Winston Churchill boldly stated once that: “democracy is the worst form of government except for all the others.” Yet, it is truthful in light of another of his says: “the best argument against democracy is a five-minute conversation with the average voter.” However, Churchill’s second statement holds water with the implicit meaning that it embodies and that could allow us to restate it as “the best argument against Democracy INTEGRITY is a five-minute conversation with a misled average voter.” It is within this voter perception of freedom, justice, and societal balance where the democracy integrity thrives or erodes. It is within this perception that society at large reaps the fruits of representation, when participatory democracy is yielded or where turnkey tyrannies are established. ACME Institute for Democracy Integrity is there to foster the emergence of the humanistic paradigm in politics to safeguard the average voter perception of the lofty values of freedom and justice. It further aims to help the voter attain societal balance struck against responsibility vs. authority, rights vs. duties, but never oppression vs. patronage or even chaos.