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A Ticket System for Government (Or: Let’s Finally Give the Ombudsman Teeth)

The ombudsman, as it stands, is a shark without teeth. It cannot even smell a scandal if it was bleeding before their eyes — can’t sense, can’t bite, can’t act, can’t fix. It’s a watchdog with no jaws. So let’s give it an upgrade or even better give the government such an upgrade that Ombudsman loses the necessity for their entire existence.

This isn’t some grand ideological revolution. It’s just a silly idea for a public ticket system. Silly, but powerful.

Imagine a civic ticket system — not buried in obscure forms, not locked in back-office email chains. Just like an internal help-desk, but for governance. Public, structured, traceable. And smart.

This is what it looks like.

Core Idea
Citizens should be able to report issues publicly — not buried in anonymous inboxes, not hidden behind “ongoing investigation” seals. People already talk about public issues. If people can talk about public issues with their friends, why can’t they track them together too?

A government ticket system could work just like internal systems in IT or customer service — but with a civic twist.

This is not a place for endless debate. It’s a structure to frame problem → proposal → response, cleanly and traceable.

This system proposes a transparent, iterative problem-solving interface where AI is used not to obscure, but to clarify.

The System: Public, AI-Structured, and Transparent

The system is made up of 4 stages — and yes, it uses AI — but only as a tool to help people sharpen what they’re already saying.

Every issue goes through this cycle:

1. Problem Description
a) Citizens submit an issue. b) The AI cleans up the language, consolidates overlapping inputs, and upgrades the coherence of the report. c) A public change-log shows the input that evolved the description — all steps visible, all input attributable.

2. Proposed Solution
a) Based on the refined problem description, the AI drafts a solution or possible action path. b) This is visible to the public as a formal response — no magic, just structured reasoning. c) This is not a decision. It’s a draft — structured logic, not authority. Only advice.

3. Critique Layer
a) Citizens respond to the proposed solution — a structured challenge to the proposal.. b) Their remarks are also structured by AI — not censored, but upgraded for clarity and grouped by theme or angle. c) Again, change-logs and input trails are visible. No anonymous edits. No hidden manipulations. d) in a sense this is the same as step 1 (problem description)

4. Upgraded Solution
a) The AI integrates valid critiques and proposes a refined version of the solution. b) This is the “feedback-reinforced” stage, where the system attempts synthesis, not endless argument loops.

All stages remain visible — including abandoned tickets, failed resolutions, and ongoing ones. This creates a living public record of issues and proposed governance responses.

This is the synthesis. 1 = 2 + 3 = 4.

Why This Matters

  • It forces clarity and traceability. No more vague complaints floating in chaos.
  • It turns public input into a collaborative upgrade process.
  • It shows which tickets are being handled, stalled, ignored — in plain sight.
  • It makes every AI edit accountable, not mysterious.
  • It doesn’t replace the ombudsman — it arms them.

Business Model? Sure — But Keep It Public

Yes, this is a product. But no, it shouldn’t be commercialized. This is civic infrastructure. It belongs to the commons.

It could be sold to municipalities, NGOs, or transparency coalitions — but that defeats the purpose.

Build it, release it, and let it run at zero cost. The public has already paid for enough systems that don’t work. This one should.

The value lies not in monetization — but in legitimacy.

Expanded Use: From Complaint Board to Administrative Operating System

What starts as a feedback tool can evolve into a complete civic engine. The system can scale:

  1. Reported Issue
  2. Processed Issue (by a public servant or automated filter)
    • AI-generated remark on process adequacy (4-stages again)
  3. Re-open option if resolution was insufficient (4-stages again)
  4. Cross-department visibility and workflow mapping
    • The ticket can go through different departments and the work of each department remains visible.

Each issue flows like a case file, but it’s public-facing and structurally transparent. Departments can adopt the system internally. Citizens and officials see the same state of the case. Updates are traceable.

With enough refinement, this system could even approach pre-judicial arbitration or replace lower-level administrative courts — especially for predictable, repeatable types of disputes (benefits, housing, permit denials, etc.).

At some point a judge and lawyer can then bend over the case after it went through these 3 steps.

