A casual look at how inequality works in society

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Master Wonder · Mar 24, 2025
Let’s be real—once private ownership and power structures come into play, inequality isn’t just a glitch in the system. It is the system. From ancient times to today’s finance-driven world, the story hasn’t really changed. Exploitation didn’t go away—it just got a makeover. It’s cleaner, quieter, and way better at hiding in plain sight. But […]

Let’s be real—once private ownership and power structures come into play, inequality isn’t just a glitch in the system. It is the system. From ancient times to today’s finance-driven world, the story hasn’t really changed. Exploitation didn’t go away—it just got a makeover. It’s cleaner, quieter, and way better at hiding in plain sight.

But class exploitation isn’t just about who holds more money or influence. It’s an entire framework—built from legal systems, cultural norms, education, and economic structures. It shapes not just how society works, but how people think about society.

Wherever a small group holds concentrated power, others inevitably get left behind. It has been repeated in human history.

This isn’t merely the result of inequality—it is a selfish system carefully designed to keep certain groups at the top while making upward mobility difficult for the rest.

What makes it so resilient is that the ruling class doesn’t just control wealth or political decisions—they also shape public values, dominate media narratives, and define what’s considered “normal” or “possible.” Over time, this creates a sense of inevitability. People begin to believe the system is just “the way things are.” And that’s how inequality sustains itself—by making the cage look invisible.

Even in today’s modern world, class structures don’t just happen—they’re carefully maintained through systems built to protect those already at the top.

  • The legal system, while presented as fair and impartial, often reinforces existing power dynamics. Laws tend to favor those with resources and influence, making it harder for the disadvantaged to seek justice on equal footing.
  • Political institutions, through electoral systems, lobbying, and backroom deals, tend to channel power and public resources toward a small elite, leaving the majority with limited real influence.
  • The economy may claim to reward hard work and competition, but in reality, markets are shaped by large corporations and financial interests. Capital is highly concentrated, and social mobility becomes more of a myth than a reality.
  • Culture and media also play their part. Through education systems, news outlets, and popular entertainment, people are subtly taught to accept social inequality as natural—even necessary. This normalizes the status quo and discourages challenges to the system.

At its core, a class-based society is about the double monopoly of power and wealth. Those at the bottom are often forced to spend all their energy just trying to survive, while those at the top enjoy the means to shape the rules—and keep everyone else in their place.

I. No real citizenship, no real political power

In a society built on class exploitation, ordinary people aren’t treated as citizens—they are subjects, tools, or resources. Political power and institutional design exist almost entirely to serve a privileged few. What is left for the majority is mostly symbolic participation, rituals that give the illusion of inclusion but deny real influence.

Historically, systems like Rome’s massive slave economy or China’s imperial examination system helped sustain rigid social hierarchies.On the surface, they offered a path for upward mobility—but in reality, these were control mechanisms, designed to preserve order and prevent meaningful change. By giving people just enough hope, they kept them in their place.

In modern times, capitalist democracies offer voting rights, but the reality is more complicated. Economic power often steers political outcomes. Capital controls the media, shapes policy, and influences public opinion—turning elections into performances choreographed by vested interests, not true exercises in civic decision-making.

Meanwhile, in class-based societies, those in power often treat public resources as if they personally own them. Even when the government rolls out welfare programs or companies raise wages, it’s usually packaged in a way that makes people feel grateful—like they’re receiving a favor, not claiming something that should already be theirs as a matter of fairness. By controlling both the resources and the narrative around them, the ruling class positions itself as generous and benevolent—while reinforcing its dominance behind the scenes.

II. Law and institutions: decoration or weapon?

1. The true role of law in a class-based society: creating the illusion of equality

In theory, laws are meant to uphold justice and fairness. But in a deeply divided society, how laws are applied often depends on your status, wealth, or connections.

Throughout history, legal systems have tended to impose strict rules on ordinary people while showing leniency—or even blatant favoritism—toward the ruling class. For instance, during medieval Europe’s feudal era, nobles could often pay a fine instead of facing real punishment, while peasants and serfs might suffer harsh penalties for even minor offenses.

Even though modern societies have adopted legal frameworks and systems like the separation of powers, in practice, law enforcement is still heavily influenced by money and power. For example:

  • Corporate legal privilege: After the 2008 financial crisis, major Wall Street firms were exposed for widespread fraud and reckless risk-taking. Yet very few top executives faced criminal charges. Most banks simply paid fines and went back to business as usual. In contrast, ordinary people struggling with debt—missing mortgage payments or defaulting on credit cards—often faced far harsher legal consequences.
  • Wealth skews justice: In the U.S., wealthy defendants can afford elite legal teams who use complex legal tactics to delay proceedings or secure favorable outcomes. Meanwhile, low-income individuals usually rely on overburdened public defenders, making equal justice nearly impossible. A stark example is the Stanford rape case, where Brock Turner received just six months in jail for sexual assault—while someone without money or status might have faced years behind bars for a similar crime.
  • Legal immunity for politicians: In many countries, political leaders and senior officials use their positions to interfere with judicial processes. Even after leaving office, they often remain shielded by powerful networks, making them nearly untouchable by the law.

