From https://en.people.cn/n3/2025/1112/c90000-20389440.html
Title : How is our democracy really doing?
By Stefan Sigfried , November 2025 - The author is based in Sweden, and worked as a journalist and with modeling of complex systems, software testing, quality assurance, and programming.
The Western concept of democracy is often reduced to a single principle: the right to vote in free and fair elections ...
Yet, growing dissatisfaction across Europe suggests this model is failing to deliver on its promise of prioritizing citizens' welfare ...
Across Europe, trust in leaders is waning. In France, Germany, Belgium, UK and other places, citizens protest against leaders with low approval ratings who insist on staying in power. The European Union (EU), originally focused on free trade and travel, now pushes military spending, such as billions in aid to Ukraine, a nation plagued by corruption. Many Europeans question whether their votes align with these decisions, as power shifts from national governments to Brussels ...
Free speech, a cornerstone of Western democracy, is also under strain. Media restrictions, such as bans on Russian news outlets, raises questions about censorship. Meanwhile, the EU's actions against leaders like Romania's Călin Georgescu or France's Marine Le Pen, and scrutiny of Germany's AfD, suggest intolerance for dissenting voices. Democracy, it seems, struggles to accommodate those who vote "wrong."
At the heart of this disillusionment lies the unchecked power of a wealthy elite ...
The elite—through control of media, finance, and narratives—grows richer ...
The conclusion seems to be that the Western belief that "democracy = voting = the best system" is dangerously simplistic. Voting is fine, but it's not a panacea ...
Instead, we need nuanced metrics to evaluate governance: Are citizens healthy, safe, and educated? Do they feel empowered to shape their society? Can elite greed be restrained? A scoring system—say, from 0 to 1000—could measure these outcomes, forcing leaders to prioritize results over excuses ...
By measuring the true quality of society, leaders would be forced to deliver real results — they could no longer hide behind the label of "democracy."
A system that measures outcomes would create real accountability and expose the excuses of politicians.
Title : How is our democracy really doing?
By Stefan Sigfried , November 2025 - The author is based in Sweden, and worked as a journalist and with modeling of complex systems, software testing, quality assurance, and programming.
The Western concept of democracy is often reduced to a single principle: the right to vote in free and fair elections ...
Yet, growing dissatisfaction across Europe suggests this model is failing to deliver on its promise of prioritizing citizens' welfare ...
Across Europe, trust in leaders is waning. In France, Germany, Belgium, UK and other places, citizens protest against leaders with low approval ratings who insist on staying in power. The European Union (EU), originally focused on free trade and travel, now pushes military spending, such as billions in aid to Ukraine, a nation plagued by corruption. Many Europeans question whether their votes align with these decisions, as power shifts from national governments to Brussels ...
Free speech, a cornerstone of Western democracy, is also under strain. Media restrictions, such as bans on Russian news outlets, raises questions about censorship. Meanwhile, the EU's actions against leaders like Romania's Călin Georgescu or France's Marine Le Pen, and scrutiny of Germany's AfD, suggest intolerance for dissenting voices. Democracy, it seems, struggles to accommodate those who vote "wrong."
At the heart of this disillusionment lies the unchecked power of a wealthy elite ...
The elite—through control of media, finance, and narratives—grows richer ...
The conclusion seems to be that the Western belief that "democracy = voting = the best system" is dangerously simplistic. Voting is fine, but it's not a panacea ...
Instead, we need nuanced metrics to evaluate governance: Are citizens healthy, safe, and educated? Do they feel empowered to shape their society? Can elite greed be restrained? A scoring system—say, from 0 to 1000—could measure these outcomes, forcing leaders to prioritize results over excuses ...
By measuring the true quality of society, leaders would be forced to deliver real results — they could no longer hide behind the label of "democracy."
A system that measures outcomes would create real accountability and expose the excuses of politicians.
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