Design Philosophy

  • Public by default.
  • AI-enhanced, not AI-obscured.
  • Built around iteration, not resolution-hiding.
  • Input is traceable. Reasoning is legible. Logic is public.
  • Not built to silence citizens with forms — but to cohere chaos into clarity.

Potential Impact:

If deployed at scale, this would:

  • Reduce performative complaint culture (“I ranted online!”) in favor of traceable input.
  • Provide oversight journalists and watchdogs with live case data.
  • Offer civil servants a way to separate noise from signal.
  • Create longitudinal accountability: we’d know what failed, what improved, and why.
  • We can track government efficiency through details such as backlog and amount of re-opened cases

Final Thought

Let’s stop treating public concern like noise.

Let’s give it a ticket.

Let’s give the ombudsman jaws.

Give people a way to speak clearly. Let the problems stay visible. Let the fixes be criticized. Let the system evolve in full view.

Democracy doesn’t die in darkness — it suffocates in forms. We’ve normalized arbitrary bureaucracy and opaque complaint systems. But the technology to upgrade them exists. All we’re missing is the will — and the will can be crowd-sourced.

Written by Artorius Magnus

https://tinyurl.com/laconic-utopia World-Peace suggestions @250 articles highschool dropout-autodidact (unofficially 5+ PhD's).

In Hart van Holland

https://www.hartvanzuidplas.nl/nieuws/algemeen/20262/petitie-voor-straatnaam-voor-verzetsheld-arie-den-toom.

Petitie wordt aangeboden aan burgemeester

Op 25 mei aanstaande om 15.00 uur wordt de petitie aan de burgemeester van West Betuwe aangeboden door de voorzitter van de VBL mevrouw Haubrich. Helaas kunt u daarbij niet aanwezig zijn in verband met de richtlijnen inzake het coronavirus..

https://www.boerenbusiness.nl/melk/artikel/10887321/ontspoort-schouten-op-het-voerspoor

Mogelijk is er een krappe meerderheid in de Tweede Kamer tegen de voerspooraanpak van minister Schouten, waarmee ze de stikstofuitstoot dit jaar al wil reduceren..

Andere link petitie

Bedankt voor uw interesse in de petitie! De link naar de actieve petitie is echter: https://avaaz.org/nl/communitypetitions/degemeentezoetermeerbehoudjohancruyffveldmeerzicht/dashboard .

Beste ondertekenaars

Door omstandigheden is deze petitie op twee plaatsen online gekomen. We willen de ondertekeningen graag op één plek verzamelen en verzoeken u te ondertekenen op :

Op een andere petitiesite te ondertekenen

Vast hartelijk dank!

Rob Elens, huisarts.

https://www.nieuweoogst.nl/nieuws/2020/05/15/nvm-signaleert-trek-van-randstedeling-naar-buitengebied?fbclid=IwAR1WOKtC-CpAxgTeJJDUOnD8FvSKTjzEnMQ5mIovXkQS_2ZsjhQY4uBcqIA

' Het platteland gaat de komende tien jaar drastisch veranderen ' .

Corona: 535 euro collegegeld retour voor late afstudeerders!

Wie tussen september 2020 en eind januari 2021 afstudeert, krijgt drie maanden collegegeld terug. Voor studenten van universiteiten en hogescholen is dat 535 euro.

Het ministerie neemt aan dat veel van deze studenten zonder de coronacrisis sneller klaar zouden zijn.

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Maar dat wordt niet per student vastgesteld: de treuzelaars onder hen hebben dus geluk.

Het kabinet heeft ook gekeken naar studenten met een aanvullende beurs en/of basisbeurs. Als zij hun recht op deze beurs verliezen in de maanden juli, augustus en september, krijgen ze een tegemoetkoming. Voor hbo- en wo-studenten gaat het om eenmalig 1.500 euro.

Andere studenten kunnen hun studievertraging inhalen in de loop van hun opleiding, is de gedachte van minister Van Engelshoven. Dat zei ze twee weken geleden in debat met de Tweede Kamer.

