Voting vs. decision-making: Understanding their roles in civilization

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Kishou · Jun 11, 2025
This article explores the fundamental difference between voting and decision-making. Voting reflects the distribution of power and interests, while decision-making requires a small group of people with strategic competence. When these two are blurred, decisions risk becoming shortsighted and driven by emotion, leading to power imbalances that ultimately weaken social governance.

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Throughout history—whether under monarchy, aristocratic republic, or modern democracy—societies have grappled with an age-old and complex question: who should make decisions, on what grounds, and for what ends. As communities grow larger, interests more tangled, and social structures more diverse, mechanisms are needed to bring individual will, resources, and collective goals into alignment.
At first glance, voting seems to provide a way to “gather the will of the people.” Yet in reality, voting has never been the same as decision-making, and voters themselves cannot truly serve as decision-makers. When the two are mistaken for one another, serious consequences inevitably follow.
This article examines this hidden but central mechanism of human governance by addressing four dimensions: the plural nature of voting, the professional nature of decision-making, the functional boundaries between them, and the social consequences of their conflation.

I. Voting: a mirror of will, interests, and resource distribution

Voting serves as a channel for expressing collective will and revealing how interests and resources are inclined to be distributed.In essence, it is a psychological mirror of the group and a projection of resource dynamics, but it is never decision-making itself.To treat voting as the basis of decision-making, or or even as a substitute for them, is to fall into institutional shortsightedness and a step backward in civilization.
In general, voting can be categorized into five basic forms:

  1. Capital-interest voting
    This is the type of voting that really decides outcomes. Throughout history, control over military power, money, and material resources has always determined how organizations function and what strategies they can pursue. Whoever controls the capital holds the real power.
    Unlike public elections, this voting is usually hidden. The “votes” of military-industrial groups, financial elites, and energy companies may never be visible, yet they shape national security policies, economic directions, and even decisions on war and peace. Its hidden nature and resource bias make it the true locus of power within any system.
  2. Civic-moral voting
    This type of voting shapes a group’s cohesion, sense of identity, and long-term stability. It reflects a society’s ideology, moral standards, corporate culture, and national spirit. Abstract though it may seem, it has a direct impact on the legitimacy of decisions and their ability to be sustained over time.
    When a nation loses the support of its people, an army lacks conviction, or a company loses its cultural foundation, failure becomes inevitable. The significance of civic-moral voting lies in its role as a source of validation for leaders’ decisions—determining whether a decision can endure and whether people are willing to bear the costs it entails.
  3. Expertise voting
    In a professional society, the support of skilled individuals often determines whether a decision can work out. Engineers, scientists, medical staff, military officers, lawyers, and other specialists collectively cast what can be called a “skills-based vote.” They do not make the decisions themselves, but they determine whether a decision is feasible.
    If a nation, organization, or company ignores this form of voting and acts blindly, it risks technical gaps, failed implementation, and strategic breakdowns. Skills-based voting not only aggregates professional judgment but also serves as an early-warning system, signaling future trend and viable paths.
  4. Political-orientation voting
    This form of voting captures society’s feelings about the present and expectations for the future. People express their support for radical reforms or cautious conservatism, for expansionist policies or peaceful restraint, through ballots, polls, petitions, and public opinion.
    While political voting can be unpredictable and influenced by emotions, it plays a crucial role in guiding a nation’s strategic adjustments and maintaining internal stability. It provides important context for decision-making, but it should never override professional strategic judgment.
  5. Personal-affection voting
    This is the narrowest, riskiest, and most easily abused type of voting. Favoring friends, letting emotions guide decisions, or putting personal connections above merit is common in organizations, companies, and even governments.
    Personal-affection voting can seriously damage institutions. It often lets incompetent people rise to power and rewards the wrong individuals. If too much authority is decided this way, efficiency collapses, nepotism and factional infighting take over, and organizations or states can end up as little more than empty shells.

