Burn the World Down: Nero, Trump & Now, How Narcissistic Leaders Destroy Lives

Burn the World Down

A Tale of Two Emperors โ€” Separated by Two Millennia, United by the Same Wound

Burn the World Down: Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: Nero-Trump Split Image

History does not repeat. But it rhymes โ€” in fire, in spectacle, in the slow rot of institutions hollowed out by one man’s bottomless need for adulation. And sometimes in how narcissistic leaders will Burn the World Down around them… literally and metaphorically.

Nearly two thousand years apart, two figures emerge from the same psychological mold: the narcissistic ruler who mistakes performance for governance, who sees the state not as a trust to be honored but as a stage to be owned. One wore a laurel wreath and played the lyre while Rome smoldered. The other wears a red cap and posts to social media while democratic norms crumble. The costumes differ. The pathology is identical.


The Performer on the Throne

Burn the World Down: Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: The Performer on the Throne

Nero did not govern Rome so much as perform it. He fancied himself a great artist โ€” a singer, a poet, a charioteer โ€” and he demanded that the world reflect his self-image back to him. He built the Domus Aurea, his Golden House, a palace of staggering extravagance stretching across 300 acres of Rome’s heart, complete with a 30-meter rotating golden statue of himself as the sun god. The message was unsubtle: I am not merely emperor. I am divine. I am the light.

Donald Trump understands this language fluently. Before he ever entered politics, he spent decades erecting towers and stamping his name on them in gold letters as tall as a man. Trump Tower. Trump Plaza. Trump International. The branding was never about real estate. It was about the same compulsion that drove Nero to commission that colossal statue โ€” the raw, unquenchable hunger to see one’s own name reflected in the skyline of the world. When he returned to the White House, he renamed the Gulf of Mexico. He proposed putting his face on Mount Rushmore. The Golden House has merely moved to Mar-a-Lago.

Burn the World Down -- Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: Nero’s Opulent Domus Aurea (Made by Genolve)
Burn the World Down -- Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: Rendering of Trump’s Golden Ballroom

Scapegoats & the Fire

When Rome burned in 64 CE โ€” whether by accident, negligence, or Nero’s own hand remains debated โ€” the emperor needed someone to blame. He chose the Christians: a small, strange, already-suspect minority who could be painted as enemies of Rome, subverters of tradition, threats to the social order. It did not matter whether they were guilty. What mattered was that the crowd needed a villain, and Nero needed the crowd’s attention redirected.

The mechanism is ancient. It is also contemporary.

From the opening day of his first campaign โ€” “They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists” โ€” Trump has governed by the same principle Nero understood instinctively: a frightened, angry populace is a manageable one, provided you give them an enemy. Immigrants. Refugees. Muslims. The “deep state.” Transgender athletes. The targets rotate, but the function never changes. Find the outsider. Name them the source of your people’s pain. Watch the crowd roar its approval. This is not politics. This is the oldest magic trick in the authoritarian’s repertoire, and Nero would have recognized it immediately.

Burn the World Down -- Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down — Nero and Trump: The Great Fire of Rome
Burn the World Down: Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: Christian Scapegoats — Triumph of Faith-Christian Martyrs in the Time of Nero by the French artist Eugeฬ€ne Romain Thirion
Stephen Millerโ€™s War on Democracy & Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: Stephen Millerโ€™s War on Democracy, Trump’s Illegal Immigration Policies & the Scapegoating of Innocent People

The Removal of the Inconvenient

Here is where the parallel becomes most chilling โ€” and most instructive.

Nero did not consolidate power in a single dramatic coup. He did it incrementally, by removing, one by one, everyone who might restrain him, challenge him, or remind him of his obligations to something larger than himself.

First came Britannicus, his younger stepbrother and rival to the throne โ€” poisoned at a dinner party. Then his mother Agrippina, who had made him emperor and believed she could control him โ€” assassinated on his orders when she proved inconvenient. Then Claudia Octavia, his first wife, exiled and executed to clear the path for Poppaea. Then, eventually, Poppaea herself โ€” allegedly kicked to death in a rage. And throughout it all, the court filled not with wise counselors but with flatterers, yes-men, and sycophants who told Nero only what he wished to hear.

Trump has not murdered people. Let that distinction stand clearly. But he has murdered institutions with the same methodical incrementalism. The State Department, hollowed. The EPA, defanged. The Department of Education, targeted for dissolution. Inspectors general โ€” the internal watchdogs of democratic governance โ€” fired en masse in the middle of the night. Judges who rule against him are denounced as illegitimate. Generals who push back are fired or publicly humiliated. The Joint Chiefs, the intelligence community, the free press โ€” all reframed as enemies of the people. What Nero did with poison and the Praetorian Guard, Trump does with executive orders, social media, and the slow strangulation of institutional legitimacy.

The result, in both cases, is the same: a court of sycophants, a vacuum where wisdom once sat, and a ruler accountable to no one.

Burn the World Down -- Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: Posioning of Britannicus
Burn the World Down: ABCs of Democracy Tee (available at The Quip Collection, Reckoning Line)
Burn the World Down: ABCs of Democracy Tee

And women have long held the Title of Inconvenient… across many different cultures and times. Three of the people Nero is known to have killed or contributed to their deaths are women. Along these same lines is Donald J. Trump who has been convicted of sexual assault and is doing everything in his power to conceal and repress the Epstein Files. If he were innocent, why is he hiding these files?


Seneca’s Lesson โ€” And Ours

This is where history’s rhyme becomes most painful to hear.

Seneca โ€” philosopher, statesman, and Nero’s tutor โ€” watched the murders accumulate. Britannicus. Agrippina. The parade of the discarded. And like so many good people throughout history, he chose the path of dignified withdrawal. He asked to retire to his country estate. He stepped back from the court, from the chaos, from the escalating horror. Surely, he must have reasoned, this cannot continue. Surely the madness will exhaust itself. Surely Rome’s institutions, its traditions, its fundamental decency will reassert themselves.

