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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社会公民における政治的主権の重要性について

社会公民における政治的主権の重要性について

Daohe · Jun 3, 2025

公民の政治的主権なくして、公民の国家は存在しません。 一、国家とは何か?社会公民とは何か? 国家とは、抽象的な疆域、制度、政体、あるいは政権の集合体ではありません。近代国家の本質とは、公民が、自らの利益、共同の安全、そして未来へのビジョンを基に、自発的に締結した政治共同体です。公民は、国家が存在するための主体であり、根幹なのです。もし国家に、真の意味での「公民」が存在しなければ、その国は政治共同体としての正当性を失い、単なる統治機関や暴力装置へと成り下がってしまいます。 公民であるということの真の意味は、単に特定の国境内に居住していることでも、その国の身分証明書を所持していることでもありません。それは、政治的主権を享受しているかどうかにかかっています。 政治的主権を持って初めて、個人は真に「国家共同体」における権力の主体となることができます。そうして初めて、国家権力の運営を決定し、監督し、それに関与し、抑制と均衡を図ることができるのです。そして、国家を、一部の少数者の専有物ではなく、「私たちの国家」とすることができるのです。 二、歴史の深層:国家と主権の進化 人類の政治史を概観すると、国家の出現は当初、部族の連合、軍事的な拡大、そして領土の支配に源を発していました。初期の「国家」は、武力と血縁によって維持され、個人に権利はなく、臣民に主権はありませんでした。中世の封建帝国や神権政治も、例外なく政治的主権を国王、教皇、貴族、聖職者といった階層の手に固く握りしめ、人民は家畜のように、その運命は草のように扱われました。 近代的な国民国家が興隆し、啓蒙主義運動、ブルジョア革命、そして近代的な立憲制度が確立されて初めて、「国民主権」や「公民の政治参加」が、国家の政治構造の中に徐々に組み込まれていったのです。フランス革命は「主権は人民に属する」と宣言し、アメリカ合衆国憲法は「人民政府、民選議会」を確立しました。こうして、近代国家の政治的正当性は、初めて「公民の主権」の上に築かれ始めたのです。 しかしながら、今日の世界を見渡しても、真に「公民の政治的主権」を実現している国家は、ごく少数です。大多数の国家は、依然として「見せかけの公民国家」の状態に留まっています。すなわち、名目上は「人民が国家の主である」としながら、実質的には権力は少数の集団に集中し、公民は受動的な服従者や道具に過ぎないのです。 公民が不在であれば、主権もまた不在となり、国家は退化し、文明は停滞します。 三、政治的主権の真の意味 政治的主権とは、形式的に設けられた法律の条文でも、時折行われる選挙投票でもありません。それは、公民が、国家権力の運営、公共の事柄に関する意思決定、公的資源の分配、そして国家の統治構造の設計に、実質的に関与できる権利のことです。 具体的には、以下の権利が含まれます。 もし国家が、形式的な「投票」だけを許し、公民に実質的な政治的主権を与えないのであれば、公民は単なる数字へと成り下がり、国家は寡頭制へと堕落するでしょう。 四、主権なくして、公民という存在は偽りとなる 現実の世界では、多くの国家が自らを「公民国家」と称しながらも、形式的に公民としての身分を与えているに過ぎません。その実質において、公民は主権を持たず、国家の統治に実質的に参加する権利もありません。 彼らは義務を負い、代償を払いながらも、権力構造の外側に置かれ、国家という機械の付属物となっているのです。 それは、以下のことを意味します。 この現象は、深く考察するに値する社会構造を浮かび上がらせます。すなわち、国家は制度設計上、「公民を基本とする」と約束しながら、実践においては、公民が公共の事柄における共同の参加者であるという地位を、真に実現できていないのです。 主権が人々の手から失われる時、国家はもはや民心を引きつける力を持ちません。社会の信頼はそこから瓦解し、文明発展の礎は揺らぎ始めます。最終的に、そのような国家は、全国民のものではなくなり、特権階級の私有財産と化し、その衰退もまた、覆い難いものとなるでしょう。 五、主権の欠如が、国家の運命に与える影響 歴史と現実は、社会公民から主権を奪ったいかなる国家も、最終的には以下の四つの苦境に陥ることを、繰り返し証明しています。 六、文明の未来における、唯一の道 人類文明が持続的に進歩しようとするならば、唯一実行可能な道は、「公民の政治的主権」を全面的に確立した、近代的な国家制度を築くことです。すなわち、 ただ、そうして初めて、国家は真に「公民国家」となり、社会は安定的で、公正で、繁栄し、文明は持続的に進化していくことができるのです。 結語 公民の政治的主権なくして、公民の国家は存在しません。 国家が、公民の主権なくして存在するならば、それは権力者の支配と暴力装置が残るだけです。 社会が、公民の主権なくして存在するならば、そこには抑圧、収奪、そして偽善的なパフォーマンスが残るだけです。 文明が、公民の主権なくして存在するならば、それはやて暗黒、腐敗、そして崩壊へと陥るでしょう。 国家の真の主人たりうるのは、政治的主権をその手に握る、社会公民だけです。未来が真に属するのは自ら目覚め、参加し、権利を求め、そして自らの主権を守り抜く勇気を持つ社会公民なのです。 これこそが、国家が存在するための最低ラインであり、一つの文明が前進し続けられるかどうかを左右する、最後の保証なのです。  

Political sovereignty and the foundation of an autonomous civil society

Political sovereignty and the foundation of an autonomous civil society

Daohe · Jun 3, 2025

Without citizen sovereignty, there can be no true citizen state. 1. What is a state? What is a citizen? A state is not merely a set of borders, institutions, regimes, or ruling authorities. In its modern form, a state is a political community voluntarily formed by a group of social citizens, organized around shared interests, […]

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