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How Given Rules Shape Our Lives — and Why We Must Start Shaping Them
TL;DR
You’re optimizing inside policy environment you didn’t design. From birth to death, policy defines your reality — water, streets, pensions, rights. Most people stay default citizens. Policy Genome helps you co-design the system.
Most of us spend our lives working on ourselves. Be better. Move faster. Learn more. But we rarely stop to ask: what system are we working inside? Who set the rules? Who maintains the space we move through? It's called policy. But really, it's your environment. You can optimize yourself perfectly, but if the environment is toxic, broken, or designed against you, your optimization hits a ceiling. You breathe polluted air. Walk broken paths. Are banned from going where you want. You navigate systems built by others, for others. Most of us accept the policy environment like the weather — something that happens to us. But these environments aren't natural. They're designed. By people. People like us. This is default citizenship: living inside systems we didn't build and don't maintain. Your Life, From Birth to Burial The environment shapes you before you exist. Birth: Are abortions legal? What prenatal care is covered? How are you born? These aren't medical questions. They're policy settings. Adulthood: Who can you marry? One person or several? Same gender or different? Can you divorce? Adopt? Choose to be childless? Even death: How can you be buried? Who decides what happens to your body? Between birth and burial: the air quality, water safety, street design, internet access, healthcare systems, pension rules. You didn't choose these settings. But they choose much of your life. We Are All Default Users Most of us become default citizens. We use the system but don't edit it. Follow the paths but don't build them. Breathe the air but don't check who controls its quality. We think voting is engagement. But voting is like having one voice in a conversation that happens every few years. Meanwhile, policy gets shaped daily— in hearings, meetings, media, and direct communication. Voting is important. But it's like thinking you influence a software product by rating it once a year, while never reporting bugs, suggesting features, or engaging with the development process. We treat the environment like physics — unchangeable laws we must work around. But policy isn't physics. It's collective software that runs on human agreement. Policy Environments Can Collapse Iran, 1970s: Women in bikinis. University professors. Jazz clubs. Liberal cities. Iran, 2020s: Mandatory hijab. Morality police. Women killed for showing hair. One generation. Same country. Different environment. The majority focuses on personal lives while the system transforms around them. No country is immune. Rights expand — and contract. Freedoms grow — and fade. Democracy strengthens — and breaks. Policy changes because someone deliberately changes it. Often, it's not those acting for the common good — it's those with ambition, power, and intent. When the majority doesn’t maintain the environment, a small minority ends up designing it. Usually not in everyone’s favor.
Policy Shapes the Economy and Progress
In 2024, Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson won the Nobel Prize for proving something remarkable: inclusive institutions create wealth (the idea explained in their bestselling book Why Nations Fail). They showed that countries with institutions characterized by broad political participation — where more different people shape policy — consistently achieve higher economic development. Exclusive systems are fragile and closed to innovation. Inclusive ones attract investment, fuel opportunities, create entirely new industries. When governments open datasets, whole startup ecosystems emerge. Banks, insurance companies, and businesses build services on newly accessible public data. This isn't redistribution — it's wealth creation. The policy environment doesn't just regulate the economy. It creates economic possibility.
The Myth of Individual Solutions
You've been told the problem is you. Work harder. Be more productive. Take responsibility. But what if you're the best driver in the world, and the road leads off a cliff? You can have perfect personal habits, but if the environment lacks clean water, your health suffers. You can be brilliantly educated, but if the economy is designed to concentrate wealth, your skills might not matter. You can be the most enlightened person alive, but if the system around you turns authoritarian, your enlightenment lives in a cage. Individual optimization is necessary. But it's not sufficient. This isn't just theory — it works for everyone, from ordinary citizens to oligarchs. In countries with weak transparency and broken courts, even vast assets are worth a fraction of what they could be under better rules. Improving the policy environment can grow wealth more than chasing an extra percentage point of return or tweaking a portfolio. It's the infrastructure of prosperity. The direction of the platform matters more than how well you move on it.
What Actually Works
Small groups create massive change. I've seen it firsthand: A two-year campaign by five to ten people opened financial reports of every business in our country. Zero budget. Millions now use this data monthly. Entire new services emerged — banks checking counterparts, insurance companies assessing risk, startups building transparency tools. Another example: Legal experts from NGOs drafted legislation decriminalizing adult content. The bill now has 20+ parliamentary supporters. An issue once absent from high-level political debate is now on the national agenda — and even featured in The New York Times. These weren't revolutions. They were environmental maintenance. With AI, the leverage is exponential. You can now analyze court decisions for bias, track conflicts of interest, and monitor public affairs — work that once required armies of researchers now takes hours. Or even no time at all when automated, like channels that autopost court sentence summaries. System-level change used to require specialized expertise. Now AI democratizes the tools. The question isn't whether massive change is possible — it's whether enough people will claim these tools while they can.
Policy Genome
This launches Policy Genome — a platform for the new policy approaches. Traditional policy work excludes regular people by design. We're building accessible tools, clearer interfaces, better ways to engage. Policy should be as intuitive as the technology we use daily. If you want to see working AI policy solutions, bring ideas, resources, networks, skills — connect with us. Support grassroots initiatives over traditional institutions that deliver photo opportunities instead of results. The policy environment is editable. Today. By you.
The Choice
You're already living inside the policy environment. Every day. You already breathe its rules, walk its paths, rely on its systems. It's great to optimize your life. But it's even more exciting to shape the system it runs in. The question isn't whether to engage. You're already engaged. The question is whether to stay a default user or become a co-developer. Stop auto-renewing default citizenship subscription. Policy Genome creates tools and insights for a healthier policy environment. Connect with us to help design the future we'll all live inside.