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    <title>Archit Sharma Blog</title>
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    <item><title>Leaderless Power: Who’s responsible when a crowd does harm?</title><link>https://architsharma.me/blog/leaderless-power.html</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://architsharma.me/blog/leaderless-power.html</guid><pubDate>Sun, 15 Mar 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate><author>hello@architsharma.me (Archit Sharma)</author><description><![CDATA[<p>A short note on how crowds form, move, and blur responsibility.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I keep returning to a question that feels both moral and practical: if a crowd causes harm without a single visible leader, where does responsibility sit?</p>
<p>!![amber] Leaderless harm is not responsibility-free harm. It is harder to pin down, not impossible to judge.</p>
<p>Here are the core points that shape how I think about it:</p>
<ul>
<li>We normally fear the touch of strangers, but the crowd is the place where that fear flips into its opposite. In the crowd, the ==amber:fear of touch falls away==.</li>
<li>Crowds are equalizing forces: inside them, ==blue:social distinctions are flattened==, at least for a time.</li>
<li>The open crowd is “natural” and survives by ==green:growth==; it exists only as long as it keeps growing, and it disintegrates when it stops.</li>
<li>The closed crowd does the opposite: it trades growth for ==blue:permanence== and can be reassembled.</li>
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<p>Taken together, this makes “leaderless” harm feel less mysterious. The crowd equalizes individuals, and (when open) survives by growth. When harm happens inside that movement, ==red:responsibility doesn’t disappear== — it feels harder to pin to a single person because the crowd’s equality blurs individual distinction.</p>
<p>That doesn’t absolve anyone. It does explain why assigning blame after the fact feels slippery, and why crowds can seem both moral and monstrous in the same hour.</p>]]></content:encoded></item>
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