Hello Lelamarkam
You are asking a lot of good questions.
One problem of this 15-minute essay is that it leaves out how the pieces of TDG fit together. One of those pieces is a profound change of culture that the TDG will require for it to work. For example, the British people of 1600 had a much different relationship with their state than the British people of today. The TDG will bring out probably just as big of change when compared to western democracy.
In 1688, the British aristocracy ceded a lot of their power to the elected Parliament. This was mostly a power grab; the conscious change of culture was just an afterthought.
The early TDG builders should fully understand that they are not just putting together a different electoral structure; they are also creating a new culture for government decision making. And this culture change has to be deliberate! I estimate 20 years to build the TDG. If it is not deliberate, then we are looking at centuries--if the world reverts back to authoritarian rule.
I could answer all your questions one-by-one. But you seem to have a great interest in this topic. Follow my byline to get the TDG book, which is a free read from my website. It will take you about three hours.
I'm sure if you read the book, you will some other questions. Thank you for your interest.
Dave Volek
Inventor
Tiered Democratic Governance
BTW, the TDG advisors don't have any votes or vetos. There is a unique relationship between the advisors and the elected bodies.