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	<title><![CDATA[ANYHOO 360: VALOUR&#039;S MODEL US CONSTITUTION, SECTION VI}]]></title>
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	<pubDate>Wed, 25 Feb 2026 23:51:06 -0500</pubDate>
	<link>https://socialnetworkpresident.space/pages/view/5796/valours-model-us-constitution-section-vi</link>
	<title><![CDATA[VALOUR&#039;S MODEL US CONSTITUTION, SECTION VI]]></title>
	<description><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p><p>---</p><p>SECTION VI — DIRECT DEMOCRACY, LABOUR REPRESENTATION, AND DIGITAL GOVERNANCE</p><p>§1. Popular Sovereignty and Direct Democratic Power<br />1. All political authority originates in the people, who retain the permanent right to legislate directly through national initiatives, referenda, and recall mechanisms. &nbsp;<br />2. Citizens may propose federal legislation, constitutional amendments, or the repeal of existing laws through a verified petition process administered by an independent body. &nbsp;<br />3. National referenda shall be binding when supported by a majority of participating voters and meeting turnout thresholds established by statute. &nbsp;<br />4. Elected officials at all levels may be recalled by their constituents through a transparent, accessible, and fair process.</p><p>§2. Participatory Governance<br />1. Federal agencies shall incorporate public deliberation platforms enabling citizens to comment on, propose, and evaluate regulatory actions. &nbsp;<br />2. Major federal policies with significant social, economic, or environmental impact shall undergo mandatory participatory review, including digital hearings, citizen assemblies, and randomly selected deliberative panels. &nbsp;<br />3. Citizens have the right to access all non-classified government data in open, machine-readable formats to facilitate informed participation.</p><p>§3. Labour Representation and Economic Democracy<br />1. Workers have the constitutional right to organize, bargain collectively, and participate in workplace governance without interference or retaliation. &nbsp;<br />2. Large enterprises, as defined by statute, shall adopt co-determination structures in which elected worker representatives hold no less than one-third of seats on governing boards. &nbsp;<br />3. National labour councils shall advise Congress and federal agencies on economic, technological, and industrial policy, with representation from unions, worker cooperatives, and independent worker organizations. &nbsp;<br />4. The federal government shall promote the development of worker-owned enterprises, cooperative business models, and democratic workplace practices through public financing and technical support. &nbsp;<br />5. No law or contract may waive or diminish fundamental labour rights, including the right to safe working conditions, fair wages, and protection from exploitation.</p><p>§4. Digital Democracy and Civic Technology<br />1. Every citizen has the right to secure, private, and accessible digital participation, including identity verification, petition signing, public consultation, and voting where authorized by law. &nbsp;<br />2. Digital democratic systems shall be publicly owned or publicly regulated, open-source, independently audited, and designed to prevent surveillance, manipulation, or discrimination. &nbsp;<br />3. The federal government shall maintain a National Digital Commons, providing universal access to high-speed internet, digital literacy programs, and public-interest digital infrastructure. &nbsp;<br />4. Platforms of significant public influence must disclose political advertising, algorithmic decision-making criteria, and content moderation practices, subject to independent oversight.</p><p>§5. Electoral Integrity in a Digital Age<br />1. Elections shall be administered using verifiable, auditable, and tamper-resistant systems, including paper or equivalent physical records for all ballots. &nbsp;<br />2. Citizens shall have real-time access to ballot tracking, registration status, and election information through secure public digital portals. &nbsp;<br />3. Foreign or domestic digital interference in elections constitutes a constitutional violation and shall be met with mandatory investigation and corrective action.</p><p>§6. Public Transparency and Algorithmic Accountability<br />1. Government use of algorithms, artificial intelligence, or automated decision systems must be transparent, explainable, and subject to public oversight. &nbsp;<br />2. Citizens have the right to know when automated systems are used in decisions affecting their rights, benefits, or obligations. &nbsp;<br />3. High-impact algorithms used by public agencies must undergo regular audits for bias, accuracy, and fairness, with results published openly. &nbsp;<br />4. No automated system may replace human accountability in the exercise of public power.</p><p>§7. Enforcement and Remedies<br />1. Any citizen may bring suit in federal court to enforce the rights and processes established in this Section. &nbsp;<br />2. Courts shall apply strict scrutiny to any law or practice that burdens direct democratic participation, labour rights, or digital access. &nbsp;<br />3. Violations of this Section by public officials or private entities acting in a public capacity constitute grounds for removal, disqualification, and civil or criminal penalties as defined by law.</p><p>---</p><p>&nbsp;</p>]]></description>
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