@winstonpeters It should have been the raising of questions and concerns by billions of members of public that put the WHO into disrespect. Not the eventually political withdrawal of the US. Too much politics not enough listening to people.
@elonmusk If you have female human DNA and chromosomes and are older than a girl then you are a woman. The chances are pretty good you'll also have a womb but if you don't then you are still a woman
The big question is WHO is funding the W.H.O. ? These anonymous donors will want something in return. The World Health Organisation is still seeking total control without accountability of everyone on the planet in the event that they ( The W.H.O. ) declare another Public Health Emergency of International Concern ( such as a pandemic) Power without accountability is tyranny, their funding without transparency is corruption .
Kier Stalin has stated you will have to pay £85 every time you are requested to prove your ID,if you refuse to use digital ID
No vote in Parliament
No parliamentary committee to review digital ID
No vote in the House of Lords
No referendum
No consultation with the general public.
@CalvinPerr26876@2FreeMike@d_peter17473@priest_rebel@thecoastguy There's a lot in that article bro. You like representative democracy and centralized control. I can't help that, that's your free choice to make. Go right ahead and support it. I do note you've given up on on saying arms is the way to go though and decided a new attack instead.
@CalvinPerr26876@2FreeMike@d_peter17473@priest_rebel@thecoastguy We've never actually been slaughtered and don't suffer from the constant paranoia that it's going to happen.
Likewise the Swiss who have been neutral for centuries have never been slaughtered.
The presence of wisdom and democracy is what's needed not arms.
Mindset.
@CalvinPerr26876@2FreeMike@d_peter17473@priest_rebel@thecoastguy We come from British roots and we are generally quite pacifist. What my comment alluded to was that we would rather everyone was disarmed and peaceful than have everyone armed and hostile. Resolving with violence is a no win solution for all in our view.
@TownLiberation @brianhund Yes we can help. Our software gets managed by a trust that's managed locally in the area democratically. The system enables each individual in a given area or organisation to have a vote plus many other components in everything that happens. The trust can also manage assets.
@NZNationalParty Just so everyone is clear. No political party spends anything. Taxpayers do and they never get consulted.
Taxpayers also never get to see what really happens to their money. The money trail, it just disappears.
Lets see what goes on and let taxpayers decide. #DirectDemocracy
@2FreeMike@jeffcharlesjr Yeah.. Putting decision making power in the collaborative hands of locals means that the council will be doing as the people collaboratively want. Not as one council guy thinks he can operate... And that everything is in the public eye.
DON'T HATE - DEBATE - HOW SWISS STYLE #DIRECTDEMOCRACY SEARCHES FOR THE BEST SOLUTIONS
In the Swiss system of direct democracy, debate is not an accessory to the political process—it is its very foundation. Switzerland’s unique model is shaped not only by regular votes and referenda, but by a deeply embedded culture of dialogue that extends from the federal government, where seven federal councillors govern by consensus, to the cantonal and communal levels where ordinary citizens are empowered to directly shape policy.
This structure reflects an enduring commitment to discussion over confrontation, participation over delegation, and consensus over partisanship.
At the federal level, the Swiss Federal Council, comprised of seven ministers from different political parties, operates as a collective executive without a dominant head of state.
Collegiality
The collegiality principle ensures that decisions are made jointly, behind closed doors, requiring debate, compromise, and a shared responsibility that discourages political grandstanding.
Adversarial
Unlike the often adversarial nature of parliaments in representative systems, where opposition parties frequently resort to rhetorical attacks or obstruction and where debate can resemble theatre rather than genuine dialogue, the Swiss system fosters a quieter but deeper negotiation.
Common Ground
Ministers do not campaign against one another or attempt to score political points in public; they must instead find common ground. This not only tones down hostility but also models a deliberative process to the rest of the political structure.
Citizens at the heart
In the cantons and communes, this ethos is reflected in mechanisms that bring political participation directly to citizens. Every Swiss citizen has the right to propose changes to laws or the constitution through initiatives, and to challenge parliamentary decisions through referenda.
