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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台湾の大規模罷免運動:私たちは彼らを選べても、罷免は決してできないのか?

台湾の大規模罷免運動:私たちは彼らを選べても、罷免は決してできないのか?

Kishou · Jul 24, 2025

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台湾大罢免:我们能选他们,却永远罢不掉他们?

台湾大罢免:我们能选他们,却永远罢不掉他们?

Kishou · Jul 24, 2025

一乘公益 出品 我们将持续关注世界民主制度的深层改革议题。 附:台湾罢免制度的十大修正建议 引言: 在多数民主国家,人民拥有“投票选人”的权利,却极难“中途罢人”。 这不是偶然,而是制度设计上的“内建屏障”。以台湾近年来接连爆发的罢免案为例,我们可以清晰地看到:罢免制度在操作上几近瘫痪,民意被制度性冷处理,政治责任几乎无法追究。 这背后,是一个更深刻的民主命题: 没有罢免权的民主,是失控的授权; 没有有效罢免机制的制度,只是表演性的政治。 一、台湾的罢免困局:现实层面的“合法无效” 案例1:陈柏惟罢免案(2021) 案例2:黄捷罢免案(2021) 案例3:钟东锦罢免案(2024) 这些案例说明:制度虽开罢免口子,实际却构建了“防罢免机制”。 二、为什么罢免制度“名存实亡”?台湾的五重制度性障碍 1. 程序复杂,门槛奇高 问题在于:制度把“罢免”变成了专业战争,普通人难以介入。 2. 政党绑架与政治极化,令罢免沦为选战延长线 罢免的本义是制度自清,却被政党当作政治互打工具。 3. 民众动员结构解体,行动力被高度分散 现代民主社会里,个体虽“自由”,但“孤立”。 4. 媒体生态异化,言论空间制造假民意 媒体不再引导公民判断,而是在协助政党定调。 5. 罢免之后,无制度性善后,导致民众恐惧动荡 民众需要的是“负责任的纠错机制”,不是混乱后的政治空转。 三、民主必须有“完整的罢免机制” 如果民主是一辆公共列车,选举是上车,罢免就是刹车。 一个没有刹车系统的民主,不是自由的制度,而是制度性失控。 ▶ 完整的罢免机制应包含五个构件: 构件 功能 台湾现状 优化建议 ① 易启动 民众能发起,无需政党支援 极高门槛 降低第一阶段门槛至0.5% ② 公正审查 联署、资格、公文全程公开 行政权审查模糊 建立跨党独立罢免委员会 ③ 非政党操控 去党化动员 政党完全主导罢免动员 限制政党使用行政资源介入罢免 […]

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