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Lately, I've been reviewing governance proposals while drawing flowers, and the more I look, the more I feel that "delegated voting" is a bit like handing the keys to the person who seems to understand the most. As a result, it gradually turns into a few addresses making all the decisions. On the surface, it's community governance, but in reality, many people just cast their votes to save effort, and whether the proposal actually benefits someone or not, frankly, they might not understand or bother to follow.
It's more like the current memes and celebrity shoutouts—when attention shifts, newcomers rush in, and veteran players sigh: don't take the last baton. Governance is the same; when it's lively, everyone is a "citizen," but when things cool down, only "oligarchs" are left voting.
My current approach is pretty cautious: I don't stay up late watching votes, I don't heavily stake governance tokens, I just vote a little myself when I can, at least to keep my mind at ease. Anyway, what I've learned isn't about techniques, but about not confusing "participation" with "control."