They did not. Seneca was eventually accused of conspiracy โ€” on thin and dubious evidence โ€” and Nero ordered him to take his own life. The philosopher who had taught the emperor about virtue, restraint, and the common good was destroyed by the very man he had tried to shape into something worthy of power.

Does this not sound familiar?

Look around at the good people of America today. The senior officials who resign rather than implement unconscionable orders โ€” and then say nothing publicly, for fear of the backlash. The Republican senators who privately express horror at what is happening and publicly say nothing consequential. The corporate leaders who withdraw from the public square, quietly pulling DEI programs, quietly complying with whatever winds blow from Washington, heads down, hoping the storm passes. The ordinary citizens who have tuned out the news because it is simply too exhausting, too relentless, too dark.

They are doing what Rome’s good people did. They are retiring to their country estates.

And history’s lesson on this point is merciless: it does not end well for those who wait.

The insanity of such rulers does not die down. It does not self-correct. It does not exhaust itself and return the world to normal. It escalates โ€” until it is stopped, or until it collapses everything around it. There is no third outcome.

Burn the World Down -- Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: Death of Seneca by Spanish artist Manuel Domiฬnguez Saฬnchez, completed in 1871
Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: Everyone Who Has Left or Been Fired from Donald Trump’s Second Administration So Far — People Magazine — April 23, 2026

The Damage That Outlasts the Ruler

Even granting the most optimistic political scenario โ€” a midterm correction, a 2028 restoration of something resembling democratic normalcy โ€” the damage already done will echo for decades.

Nero’s Rome never fully recovered its pre-Neronian character. The trust between emperor and Senate, between ruler and citizen, had been poisoned in ways that could not simply be legislated away. The precedents had been set. The guardrails had been demonstrated to be merely suggestions.

The damage Trump has inflicted is similarly structural, and in one domain โ€” climate โ€” it is not merely structural but irreversible on human timescales.

The decisions made and unmade in the 2020s regarding climate mitigation are not policy choices that a future administration can simply reverse with the stroke of a pen. Carbon already in the atmosphere does not respond to executive orders. Ecosystems tipped past their thresholds do not recover because a new president rejoins the Paris Agreement. International coalitions dismantled and trust shattered require years, sometimes decades, to rebuild โ€” and we do not have decades to spare.

We have already crossed into the territory where the question is no longer whether catastrophic climate disruption occurs, but how catastrophic, and how soon. What happens in this decade sets in motion consequences that will unfold across the rest of this century. The decade of decisive action has been squandered โ€” not by accident, but by deliberate political choice in service of fossil fuel interests and short-term electoral calculation.

The scenario imagined in Sapience: The Moment Is Now โ€” once the province of speculative fiction โ€” grows less speculative with each passing year. Nation-states bankrupted by cascading climate disasters. The retreat of governmental capacity in the face of crises that exceed its resources. The rise of multinational corporate entities as the only institutions with sufficient capital and reach to fill the vacuum. A world governed not by democratic consent but by the logic of emergency management and corporate liquidity.

If that future arrives, historians will mark this decade as the moment the door to prevention closed. And they will note, with the same weary recognition with which we now study Rome, that the people of that era saw it coming โ€” and too many of them retired to their country estates and waited for someone else to act.

Burn the World Down -- Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: 2029 End of the Line for People of Earth

The Wisdom Wrap: What These Two Men Teach Us

Nero and Trump are not aberrations. They are archetypes โ€” recurring figures in the long human story of what happens when power is given to those whose primary relationship is with their own reflection.

They teach us that:

Spectacle is not governance. The roar of the crowd is not the same as the consent of the governed. Entertainment and leadership are not the same thing, and a civilization that cannot tell the difference is in mortal danger.

Sycophancy is not loyalty. It is the final stage of institutional decay. When a leader surrounds himself only with those who tell him what he wants to hear, he has not achieved security โ€” he has achieved blindness. And blind leaders drive civilizations off cliffs.

Withdrawal is not neutrality. Seneca learned this too late. The decision to step back, to keep one’s head down, to wait out the storm โ€” this is not an act of wisdom. It is an act of complicity dressed in the clothes of prudence. History does not excuse it, and neither should we excuse it in ourselves.

Collapse is not inevitable โ€” but it requires us to choose otherwise. Rome did not have to fall the way it fell. The conditions were created by human choices, human failures, human cowardice and greed. So too with what faces us now. The archetype of the narcissistic ruler is powerful โ€” but it is not all-powerful. It has been broken before, by citizens who refused to retire to their country estates, who refused to normalize the abnormal, who held the line when the sycophants told them the line did not matter.

The question for this moment โ€” as it was for Rome, as it is in every age when the fire-starter takes the throne โ€” is not whether we understand what is happening.

We understand.

The question is whether understanding will be enough to move us to act.

Burn the World Down -- Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: 2029 End of the Line for People of Earth

This blog is a companion to Season 2, Episode 2 of the Wisdom Guardians Podcast. The full episode of Burn the World Down: Nero, Trump & the Corruption of Western Civilization is available on YouTube and Spotify. Episode 1 of Season 2 is about Caligula โ€” Nero’s uncle who was also quite bad for the Roman Republic.

๐Ÿ“˜ Explore the deeper themes in Sapience: The Moment Is Now.

Burn the World Down: Nero, Trump & Now: Briefing Document

Burn the World Down: Nero and Trump
Burn the World Down: The Gilded Ruin The Rise and Fall of Nero — Slide 1

The Theatricality of Tyranny: Nero as a Historical Template for Absolute Power

This briefing document analyzes the reign of Nero through the lens of “theatrical coding”โ€”a method employed by ancient historians to preserve warnings about the nature of self-absorbed, ruthless leadership. By examining the accounts of Tacitus, Suetonius, and Cassius Dio alongside modern archaeological and revisionist insights, this document explores how the staging of power in the first century provides a template for identifying modern figures who prioritize personal interest over the public good.

