A governance model centered on complete citizens

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Daohe · Aug 7, 2025
The institutional evolution and historical trajectory of civil politics Produced by Yicheng Commonweal To those who truly love their country I. Opening: Who does true governance belong to? In today’s world, nearly every nation inscribes grand slogans such as “putting people first” or “rule of law” into its political declarations. These phrases are treated as […]

The institutional evolution and historical trajectory of civil politics

Produced by Yicheng Commonweal

To those who truly love their country

I. Opening: Who does true governance belong to?

In today’s world, nearly every nation inscribes grand slogans such as “putting people first” or “rule of law” into its political declarations. These phrases are treated as if they automatically elevate a government to the moral high ground of civilization. Yet the reality is often the opposite. Such terms have become rhetorical veils that conceal authoritarianism or preserve privileged structures. Beneath them lies a political logic that serves not the people as a whole, but a small circle of power holders—state elites, wealthy elites, and cultural aristocrats.

Now, we must confront a question that has long been avoided: Whose interests should a nation truly be governed for?

The answer may not be complicated: the true masters of a nation must be every “complete citizen” who shares the rights and responsibilities of political, economic, social, and cultural governance.

This article will examine both theory and real-world cases to systematically challenge the absurdity of so-called “people-centered” and “rule-of-law” approaches, and to advance a governance model centered on complete citizens—an institutional framework that reflects the direction of future civilizational progress.

II. Pseudo “people-centered” and pseudo “rule-of-law”: the reality behind the institutional façade

1. “Putting people first”—but which people are we really talking about?

We cannot judge a nation’s civility merely by the slogan “people-centered”. In practice, the “people” it refers to are often not citizens in the general sense, but a select few within specific groups.

  • In the United States, “freedom” and “individual rights” are constantly emphasized, yet the real foundation of governance is the control of national destiny by wealthy elites. The state apparatus is deeply intertwined with capital interests, resulting in extreme wealth inequality and long-term monopolization of public resources. What once were citizens’ rights have now largely become consumer perks and the illusion of meaningful voting, completely detached from genuine self-governance.
  • In countries such as Russia and Iran, the stability of the regime relies on suppressing personal freedoms under the banner of “national security.” The slogan “people-centered” serves merely as a tool for maintaining control; in reality, governance is regime-centered.
  • In Middle Eastern monarchies and Southeast Asian family-based authoritarian systems, there is little talk of “people-centered” governance at all. The state operates directly on the basis of ruling power and oligarchic economic structures, with the “people” reduced to subjects of the throne or instruments for resource extraction.

The common thread in these systems is that the “people” in the logic of governance are never recognized as autonomous individuals with full political, economic, and social rights. Instead, they exist as objects of rule, merely softened with polite or positive language.

Slogans may abound, but the status of the people remains unclear. In reality, so-called “people-centered” governance is often just a rhetorical device through which those in power claim legitimacy from society—it is not a system genuinely based on citizens.

2. “Rule of law”—but what is actually being governed?

At first glance, “rule of law” appears to be the rational achievement of modern state governance. In reality, however, it is more often a mechanism for maintaining existing systems than a genuine model of governance. A nation may have a complete legal system and standardized procedures, but this does not necessarily mean it is well-governed. The reasons are as follows:

  • Law can itself be a tool of oppression.
    Nazi Germany had a comprehensive legal code, and South Africa under apartheid also acted “according to the law.” Yet in both cases, the law was not designed for all citizens—it served specific races or regimes.
  • Law is not neutral. it is a reflection of the underlying values behind the system.
    In capitalist nations, the law upholds private property as its highest value, while in authoritarian states, its foremost aim is to secure political order. In both cases, the rights of citizens are routinely sacrificed for the sake of “legitimacy.”
  • Rule of law cannot correct structural injustice.
    Laws are merely rules, but it is the institutions behind them that determine whether fairness is possible. If the design of these rules excludes the possibility of citizen participation, shared governance, and common good, then even the most complete legal system becomes nothing more than a pretext for procedural injustice.

In other words, the rule of law can maintain order, but it cannot create justice. When citizens are excluded from participating as the true subjects of law, the system becomes a softened form of power — a bloodless authoritarianism.

Although the rule of law is a basic element of modern governance, it remains a procedural mechanism rather than a governing paradigm. It preserves order but does not shape vision.

