ADVERTISEMENT
### **The Cost to Democracy**
When citizens feel disconnected from decision-making, trust erodes. When policies seem to benefit the few at the expense of the many, cynicism grows. When outcomes feel predetermined, participation declines.
Democracy doesn’t collapse overnight. It thins gradually — hollowed out by systems that function smoothly but answer quietly to interests beyond public reach.
Eliminating influence entirely is neither realistic nor desirable. Expertise, advocacy, and negotiation are essential to governance. The question is balance and transparency.
Stronger disclosure rules, clearer boundaries between public service and private gain, and a media culture willing to challenge access-driven narratives can all help. So can an engaged public that asks not just *what* decisions are made, but *how* they came to be.
### **Conclusion**
Understanding it requires moving beyond slogans and personalities to examine structures. Who benefits? Who decides? Who is heard — and who isn’t?
—
If you’d like, I can:
Just tell me the direction you want.
ADVERTISEMENT