Your overall pattern
You landed in Centrism. That does not necessarily mean you are vague or undecided. More often, it means you are wary of any worldview that claims to explain everything. You may find yourself agreeing with the left on some issues, the right on others, and neither side on the rest.
You likely prefer workable trade-offs over purity tests. In your view, politics is often less about choosing saints and villains and more about managing competing priorities in the real world. That can make you a bridge-builder, but it can also make others see you as frustratingly noncommittal.
"Good judgment often lives between slogans."
Typical tendencies
- Social outlook: You usually support personal freedom, but you also want enough shared norms to keep society functional.
- Economic outlook: You may favor a mixed economy, where markets do most of the work but rules exist to limit abuse and instability.
Your strengths
- Bridge-building: You can often translate between opposing camps and spot room for compromise.
- Flexibility: Because you are less attached to one doctrine, you may be more open to new evidence.
Common blind spots
- You may confuse moderation with wisdom even when a sharper break is actually necessary.
- You may be perceived as avoiding conflict rather than making a clear moral choice.
Next steps for growth
- Ask yourself whether your middle position is truly thoughtful or simply the least uncomfortable option.
- Spend time with arguments from the edges so you can see what urgent realities moderate language sometimes softens too much.
Disclaimer
This result reflects one pattern in how you answered, not the full complexity of your politics. Use it as a prompt for deeper thinking.