The Historiography of Performance: “Theatrical Coding”

Ancient historians did not merely record biographies; they used “theatrical coding” to warn future generations about the inherent dangers of autocracy. In this context, the lurid stories of Neroโ€™s stage performances, public depravity, and familial cruelty are viewed not just as gossip, but as archetypal shorthand for the corruption of the princepsโ€”the “first among equals.”

Burn the World Down: Nero, Trump
Burn the World Down: Nero, Trump: Deconstructing Nero — Slide 6

Dissimulation and Doublespeak

As outlined by Shadi Bartsch in Actors in the Audience, the Neronian era forced the Roman elite into a state of perpetual performance. Under the “scrutinizing eye” of the ruler, senators became actors and dissimulators. This environment distorted language into “doublespeak”โ€”saying one thing while meaning anotherโ€”as a survival mechanism against imperial oppression. This theatricality transformed the political arena into a stage where representation was dictated by the pull of autocratic authority.

Vituperatio: The Rhetoric of Malignity

Critics of the traditional Neronian narrative, such as Thorsten Opper, suggest that many accounts were shaped by a rhetorical tradition known as vituperatio (vituperation). This allowed historians to invent or exaggerate perversions to malign a character. However, from a critical historian’s perspective, the convergence of these stories across multiple authors suggests a fundamental truth about the “theatrical” style of Neroโ€™s rule, regardless of whether specific details were apocryphal.

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: Deconstructing Nero — Slide 7

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Templates for Power: The Private Playground of the Tyrant

The “Nero template” identifies a leader who views the state, the public, and even their own family as a playground for exploitation.

The Systematic Destruction of the Family

Neroโ€™s treatment of his inner circle serves as a primary warning against leaders who lack empathy or public concern.

  • Agrippina the Younger: Neroโ€™s mother and co-regent was systematically sidelined and eventually murdered. Historians describe elaborate plots, including a self-sinking boat, before she was ultimately stabbed. Her death is often framed as a “sacrifice” to appease the senatorial elite who resented her political influence.
  • Claudia Octavia: Neroโ€™s first wife, beloved by the people, was divorced, banished, and executed in a steam bath. The public riots in her favor ironically triggered more extreme cruelty, as Nero became more determined to eliminate her as a symbol of popular resistance.
  • Poppaea Sabina: His second wife allegedly died after Nero kicked her in the belly while she was pregnant. While some revisionists suggest this was a “matrimonial row that got out of hand” or a miscarriage, the historical coding remains: the tyrantโ€™s rage consumes even the most intimate and vulnerable.

Sexual Exploitation as Political Control

Neroโ€™s sexual behaviors are interpreted by historians as a means of asserting total, arbitrary control over all bodies within the empire.

  • The Castration of Sporus: Nero had the freedman Sporus castrated and married him in a public ceremony where Sporus wore the traditional garb of a bride.
  • Pythagoras and Public Consummation: Nero later played the role of the bride in a ceremony with another freedman, Pythagoras, consummating the union on a couch in full view of banquet guests.
  • The “Animal Skin” Games: Suetonius records that Nero would don animal skins to assail the private parts of men and women bound to stakes, a “theatrical” display of dominance and the “unmanning” of his subjects.
Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: Emperor Nero ordered the castration of a young man named Sporus to make him resemble his deceased wife, Poppaea Sabina.

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The Great Fire: Scapegoating and Spectacle

The Great Fire of Rome in AD 64 provides a template for how a “theatrical” ruler handles catastrophe.

Historical MythArchaeological/Revisionist Reality
Nero “fiddled” (sang of Troy) while the city burned.Nero was in Antium when the fire started and led relief efforts.
Nero brazenly set fire to the city to make room for his palace.The fire likely started accidentally in the slum housing of the Circus Maximus.
Nero used the apocalyptic backdrop for a theatrical performance.Nero did build the lavish Domus Aurea over the ruins, signaling a lack of sensitivity to public loss.

Neroโ€™s subsequent persecution of Christiansโ€”scapegoating a marginalized group for the fireโ€”establishes a template for “political scapegoating” used by ineffective or negligent leaders to deflect culpability.

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: This painting is titled Nero’s Torches (Pochodnie Nerona), created in 1876 by the Polish artist Henryk Siemiradzki

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Evolution vs. Devolution: A 5,000-Year Cycle

The debate persists: has the psychology of the “ruthless ruler” evolved into something more sophisticated, or has it devolved into more destructive forms?

  • Ancient Tactics: Neroโ€™s theatricality was overtโ€”singing on stage, public executions, and physical “unmanning.” Power was asserted through direct, often grotesque, spectacle.
  • Devolution of the Public Good: The case of the 400 slaves executed in AD 61 illustrates a devolution of justice. Despite public support for the innocent slaves, Nero backed the senatorial faction to uphold a brutal deterrent law, prioritizing political alliance over human life.
Burn the World Down
Nero — Myth & Warning: Infographic (LMNotebook)

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Modern Comparisons: The Neronian Legacy in the 21st Century

The “shorthand” of Neronian history remains a vital civic tool for identifying contemporary political figures who utilize public attention for personal entertainment and exploitation.

