How to build a highly efficient and perfectly oppressive society

Avatar photo
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.

Share this article:
LEARN MORE

Continue Reading

利民与利国之别:现代国家治理正道与秩序

Daohe · Jun 10, 2025

国家为何存在?不是为了口号、不是为了疆域、也不是为了GDP。 国家的存在意义,只在于保障公民基本权利、维护公民生活尊严、提升公民幸福指数。 若国家强大却百姓困苦,国家荣耀却公民焦虑,则这个国家必是空壳政体,强表弱里,表面繁荣,实则积弊丛生。 所以,厘清“利国”与“利民”的本质区别,并将“利民”确立为国家治理的唯一正当性,是现代国家稳定、公正、持久繁荣的前提。 一、利国与利民之间的矛盾是什么? 利国是指国家宏观战略、国家安全、经济增长、军事地位、国际影响力等系统性目标。 利民是指个体公民的收入水平、就业保障、住房医疗、言论自由、司法公正、公共福利、人格尊严、参与政治的权利。 二者本应统一,但在权力运作与国家意志实践过程中,常常出现以下结构性矛盾: 这些结构性矛盾是利国性政策最大的弊端,也是公民真正的敌人。 二、利国政策的风险有哪些? 有一些国家为保表面上的国家面子、外交强势,而选择去牺牲公民权利,久而久之,必然埋下七重风险,结果也一目了然: 1.社会信任体系崩塌 公民对政府、制度、执法、司法缺乏信任,政令失效。 2.贫富极化 资本集团借国家战略之名操控资源,财富向少数人聚集,贫者愈贫。 3. 政治合法性危机 国家公信力丧失,制度认同感坍塌,合法性来源逐渐流失。 4.社会焦虑蔓延 住房、就业、教育、养老、医疗成本高企,民众心理失衡。 5.公共政策僵化 少数权贵把持决策,政策缺乏修正机制,社会矛盾层层堆积。 6.舆论管控反噬 舆论压制导致民间怨气积聚,形成“表面稳定、暗潮涌动”格局。 7.长远国家竞争力受损 创新力、社会活力、文化创造力枯竭,国家逐渐丧失竞争优势。 三、利民型国家的治政核心原则 真正现代国家治理,必须确立四大利民治政原则: 1. 民生优先原则 财政优先保障民众基本生活质量,医疗、教育、住房、就业、养老。 2. 权利保障原则 宪法保障公民知情权、表达权、参与权、监督权。 3. 公共财政阳光原则 预算、支出、政务信息公开透明,纳税人有权全程监督。 4. 权力有限原则 国家权力受法律约束,公权力仅为公共利益服务,不能私有化、工具化、家长继承化。 四、合理国家治理结构体系图谱 构建合理国家治理体系,需确立“三元共治、双向制衡”结构: 权力主体 职能定位 监督关系 国家政府 宏观安全、财政调控、立法、外交 受公民、媒体、议会监督 公民社会 行业治理、社群事务、民间组织 受法治约束,拥有公共决策参与权 公民个人 政策投票、监督权、知情权 直接监督国家权力、参与事务治理 五、现代公务员制度彻底革新标准 国家公务员,应具备以下标准: […]

Cowardice and brutality in Chinese education: a warning and threat to global civilization

Cowardice and brutality in Chinese education: a warning and threat to global civilization

Master Wonder · Jun 9, 2025

I. Why are cowardly and brutal styles of education so common in Eastern societies, especially in China? To understand these two distorted educational patterns, we must go beyond blaming individual parents or schools. Instead, it is necessary to examine the deeper cultural and historical roots—particularly the long-standing authoritarian structure of Chinese civilization. For centuries, Chinese […]

read more

Related Content

The Real Enemy of Civilization
The Real Enemy of Civilization
Avatar photo
Yicheng · Apr 10, 2025
Yicheng Commonweal has written over a hundred articles, aiming to awaken the public’s fundamental understanding of goodness, virtue, civilization, ignorance, love, and progress. We originally thought that many misunderstandings and indifference stemmed from a lack of awareness. However, after engaging with more people, we discovered that for some, their evil is intentional, a disguise crafted […]
Voting vs. decision-making: Understanding their roles in civilization
Voting vs. decision-making: Understanding their roles in civilization
Avatar photo
Kishou · Jun 11, 2025
This article explores the fundamental difference between voting and decision-making. Voting reflects the distribution of power and interests, while decision-making requires a small group of people with strategic competence. When these two are blurred, decisions risk becoming shortsighted and driven by emotion, leading to power imbalances that ultimately weaken social governance.
Inside the “cage trap”: how authoritarian governments maintain control
Avatar photo
Yicheng · Dec 19, 2024
If a regime or government adopts the “Cage Trap” policy, it essentially acts as an extreme mechanism to safeguard privilege and protect class interests. This article offers a multidimensional exploration of this concept. The “Cage Trap” refers to government policies that impose strict controls on citizens’ freedoms, often justified in the name of national security […]
View All Content