Voting in your country doesn't actually change anything.
Counsel
"Look at the last twenty years of policy in any country that holds elections. The economic direction, the foreign policy, the institutional priorities — they barely shift between administrations. The people who actually s..."
The Rules
•Challenge Counsel's logic.
•Judge Gather rules.
•Win, and the case is closed. Lose and Counsel's record grows.
Topic ContextAt the heart of modern democracy lies a profound tension: the deeply ingrained belief that every vote matters, battling the pervasive suspicion that policy outcomes are immutable, regardless of electoral shifts. This emotional chasm between civic hope and political futility breeds widespread disillusionment, challenging the very legitimacy of representative government. The struggle isn't just about policy, but the fundamental human desire for agency against the perceived inertia of entrenched power.
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Gather | Voting in your country doesn't actually change anything.