  • Decadence and Domestic Profligacy: Modern leaders have been compared to Nero for their lavish personal expenditures during times of national crisis. Examples include the “gold wallpaper” used in the renovation of Boris Johnsonโ€™s Downing Street apartment, redolent of the frescoes and gold leaf of the Domus Aurea.
  • Theatrical Trolling: Former President Donald Trumpโ€™s retweet of a photograph of himself “playing the fiddle” during the early stages of the COVID-19 crisis is cited as an act of “Neronian trolling,” deliberately invoking the image of the detached leader during a catastrophe.
  • Public Attention as Power: The “Epstein class” and figures like Trump are noted for using wealth and public platforms to pursue personal, often cruel, entertainment, paralleling the Roman emperor’s use of the theater and gladiatorial games to distract or manipulate the populace.
  • The Persistence of the “False Nero”: Affection for Nero persisted among the common people for decades after his death, leading to the emergence of “false Neros.” This highlights a historical truth: political popularity is often untethered from effective or moral leadership.

Conclusion

The accounts of Nero serve as a coded warning for future generations. Whether through the “theatrical” execution of family members, the “vituperative” rhetoric of historians, or the “doublespeak” of the court, the Neronian template identifies the perennial risk of leaders who prioritize their own “stage performance” over the stability and welfare of the state. History, in this sense, is not just a record of the past but a diagnostic tool for the present.

Burn the World Down: Nero, Trump & Now: Political Governance Review

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: Dramatic View of Nero Playing His Lyre as Rome Burned

Political Governance Review: The Theatricality of Tyranny and the Shorthand of History

1. The Historiographical Script: History as Theatrical Coding

In the study of classical power dynamics, “theatrical coding” emerges not as a mere biographical quirk, but as a sophisticated literary defense mechanism deployed by Tacitus, Suetonius, and Cassius Dio. These chroniclers recognized that in the absence of modern recording technology, the preservation of civic warnings required a standardized language of pathology. They utilized vituperatioโ€”the rhetorical art of personal attackโ€”not as a simple smear campaign, but as a deliberate “topos” taught in Roman rhetorical schools. By retrofitting the excesses of leadership into archetypal scripts, these historians signaled the presence of a “monster” rather than a legitimate princeps. Through “clever design” (Freudenburg), the fall of a leader was often coded to mirror mythic catastrophes like the destruction of Troy, transforming historiography into a template for identifying the rot of absolute power.

As analyzed by Shadi Bartsch in Actors in the Audience, the distortion of language under autocratic authority functions as a mechanism of imperial oppression, creating a climate redolent of Stalinist dissimulation:

  • Scripted Realities: The requirement for subordinates to become “actors,” masking their true thoughts to survive the scrutinizing eye of a ruler who demands constant performance.
  • Dissimulative Survival: The evolution of “doublespeak”โ€”saying one thing while meaning anotherโ€”as the only available mechanism to undo the suffocating effects of imperial suppression.
  • Forced Theatrical Participation: The degradation of the elite through compelled participation in the emperorโ€™s “drama,” effectively stripping the senatorial class of their agency and dignity.
  • The Distortion of Discourse: The process by which the magnetic pull of autocratic authority warps all public representation, rendering authentic communication a capital offense.

This mechanism of recording power ensures that the “Shorthand of History” is not merely a record of events, but a diagnostic manual for identifying the early onset of the tyrannical template.

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: The Gilded Ruin The Rise and Fall of Nero — Slide 15

2. The Nero Template: Case Studies in Deranged Exploitation

Nero serves as the foundational archetype for the performer-leader, a figure who perceives the state not as a trust, but as a private theater for self-gratification. This transition from princeps(first among equals) to a self-absorbed performer is crystallized in the “Sacrifice of the Beloved,” specifically the fate of Claudia Octavia. Despiteโ€”or perhaps because ofโ€”populist riots in her favor, Nero responded with a liturgy of calculated cruelty: a divorce, banishment, and a state-sanctioned execution involving the slitting of her wrists and suffocation in a steam bath. The delivery of her decapitated head to court was a theatrical punctuation mark. The political warning is clear: in a self-absorbed regime, public affection for a victim is viewed as a personal affront by the ruler, ironically accelerating the victim’s destruction.

Nero’s court functioned as a “playground for exploitation,” where familial bonds were systematically dissolved to assert arbitrary dominance. This was not merely criminality; it was the theatricalization of the domestic sphere to prove that no boundary was sacred.

The Dramaturgy of Dominion

Target of ExploitationTheatrical Act (Source-derived)Political Warning Encoded
Agrippina (Mother)A sequence of “clever designs”: a falling ceiling followed by a self-sinking boat; finally, a literal womb-stabbing.The total erosion of natural bonds; a leader who consumes the source of their own legitimacy for the sake of the “show.”
Claudia Octavia (Wife)Suffocation in a steam bath and the delivery of her decapitated head to the Neronian court.The danger of populist favor; how a leaderโ€™s jealousy of the publicโ€™s love for another triggers extreme state cruelty.
Poppaea Sabina (Wife)A “matrimonial row” resulting in a fatal kick to the pregnant belly (interpreted by modern archaeology as a miscarriage coded as a “topos”).The “Tyrant’s Topos”: how a domestic tragedy is retrofitted by history into a template of irredeemable evil to signal the end of a dynasty.
Britannicus (Brother)A calculated assassination to eliminate the last competing claim to the Julio-Claudian line.The violent liquidation of legitimacy; the prioritization of a sole, theatrical authority over established succession.

This exploitation of the domestic sphere served as a precursor to the exploitation of the human body as a broader tool of arbitrary state control.

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: Nero Orders His Mother Killed
Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: This image depicts a historical moment in time titled Nero and Agrippina by painter Antonio Rizzi
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Burn the World Down: This painting, created in 1876 by Giovanni Muzzioli, is titled Poppea Brings the Head of Octavia to Nero
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Burn the World Down: It is widely reported that Nero kicked his pregnant second wife, Poppaea Sabina, to death in a fit of rage.