De oppositie wilde meer geld voor gedupeerde studenten. Een voorstel van de PvdA kreeg zelfs de helft van de Tweede Kamer achter zich: wie nu een aanvullende beurs heeft (van eerstejaars tot afstudeerder) zou daar drie maanden langer het recht op moeten krijgen. Alleen de vier coalitiepartijen (VVD, CDA, D66 en ChristenUnie) stemden ertegen, in afwachting van de plannen van de minister.

CDA en D66 hadden het kabinet eerder in een motie opgeroepen om de gevolgen van de coronacrisis voor studenten in beeld te brengen en “waar nodig studenten te ondersteunen, bijvoorbeeld bij opgetreden studievertraging”.

Het besluit van vandaag is het antwoord op die motie. Het kabinet neemt een ‘generieke maatregel’ voor een grote groep studenten zonder uit te zoeken wie daadwerkelijk last heeft van de crisis en wie niet. Dat maakt de maatregel makkelijker en sneller uitvoerbaar.

Studenten kunnen overigens van hun universiteit of hogeschool een beurs krijgen als ze zelf ziek zijn geworden, zoals de minister in het debat zei. Daarvoor moeten ze een beroep doen op het zogeheten profileringsfonds. Dat geldt ook voor studenten die mantelzorg moeten verlenen of in andere bijzondere omstandigheden verkeren.

Wel verschillen de regels voor deze profileringsfondsen nogal. Aan sommige universiteiten moeten studenten snel zijn als ze er een beroep op willen doen, anders vissen ze achter het net.

Zie artikel Univers: https://universonline.nl/2020/05/15/corona-535-euro-collegegeld-retour-voor-late-afstudeerders

Forbes: Are These Tech Companies Complicit In Human Rights Abuses Of Child Cobalt Miners In Congo?

Ewelina U. Ochab

In late 2019, some of world’s largest tech companies, including Apple, Alphabet (which isthe parent company of Google LLC), Microsoft, Dell and Tesla (the Defendants), were named in a lawsuit brought in Washington DC court by 13 Congolese families (the Claimants).

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The lawsuit alleges that their children were killed or injured while mining for cobalt in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Cobalt is a key component of rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, of the type used in electronic devices manufactured by these five companies.

Congo

The lawsuit alleges that “the young children mining Defendants’ cobalt are not merely being forced to work full-time, extremely dangerous mining jobs at the expense their educations and futures; they are being regularly maimed and killed by tunnel collapses and other known hazards common to cobalt mining in the DRC.” Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Dell and Tesla are alleged to have been aiding and abetting the deaths and serious injuries of the Claimant’s children working in cobalt mines in the supply chain of the tech corporations.

The lawsuit alleges that the companies “are knowingly benefiting from and providing substantial support to this ‘artisanal’ mining system in the DRC. Defendants know and have known for a significant period of time the reality that DRC’s cobalt mining sector is dependent upon children, with males performing the most hazardous work in the primitive cobalt mines, including tunnel digging. These boys are working under stone age conditions for paltry wages and at immense personal risk to provide cobalt that is essential to the so-called ‘high tech’ sector, dominated by Defendants and other companies.”

The families are seeking compensation for, among others, forced labor, unjust enrichment, negligent supervision, intentional infliction of emotional distress, wages promised but not paid, and “the loss of assets and of educational and business opportunities as a result of Defendants’ illegal conduct”, “damages for the mental anguish and pain and suffering Plaintiffs experienced as a result of being forced to labor against their will in horrific conditions and subjecting them to serious injuries and death.” The lawsuit further seeks an order for the tech companies to create a fund to ensure appropriate medical care for all those children who were injured while mining cobalt for the tech companies and to clean up the environmental impact of mining cobalt in DRC by the Defendants.

According to Siddharth Kara, an expert on modern day slavery, “more than 60% of the world’s supply of cobalt is mined in the ‘copper belt’ of the south-eastern provinces of DRC.” His research suggests that “more than 255,000 creuseurs mining cobalt in DRC, at least 35,000 of whom are children, some as young as six.” His research claims that “children under the age of 14 years earn an average of $0.81 per day, adult females earn an average of $1.02 per day, and adult males earn an average of $2.04 per day.”

15-05-2020 | Petitie Null