The Republic's Conscience — Edition 11. Part III.: The Doctrine of Constitutional Self-Correction

The Whitepaper por Nicolin Decker

Notas del episodio

In Day Three of The Doctrine of Constitutional Self-Correction, Nicolin Decker examines one of the most persistent misunderstandings in modern democracy: the belief that popular participation functions as direct instruction rather than constitutional signal.

Public discourse often treats elections as mandates, voter preferences as policy commands, and public opinion as a continuous directive stream to which institutions must respond immediately. Day Three rejects this framing as intuitive—but fundamentally mistaken. The Constitution does not treat the electorate as a management committee. It treats the people as the Republic’s primary sensing layer.

🔹 Core Thesis

Voters do not govern by command. They govern by signal.

Elections, speech, and civic reaction supply  ... 

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Palabras clave
RAND CorporationUnited States National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)Harvard Law School
United States CongressBrookings InstitutionMassachusetts Institute of Technology — Architecture & Systems EngineeringSupreme Court of the United StatesStanford UniversityUnited States Courts of AppealsHoover InstitutionOECD Directorate for Public GovernanceYale Law School
Congressional Research Service
Office of Legal Counsel, U.S. Department of JusticeMax Planck InstituteUniversity of OxfordUniversity of CambridgeAmerican Enterprise InstituteU.S. Government Accountability Office