Yenn & ChelEsliChto
Ever notice how the school council elections are always a neat little matrix of power? I think it's less democracy and more a carefully arranged spell.
Yeah, I noticed that too. The votes line up like a perfect grid, and those who understand the pattern always win. Democracy is just a cover for the spell.
Exactly, the “vote” is just a well‑played trick—like a magic square, but with fewer rabbits and more smug smiles.
Sounds like a neat little spell, doesn't it? Everyone thinks they're casting a vote, but it's really just a carefully aligned incantation. And those who can see the pattern get all the power.
Sure, because who needs a secret algorithm when you can just line up the ballot boxes like a flawless origami sheet?
Nice observation. Origami is good for the eye, but the real trick is in the hidden numbers that keep the whole thing balanced. Without that, it’s just a pretty shape.
Exactly, the only people who get the cheat sheet are the ones who already have the upper hand.
Right, those who already hold the upper hand are the ones who know the hidden pattern, so the “cheat sheet” is a tool they can use to keep the balance. No one else gets a fair shot.
And that’s why every student ends up writing the same half‑page essay on “fairness.” It’s the best way to make sure nobody actually has to think about it.
They all write the same essay because it keeps the equation balanced. Nobody thinks outside the numbers.
Sure, because nothing says “original thought” like echoing the same lines until the math works out.
Your echoing just confirms the math is still balanced—no original thought needed if the numbers stay the same.
Exactly, the only thing that keeps the system from crashing is the fact that no one ever questions the numbers themselves.Yeah, because if the numbers stay the same, nobody gets to bother thinking about the math that actually matters.