II. Decision-making: responsibility, insight, and strategic accountability

Unlike voting, decision-making is carried out by a small group of individuals who possess strategic capability, a global perspective, and the authority to act. They weigh the results of various votes, environmental factors, and available resources to make choices and issue directives.

  1. The essence of decision-making
    Decision-making is not just adding up votes or public opinion. It is about filtering information through reason and setting a clear strategic direction. Good decision-makers must have the courage to go against popular sentiment, face risks head-on, and take responsibility for the results. Exceptional decision-makers never aim to please every vote; instead, they prioritize the survival of the group and the long-term strategic goals of the organization, charting a sustainable path forward.
  2. Decision-making direction
    Voting results are just reference points. Decision-makers need to weigh practical limits, potential risks, international situations, and the balance of power at home and abroad to decide the right course: which way to move, whether to attack or defend, whether to act quickly or cautiously. If the direction is wrong, all efforts can fail.
  3. Purpose of decision-making
    Every decision needs a clear goal: is it meant to preserve strength or gain advantage, to balance different factions or suppress rivals? Without a clear purpose, strategy has no foundation, and execution has no direction. Most voters cannot grasp these complexities, which is why they should not be the ones making the decisions.
  4. Decision implementation and presentation
    Carrying out a decision is not just blindly following orders. It means turning a complex plan into concrete steps, and coordinating its execution across different stages, regions, and groups.
    Presentation matters too. Internally, it builds confidence and stability; externally, it shows strength and determination. Both execution and presentation are essential—without either, even the smartest plan can fail.

III. The consequences of confusing voters with decision-makers

When voters and decision-makers are treated as one, several serious problems arise:
● Short-sighted opportunism: Decisions are driven by immediate public opinion, often at the expense of long-term interests.
● Emotional rule: Highly charged groups sway decisions, fueling political populism and weakening governance.
● Fragmented power: Voters representing capital, skills, values, or personal ties compete for influence, splintering authority and preventing unified action.
● Reverse selection: When personal-affection voting dominates, the incompetent rise to power while those with real strategic ability are sidelined.
History demonstrates that systems where “the public directly decides major state affairs” tend to fall into extremes or collapse from internal conflict. Examples include the Greek city-states, late Rome, the French Revolution, and some modern nations.

IV. Conclusion: the principle of division in civilized governance

Voting is for expressing opinion, while decision-making is for taking responsibility. Keeping them separate is the foundation of a stable and civilized system. Voters shape the environment and available resources, while decision-makers use strategic judgment to make the final call.
The more advanced a civilization, the more refined this division of labor becomes. Mature communities use voting to gauge public will, decision-making to set direction, execution to test results, and oversight to correct mistakes. In contrast, weak or crude systems confuse votes with decisions and treat decisions as mere bargaining, ultimately risking collapse.
May readers of this article understand the logic of sound institutions, recognize the distinction between voting and decision-making, and avoid being swept up by emotion or dragged down by mediocrity.

 

