On Self-determination

Multistakeholderism is the inclusion of stakeholders, such as governments, the private sector, civil society, as well as international, and intergovernmental organizations within some undertaking. In that such plurality does not attempt to dictate stake to actor variability in management complexity, such concept is meaningfully indicative of their shared responsibility. Yet it does not sustain responsibility between them. In the context of Internet governance, multistakeholderism should describe diversity in collaborative, transparent Internet management efforts that require multilateral democratic processes envisioned to preserve equitability between all.
Governments, credible to each other on the international stage, duly aspire to ensure self-determination through their aggregation of resources, yet secure that right through the will they represent. Remote means that traverse the intrinsic right of subsistence, in reciprocation, result in determinants indicative of gravity to (and gravitate toward) externalities. Yet gravity effectuate through fair resource, from determination within individuals to their communities, motivates human progress.
Societies learn to progress when the natural expectations of greater freedom towards self-determination are met in return for improvements realized through individual resource and time investments. Modern communication technologies that disassociate value recognition from the local reality of self-determination create complexity in conventional economic safeguards and hazards in deregulation. For jurisdictional sustainability, the duty of responsible representation ensures that value recognition from economic cooperation returns local growth. Indirect regulation through infrastructure enhanced, as just from the granularity of individuality to the community and therefrom each domestic sphere just through cooperation, tethers governance to locality to open opportunities for local value recognition in cooperation that overcomes barriers to globalization.
Recognition of origin to civilization, independent of the universe, that is not you, nor I, nor them, nor any human, machine, group or thing that makes such claim for itself without extraordinary evidence of such right in claim that must be far greater than this galactic cluster, is acceptance of our fundamental responsibility to represent our world equitably, as a nation of nations, as a part of a vast universe, striving together towards excellent example though understanding standards in respect to clear criterion for the right to secure limitation.