3. Sexual Exploitation as Arbitrary Control: The “Unmanning” of the Empire

The Neronian court transmuted private deviance into a public liturgy of state dominance. Neroโ€™s sexual behaviorsโ€”specifically the accounts of Sporus and Pythagorasโ€”were viewed by ancient historians not as matters of personal preference, but as theatrical assertions of total control over all bodies. The castration and formal marriage of the youth Sporus, followed by Nero adopting the role of the “bride” to the freedman Pythagoras, were performances of “unmanning” the empire. By consuming these pseudo-nuptials at banquets in full view of the elite, Nero forced the citizenry to witness and participate in their own degradation, acknowledging his power to rewrite the most fundamental biological and social realities.

The “Softened” Citizenry: Ancient medical records, specifically the Epitome of Medicine by Paul of Aegina, describe castration by compression: placing children in a vessel of hot water until the “bodily parts are softened” and dissolved. This anatomical dissolution serves as a harrowing metaphor for a citizenry under a theatrical tyrant. A populace that allows its agency to be eroded is “softened” in the heat of a leader’s whims, losing its political form and becoming a malleable object for the autocrat’s entertainment.

This personal depravity was the ultimate assertion of class-based dominance, where the bodies of the subjects became the literal stage for the ruler’s pathology.

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: This image shows a scene depicting Emperor Nero marrying Sporus, a young man he had castrated to resemble his deceased wife
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Burn the World Down: Genolve depiction of Nero marrying a Freedman at the bride.

4. Convergence and Class Tensions: The Elite vs. the Street

The memory of Nero remains a “Contested Memory.” To the senatorial families, he was a “Stalinist” monster who utilized dissimulation to hollow out the Republic. To the masses, however, he was a vigorous “Restorer” who bypassed the conservative Senate to build a direct power base with the “Street” and the knightly classes. The construction of the Domus Aurea (Golden House) following the Great Fire of AD 64 was a strategic maneuver: it was a “necessary investment” in the entertainment and housing of the knights, the middle tier of Roman power, effectively marginalizing the old elite.

Historical Record vs. Archaeological Nuance

Literary Accounts (The Script)Archaeological Facts (The Nuance)
Nero “fiddled” (sang of Troy) from a safe elevation while Rome burned.Nero was in Antium when the fire started and rushed back to lead relief efforts.
The fire was a deliberate act of arson to clear space for the Domus Aurea.Nero provided housing for the homeless, arranged grain supplies, and instituted building codes.
The Domus Aurea was a sign of purely selfish, deranged luxury.The palace served as a strategic investment to house the court and entertain the knightly class.
The “Monster” was universally hated upon his death.Persistent “False Neros” and positive graffiti in Pompeii show enduring street-level popularity.

The ultimate archaeological proof of this “Shorthand of History” is found in the Carthage sculpture, where Neroโ€™s jowly, full-faced image was literally re-carved and disfigured into the face of his successor, Vespasian. This physical re-coding of power demonstrates how history literally erases the performer to make way for the new regime.

5. Modern Convergence: Identifying the Contemporary “Theatrical” Tyrant

The tactics of ancient tyrants are mirrored by modern political figures who utilize public attention as a tool for personal entertainment and “Neronian trolling.” This leadership styleโ€”attention-seeking, petulant, and arbitraryโ€”treats governance as a medium for self-promotion rather than a civic duty.

We see this modern convergence in the “Epstein class,” which views the bodies of the vulnerable as a playground for power, and in specific cultural signifiers. A notable modern echo of “fiddling” occurred in Spring 2020 during the COVID-19 crisis, when a retweet featuring a leader playing a fiddle was used as a tool of populist distraction. Similarly, the “gold wallpaper” renovation of Boris Johnsonโ€™s Downing Street residence serves as a contemporary iteration of the Domus Aureaโ€”an aesthetic of excess standing in for legitimate authority.

Burn the World Down is a deep dive into the archetypal forces of Narcissistic Leaders, embodied by Nero and Trump, and the well-established patterns they follow leading to collapse of empires and death of innocent people.
Burn the World Down: Convergence — Slide 4 of The Gilded Ruin The Rise and Fall of Nero (LMNotebook)

Red Flags for Neronian Leadership

  1. Prioritization of the “Show”: The transformation of policy into performance and governance into entertainment.
  2. The Family Playground: The use of family members as either tools for power or targets of arbitrary exploitation.
  3. Scripted Realities: The manipulation of the narrative through “theatrical coding” or social media to override objective facts.
  4. Aesthetic of Excess: The focus on gilded displays (gold leaf, luxury brands) as a substitute for administrative competence.
  5. Populist Trolling: The use of public spectacle and “vituperatio” to distract from administrative or economic turmoil.

6. Evolution vs. Devolution: The 5,000-Year Psychology of Power

The psychology of the ruthless ruler has not evolved; it has merely found more efficient stages. While modern technology has made the theatricality of power more transparent, it has also made it more dangerous, allowing for the instantaneous spread of “Scripted Realities.” The transition from the princeps to the “monster” described by Suetonius and Tacitus illustrates a recurring historical cycle: power that begins with promise often devolves into a desperate performance of dominance.

We must understand that the “pious frauds” and apocryphal contraptions of historians are often more important than the facts themselves. They represent a psychological fossil recordโ€”a warning system designed to detect the presence of a leader who has abandoned the public good for the sake of the show. If multiple sources repeat the same archetypal stories of madness, the “theatrical coding” must be taken seriously as a civic defense mechanism.

The theatrical tyrant is never a relic of the past; he is a recurring pathology that waits for a citizenry to “soften” enough to accept the performance as reality.

