Three keys to civil society: power, responsibilities, and protection

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Yicheng · Apr 3, 2025
One of the greatest advancements of civilization today is not just the height of technology or the prosperity of cities, but the fact that people are finally being seen as an end rather than a means. When individuals transition from being ruled and managed to becoming thinking, vocal, and responsible members of society, we step […]

One of the greatest advancements of civilization today is not just the height of technology or the prosperity of cities, but the fact that people are finally being seen as an end rather than a means. When individuals transition from being ruled and managed to becoming thinking, vocal, and responsible members of society, we step into a new stage of civilization.

At this stage, being a citizen is no longer just a legal status—it is an ideal of character, an institutional role, and a way of existing in society. So, what should a citizen in a mature society possess? And what responsibilities should they take on?

This article puts it simply: power, responsibility, and protection are the three keys that define what it really means to be a citizen in a modern society. They are not only a recognition of rights, but also a call to duty—not only gifts of the system, but tools that forge personal character.

Take away any one of these, and the idea of citizenship falls apart. And without real citizens, you can’t have a truly civilized society.

1. Power: Being recognized means saying “I’m here” in the modern world

For most of human history, power was a privilege held by the few. The rest were managed, sacrificed, or forgotten. It wasn’t until the rise of the modern nation-state that we began to acknowledge a basic truth of civilization: every person has the right to take part in shaping their own future.

Citizen power isn’t a gift—it’s a birthright

Freedom of speech, the right to vote, to hold leaders accountable, to organize, to protest—these aren’t favors handed down by the state. They’re the foundation of the social contract. If a society expects people to follow laws, respect rules, and do their part, it must first give them a voice in creating those rules.

Power is what turns a citizen from a passive bystander into an active owner of society.

A true “modern human” is, above all, someone who has the right to speak up, the strength to stand against injustice, and are entitled to shape the future.

Power is the foundation of happiness

Without power, freedom can be silenced.

Without power, dignity can be crushed.

Without power, happiness becomes a favor—not a right.

Power is the first line of defense for happiness—it is what the system gives us to claim the way we want to live.

That’s why every citizen must understand: my power is proof that I exist. To defend it is not just about protecting myself—it’s about making sure the next generation can still live in the light.

2. Responsibility: Behind freedom lies our response to society

Civilization isn’t just built on “what I want”—it must also be built on “what I should do.”

Without responsibility, power turns into selfishness and abuse. Without accountability, freedom slips into emptiness and destruction.

In a civil society, responsibility isn’t something imposed from the outside—it comes from a place of personal maturity.

Citizen responsibility is an active response to the community

Paying taxes, serving in the military, following the law, caring about public affairs, participating in democracy, respecting others’ rights, supporting the vulnerable—these are not just legal requirements. They represent a core value: I am not just an individual; I am part of society. No one is an outsider. Every time someone chooses inaction, it’s a step toward society’s breakdown.

In a complex and diverse modern society, responsibility isn’t just the foundation for maintaining order—it is the invisible contract that allows trust to flourish among us all.

Responsibility is another path to freedom

Some people misunderstand freedom as “doing whatever I want,” but they forget that only those willing to take responsibility for their choices truly deserve freedom. Social freedom isn’t about “escaping control”—it is about understanding the goodwill behind the rules and asserting yourself within the boundaries.

A citizen’s responsibility reflects their freedom. It is not a form of constraint, but a self-imposed discipline—a weight we choose to bear for the people we care about and the causes we believe in.

3. Protection: The warmth of the system is the bottom line of civilization

While power and responsibility define the moral contract between individuals and society, protection is the system’s core promise to its citizens—it is the safety net that ensures no one falls through the cracks.

Citizen protection is the very reason for a modern state’s existence

No one should lose their dignity because of illness, lose hope because of poverty, or have their future taken away due to where they were born. Education, healthcare, social security, job opportunities, and fair justice are not just “perks”—they are the system’s way of showing basic respect for every individual.

A citizen without protection may have a vote, but lacks real existence; may have rights, but doesn’t live a life of dignity.

Protection doesn’t weaken a person’s abilities—it ensures that everyone has the chance to stand tall, with the strength to chase their own dreams.

Protection is the moral compass of the system

In a healthy society, no one should fall into despair due to poverty or illness, no one should be abandoned because of old age, and no one should have nowhere to turn after being wronged.

A true civil society ensures that every ordinary person—regardless of background, resources, or powerful connections—can live a life of respect and dignity.

This protection is not only the conscience of the system, but also the warmth of society and the very essence of civilization.