  • Nazi Germany had a complete legal system, yet it used law to kill with legitimacy.
  • During apartheid, South Africa enforced racial discrimination through law.
  • In many countries today, “national security laws” are used to restrict free expression and punish dissent — all justified as lawful governance.

These historical facts have revealed that:

  1. When legislation is controlled by non-civic mechanisms, the very perfection of law turns into a satire on justice.
  2. True law arises only from the collective will of citizens who share the right to shape their own governance.

In short, the rule of law is not an end in itself but a means. Without the core value of complete citizenship, it risks turning into a form of legalized oppression.

III. The real solution: a governance model centered on complete citizens

What does it mean to build a nation around its citizens? It is not a slogan but a systemic logic. it is a comprehensive reconstruction of social governance. There are five primary features:

  1. Recognition and protection of the “complete citizen”:
    A complete citizen possesses political decision-making power (such as legislative participation and the right to referendum), economic sovereignty (including labor dividends and public capital shares), social security (through welfare systems), and cultural freedom (a space for thought and expression free from oppression).
  2. Broad civic participation in governance:
    The operation of state power should be built on citizen assemblies, social consultation mechanisms, and local self-governance — not on administrative bureaucracies or oligarchic elites.
  3. Public resources open to all citizens:
    Education, healthcare, land, natinoal data, and finance should no longer be monopolized by the state or controlled by capital. They must be governed and shared through citizen trust systems.
  4. Institutional transparency and civic participation:
    All processes of institutional design should be open and transparent. Citizens should have the right to propose, veto, and amend policies through democratic mechanisms.
  5. Civilizational ethics and values above capital or security logic:
    The ultimate goal of governance should shift toward collective well-being and the sustainable growth of civilization, rather than mere economic expansion or authoritarian stability.

1. What is a complete citizen?

A complete citizen does not simply mean someone who holds official identification. It refers to an individual who is endowed with full rights to participate in, decide upon, and share the outcomes of state governance, including at least:

aspects Contents of Citizenship Rights
Political rights Right to vote and recall, right to propose public initiatives, participatory legislative rights, right to approve or veto via referendum
Economic rights Right to participate in national wealth distribution, share in public data dividends, receive dividends from state-owned capital, negotiate labor-related dividends
Social rights Access to basic welfare, fair access to education and healthcare, right to participate in social consultation mechanisms
Cultural rights Freedom of speech, freedom of intellectual and spiritual space, right to participate in the design of educational curricula

A complete citizen is not an abstract symbol, but a tangible force within the governance of the state.

Only when these rights are institutionalized, enforceable, and transparent do citizens truly become the masters of their nation.

2. Five institutional principles of citizen-centered governance

  1. Shared governance structure: Major state decisions, resource allocation, and budget use should be grounded in citizen assemblies, public forums, and local self-governance systems.
  2. Shared benefits system: Social wealth, including public capital, natural resources, and data assets, should be managed through a “citizen dividend fund,” distributing dividends to all citizens.
  3. Consensus mechanisms: Deliberative democracy should serve as the institutional core, avoiding one-size-fits-all mandates while accommodating diversity, differences, and balancing interests.
  4. Shared responsibilities: Citizens not only enjoy rights but also bear institutional responsibilities, such as supervising state power, participating in budget decisions, and protecting the environment.
  5. Shared goals: The objectives of governance should no longer be mere economic growth or regime stability, but rather civilizational well-being, social engagement, and institutional trust.

VI. The evolution of governance: from subjects to citizens, from control to co-governance

Modes of governance do not emerge overnight. They are the outcome of continuous historical evolution.

Stage Mode of governance Relation of subjects Characteristics
Feudal Monarch supremacy Subjects Law is the will of the monarch.
Theocracy – Divine monarchy Church or divine authority Faithful Governance based on religious principles
Constitutional monarchy Power shared with nobility and bourgeoisie Taxpayers Rights are hierarchical
Democratic republic Citizen co-governance Entire citizenry Establishment of representative institutions
Data governance (modern turning point) Information and platform controlled by tech oligarchs “Data subjects” Virtual enslavement
Citizen co-governance (future trend) Collaborative decision-making by all Complete citizens Technological empowerment and equitable governance

Conclusion: Governance built around complete citizens is not an abstract ideal. It provides a concrete way to counter information tyranny, centralized power, and capital domination.

