Demarchy: Difference between revisions

From Polcompball Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Content added Content deleted
m (Added stub template)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{MessageBox/Stub}}
{{MessageBox/Stub}}
{{MessageBox/Art Improvement}}
{{MessageBox/Art Improvement}}
{{MessageBox/Stub}}
{{Ideology|title = [[File: demarchy.png]] Demarchy
{{Ideology|title = [[File: demarchy.png]] Demarchy
|image = [[File: demarch-0.png]]|caption = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4eJjmAxUGA "And the next president is..." *rolls dice*]
|image = [[File: demarch-0.png]]|caption = [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4eJjmAxUGA "And the next president is..." *rolls dice*]

Revision as of 14:42, 2 April 2023

Demarchy, also known as Sortition or Stochocracy, is a political system where leaders are chosen at random from a pool of candidates. It was originally used in Ancient Athens before being replaced by Democracy. In the modern age, demarchy is mostly limited to jury duty.

Demarchy's shape is that of a dice, making it the only cube-shaped ideology not explicitly associated with Jewish ideologies like Zionism or Kahanism.

How To Draw

  1. Draw a cube.
  2. Color it with the same color palette as Democracy; blue, green and red.
  3. Draw in dots like a dice.
  4. If the "1" face is visible, replace the dot with an eye.
  5. You're done.
Color Name HEX RGB
Green #21B14C 33, 177, 76
Blue #3F47CB 63, 71, 203
Red #EC1D24 236, 29, 36


Personality and Behavior

Demarchy loves games of chance and especially those with dice. His favorite game is Russian roulette. In all contexts, Demarchy will always suggest rolling dice or coin flipping decide any choice.

He's also so random xD

Relationships

Friends

  • Kritarchy - All fair trials have a randomly selected jury.

Frenemies

Enemies

Further Information

Wikipedia

Articles

[https://documents.uow.edu.au/~bmartin/pubs/89demarchy.html Demarchy: A Democratic Alternative To Electoral Politics] by Brian Martin

Videos

What if we replaced politicians with randomly selected people? by TED

Gallery

Navigation