Law is meant to be the foundation of social order—something that stands above class and wealth. But in reality, the way laws are applied often depends on who holds the power and resources.

Court rulings, law enforcement, even reforms may all follow legal procedures on the surface. Yet in practice, they often end up protecting the interests of the powerful more than delivering real justice or fairness.

2. Legal and political theater fuels division

Legal systems often create the illusion of progress, but real change is slow—and often blocked by those in power. People are left stuck between rising hopes and constant letdowns.

Meanwhile, political discourse shifts focus to identity and culture wars, distracting the public from deeper economic and structural issues. As division grows, the real winners are those at the top—quietly reinforcing their control while everyone else fights among themselves.

This is no accident. Politicians have mastered the art of shaping narratives and stirring conflict, turning people against one another while those in power sit comfortably above the chaos, untouched and in control.

III. Control through fools, flattery, and fear

A system built on class exploitation never empowers the wise or the independent. It prefers the clueless—easy to control—and the obedient—eager to please. Together, they keep the machine running with a mix of ignorance and cruelty.

Throughout history, every ruling class has raised its own loyal enforcers. From imperial eunuchs to secret police, from court elites to modern spin doctors, their job is to silence dissent, shape narratives, and protect the system from within.

The real threat isn’t protest—it’s unity. This is why those in power constantly sow division. They pit region against region, class against class, and group against group, turning potential solidarity into scattered frustration.

IV. Economy and finance: poverty is a carefully designed trap

1. Using economic and financial tools to keep people poor

In a system built on class exploitation, poverty isn’t just a side effect — it is a tool of control. Through high taxes, sky-high housing prices, inflation, and debt traps, the working population is forced to live just above the survival line. With little time or energy left to question the system or fight back, people are stuck in survival mode. Modern consumerism only makes it worse, encouraging people to overspend and fall into debt, tightening the leash around their freedom and choices.

2. Using power to harass and extract at every turn

In the past, heavy taxes drained people’s resources. Today, it is hidden under things like extra fees, fines, and ever-changing policies that just add more stress. These changes are often claimed to be for “better governance,” but in reality, they are just ways to take more from the people. This constant uncertainty creates what’s called a “fatigue society,” where people are so worn out and worried that they can barely keep up with life, let alone fight back.

V. Mental Control: The Double Opium and Cultural Poison

1. Shaping Social Values Through Desire

Class exploitation goes beyond physical oppression. It also involves controlling people’s minds. The elites promote ideals like “wealth and status” and “power above all,” creating a sense of dependence on the system, even leading people to believe they could someday join the ruling class.

The rise of “wealth flaunting” culture and the idea of the “self-made success” myth encourages people from lower-income backgrounds to dream of joining the “upper class.” This cultural influence subtly shifts their focus toward wealth and power, making them mentally align with the elite—without realizing they’ve actually been stripped of their own rights and opportunities.

2. The Glorification and Brainwashing of Exploitation

The ruling class doesn’t just rely on force—they have mastered the art of using cultural brainwash to maintain their power. In the past, it was all about things like the “divine right of kings” and “the three cardinal bonds.” Today, we get billionaire success stories and the magical myth of the “self-made man.”

Mainstream education and the media deliberately avoid addressing structural inequality. Instead, they push the narrative of “changing your destiny through hard work,” creating a competitive, “rat race” culture. People at the bottom end up fighting each other, wasting energy, and never seeing the real issue.

Conclusion: The Ultimate Cost and Reflection on Class Exploitation

At first glance, an exploitative society may appear stable, but in reality, it is fragile. When the economy collapses, the spirit breaks down, and the lower class falls into complete despair, civilization is on the brink of collapse. History has shown that any system built on extreme exploitation eventually destroys itself through the corruption and ignorance it accumulates.

True civilization should be based on respecting humanity and ensuring fairness. Real laws should serve citizens, not privileges. Real politics should foster unity, not division.

This is why we propose the concept and solution of a “society of social citizens.” This concept holds immense potential and can lead to true equality in politics, economy, education, and rule of law. It is not just an idea, but a practice that returns control over social matters to the citizens, giving everyone the power to participate in decision-making and influence change, thus breaking the existing power structures and fostering a fairer and more inclusive society.

Only then can civilization truly endure, no longer sinking into the cycle of exploitation and collapse.

