All 20 Uses
democracy
in
The Circle
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- "Meanwhile," Stenton said, "there's another area of public life where we want and expect transparency, and that's democracy.†
p. 207.3
- We're lucky to have been born and raised in a democracy, but one that is always undergoing improvements.†
p. 207.4 *
- And yet still, so long after the founding of this democracy, every day, our elected leaders still find themselves embroiled in some scandal or another, usually involving them doing something they shouldn't be doing.†
p. 207.6
- And that is a move toward the ultimate transparency that we've all sought from our elected leaders since the birth of representative democracy.†
p. 208.9
- And along the way, I intend to show how democracy can and should be: entirely open, entirely transparent.†
p. 210.1
- "It begins now for me, Tom," she said, "And I hope it begins soon for the rest of the elected leaders in this country—and for those in every one of the world's democracies."†
p. 211.4
- There were tens of thousands of clear elected officials all over the country and world, and the movement was less a novelty and more of an inevitability; most observers predicted full governmental transparency, at least in democracies—and with SeeChange there would soon be no other kind—within eighteen months.†
p. 328.1
- Bailey continued: "Now this new era of transparency dovetails with some other ideas I have about democracy, and the role that technology can play in making it complete.†
p. 386.7
- There are people in DC who see us as the solution to making this a fully participatory democracy.†
p. 388.5
- One hundred percent democracy.†
p. 390.1
- To have the validation of the Wise Men, to have perhaps pivoted the entire company in a new direction, to have, perhaps, perhaps, ensured a new level of participatory democracy—could it be that the Circle, with her new idea, might really perfect democracy?†
p. 395.5
- To have the validation of the Wise Men, to have perhaps pivoted the entire company in a new direction, to have, perhaps, perhaps, ensured a new level of participatory democracy—could it be that the Circle, with her new idea, might really perfect democracy?†
p. 395.5
- It's democracy with your voice, and your moxie.†
p. 400.1
- She'd connected a few dots: the efficiency and utility of the CircleSurveys, the constant Circle goal of total saturation, the universal hope for real and unfiltered—and, most crucially, complete—democracy.†
p. 401.9
- They were purveyors of an innately flawed kind of democracy, where only the wealthy were elected, where their voices were heard loudest, where they passed their seats in Congress to whatever similarly entitled person they deemed appropriate.†
p. 403.4
- Demoxie was purer, was the only chance at direct democracy the world had ever known.†
p. 403.7
- Democracy is mandatory here!†
p. 406.4
- With actual democracy, a purer kind of democracy, people would be unafraid to cast their votes, and, more important, unafraid to be held accountable for those votes.†
p. 419.1
- With actual democracy, a purer kind of democracy, people would be unafraid to cast their votes, and, more important, unafraid to be held accountable for those votes.†
p. 419.1
- This democracy thing, or Demoxie, whatever it is, good god.†
p. 488.5
Definitions:
-
(1)
(democracy) a system of government in which citizens have power with equal votes
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)