$PEP Decentralization Movement



Decentralized communities fundamentally rely on spontaneous order, consensus mechanisms, and individual autonomy. When a strong personal cult or deification movement emerges, it usually leads to the following critical issues:

Power Re-centralization: No matter how selfless this “god” was initially, as long as the community ties decision-making authority, moral authority, and public opinion guidance to one person, it effectively turns the decentralized network into a de facto centralized structure. The nodes are still many, but all listen to a single voice, which is no different from traditional hierarchical systems.

Single Point of Failure (SPOF): Humans make mistakes, become emotional, age, die, get bought, or are threatened. If this deified person crashes (moral collapse, hacking, control, or simple misjudgment), the entire community’s trust can collapse instantly—worse than a centralized institution’s failure—because everyone originally believed they were “centerless.”

Expulsion of Dissent and Involution: Deification inevitably comes with “guardians” and “heresy trials.” Anyone questioning the leader will be labeled a “divisive element” or “disloyal.” Over time, the community is left with only sycophants and those afraid to speak, causing creativity and resilience to rapidly diminish.

Successor Crisis: When the “god” dies or steps back, who inherits the halo? Most likely, the community will split into factions fighting each other, ultimately either dissolving entirely or being taken over by a new, stronger “god” (often capital or external forces).

Historically, decentralized movements that aim for longevity—such as open-source communities, crypto punks, early Bitcoin communities, and certain autonomous organizations—are highly wary of personal cults. Linus Torvalds, no matter how irritable, was never called “Emperor Linus”; Satoshi Nakamoto simply disappeared, exemplifying the most sophisticated form of decentralization; Vitalik Buterin, despite his influence, repeatedly emphasizes “I am just an ordinary developer, Ethereum does not belong to me.”

A truly decentralized community should worship rules, code, culture, and ideas, not flesh and blood. Elevating a person to a god seems to foster consensus, but in reality, it is burying decentralization by hand.

So the saying is very true: “In a decentralized community, there can be heroes; in a decentralized community, there are only maintainers.” Heroes are venerated, but maintainers are replaceable—that’s healthy.

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