V. Global governance models: who is advancing toward citizen-led co-governance?

Country/Region Characteristics of governance model Citizen status Advantages Risks
Switzerland Multi-level direct democracy high Strong local autonomy, high institutional trust, low corruption Slow decision-making, slow reform
Norway / Finland Social democracy high Fair welfare system, multiple platforms for participation High taxes, aging population burden, challenges in integrating immigrants
The United States Capitalist representative democracy / capital-driven democracy Medium-Low Diverse culture, robust legal system, freedom of speech, independent judiciary Wealth inequality, oligarchic control and monopolies, social polarization
Singapore Elite governance + rule of law, technocratic bureaucracy Medium High administrative efficiency, low corruption, high performance, low crime Weak democratic participation, limited citizen involvement, high control
Iran / Russia Authoritarian state, religion- or security-based governance Very low Apparent social stability, strong cultural mobilization Suppression of freedoms, inability to reform, institutional rigidity

The conclusion is simple: efficient governance does not equal a civilized society. Citizen status is the key factor in judging the quality of a governance model. The first benchmark of good governance is citizens’ institutional position, not economic output or political stability.

VI. The historical and civilizational necessity of citizen-centered governance

  • History moves from subjects to citizens, from domination to co-governance.
    Whether it was the French Revolution, the American War of Independence, or the democratic transitions in post-colonial states, the underlying essence has always been the pursuit of citizen agency.
  • With the rapid advancement of technology, governance need to return to human-centered collaboration.
    With AI, blockchain, and data governance, old-style centralized control is too expensive and hard to trust. A country can only be strong, open, efficient, and fair if citizens are actively involved in decision-making networks.

The society of the future will be one of co-governance, not mere regulation.
Global challenges—like climate change, pandemics, and resource scarcity—force countries to adopt universal participation mechanisms. Citizens should become the designers, implementers, and evaluators of institutions. Otherwise, the system loses its legitimacy.

VII. Systemic risks and future governance challenges

A citizen-centered governance model is not a “perfect state” and must confront several real-world challenges:

  • Populist polarization: Unrestricted citizen participation may lead to emotional politics and rising xenophobia.
  • Data monopoly: If AI, large models, and algorithmic platforms are not publicly owned, a new digital ruling class could emerge.
  • Governance fatigue: Without incentives and institutional feedback, citizen participation can fall into superficial democracy.
  • Fragmented governance: Diverse participation without top-level consensus may result in uncoordinated policies and localism.

The solution is to create a governance system that brings together deliberation, public data, civic education, and citizen responsibilities, enabling a virtuous cycle of co-governance.

Conclusion: The ultimate purpose of a state is not to rule, but to ensure the happiness of its people living together. The height of civilization is determined by the depth of its citizens’ participation.

Whether a country is truly “civilized” does not depend on how much wealth it produces or how strong its military is. It depends on whether every citizen is recognized as a genuine master of the state, whether institutional arrangements guarantee their rights to participate in governance, pursue happiness, and contribute to civilization—and whether these rights are actually exercised.

In other words, a civilized state acknowledges, institutionalizes, and empowers each citizen’s rights to governance, well-being, and participation in democracy.

The so-called citizen-centered governance model is not just a systemic innovation. It is a great return to the true purpose of the state—a community built by the people, for the people, and run together by the people.

In this era of institutional disputes, uncontrolled technology, and crossroads of civilization, we must take this decisive step: return power to the people, restore authority to the citizenry, and build a state that truly belongs to every complete citizen.

We must move beyond the hypocrisy of “people-centered” rhetoric and the partial logic of “rule of law,” and return to the simplest, yet the most powerful principle of governance: each person, as a complete citizen, co-governs, co-owns, and co-creates the civilization of their state.

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论现代信息殖民:社会公民言论自由与信息主权

Daohe · Jun 8, 2025

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病理的な社会における女性の苦境と、そこから抜け出すための道