Burn the World Down: Nero, Trump & Now: Study Guide

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: A-dramatic-ancient-Roman-palace-interior-under-stormy-torchlight-with-Emperor-Nero-in-rich-imperial-robes-standing-in-the-foreground-half-in-shadow-we808

The Theatricality of Tyranny: Nero and the Coded Shorthand of History

This study guide analyzes the reign of the Emperor Nero through the lens of “theatrical coding.” It posits that ancient historical accounts, such as those by Tacitus, Suetonius, and Cassius Dio, function as a deliberate shorthand to warn future generations about the nature of self-absorbed, ruthless leadership. By examining the convergence of these narratives, we identify templates for power that remain relevant to modern political analysis.

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Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: The Gilded Ruin The Rise and Fall of Nero — Slide 6 — Theatrical Coding

Burn the World Down | Part I: The Template for Power

Theatrical Coding and Archetypal Storytelling

Ancient historians utilized specific “theatrical” storiesโ€”Neroโ€™s stage performances, public sexual depravity, and animal-skin “games”โ€”not merely as gossip, but as a coded warning system. This “shorthand” describes a ruler who views the empire as a private stage and the populace as a captive audience.

  • Dissimulation: Under autocratic authority, subordinates (such as Roman senators) are forced to become actors and dissimulators. This “doublespeak”โ€”saying one thing while meaning anotherโ€”becomes a survival mechanism in a “darkly self-concealing” literary and social culture.
  • Vituperatio: A rhetorical tradition of personal attack where historians could invent or exaggerate stereotypes to malign a characterโ€™s moral standing, signaling a leader’s unfitness for office.
  • The Paradigm of the Stage: When an emperor takes the stage, the audience must “play alongโ€”or else.” This transforms the political arena into a theater where representation is distorted by autocratic pull.

Case Study: The Exploitation of Family and Public

The deaths of those closest to Nero serve as a “playground for deranged exploitation” and a warning template for how absolute power reacts to public sentiment.

FigureHistorical Narrative as “Coding”The Warning Template
OctaviaDivorced, banished, wrists slit, and suffocated in a steam bath; her head delivered to court.Populist Trigger: Riots in favor of a beloved victim can ironically trigger more extreme cruelty from a self-absorbed ruler.
AgrippinaTargeted via a self-sinking boat before being stabbed; her final gesture was offering her womb to the blade.The Unnatural Reign: Hostility toward a mother figure coded as a warning against leaders who disregard the most fundamental social bonds.
Poppaea SabinaKicked to death while pregnant after a “matrimonial row.”The Topos of the Tyrant: Killing a pregnant wife is a historical “topos” (commonplace) used to signal the ultimate “evil deed.”
SporusA freedman castrated and married to Nero in a traditional bridal ceremony.Unmanning as Power: Sexual exploitation and castration used to assert total, arbitrary control over all bodies in the empire.

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Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: The Gilded Ruin The Rise and Fall of Nero — Slide 9 (created by NotebookLM)

Burn the World Down | Part II: Modern Comparisons and Evolution

Convergence of Ancient Tactics and Modern Figures

The “theatrical” style of ruleโ€”prioritizing public attention and personal entertainment over the public goodโ€”finds parallels in modern political figures.

  • The Gilded Residence: Neroโ€™s Domus Aurea (Golden House), featuring gold leaf and ceilings that dropped flower petals, is compared to modern “Neronian” displays of wealth, such as Boris Johnsonโ€™s reported $125,000 renovation of Downing Street with “gold wallpaper” or the gilded private residences of Donald Trump.
  • Neronian Trolling: In 2020, during the COVID-19 crisis, Donald Trump retweeted a photograph of himself playing a fiddleโ€”a direct nod to the (historically inaccurate) myth of Nero “fiddling while Rome burned,” serving as a modern form of theatrical provocation.
  • The Epstein Class: Modern exploitative figures who use power for personal, cruel entertainment mirror the “playground of exploitation” seen in the Julio-Claudian court.

Evolution vs. Devolution

A central debate for the investigative historian is whether the “ruthless ruler” has evolved or devolved over 5,000 years.

  • Devolution: The argument that modern leaders have devolved into more destructive forms, using technology to amplify the same “self-absorbed” Neronian traits.
  • Evolution into Sophistication: The counter-argument that modern manipulators have become more “sophisticated,” utilizing “tweets” and controlled narratives to achieve what Nero sought through public declamations and stage performances.

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Burn the World Down | Part III: Glossary of Historical Coding

1. Acta: Records of judicial proceedings; in martyr literature, these were often stylized to portray the confrontation between power and the individual. 2. Bulla: An amulet worn by freeborn Roman boys; used in statuary to identify Neroโ€™s initial “angelic” and legitimate status before his “theatrical” decline. 3. Cognitio extra ordinem: The wide latitude permitted to provincial governors to act on their own initiative; a source of the “sporadic and local” nature of Neronian-era persecution. 4. Damnatio Memoriae: The official damnation of a ruler’s memory; explains why many hostile accounts were drafted after Neroโ€™s death to burnish the reputations of successors like the Flavians. 5. Pax Deorum: “Peace of the gods”; the justification used by tyrants to suppress “un-Roman” groups (like early Christians) who were perceived as a threat to state stability. 6. Princeps: “First among equals”; the title Nero held, masking the reality of a monarchy and creating the “theatrical” need for the emperor to constantly perform for the senatorial class. 7. Superstitio: A term used by Pliny and Suetonius to label Christianity as “depraved” and “excessive,” coding it as a contagion rather than a legitimate religion (religio). 8. Topos: A traditional theme or formula in literature; for example, the “tyrant killing his pregnant wife” is a topos used to signal total moral collapse.

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Burn the World Down | Part IV: Critical Analysis Quiz

1. According to the concept of “Theatrical Coding,” why did historians like Suetonius emphasize Neroโ€™s stage performances and animal-skin games?

  • A) To provide an accurate record of 1st-century Roman entertainment.
  • B) To act as a coded shorthand warning future generations about self-absorbed leadership.
  • C) To encourage the public to attend more theatrical events.
  • D) To document the evolution of Roman musical instruments.

