To supplement what
@Kai Robinson just said, I'd like to add that I've lived in Japan since 1994, and I can tell you the single word that describes Japanese culture is this: RULES. It's all about spoken and unspoken rules, regulations, laws and a complex organizational structure that keeps society here largely running well, but at a cost to individual citizens. Many Japanese experience freedom from the endless rules and structure for the first time when they choose to live overseas. There are still rules and societal order in countries outside Japan, yet often on a lesser scale, resulting in a greater feeling of freedom. Those who prefer endless rules and structure eventually return to the security Japan's rules and structure offers. Those who prefer a greater degree of freedom (yes, at a cost, of course), often choose to remain outside Japan. I don't necessarily like all the rules and structure, but I've grown to accept it and is why I remain living here.
Those words I just wrote aren't speaking good or bad about Japan so much as it speaks about rules and order in a way that I personally have experienced for over 31 years. When you live in a society which pounds on the rules for that long, it's only natural you will ask how many rules are actually needed? How much structure is required for societal cohesion? How many leadership roles are needed to govern, and what powers and term limits must apply to them? What are all those rules and all that organizational structure trying to achieve, and can that be achieved with more rules and structure or less?
On a much smaller scale, those are the same sort of questions before us in this thread, which need to be considered in light of what Kai just said.
In the future, when the founders are no longer with us (in the land of the living) and when all existing board members which serve now are gone, it will be up to people from the community at that point in time to determine what is or isn't needed to govern this forum. There will be no influence from the original founders at all then. Even so, the community doesn't need to wait decades for that to happen, We've had board member elections since our Fall 2021 founding. Not may names were cast into the pot of candidates, and to be honest, there were not a tremendous number of votes cast for those vying for a board position. Indeed, in a more recent election, I felt compelled to seek out responsible people I personally knew from the community to ask them if they might consider running for a board seat. Most declined. Only one agreed, and he was elected to the board.
So in terms of what we need, I would say it is "participation." No participation means apathy. And when apathy takes hold, it won't bode well for this forum in general, just just in terms of its organizational structure.
I as one man cannot
MAKE people want to be on the board or vote or donate or any of that. I can try. But I cannot force them to do that. This forum was created by people from the community who volunteered their time for the good of the community, and it must continue to be people from the community to keep this great forum alive, make new rules, creation new leadership positions, or even do the reverse and eliminate some rules and/or positions, as is partly the case now, and is the subject of this thread.
It's natural to fear change. It's natural to compare with other organizations and in so doing over-analyze. But at the end of the day, this change won't be etched in stone for all time. The board has members with limited terms and as new board members take over, they will hold votes and decide whether or not to re-evaluate past decisions. This is why I voted in support of what the board recommended in this thread, because I know it's not an eternal decision.
I don't think the debate about the decision of this vote will end, and that's okay. Indeed, I think it's a great "sign of life." Because if there was no debate, and if only a scant few people voted, it would be concerning. And on that topic, as of the time of this writing, only 69 people in total have voted. This forum has just over 3100 registered members, translating into a 2% voter turnout thus far.