Yicheng · Jun 5, 2025

病理的な社会において、「女性」とは、一個人の名称ではなく、制度と環境によって繰り返し利用され、傷つけられる、一つの存在構造を指します。彼女たちは、人類の再生産と継続という生物学的な本能を担いながら、文明が衰退し、秩序が腐敗し、欲望が横行するこの社会生態系の中で、最も迫害されやすく、最も操作されやすい集団となっています。 私たちが文明を語り、未来を語り、人類を語ろうとするならば、まず女性の運命を正視しなければなりません。なぜなら、女性の運命とは、ある社会の真相、体制、そして価値観を、その深層で映し出す鏡だからです。 一、病理的な社会による、女性への的を絞った抑圧 病理的な社会において、女性への抑圧は、しばしば最もコストが低く、最も効率的な統治方法の一つとなります。その背景には、三つの重要な理由があります。 第一に、女性が持つ妊娠・出産という能力が、彼女たちを環境の安定性に高く依存させる、という点です。 人類の歴史を通じて、女性は妊娠と育児の段階で、比較的安全な生活条件を必要としてきました。この長期にわたる現実が、不安定な環境下にある女性という集団を、権力構造が操作しやすい対象へと変えてきたのです。病理的な社会は、不安や焦燥感を創り出すことで、女性が安定を求める気持ちを、現行秩序への依存へと転換させます。 第二に、病理的な社会は、女性が目前の生活条件により注意を払う傾向があるという特性を利用し、制度変革への参加意欲を削ぎます。 家庭の世話や社会関係の維持といった責任を長期にわたって担う中で、女性という集団は、往々にして目に見える現実的な安全や資源を重視し、長期的な政治・経済構造への体系的な疑問を投げかけることには、なかなかエネルギーを注げません。 これは能力の問題ではなく、社会が構造的な配置を通じて強化した、役割の固定化なのです。 第三に、感情や人間関係のネットワークを利用して女性の判断に影響を与え、その独立した認知の空間を狭めます。 女性は日常生活において、親密な関係やコミュニティとの交流に、より頻繁に関与するため、世論や風潮、人間関係における期待といったものに影響されやすい傾向があります。病理的な社会は、まさにこの環境を利用し、外部の規範を、自己を律する内面的な制約へと変えさせることで、目に見えない管理体制を形成するのです。 こうして、病理的な社会は、一連の的を絞った管理手段を採用します。 1. 環境の不安定さを創出し、女性を長期的な不安と依存の状態に置く。 経済の不安定化、世論による恐怖の創出、社会の安全感の低下といった手段を通じて、女性に「安定」を希少な資源と見なさせ、それによって制度的な正義や改革への期待を低下させます。 2. 性的な関係を、物質化、通貨化、権力化し、女性の身体的・感情的な自律性を侵食する。 親密な関係を取引のように扱うことで、女性が配偶者選び、結婚、職場において、自らの身体や感情を「資源」や「交渉材料」として使うように仕向けます。これにより、本来個人に属する私的な領域が、社会的な交換の道具へと成り下がります。 3. 世論とステレオタイプな言説を利用し、女性の自己認識と判断力を削ぐ。 例えば、「女性は感情的だ」「女性は生まれつき虚栄心が強い」「女性は理性に欠ける」といったレッテルを貼ることで、社会のルールを疑う女性に自己不信を抱かせ、声を上げる勇気を奪い、最終的に現状に従順にさせ、不正を「正常」なこととして受け入れるように慣れさせていきます。 4. 出産への焦りや結婚への恐怖を利用し、心理的な枷を構築する。 「女性は結婚しないと誰からも相手にされなくなる」「女性は30歳までに子供を産まないと手遅れになる」といった社会的な物語は、自然発生的な観念ではありません。それは組織的かつ意図的に広められるものであり、女性が他の人生の選択肢を構想する勇気を失わせ、自らの潜在能力を発掘することを諦めさせ、「必要とされること」への不安の中で生きるように仕向けるのです。 二、病理的な社会は、いかにして女性を旧秩序の守護者へと変えるか 病理的な社会において、女性は多くの場合、抑圧メカニズムの最初の創作者ではありません。しかし、彼女たちはしばしば、その循環における受動的な「中継点」となります。彼女たちは、抑圧とリスクの中で生き残り、様々な「適応」戦略を取らざるを得ず、それによって、意図せずして既存の社会構造を存続させてしまうのです。 この現象の背後には、深層的な理由があります。 長期的な不安と支援の欠如という環境の中で、女性は保身のために、たとえそれが偽善的で、腐敗し、時には暴力的な傾向を帯びていたとしても、安全を提供してくれるように見える関係や構造を、本能的に守ろうとします。 例えば: これは、「邪悪」や「堕落」から来るものではなく、抑圧された条件下における、現実的な生存戦略なのです。