Feudal Fantasies: How Small Town Politics Pave the Road to Authoritarianism

In a small Minnesota town where my parents eventually settled, I met a man who left a lasting impression. Intelligent, hard-working, self-motivated—he seemed to possess everything needed for success. Yet, in this town, none of that was enough. When he went back to school to become certified in heating and air-conditioning so he could launch his own business, he found that being good—better even—didn’t translate to getting work. Why? Because he hadn’t been born into the right family. Nor had he married into one. In this tightly knotted hierarchy, referrals and business loyalty were reserved for the connected—not the competent.

brown and grey concrete building
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Even though his work was superior and his prices more reasonable, the jobs went to less qualified contractors with the right last names. His story is not unique. I’ve seen it before.

I did not grow up in that Minnesotan town, but I did live for a time in a small South Dakota town where my father was the pastor. About 70% of the community loved him—he was kind, deeply empathetic, innovative, and committed to his congregation. But a smaller group, perhaps 30%, made his life increasingly difficult. Why? Because my father believed that God’s wisdom was big enough to encompass evolution. He believed creation could unfold over billions of years, not just the 6,000 years described in a literal reading of Genesis. This flexibility, imagination, and openness terrified the fundamentalists.

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That same small group eventually drove my father out. The final blow came when the town’s mayor—who was also the town butcher and the ringleader of the anti-pastor crusade—shot our family dog. Let that sink in: a community leader, a butcher no less, responded to theological disagreement with the casual violence of a bullet through a pet.

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That act mirrors the level of cruelty and irrational devotion we see today. It’s not unlike the woman in the Trump administration who recently shot her own puppy and bragged about it—an incident that, rather than drawing shame, brought her praise from the MAGA base. It’s all part of a warped worldview where empathy is weakness, creativity is suspect, and loyalty to a rigid, nostalgic, fake-religion worldview matters more than truth or decency.

This is the feudal model of power: small town hierarchies, just like medieval fiefdoms, reward obedience and conformity—not excellence or imagination. And these structures didn’t stay in small towns. They scaled. Over the years, this mindset climbed the ladder from local governments to statehouses to Washington D.C., setting the stage for Trump and his MAGA cult to seize power.

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Just like that 30% drove my father away, MAGA’s minority—less than one-third of Americans—has managed to dominate the political landscape through gerrymandering, voter suppression, media manipulation, and sheer will to power. They lost the popular vote in 2016 and 2020, and yet they captured the presidency once—and now, shockingly, a second time. How? Because the feudal framework still rules.

Carl Jung once wrote that modern man is “eye-deep in the medieval psyche.” We dress like modern people, use modern tech, and live in modern cities, but psychologically? We’re still trapped in feudalism. We still defer to kings and lords. We still fear heretics. We still sacrifice the wise and the compassionate to appease the powerful few who wear the right colors and say the right words.

In my book, Sapience: The Moment Is Now, I explore how our collective psyche—warped by centuries of myth, fear, and manipulation—has been weaponized to keep people disempowered. These aren’t just psychological phenomena. They’re political tools used to fracture our shared reality, destroy our ability to agree on basic facts, and manufacture divisions so deep they seem impossible to heal.

Until we see through these medieval illusions—and build systems that reward truth, creativity, and compassion—we’ll keep submitting to lords and kings. And they will keep shooting our dogs, real and metaphorical.

The fault lines in our society aren’t random. They’ve been carved by centuries of deliberate design.

It’s time we saw the architecture clearly—and started tearing it down.


Be Curious — Remain Open to Learn New Ideas & Grow

Here are people I have been watching and following closely as the whole world moves through an incredibly dangerous time.

How Religion Helped Pave the Way for MAGA’s Desire to Destroy Everything & Punish Everyone

woman sitting and reading latest news in burning daily paper
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On Lies and the People Who Believe Them

@tiredunclesean

Replying to @isthisforreal25 the only invasion is the agitprop invading brains #trump #usa #maga #education #news #politics #immigration

♬ original sound – TiredUncleSean

What’s going on in the minds of Trump supporters

an illustration of a person s mind
Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels.com & Watch: Why TRUMP Supporters Really Believe In Him? A Psychiatrist’s Insight
Why People Follow Authoritarian Leaders | A Psychiatrist Explains Power Psychology (Channel Trailer)

Time to Look In the Mirror for sure!

Why America is Not a Moral Country

Tired Uncle SeanLike Father Like Son

This vid resonated so much with me that I commented on it: You are soooo right!!! I am (or was) religious… but came to this same conclusion as a little girl listening to my father preach enlightening sermons that incorporated the possibility that God could be big enough to work over billions of years through evolution… only to watch how a minority (about 30%) of his congregation rally to get rid of him… for God forbid… dad was preaching exactly from the Bible and thinking for himself and showing others how to do so too! This cumulated with the ring leader of this minority group (who was also the mayor and butcher of this small SD town) shooting our dog. It worked we left and I lost my faith in this kind of cruel, stupid god.

