
The hardest thing in the world is convincing other people who are just as convinced they’re right. That’s why blockchain governance is such a mess: at its core, it’s not really about tech—it’s about human nature. Ego, greed, tribalism, pride, and conflicting interests.
Both PoW (Proof-of-Work) and PoS (Proof-of-Stake) governance sound fair and decentralized on paper, but in reality, they’re kind of like kids playing a game with oversized toys:
• PoW: Whoever has the most computing power wins the vote. In practice? A handful of big mining pools control everything. No real debate needed—just outspend everyone else. Small miners? They barely get a say.
• PoS: Whoever holds the most coins gets the biggest vote. Even more direct: the rich get richer, and one whale’s vote can outweigh thousands of small holders. Want to convince a big stakeholder to change the rules? Good luck—unless it makes them richer, why would they listen?
Both systems basically replace actual discussion and compromise with raw economic power. They pretend “majority rules” solves everything, but humans don’t work that way:
• We form tribes and gangs.
• We dig in our heels even when we’re wrong.
• We’ll burn the whole house down just to save face (remember the Bitcoin block size war that split into BTC and BCH?).
• We pretend to be neutral while quietly pushing our own interests.
So pure on-chain voting—whether PoW or PoS—always ends up as “might makes right.” It never truly solves the ancient human problem: how do you get a group of stubborn, self-interested people to cooperate peacefully over the long term?
The big systems that actually work in the real world—governments, corporations, even ICANN for internet domains—don’t rely purely on voting or money power. They succeed because they eventually add structures that go beyond brute economic force:
• Laws and courts (with real enforcement)
• Formal organizations and clear rules
• Checks and balances (different groups watching each other)
• A shared higher goal that transcends personal gain (like “we can’t let the whole internet break”)
If blockchain wants to grow up and become real infrastructure, it has to face this truth sooner or later: PoW/PoS “whoever has more wins” rules are just toys—they can’t withstand the full weight of human nature.
It’ll either stay stuck in a kindergarten of endless arguments, forks, and drama… or it’ll have to add real institutional and legal governance, even if the purists scream “betrayal of decentralization!”
You’re spot on: accepting that humans are flawed is a million times harder than inventing fancy tech.
Leave a Reply