Your overall pattern
You landed in Social Democracy. That usually means you care deeply about what a society owes its people, especially those who are vulnerable or structurally disadvantaged. You may see the state not as an enemy of freedom, but as one of the main tools for building security, fairness, and shared dignity.
You are likely skeptical of a pure market logic that leaves too much to chance. Instead, you may favor strong public institutions, labor protections, redistributive policy, and a social contract that asks more from the wealthy while promising more protection to everyone else.
"A decent society is judged by how well ordinary people can live inside it."
Typical tendencies
- Social outlook: You may support policies that protect the common good even when they place some limits on individual discretion.
- Economic outlook: You are often drawn to unions, public services, and redistribution aimed at reducing poverty and precarity.
Your strengths
- Solidarity: You think in terms of shared fate and are motivated by the idea that no one should be abandoned.
- Institutional care: You appreciate durable systems that help people survive illness, unemployment, and inequality.
Common blind spots
- You may place too much trust in bureaucracy and overlook how inefficient or paternalistic it can become.
- You may frame every appeal to autonomy as selfishness, even when personal freedom matters in a real and human way.
Next steps for growth
- Ask where protection ends and overreach begins in the policies you support.
- Look for models that combine strong safety nets with local accountability and citizen choice.
Disclaimer
This result is a broad political sketch, not a verdict on your values. Let it start a conversation rather than end one.
