Fairvote Canada
What is This Group is About?
De Quoi Parle ce Groupe?
The unofficial non-partisan Lemmy movement to bring proportional representation to all levels of government in Canada.
🗳️Voters deserve more choice and accountability from all politicians.
Le mouvement non officiel et non partisan de Lemmy visant à introduire la représentation proportionnelle à tous les niveaux de gouvernement au Canada.
🗳️Les électeurs méritent davantage de choix et de responsabilité de la part de tous les politiciens.

- A Simple Guide to Electoral Systems
- What is First-Past-The-Post (FPTP)?
- What is Proportional Representation (PR)?
- What is a Citizens’ Assembly?
- Why Referendums Aren't Necessary
- The 219 Corrupt MPs Who Voted Against Advancing Electoral Reform
Related Communities/Communautés Associées
Resources/Ressources
Official Organizations/Organisations Officielles
- List of Canadian friends of Democracy Bluesky
- Fair Vote Canada: Bluesky
- Fair Voting BC: Bluesky
- Charter Challenge for Fair Voting: Bluesky
- Electoral Renewal Canada: Bluesky
- Vote16: Bluesky
- Longest Ballot Committee: Bluesky
- ~~Make Votes Equal / Make Seats Match Votes~~
- Ranked Ballot Initiative of Toronto (IRV for municipal elections)
We're looking for more moderators, especially those who are of French and indigenous identities.
Politiques de modération de contenu
Nous recherchons davantage de modérateurs, notamment ceux qui sont d'identité française et autochtone.
view the rest of the comments
Interesting idea, is there some political system or philosophy that what you have described is called so I can look more into it?
I'd call it modified trias politica.
But really, I'm not sure. Personally, I support anarchocommunism. Kropotkin doesn't discuss the trias politica much in his Conquest of Bread.
But a workable idea would be this.
The maxims of anarchocommunism consist of:
The order lies in there, that it is organised decentrally. What you want, is avoiding any power gathering. With trias politica, we see that the legislative always will attempt to encroach on other powers, and often succeeds.
Following that, I think the most logical path would be that there is no executive, no legislative, no juridical force; instead, all do these tasks all together (unified power). Just as you can help stock shelfs, and decide together to organise the store differently, and to check whether you all do it right, so too can a store be ran by itself.
When we also make groups small-scale and decentralised, it is also easier to combat tyranny. All must be involved for decisions. Unified power therefore, must involve all.
Within authoritarian systems in where there is only one unified power, typically all that power belongs to a few, not to everyone, effectively creating classes. But if that power belongs to everyone, then tyranny is hard to pull off — especially if groups are small each and federated.
Problems mainly arise due to greed and corruption; and both can only arise due to capitalism and monetary economics. When both are eliminated, and the society is focused around need rather than merit, it is fairer. It also helps if the system is 'natural'.