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Time, history, and how we understand them

Time, history, and how we understand them

Daohe · Jun 5, 2025

Since the dawn of human civilization, history has carried people’s collective memory and experience. People have long tried to draw lessons from it, hoping to avoid repeating past mistakes and to push society forward. Yet when we look back across thousands of years, the rise and fall of dynasties, the cycles of war and peace, […]

重新认识时间与历史的关系

重新认识时间与历史的关系

Daohe · Jun 5, 2025

自人类文明诞生以来,历史便承载着我们的集体记忆与经验。人们常试图从历史中汲取教训,以避免重蹈覆辙、推动社会进步。然而回顾数千年的文明演进,王朝更替、战争与和平、专制与反抗似乎反复出现,呈现出某种周期性的循环。 原因不在于历史本身,而在于我们看待历史的方式。 当我们以“时间线”的视角审视历史,历史就成为一个可以被分析、归纳与理解的对象,帮助我们辨识文明演化的脉络与制度演进的逻辑。 而当我们以既有的经验去类比现实,便容易落入命运论的思维模式,将历史简化为宿命的重复,使得经验的教训难以真正转化为制度变革或认知跃迁。 本文将从这两种不同的历史观出发,探讨它们对人类文明认知、集体心理及制度构建的深层影响,并尝试回答一个关键问题:为何我们常常意识到历史的教训,却依然难以摆脱文明困境的轮回? 一、时间线历史观:还原事实,厘清路径 将历史置于时间轴上,是一种理性且系统的观察方式。它以事实为基础,将事件依时间顺序展开,使过去不再只是模糊的传说或情绪化的记忆,而成为可以分析、理解的历史现实,具备因果关系与结构逻辑。 这种方式的核心价值在于: 时间线历史观的价值,在于它拒绝将历史视为命运的重演,而是强调变量的作用。 它承认历史的开放性与文明路径的多样性,强调人类行为的能动性与制度选择的重要性。 文明是否走向进步,并非由所谓的“历史规律”决定,而取决于我们如何面对现实、反思过去、选择未来。 二、历史中的历史观:经验循环与宿命陷阱 与以时间线为基础的理性观察不同,另一种更常见的历史理解方式,是在历史中看历史——即人们倾向于以过去的历史模式解读现实,并尝试从中提炼出“规律”,以此指导当下。 这种思维背后的动因,是人类对不确定性的天然恐惧。面对复杂多变的现实,我们倾向于从既有经验中寻找解释与预判路径,以此缓解对未来的焦虑。但正是这种趋向确定性的本能,容易滑向宿命论的深渊。 具体体现在以下几个方面: 以历史看历史,最大的危害是让历史教训合法化为历史规律,使当代人失去纠错与变革意志。 三、历史为何教而不改 为何人类社会屡次面对相似的灾难,却始终难以真正吸取教训?问题并不在于历史本身不清晰,而在于文明内部存在三种深层机制,使得历史教训在传承与转化过程中被系统性削弱,甚至失效。 1. 权力的自我维系机制 执政者与既得利益集团往往出于延续统治的需求,有意回避甚至篡改历史真相。前朝之覆可能被描述为“天命已尽”或“人心叵测”,而非制度崩溃或社会失衡。 这种对历史教训的选择性叙述,实质是为了削弱变革的正当性,从而维持现有秩序。 2. 集体认知的惰性机制 公共意识倾向于接受熟悉、线性、符合传统经验的解释,而对复杂性与不确定性保持天然警惕。这种认知惰性让社会更愿意接受“盛极必衰”这样的宿命叙事,而非深入剖析具体的制度性失败。 久而久之,历史经验被简化为模式,变成一种“心理安慰”,而非行动指南。 3. 叙事权的封闭控制机制 谁掌握叙事,谁就掌握历史的意义。在大多数社会中,历史往往由官方书写,反思性的民间声音则被边缘化甚至封锁。结果是,即使真实的教训存在,也难以进入主流教育与公共讨论,从而失去触达集体意识的渠道。 这三种机制相互交织,使文明难以形成有效的自我修正能力。历史不仅被遗忘,更被格式化、被利用,成为延续旧模式的工具,而非开启新路径的资源。 因此,哪怕灾难重演,社会依然可能选择熟悉但失败的方案,陷入一次次看似“不可避免”的轮回。 四、文明突围的现实路径 要真正吸取历史的教训,文明必须挣脱经验主义与宿命论的束缚,回归基于事实、逻辑和变量的历史理解。这种突围不是抽象的理念转变,而是现实中集体认知和制度实践的深刻重构。 这意味着: 结语 当我们将历史的发展置于时间线中去看待,历史便回归其真实面貌,成为文明认知自身演进路径的参照。 而当我们用既有的历史模式去解释现实与未来,便容易落入经验的循环与宿命的陷阱,使教训失效,让文明困于自我复制的轮回。 文明的进步并非时间推移的自然结果,也不是历史规律的自动演化。它的发展依赖于少数清醒之人——那些敢于质疑旧范式、突破经验窠臼、重构制度与秩序的人。他们推动时代断裂与文明重生,赋予历史真正的价值。

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