How to build a highly efficient and perfectly oppressive society

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Yicheng · May 10, 2025
A system where everyone can be deceived, exploited, and oppressed—yet powerless to resist Throughout the course of human civilization, the idea of building a “perfect abyss” has never been a mere fantasy. Its prototypes are scattered across history and present-day society—different in appearance, but strikingly similar in essence. If one were to deliberately design such […]

A system where everyone can be deceived, exploited, and oppressed—yet powerless to resist

Throughout the course of human civilization, the idea of building a “perfect abyss” has never been a mere fantasy. Its prototypes are scattered across history and present-day society—different in appearance, but strikingly similar in essence.

If one were to deliberately design such a society, three foundational principles must be strictly upheld: all wealth flows from one source, all power speaks from one voice, and all officials follow one chain of command.

I. Centralize all wealth, control the world

Money is the most fundamental unit of power and freedom in modern society. Whether a person can make independent choices largely depends on their basic economic capacity. Housing, education, healthcare, career paths—even the freedom to express opinions—all rest on a degree of financial autonomy. That is why restricting economic agency is one of the most effective ways to limit social freedom.

In a well-engineered abyssal society, people must never gain real control over economic resources.

The chronic financial vulnerability of the lower classes is not an accident—it is a structural reality. When people live paycheck to paycheck, drowning in debt and instability, they lose the capacity to reflect on systemic injustice, let alone organize to change it. Survival becomes their sole occupation.

And none of this is maintained by brute force, but rather by the quiet operation of a complex system—one that ensures that control over resources is always concentrated in the hands of a few. Tax policies favor capital, public resources are unevenly distributed, the education system rewards obedience, and the finance and housing sectors manufacture burden and dependency. Each seemingly neutral institutional design subtly funnels economic resources upward.

When people are consumed by survival—by housing near good schools, social insurance, and endless loan payments—they no longer have the strength to ask what freedom means, or what justice looks like.

II. Tame the citizens, preserve the throne

To crush political dreams, all it takes is turning citizens into obedient sheep.

The greatest threat to a deep-state society is not weapons, but the widespread awakening of civic consciousness. Once ordinary people realize they have the power to act collectively and participate in politics, the legitimacy of absolute power begins to crumble. That is why cutting off pathways for political participation becomes one of the system’s core strategies.

This suppression is not achieved through brute force, but through layered mechanisms—culture, education, media, and psychological conditioning—all working together to quietly neutralize resistance.

  • From an early age, the education system frames politics as something that belongs to the upper ranks of society—instilling a belief that “politics is not something people like us can influence.”
  • Mainstream media deliberately oversimplifies political issues and distances them from everyday life, aligning itself with those in power.
  • Meanwhile, the public discourse is saturated with subtle suggestions that “getting involved in politics is tantamount to rebellion,” gradually turning civic engagement into something dangerous—something to be avoided.

This long-term shaping of information and cognition does not result in the silence of a generation, but rather in the “lack of political imagination” within it. People can no longer conceive of collective expression, democratic dialogue, or public action, and they find it increasingly difficult to trust or unite with others. Individuals gradually become atomized, losing the ability to form collective power.

Ultimately, citizenship is reduced to that of a “submissive individual”—no longer concerned with how the system operates, but only with how to avoid being harmed. In this state, even when widespread injustice exists, there is a lack of sufficient mobilization to push for change.

No need for suppression, no need for bullets—the system continues to function, because people have long since abandoned the possibility of fighting for change.

III. Control Through Bureaucracy: The System’s Grip on Power

Fostering “controllable talents” and making internal friction an institutional inertia.

In a highly centralized power system, maintaining long-term stability requires a bureaucratic structure loyal to the system, rather than to the people. In such a mechanism, those with independent judgment, a sense of public responsibility, and the courage to speak out are often excluded from the core. Instead, the system favors controllable talents—those who are deeply attached to power and have no moral boundaries when it comes to personal gain.

Some of them are addicted to power, some are driven by greed for money, and others are enslaved by personal desires. These “weaknesses” make them particularly easy to manipulate. The system places them in various power positions, where they become the boss in institutions, granted a paternalistic authority that forces peope to comply.

A deeper strategy is to create structural divisions and competition. By overlapping the authority of departments, leaving room for power struggles between local and central governments, and uneven resource allocation among officials, the system forces them into constant infighting within the institutional framework. This artificial mechanism of internal competition compels officials at all levels to expend vast amounts of energy on mutual surveillance and the struggle for limited resources, leaving little time for building consensus or pushing for reforms.

In the midst of this chaos, those in power only need to occasionally “mediate” to win hearts and establish authority. People may even come to appreciate the “arbiter of order,” despite the fact that they were the ones who created the very chaos. As the old saying goes, “The world is vast, yet it is like holding it in the palm of your hand.”