2. The execution of Claudia Octavia is presented as a “template” for what political phenomenon?

  • A) The successful implementation of imperial divorce laws.
  • B) The necessity of steam baths in Roman hygiene.
  • C) How populist support for a victim can ironically trigger more extreme cruelty from a tyrant.
  • D) The peaceful transition of power within the Julio-Claudian dynasty.

3. What does the castration and “marriage” of Sporus represent in the analysis of Neronian power?

  • A) A progressive move toward gender fluidity in the ancient world.
  • B) A personal romantic preference of the emperor.
  • C) A method of “unmanning” others to assert total, arbitrary control over all bodies.
  • D) A traditional Roman religious ceremony for freedmen.

4. How does the “Domus Aurea” correlate with modern political figures in the provided text?

  • A) It is compared to the efficient management of public housing.
  • B) It is used as a metaphor for the “Epstein class” and their use of public attention.
  • C) It is compared to Boris Johnsonโ€™s “gold wallpaper” and Donald Trumpโ€™s gilded residences as evidence of Neronian profligacy.
  • D) It is cited as the first example of sustainable urban architecture.

5. Why do investigative historians consider the “convergence” of similar stories across multiple ancient authors to be significant?

  • A) It proves the stories are 100% factually accurate.
  • B) It suggests that even if theatrical coding is applied, the repetition indicates an underlying truth or essential warning.
  • C) It shows that ancient historians all belonged to the same guild.
  • D) It indicates that Nero had a very successful public relations team.

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Burn the World Down | Answer Key and Analytical Commentary

1. B. Theatrical coding uses the stage as a paradigm for the theatricality of power, turning Nero’s personal follies into a cautionary shorthand. 2. C.Historians note that the people’s riots in Octavia’s favor made Nero more determined to destroy her, serving as a warning for how victims of tyranny are often endangered by their own popularity. 3. C. Sexual exploitation is analyzed not as a personal vice but as a calculated assertion of dominance over the physical bodies of subjects. 4. C. The text directly links the “profligacy” of renovating private residences with public or donor funds to the “Domus Aurea” style of self-indulgent governance. 5. B. Convergence suggests that the “archetypal storytelling” used by Tacitus, Suetonius, and Dio is a vital civic tool, regardless of whether certain details (like the fiddle) are apocryphal.

Burn the World Down | Review of How America Got Here: Rise of Mega Corporations & an American Oligarchy

Burn the World Down
Burn the World Down: 64 CE: a spark near the Circus Maximus becomes Romes greatest firestorm. [Image created with Genolve]

Given the critical impending collapse of the American democratic, capitalistic, economic system that is teetering on the edge of oblivion with its balance in the hands of a cruel, sadistic narcissist, let’s review how American innovation locked in the hands of CEOs has slowly, then all of a sudden, corrupted into Ruthless Oligarchy.

This timeline is taken from last year’s Wisdom Guardians podcast and blog titled: Oligarchy, Economics & Wisdom: Now Is a Great Time to Transform the System

Timeline of Events:

  • Pre-2024:Throughout history, empires rise and fall (Wolff).
  • The British Empire declines, giving rise to the American Empire (Wolff).
  • 1870-1970s: U.S. experiences a century of economic growth with rising wages (Wolff).
  • Around 1970s: Real wages in the US stop rising, leading to increased debt and women entering the workforce (Wolff).
  • The concept of โ€œThe Corruptionโ€ emerges, a societal ill rooted in selfishness and greed, leading to the downfall of civilizations (Mann). This is explored through the lens of the Pyramid Model of Mind and how the most โ€œsuccessfulโ€ people take advantage of it (Mann).
  • The development of the Totalitarian mindset and the rise of isms, paving the way for social unrest (Mann).
  • 2000-2021: Russian Oligarchs gain power and are then brought to heel by Vladimir Putin, who offers them a choice: loyalty or imprisonment (Mockler)
  • 2022: Brooke Harrington discusses American Oligarchs and their influence on the US Government (Mockler). Elon Musk buys Twitter but isnโ€™t yet seen as a full-throated MAGA Republican (Mockler).
  • 2024:D. Mann publishes Sapience: The Moment Is Now (Mann).
  • The US dollar begins to lose its status as the international currency as other countries start to explore alternate options (Wolff).
  • Late 2024:Trump runs for, and wins, another term as US President.
  • Elon Musk donates $200 million to Trumpโ€™s campaign and sets up a headquarters in Pennsylvania to campaign for him (Mockler). Musk holds a $1 million giveaway for voters in red counties (Mockler).
  • Trumpโ€™s Inaugural Committee receives a massive influx of funding from wealthy tech CEOs and Billionaires, such as Jeff Bezos, Sam Altman, Mark Zuckerberg, Uber CEO, and Ken Griffin (Mockler). The inauguration budget is four times that of Obamaโ€™s 2009 inauguration (Mockler).
  • Tech Titans such as METAโ€™s Zuckerberg, and Amazonโ€™s Bezos, begin currying favor with Trump, making business moves in support of his politics (Mockler).
  • The TikTok CEO visits Trump during his inauguration as his platform is expected to be banned in the US (Mockler).
  • Billionaire tech entrepreneur V Ramaswami joins Musk in an initiative to cut government spending (Mockler)
  • President Biden gives his Farewell Address, warning that the U.S. is turning into an oligarchy (Mockler).
  • There is a massive spike in Google searches for โ€œoligarchyโ€ following Bidenโ€™s address (Mockler).
  • Adam Mockler analyzes the concept of Oligarchy and its presence in American politics via his YouTube channel (Mockler).
  • Economist Richard Wolff delivers a stark warning about the decline of the American Empire and the potential for social collapse (Wolff).
  • January 16, 2025: President Biden delivers his Farewell Address, warning against the rise of an oligarchy in the United States (Mockler).
  • January 20, 2025: Donald Trump is inaugurated into office as US President. Billionaires and tech CEOs attend his Inauguration (Mockler).
  • January 25, 2025: D. Mann publishes blog post exploring the implications of the current political, economic, and psychological crises based on the analysis of Richard Wolff and Adam Mockler and drawing on the ideas presented in her book, Sapience: The Moment Is Now.

