This is an important tension to think through carefully, because there is a long activist history here, and a lot of current movements are stumbling into it half-consciously. The 20th century modernist imagination was heavily shaped by engineering thinking – identify the problem, build the system, apply the fix, and scale the solution.
That mindset gave us massive infrastructure, industrial production, bureaucratic governance, and later digital platforms. It also produced many disasters because human societies are not machines. A huge amount of modern activism inherited this engineering worldview without really questioning it. So every crisis became a platform problem, a governance mechanism problem, a moderation problem, a voting system problem, an algorithm problem, or a policy architecture problem.
The instinct became “If we design the correct system, good outcomes will emerge automatically.” But decades of activist and social movement experience show this does not work, as the deeper issue is usually cultural, social, and relational. People carry power relations, fear, trauma, status games, career incentives, institutional habits, and ideological baggage into every technical system they build.
So the system to often reproduces the same mess in new language. This is one of the reasons projects around sortition, citizens assemblies, mutual aid, facilitation, restorative practice, federation, commons governance, and horizontal organising have become more important in recent years. Not because they are “perfect systems”, but because they focus more on relationships, trust, participation, legitimacy, dialogue, and collective learning. That is a very different worldview, that facts alone do not create change, technical reports alone do not create legitimacy, and institutional systems often absorb criticism without transforming.
So we are now shifting toward social legitimacy tools like citizens assemblies, not because assemblies magically solve everything, but because they potentially rebuild collective ownership of decisions. The same thing happened in parts of the #Fediverse world, early federated governance conversations were often deeply “tech fix” oriented: moderation protocols, trust metrics, reputation systems, permission layers, safety tooling, formal governance stacks. Some of this matters, but over time many people discovered the real problems were social trust, burnout, informal hierarchy, hidden power, clique behaviour, conflict culture, and lack of shared norms. You cannot code your way out of those issues.
One #fashionista root to fix this has been the spreading of codes of conduct that emerged for good reasons to protect vulnerable people, to create safer participation, to challenge abusive behaviour long normalised in geek culture, and to make exclusion visible. That was and is often necessary, but there is also a danger when communities move from “shared social responsibility”
toward “rule enforcement culture” because hard rules to often become weapons inside power struggles.
This mess is full on in activist history – absolutely full of this mess of factional purges, ideological policing, moral performance, bureaucratic punishment, public shaming, procedural manipulation, and social control carried out in the name of safety or justice. This is not new, religious movements, revolutionary movements, academic institutions, NGOs, party politics, and online subcultures have all repeatedly fallen into this trap.
The danger is that communities begin replacing trust, mediation, political maturity, lived relationships with formalistic enforcement mechanisms. Then conflict stops being something people work through collectively and becomes something people weaponise institutionally. This creates exactly the kind of Sophist culture talked about in the last post – performance over dialogue, positioning over understanding, punishment over repair, and fear over trust. The difficult question is – how do you empower vulnerable people without creating rigid bureaucratic enforcement cultures?
There probably is no perfect answer to this, but historically healthier movements relied more on strong social norms, visible process, distributed responsibility, mediation, restorative approaches, practical accountability, and cultures of participation. Rather than endless rule expansion.
That path is messier and slower, but it scales better socially because it keeps people engaged in relationships rather than retreating into institutional enforcement. This is one reason the #4opens matter as social process rather than tech dogma. Open process does not magically prevent abuse or manipulation, but it reduces hidden power by making decisions visible and contestable.
The goal is not “perfect safety through rules”. The goal is healthier collective cultures capable of handling conflict, absorbing disagreement, resisting manipulation, protecting vulnerable people, and continuing to function without collapsing into purity wars or authoritarian management. That is probably the deeper shift from 20th century “tech fixes” toward 21st century “social fixes”.
Not by abandoning technology, but understanding that technology only works well when embedded inside healthy social processes. And right now, many movements are still trying to solve cultural problems with administrative machinery, which is one reason, so many spaces feel simultaneously over-managed and socially broken.


