The Unity of Power, Responsibility, and Protection

Power, responsibility, and protection are an interdependent and mutually balanced organic whole:

  • Power without responsibility is enslavement.
  • Responsibility without power is abuse of power.
  • Power and responsibility without protection are empty structures.
  • Protection without power is charity.
  • Protection without responsibility is dependency.

Only when these three work together can true citizenship and the stability of modern society be achieved.

This is the fundamental logic of the modern state: power lifts people’s heads, responsibility upholds their dignity, and protection brings security.

Conclusion: Empowering Individuals, Illuminating Society

The greatness of civilization doesn’t lie in its power, but in its ability to ensure that ordinary people live lives filled with light and warmth.

The ideal of a civil society is this: to regain one’s voice through power, restore dignity through responsibility, and find security through protection.

Each of us is not only a part of this nation but also the master of this era. We have the right to say “no,” the responsibility to say “yes,” and the strength to stand tall without fear of being abandoned in the storm.

Power, responsibility, protection—these three swords of citizenship are not only gifts from modern society, but also the greatest legacy we can pass to the next generation.

Yicheng Commonweal sincerely wishes for everyone to become a citizen of light, wielding these three swords—lifting dignity through the system, defending freedom through responsibility, and securing happiness through protection.

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「利民」と「利国」の違い──現代国家統治の正道と秩序

Daohe · Jun 10, 2025

国家の存在理由は、スローガンでも領土でも GDP でもない。 国民の基本的権利を保障し、生活の尊厳を守り、幸福度を高めること――これだけが国家の存在意義である。 もし国家が強大でも国民が困窮し、国の栄光が語られても国民が不安に苛まれているのなら、その国家はうわべだけの空洞だ。見た目は繁栄していても、内部には問題が山積している。 したがって、「利国」と「利民」の本質的な違いを明確にし、「利民」を国家統治の唯一の正当性の根拠として確立することこそが、現代国家の安定・公正・持続的繁栄の前提となる。 Ⅰ. 「利国」と「利民」の矛盾とは何か 利国:国家規模の戦略、安全保障、経済成長、軍事的地位、国際的影響力など、システム全体の目標 利民:国民一人ひとりの収入、雇用保障、住宅・医療、言論の自由、司法の公正、公共福祉、人格の尊厳、政治参加の権利 本来であれば両者は一致すべきだが、権力運用と国家意思の実行過程で次のような構造的矛盾が生じやすい: これら構造的矛盾こそが「利国」優先政策の最大の弊害であり、国民にとっての真の敵である。 Ⅱ. 「利国」中心政策が孕む七つのリスク 表面的な国威や外交上の強硬姿勢を保つために、国民の権利を犠牲にする国家も存在する。こうした選択は、やがて七つの重大なリスクの種を撒くことになる: 1.社会的信頼の崩壊 国民が政府・制度・司法を信頼できず、行政命令が形骸化する。 2.貧富の極端な格差 国家戦略を名目に資源を独占した資本集団に富が集中し、貧困層はさらに貧しくなる。 3. 政治的正当性の危機 国家の公信力が失われ、制度への帰属意識が崩壊し、正当性の源泉が枯渇する。 4.社会不安の蔓延 住宅・雇用・教育・老後・医療のコストが高騰し、国民の心理的バランスが崩れる。 5.公共政策の硬直化 少数の特権層が政策を握り、修正メカニズムが働かず、矛盾が雪だるま式に増大する。 6.言論統制の逆効果 メディア抑制が国民の鬱憤を蓄積させ、「表面は静穏、地下では激流」という状況を生む。 7.長期的競争力の損失 イノベーションや文化創造力が枯渇し、国家は徐々に国際競争力を失う。 Ⅲ. 利民型国家の統治中核原則 真に現代的な国家統治には、国民本位の四大原則を確立しなければならない: 1. 民生優先の原則 財政はまず医療・教育・住宅・雇用・年金など、国民の基本的生活水準を保障することを最優先とする。 2. 権利保障の原則 憲法により、知る権利・表現の自由・政治参加権・監視権を明確に保障する。 3. 公共財政の透明原則 予算編成から執行、行政情報まで全面公開し、納税者が全過程を監督できる仕組みを整える。 4. 権力限定の原則 国家権力は法律によって厳格に拘束され、公権力は公共利益のためだけに行使される。私物化・道具化・世襲化を許さない。 Ⅳ. 合理的国家統治構造の全体図 「三元共治・双方制衡」の構造を確立する: 権力主体 機能定位 監督関係 国家政府 国家安全、財政調整、立法、外交 国民・メディア・議会による監督 市民社会 […]

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