Decline of the American Empire — Talking Economic Sense

Economics plays a huge role in the macro forces driving individuals, political parties, and nation states. To know how to navigate these times, one need to pay attention to these macro drivers and these two economists make economics easy and explain plainly what is happening now.

The US Has A $36 TRILLION Problem” – Richard Wolff’s LAST Warning
Most People Have No Idea What’s Coming” | Richard Wolff’s Last WARNING
“Trump Just DESTROYED The US Economy!” – Richard Wolff’s Terrifying Message
Jeffrey Sachs: This is Why USA is LOSING to China
Richard Wolff: This Mistake Will DESTROY Us For Decades!
LIVE | UNFILTERED! Jeffrey Sachs’ Most Brutal Trump Attack Streamed LIVE! | US News UPDATES

Sapient Merch

100 Days of Chaos, Cruelty, and Corruption: America Boards the Pequod

100 Days of Chaos, Cruelty, and Corruption: America Boards the Pequod

America Boards the Pequod

As we mark Cinco de Mayo this year, we also find ourselves confronting a grim milestone: 100 days into the Trump presidency. While the day is often a celebration of resistance and resilience—honoring the Mexican victory over French imperial forces at the Battle of Puebla—this year it feels eerily symbolic of a different kind of struggle: the battle for the soul and survival of American democracy.

Cinco de Mayo

Trump’s first 100 days have been a whirlwind of executive orders, policy reversals, and rhetoric that veers between incoherent and incendiary. These days have been defined by confusion—chaotic rollouts of travel bans, knee-jerk firings of key officials, and contradictory statements that leave allies and adversaries alike guessing. They have been marked by cruelty—a crackdown on immigrants and refugees, relentless attacks on the press, and policies designed to strip the most vulnerable of basic protections. And they have reeked of corruption—a White House staffed by billionaires and insiders whose conflicts of interest blur the line between public service and personal gain.

Rule by Executive Order
Supreme Court says government should seek return of wrongly … | LA Times

But perhaps most troubling is how we got here. Roughly one-third of eligible voters actively chose this path, while another large swath of the electorate—about one-third—surrendered without a fight by staying home. Their inaction was as consequential as the ballots cast. In a democracy, apathy can be as destructive as bad choices.

To understand where we are, Herman Melville’s Moby Dick offers a chilling metaphor. Picture the United States as the crew of the Pequod. We have boarded a ship led by a captain whose obsession and madness are plain to see. Some passengers—Trump’s most ardent supporters—believe Ahab’s quest is righteous and just. Others sense the danger but rationalize it, thinking they can ride out the storm or even benefit from it. And many, far too many, have simply closed their eyes, ignoring the obvious signs of disaster ahead.

Ahab’s Quest
America Is Going Down with the Crazy Captain of the Ship — The Whale Is a Metaphor for American’s Collective Unconsciousness — A Willful Desire to Ignore Facts and the Reality of their Circumstances in Life

Now, as the Pequod sails out of harbor, the die is cast. The ship is moving, and it’s no longer easy to disembark. The crew has tied its fate to a man driven by ego, grievance, and a thirst for domination—qualities that, like Ahab’s, can only lead to wreckage.

America Boars the Pequod

The question we face: will we, as a nation, find a way to avert the catastrophe looming on the horizon, or are we fated to watch helplessly as the ship goes down? Melville’s tale is a tragedy. But unlike the crew of the Pequod, we still have choices. We can resist, we can organize, and we can refuse to be complicit in the madness. The next 100 days—and the next four years—will test whether we have the will and wisdom to do so.

Truth Tellers

These are must watch videos. Americans need to listen. Democratic, Republican, or non-voter…I suggest pairing the ideas of this blog with the three videos below. Together, they provide you a chilling analysis of American foreign and economic policy from a geopolitical perspective, Jeffery Sachs, and an economic perspective, Richard Wolff. Both men are saying very similar things about America and the union of their decades of work, experience, and knowledge coming from geopolitical and economic perspectives help encode our current reality. 

Combine these clear-eyed perspectives and you get a chilling understanding of why Americans are at each other’s throats in an all out culture war… we are being manipulated by a system built for the rich and run by the rich… and it is so easy for them when mainstream, bread and butter Americans are fighting each other over manufactured ideas that have nothing to do with the real and present danger of Now.

‘Europe needs an independent foreign policy’: Professor Jeffrey Sachs at European Parliament —

Jeffrey Sachs Destroys Donald Trump’s Trade Talk, Compares Him To A Cartoon Mouse | US News —

“Most People Have No Idea What’s Coming” | Richard Wolff’s Last WARNING —