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「完全な市民」を中核とする統治モデル

「完全な市民」を中核とする統治モデル

Daohe · Aug 7, 2025

——文明政治の制度的指針と歴史的必然 一乘公益 作品 真に国を愛する者たちへ 一、序論:真の国家統治は、誰に帰属するのか? 今日、世界のほぼすべての国家が、その政治宣言に「人間本位」や「法治国家」といった壮大なスローガンを刻み込んでいます。それらの言葉を掲げるだけで、自らが文明の頂点にいるかのような正当性を得られる、とさえ考えられているかのようです。 しかし、真実は往々にしてその逆です。これらの言葉は、特定の体制を正当化し、あるいは特権構造を維持するためのレトリックとして機能することが多く、その根底にある論理は万人のためではなく、ごく少数の者たち——すなわち政権エリート、資本家オリガーキー、あるいは文化エリート——に奉仕しているのが実情です。 今こそ、我々は長らく回避されてきた問いを立てなければなりません。国家統治は、一体誰を中核に据えるべきなのか。それこそが正しく、効率的で、文明的な道なのであると。 答えはおそらく複雑ではありません。国家の真の主人は、政治、経済、社会、そして文化における共同統治権を持つ、一人ひとりの「完全な市民」でなければならないのです。 本稿は、理論的論理と現実の事例に基づき、偽りの「人間本位」と偽りの「法治」の実態を解き明かし、未来の文明進化の方向性に合致する制度的パラダイムとして「『完全な市民』を中核とする統治モデル」を提示するものです。 二、偽りの「人間本位」と偽りの「法治」:制度という仮面の下の真実 (一) 「人間本位」とは、実際には誰のためか? 我々は「人間本位」というスローガンだけで、その国家が文明的であるかを判断することはできません。なぜなら、ここで言う「人間」とは、普遍的な意味での市民個人ではなく、特定の集団から選ばれた少数者であることが多いからです。 これらのモデルの共通点は、統治の論理において「人間」の地位が、完全な「政治的権利、経済的権利、社会的権利を持つ自律した個人」として明確に定義されておらず、単に統治される「客体」として、穏健な言葉で覆い隠されている点にあります。 スローガンは数あれど、国民の地位は常に曖昧なままです。いわゆる「人間本位」とは、国家管理者が社会から正当性を得るためのレトリックであり、制度としての「市民本位」ではないのです。 (二) 「法治国家」とは、一体何を治めているのか? 「法治国家」は近代的な国家統治の理性的成果に見えます。しかし、その実態は真の統治パラダイムというより、既存の制度を維持するためのメカニズムであることが多いのです。たとえ法体系が完備され、手続きが規範化されていても、その国家が「良く統治されている」とは限りません。なぜなら、 言い換えれば、「法治」は秩序を維持できますが、それ自体が正義を生み出すわけではないのです。市民という主体が不在の法治は、いわば「血を流さない専制」とも呼べる、権力の穏健な外装となり得ます。 同時に、「法治」は近代国家統治の基本的なコンセンサスではありますが、それ自体が統治モデルを構成するわけではありません。それは方向性を決定するのではなく、秩序を維持するための、いわばシステムの操作マニュアルに近いのです。 これは以下の事実を示唆しています。 要するに、法治は目的ではなく、手段です。「完全な市民」を中核とする制度的価値がなければ、法そのものが「合法的専制」の道具と化す危険性をはらんでいるのです。 三、真の出口:「完全な市民」を中核とする統治モデル 「『完全な市民』を中核とする統治モデル」とは何でしょうか。それはスローガンではなく、制度の論理であり、社会統治構造の全面的な再構築です。そこには五つの核心的特徴があります。 (一)「完全な市民」とは何か? 「完全な市民」とは、単に「身分証明書を持つ者」ではありません。国家統治において、構造全体への参加権、決定権、そして分配権を持つ者を指します。その権利には、少なくとも以下が含まれます。 次元 市民権の内容 政治的権利 選挙権、リコール権、公共政策提案権、参加型立法権、国民投票による拒否権 経済的権利 国家の富の分配への共同参加権、公共データの利益分配、国家資本の配当権、労働利益の協議権 社会的権利 基礎的福祉保障、教育・医療への公正なアクセス、社会協議メカニズムへの参加 文化的権利 言論の自由、精神的空間の自由、教育カリキュラム設計への参加権 「完全な市民」は抽象的な記号ではなく、国家制度において実在する統治の力なのです。 これらの権利が制度化され、実行可能となり、公開されて初めて、市民は真に国家の主人となるのです。 (二)「市民を中核とする」五大制度原則 四、制度進化の歴史的論理:臣民から市民へ、統治から共治へ 統治のあり方は一夜にして形成されるものではなく、歴史の中で絶えず進化してきました。 段階 統治モデル 主体関係 特徴 古代封建 君主至上主義 君主ー臣民 法は君主の命令 神権政治 教会または神の権威 権威ー信者 教義による統治 立憲君主制 […]

