tasty-slop democratic compression
the machinery of public meaning

When experience becomes governable

Modern democracy does not simply convert public opinion into government. It compresses lived experience into political signals, routes those signals through parties and institutions, and returns the result as authority. The central struggle is over who controls that conversion.

Diagram showing experience, mediation, party capture, the electoral portal, and state response

The sequence follows one mechanism at three levels. At the base is the electoral field: voters do not arrive at politics as simple preferences but as complex states that must be compressed into finite ballot outputs. Above that are the parties: institutions that learn to shape the terrain, manage salience, and pull citizens toward capture basins. Around both sits the state, which becomes anxious when social media and artificial intelligence allow experience to be reframed horizontally before official mediation can stabilise it.

fieldpolitical complexity is compressed into votes
partiescapture basins are managed before the vote
statemediation is rebuilt when interpretation escapes
Taken together, the three papers describe a single democratic compression system: experience enters as lived complexity, passes through contested interpretation, is captured by institutional poles, and emerges as governable authority.