Finale: The Art of the Abyss

Building a “highly efficient yet dark society with no power to resist” does not require advanced technology, nor does it demand war or slaughter. It simply requires an understanding of human nature: make people fearful, foster internal strife, keep them poor, lead them to self-doubt, sow distrust among them, and then offer just a little bit of hope, sugar-coated distractions, or spiritual opiates.

In this way, millions can be reduced to silent sheep, walking through the abyss while believing that there is light above them and a path beneath their feet.

The true hell is not a place of blazing fire, but a world where everyone adapts, everyone accepts, and no one resists.

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What is real success?

Daohe · Oct 31, 2024

People are often obsessed with external standards of success, caught up in comparisons and competition, and view success as an end goal. However, for every human being, we are born successful. From the moment life first blooms, our life carries unique meaning and value. Regardless of wealth or status, our existence in this world is […]

什么是真正的成功?

Daohe · Oct 31, 2024

人们经常迷失在外在的成功标准中,陷入比较和竞争,把成功当成一个目标。然而,对每一个生命而言,我们本身都是成功。从生命初绽的那一刻,我们就带着独特的意义和价值而来。无论贫富贵贱,生命本身是一种存在的成就。在世间奔波追逐时,也许我们会因外界的标准感到失落,但生命的奇迹和存在的意义从未因他人而黯淡。我们站在这片大地上,每个人的存在即是价值。 对一个追求幸福的生命而言,成功是一条充满丰富风景的旅程。 这条路上,体验的过程往往比到达终点更为深刻。人们渴望幸福,追求自我实现,然而,幸福并非一朝一夕的收获,而是逐步积累的体验。在体验亲情的温暖、爱情的甜蜜、友谊的陪伴、困苦的磨练之中,我们不断成熟、不断丰盈。我们最终发现,真正的幸福并不是得到什么,而是拥有一颗能够感受的心。这种内心的富足,才是追求幸福的人生路上最大的成功。 对一个反抗压迫的生命而言,成功即是争取自由与民主。 在这条道路上,成功并不轻松,而是伴随着抗争与坚守的阵痛。对受压迫者来说,成功不是名誉与财富,而是摆脱不公、挣脱束缚,赢得尊严与平等的权利。历史上无数个体和集体的抗争,使得人类社会的自由之路不断延展。 面对压迫和不平,我们选择发声、抗争、为自己和他人争取自由。正是在这些反抗者的成功中,我们才看见了世界一点一滴地向着平等、尊重、自由的方向迈进。正如曼德拉所说,“我学会了勇敢并非无所畏惧,而是敢于超越恐惧。“在这条抗争的路上,成功即是找到那份突破恐惧的勇气。 对一个拥有公民权利的生命而言,成功是一种对社会的承诺。 当我们拥有了权利,拥有了话语权,真正的成功便不止于此。真正的成功,是将我们的力量用于改善社会的现状,用一己之力去改变身边的点滴,让社区、城市、国家,甚至世界变得更加美好。 这种成功不再是自我成就,而是对他人、对社会的一份承诺。它不再只是个体的成就感,而是为他人带来福祉的无私行动。正如甘地所说,“成为你想要看到的改变。”在为社会进步而奋斗的过程中,成功就是不断推动这个世界向更文明、更幸福的方向发展。 因此,成功是对谁而言的?是因人而异的。它不是静止不变的,而是一个动态的过程。它像一幅不断延展的历史画卷,随着每一个时代的步伐而变化。对某些人来说,成功或许是一份安稳的生活;而对另一些人而言,可能是一场深刻的自我实现、或是为他人争取幸福的行动。它不仅是个人的荣耀,更是一种时代的象征。我们要理解的是,成功没有唯一的定义,它是一个因人而异、不断发展的旅程。 你的成功态度和目标,将决定你的人生方向。 成功不是一成不变的终点,而是随着我们的理解和追求而转变的过程。有些人选择追求物质富足;而有些人选择追求精神自由、社会进步。我们对成功的定义和态度,决定了我们拥有怎样的未来。 那么,今天我们对“成功”的理解究竟是什么呢?在这个全球化和信息化的时代,成功已不再只是个人的成就,而是更多人共同的责任。今天的成功,应是实现“全体人类完整公民”的理想。完整的公民是什么?它不仅仅是国家意义上的身份,而是具有全球意识的社会公民,甚至是全球公民。他们不分地域、不分种族,将全人类的福祉和幸福视为共同的目标。 我们的“一乘公益”,正是基于这一愿景设立的。我们的成功不是个人的光辉,而是每一个个体的幸福与尊严的汇聚。我们致力于推动人类文明和社会幸福的发展,这既是我们的责任,也是我们的使命。 真正的成功,是让每一个生命在这世间,都能够享有幸福与尊严。

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