Is the free market the best democratic system?
I would be delighted to read your paper.
If you want voters to be more directly involved in governing, then there should be more referendums — romanv
I have to agree with most of your statements, but I am not sure if direct democracy is a good solution. Too many problems. We can’t have a referendum without rules. Someone must decide (1) who votes?; (2) how the voting process works?; (3) what are the options that will be voted?, etc.
There always seems to be an element of authoritarianism involved.
In my country, we had a severily restrictive firearms regulation a few years ago. To the point that, basically, only rich people and criminals have guns nowadays. To “legitimize” the ban, we had a referendum about firearms commerce. The permissive option won by a large margin.
The problem is that the question was not about gun ownership, but gun commercialization. The result is that nothing changed. To this day people argue over the redaction of the question asked, the referendum’s effects, if it is time to do it again, etc.
But this is just a criticism of mine, with no solutions proposed.