Take this with a huge grain of salt, but your survey does not respect any good qualitative analysis guidelines. You’ve got biases and heuristics all over, most notably leading questions and anchoring as examples.
Edit: P.S. I feel, as a trained economist, that you fundamentally misunderstood the dynamics of government intervention and centralisation of power. As well as the voting dynamics… It’s a mess.
no, not every democracy. every government performs those roles but they are not all split the same way. the nordic countries are single-branch and he chinese government has many more than three.
According to this official government page Norway at least does have separation of powers into multiple branches. I haven’t looked into the other nordic countries, but it’s hard to believe that they don’t at least separate out the judiciary (courts) from the rest.
Power in Norway is divided into three branches:
- the Storting – the legislative branch
- the Government – the executive branch
- the courts – the judicial branch
If you made this yourself and are looking for feedback (that’s unclear), one issue is:
Surely by definition too much power is too much regardless of your personal threshold for “too much”, hence everyone’s answer will be the same?
https://github.com/juleslemee/Votely
Take this with a huge grain of salt, but your survey does not respect any good qualitative analysis guidelines. You’ve got biases and heuristics all over, most notably leading questions and anchoring as examples.
Edit: P.S. I feel, as a trained economist, that you fundamentally misunderstood the dynamics of government intervention and centralisation of power. As well as the voting dynamics… It’s a mess.
I mean I am definitely on the left side of the spectrum, but I feel like with statements like
or
I feel like the quiz wants you to get certain results
Nice data collection scheme.
tell me you’re from the us without telling me you’re from the us. what’s a “branch of government”?
Every democracy has 3 branches (AKA powers): judiciary, legislative and executive.
no, not every democracy. every government performs those roles but they are not all split the same way. the nordic countries are single-branch and he chinese government has many more than three.
According to this official government page Norway at least does have separation of powers into multiple branches. I haven’t looked into the other nordic countries, but it’s hard to believe that they don’t at least separate out the judiciary (courts) from the rest.
1 branch = old system.
The 3 branches are there to counterbalance the powers… theoretically.
And China is something different.
the nordic systems are based on popular sovereignty by proportional representation, which lies in opposition to separation of power.
Good work!
Ohhh, I haven’t taken one of these since my /pol/ days more than a decade ago! Let’s see.
PD.: Unsurprisingly, I’m deeply in the lower left corner. 🤷
I was lazy and just took the short version. It’s alright.
Smack in the middle of the economic left progressive libertarian quadrant. No surprises there.