My Weird Prompts

What Happens When Everyone Votes on Everything?

22 min · 30 jun 2026
aflevering What Happens When Everyone Votes on Everything? artwork

Beschrijving

Estonia has run secure nationwide i-voting for two decades. Switzerland has held over 650 national referendums since 1848. Taiwan's vTaiwan platform has processed hundreds of policy proposals through digital deliberation. So if the technology clearly works, why are we still electing representatives? This episode examines the real-world data from four major experiments in direct and liquid democracy — Estonia, Switzerland, Taiwan, and the German Pirate Party's LiquidFeedback system — and uncovers why the bottleneck isn't the voting app. It's cognition, participation inequality, and the uncomfortable truth that someone still has to write the laws.

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aflevering Who Fixes a Broken Political System? artwork

Who Fixes a Broken Political System?

Daniel asks a deceptively simple question: if the political system is broken, who actually fixes it? Legislators are embedded in the system and benefit from it — so who designs reform, pushes it through, and funds that work? This episode unpacks the difference between watchdog organizations and reform engineers, using Israel's coalition instability as a case study. We trace how the Israel Democracy Institute quietly drafts constitutional text and builds consensus over decades, while the Movement for Quality of Government enforces existing rules through the courts. We also look at Germany's constructive vote of no confidence — a single constitutional mechanism that solved the same fragmentation problem Israel faces. The answer to Daniel's question turns out to be about the invisible infrastructure of democracy itself: the institutions that maintain the plumbing while everyone watches the circus.

30 jun 202627 min