しかし問題は、この戦略が集団的なレベルになると、元々の不公正な構造を逆説的に補強してしまい、本当に変革を望む人々が、至る所で妨害される結果を招きかねない点にあります。 さらに深層的なメカニズムは、女性がその役割の中で、抑圧的な方法を次世代へと伝達してしまうことです。 この時、女性が本来持っている、子孫を守り、環境の安定を維持しようとする本能が、かえって全体主義社会の暗い構造を守るための障壁となってしまいます。彼女たちは自分を守ることを望んだだけなのに、知らず知らずのうちに、旧秩序の「擁護者」であり「監視者」となっているのです。 そして、依然として正直さ、内省、そして独立した判断を追求する少数の人々は、しばしば衆人から「破壊分子」と見なされ、危険な不安定要素として、排斥と攻撃に晒されることになります。 三、病理的な社会による、両性の間の離間工作 人類の歴史の発展を概観すると、男性と女性は、本来、相互補完的な二つの力でした。 この相互補完性は、伝統的な環境下で、集団の生存能力を高めてきました。しかし現代社会では、協力の形態はとうに性別による分業の制限を突破しており、両性は本来、より多様で、共に利益を得られる社会構造を築くことができたはずです。 しかし、病理的な社会は、文化と世論を操作することを通じて、両性間の信頼を体系的に破壊し、集団全体の協力する力を削いでいきます。 1.ラベリングと汚名化: 流行りの言葉を利用し、複雑な人間関係を、軽蔑的なレッテルへと単純化します。そして、ソーシャルメディア上で感情的な対立を増幅させ続け、憎悪と誤解を創り出します。 2. 対立感情の扇動: アルゴリズムによる情報の推薦、意図的に編集された動画コンテンツ、文脈を無視した事例の紹介などを通じて、男女双方の防衛心理を絶えず刺激します。これにより、男性は次第に女性を嫌悪し、女性は次第に男性を憎むようになり、「男女間の対立」という幻想を創り出し、真の構造的な問題を覆い隠します。 3. 協力する意志の瓦解: 一度、信頼と共通認識が侵食されると、男性は理想主義や責任感を放棄し、シニシズムや逃避へと向かいやすくなります。一方で女性は、抑圧の中で短期的な安定を求め、未来に対する想像力や行動力を低下させる傾向が強まります。 4.真の敵の曖昧化: 性別が対立する陣営として扱われる時、個人の自由を搾取し、制度的な不公正を創り出している、真の体系的な構造は、影の中に隠れて漁夫の利を得ることができます。このような、本来向けるべきでない相手への攻撃は、集団が団結して圧力に対抗する能力を失わせ、内部での消耗に陥らせるだけです。 この種の操作は、両性が協力する可能性を完全に奪うものではありません。しかし、多くの社会の現実において、信頼、協力、そして共同で何かを築き上げるという文化的な基盤は、継続的に弱体化させられています。病理的な社会が作り出す誤解を冷静に見抜き、共通認識と敬意を再建することによってのみ、互いの信頼を修復し、社会の協力する能力を回復することができるのです。 四、病理的な社会は、いかにして女性が持つ本来の資質を歪めるか 女性は、種の進化の過程で、確かに、感情の感知能力が高い、保護欲が強い、共感や他者を安心させることに長けているなど、一連の社会的に価値のある資質を示してきました。健全な社会において、これらの資質は、本来、人間関係を維持し、対立を緩衝し、文明を育むための重要な力となるべきものです。 しかし、病理的な社会の構造的な操作の下で、これらの長所は意図的に歪曲され、時には武器として利用され、逆説的に抑圧と管理のメカニズムに奉仕させられます。 最終的に、女性が本来持っていた人間的な温かみのある資質は、かえって制度によって、抑圧的な構造を存続させるための道具として操作されてしまうのです。彼女たちはもはや、社会の潤滑油となり、関係を修復する重要な力ではなく、歪んだルールの中で内面的に消耗し、自己否定することを強いられます。 これは女性の問題ではありません。全体主義社会が、生物学的・心理的な傾向の違いを意図的に利用し、言葉の罠と社会的な期待を設定し、本来なら文明を促進するはずの力を、文明を消耗させる力へと転換させているのです。 五、深淵から抜け出すために:女性と社会の健全な関係をいかに再建するか 女性を救うとは、「彼女たちの代わりに決定してあげる」ことではありません。それは、女性を長期的に受動的で、利用される状態に置く、全体主義社会そのものを終わらせることです。これは、制度レベルでの修復であり、価値観と人間関係の再構築でもあります。実行可能な道筋には、以下が含まれます。 […]

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