These tools are not simply procedural; they are democratic invitations to public debate. Before every vote, a broad public campaign unfolds, often featuring extensive media coverage, informational booklets from the government outlining both sides of an issue, and spirited but civil debates in town halls, newspapers, television, and increasingly on social media.
The people as sovereign
The right to launch a referendum or initiative is not limited to the political elite. It is this dispersal of power—where sovereignty truly resides with the people—that ensures a continual churning of ideas from every level of society.
Historically, the Swiss tradition of deliberative democracy finds its roots in the medieval Landsgemeinde, open-air assemblies in alpine valleys where free farmers gathered to debate and vote by a show of hands.
This model has been modernized but not abandoned. The spirit of the Landsgemeinde—deliberation among equals—survives in the communal assemblies still held in some cantons, and more broadly in the national political psyche.
Citizens have the FIRST & LAST word
These assemblies underline a profound belief that policy must be shaped with the direct input of those it affects, and that disagreement is not a sign of dysfunction but a step toward consensus.
Central to this is the principle of free speech. Without freedom of expression, no meaningful debate is possible. In Switzerland, this freedom is not merely a legal right; it is a civic necessity.
Public debates, citizen forums, and political campaigns thrive in a space where opposing views can be aired respectfully and taken seriously.
Mere theatre
This stands in sharp contrast to many representative democracies where the parliamentary floor often becomes a battleground of rehearsed soundbites and pre-scripted outrage, and where meaningful engagement with alternative viewpoints is rare. In such systems, the appearance of debate often masks a lack of genuine deliberation.
Democratic tool-box
Switzerland’s tools of direct democracy—initiatives, referenda, and communal assemblies—are powerful not only because they give people a say, but because they compel debate at all levels of society. Issues must be explained, justified, and defended.
Structured ongoing dialogue rather than once every four years engagement with citizens
Politicians must engage with the public not just during elections, but continuously. This regular and structured dialogue enhances transparency and accountability, fostering a level of trust that is increasingly rare in modern democracies.
The highest ranked in trust levels globally
Swiss citizens trust their government at national, cantonal and communal levels more than in many countries, not because it is infallible, but because the mechanisms exits within the Swiss system whereby government at the three levels listens, adjusts, and reflects the diverse voices of its people.
In summary, Swiss-style debate is a living process spread across the federal, cantonal, and communal levels. However, it is clearly enabled by democratic tools that prioritize citizen involvement, grounded in historical practices of public assembly, and kept alive through a deep respect for free expression.
This environment of constant, constructive debate ensures that decisions are better informed, more legitimate, and widely accepted.
It transforms governance from a spectacle of division into a practice of shared responsibility, benefitting society by creating a resilient democratic culture where every voice has the space to be heard.
In Swiss-style direct democracy, citizens are not only voters but active participants in shaping laws and policies, which ensures that public debate lies at the core of decision-making.
Because initiatives and referendums allow people to bring forward issues of genuine concern, political engagement is anchored in real-life questions that matter to communities rather than abstract party agendas.
The process of open discussion, persuasion, and compromise across society leads to outcomes that reflect a broader consensus and are therefore more legitimate, durable, and closely aligned with the needs of citizens.
Although not perfect, it is hardly surprising that Switzerland consistently ranks at the very top of most global indices—whether in crime reduction, citizen happiness, health, economic strength, safety, wealth, or trust in government—often taking first place, sometimes third, and occasionally fourth. It suggests the Swiss may hold lessons from which we could all benefit.
Real democracy isn't a left or right construct, it's not an "ism".
It's simply The Rule Of The People it always has been the definition.
It isn't capitalism, socialism, communism, or any divisive construct.
It also isn't "being able to vote for who you like to represent you". That's a construct that evolved when rulers of the day capitalised on the popular emerging concept of "democracy" and added this side branch called "Representative Democracy" in to take power back.