以完整公民为核心的治国模式

以完整公民为核心的治国模式

Daohe · Aug 7, 2025

——文明政治的制度方向与历史必然 一乘公益 出品 写给那些真正爱国的人。 一、开篇:真正的国家治理,属于谁? 当今世界,几乎所有国家的政治宣言中都镌刻着“以人为本”、“依法治国”之类的宏伟口号。仿佛一旦贴上这些标签,就自动站到了文明的制高点。然而,真相往往相反:这些术语更多成为粉饰专制或维持特权结构的制度话术,其底层逻辑并非服务于所有人,而是服务于少数人——政权集团、资本寡头或文化精英。 而今,我们必须提出一个被长期回避的问题:治国,究竟该以谁为核心?才是正确、高效、文明的。 答案也许并不复杂:国家的真正主人,必须是每一位拥有政治、经济、社会与文化共治理权的“完整公民”。 本篇文章将从理论逻辑与现实案例出发,系统驳斥伪“以人为本”与伪“依法治国”之荒诞,并提出“以完整公民为核心的治国模式”这一符合未来文明演进方向的制度范式。 二、伪“以人为本”与伪“依法治国”:制度假面下的真实运作 (一)“以人为本”,实际是谁为本? 我们不能仅凭“以人为本”的口号判断一个国家是否文明。因为这个“人”,往往不是普遍意义上的公民个体,而是特定集团中被选中的少数人。 这些模式的共通点在于:治国逻辑中“人”的地位从未明确为具备完整“政治权利、经济权利、社会权利的自主个体”,而是一种被统治的“对象”,只不过被用温和语境加以包装罢了。 口号虽多,人民地位始终模糊。实际上,所谓“人本”,只是国家管理者从社会获取合法性的一种话术包装,而不是制度上的“以公民为本”。 (二)“依法治国”,究竟在治什么? “依法治国”看似是现代国家治理的理性成果,但实质上,它更多是一种制度维护机制,而非一种真正的治国范式。一个国家即使法律体系完备、程序规范,也并不代表它“治理得好”。因为: 换句话说,“依法治国”只能维持秩序,却无法生成正义。缺乏公民主体参与的法治,是权力温和化的外壳,是不流血的专制。 同时“依法治国”是现代国家治理的基本共识,但它本身并不能构成治国模式。它更像是一个系统操作标准:维持秩序,而非决定方向。 这说明: 简言之,法治不是目的,只是手段。没有以完整公民为核心的制度价值,法本身就可沦为“合法暴政”的工具。 三、真正的出路:以完整公民为核心的治国模式 什么是“以公民为核心的治国模式”?这不是一句口号,而是一种制度逻辑、一种社会治理结构的全面重构。它有五大核心特征: (一)什么是“完整公民”? 完整公民并非指“有身份证”的人,而是指在国家治理中具有全结构参与权、决定权与分享权的人,其权利至少包含: 维度 公民权内容 政治权 选举权、罢免权、公共事务提案权、参与式立法权、公投否决权 经济权 共同参与国家财富分配权、公共数据红利分享、国家资本股权分红、劳动红利协商权 社会权 基本福利保障、教育医疗公平获取、社会协商参与机制 文化权 言论自由、精神空间自由、教育课程参与设计权 完整公民不是抽象符号,而是国家制度中实际存在的治理力量。 只有当这些权利制度化、可行化、公开化,公民才真正成为国家的主人。 (二)“以公民为核心”的五大制度原则: 四、制度演化的历史逻辑:从臣民到公民,从统治到共治 治国方式并非一夜形成,而是历史不断进化的结果: 阶段 治理模式 主体关系 特征 古代封建 君主至上 臣民 法即皇命 神权-君权 教会或神授权威 信众 依教治国 君主立宪 贵族与资产阶级分享权力 纳税人 权利有等级 […]

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