Monuments Against Time: Nero, Hitler, Trump, the Ruins of Consciousness & Now

Monuments Against Time

Meditation on Ruin, Power, and the Architecture of the Human Mind
May 6, 2026

May 6 is a date of memory. In the final days of the Third Reich, the monumental dreams of empire collapsed into smoke, rubble, and silence. It remains a useful date for remembering how rulers who try to immortalize themselves in stone often leave behind only ruinsโ€”and warnings.

Inside the Third Reich -- Albert Speer, Arch of Triumphant

Monuments Against Time: Nero, Hitler, Trump, the Ruins of Consciousness & Now: Inside the Third Reich — Albert Speer, Arch of Triumphant [Hitler inspecting a model]

The Arc of the Deal -- Donald wants a Napolean-liek Arc De Trump -- Indian Times -- Jan 1 2026
Monuments Against Time: Nero, Hitler, Trump, the Ruins of Consciousness & Now: The Arc of the Deal — Donald wants a Napolean-liek Arc De Trump — Indian Times — Jan 1 2026

Reading Inside the Third Reich by Albert Speer, one is struck by how deeply Adolf Hitler believed architecture could defeat time.

Hitler did not merely want to govern Germany. He wanted to monumentalize himself. He dreamed of immense boulevards, colossal halls, triumphal arches, and vast domesโ€”an imperial capital meant to outlive criticism, opposition, and death itself. His architect, Speer, understood this perfectly.

Speer also described a chilling idea he called ruin valueโ€”the belief that buildings should be designed so that, even after centuries of decay, their remains would stand like the ruins of ancient Roman Empire. Hitler admired Rome because its arches, forums, and domes still projected authority long after emperors had vanished into dust. He wanted future ages to look upon the remains of his Reich and imagine permanence.

That dream was already ancient.

Nero too understood architecture as theater of immortality. After the Great Fire of Rome, he began building the vast Domus Aureaโ€”the Golden House. It was a palace of spectacle, extravagance, and imperial self-glorification. But while the golden halls rose, political reality collapsed. His reign ended not in triumph, but in ruin. Nero died by suicide.

Hitler followed a similar arc, though on a scale of destruction the ancient world could scarcely imagine. His grand boulevard, his triumphal arch, his monumental Great Hallโ€”most never rose beyond paper, stone, and fantasy. The empire proclaimed to last a thousand years collapsed in twelve. He too died by suicide as the world he had set ablaze closed around him.

Now, in 2026, we again encounter the old pathology in Donald Trump.

Golden ballrooms. Monumental gestures. Ceremonial architecture. Personal branding made physical. Public grandeur fused with private vanity.

This is not merely taste. It is political psychology.

When rulers become obsessed with monumental architecture, they are often trying to convert inner instability into outward permanence. Stone becomes propaganda. Size becomes legitimacy. Spectacle becomes substitute for moral authority.

Yet there is an irony far greater now than in the ages of Nero or Hitler.

Hitler looked backward toward Rome because Roman monuments had survived centuries. Stone still seemed eternal.

But modern humanity has crossed a threshold neither Rome nor the Third Reich fully understood.

We live in the nuclear age.

In our age, no arch survives certainty. No dome defeats thermonuclear fire. No boulevard outlives planetary self-destruction. Under nuclear blast, the largest ballroom becomes dust as quickly as the smallest home. The fantasy of permanence has become technologically obsolete.

That is the dark absurdity of our time.

The more powerful civilization becomes, the less capable monuments are of saving it.

That is why the deepest struggle of the twenty-first century is not architectural, military, or economic.

It is psychological.

In Sapience: The Moment Is Now, this is the insight embodied by Yong Xing-li.

In that dystopian future, Yong is among the richest men alive. He possesses the wealth to build towers, monuments, pleasure palaces, or entire cities devoted to spectacle. He could entertain himself to death, as so many oligarchs, emperors, and modern billionaire CEOs have done before him.

He does not.

He turns toward something almost invisible.

He devotes himself to understanding consciousness itselfโ€”how human beings perceive, imagine, fear, obey, fragment, and awaken. He understands that unless consciousness evolves, every advance in technology, every accumulation of wealth, every expansion of power only increases humanityโ€™s capacity for self-annihilation.

Yong understands what Nero never grasped, what Hitler could never grasp, and what many of todayโ€™s rulers still do not grasp:

The greatest monument humanity will ever build cannot be made of marble, steel, gold, or stone.

It must be built within the human mind.

Without mastering consciousness, humanity will not merely destroy cities.

It will succeed in destroying its future.

That is the real ruin value of our age.

Not what remains standing after collapseโ€”

but whether enough human beings awaken before collapse arrives.

Hitlers crazy plan for Berlin: The World Capital Germania

Archetypal Animation created by Genolve.

Music: Ruins of Permanence 03:10 Stability (also Genolve): Slow tempo dark ambient with low strings, distant brass, soft choir, piano accents, and deep drones. Sparse percussion, minor harmony, no flashy solos. Mood is solemn, haunted, reflective, then quietly transcendent

Boring Apocalypse: Trapped in a Slow Collapse

Boring Apocalypse: Trapped in a Slow Collapse connects directly to this essay because the collapse of civilizations rarely arrives all at once. Empires often decay graduallyโ€”through normalization, spectacle, distraction, institutional erosion, and collective denial. Monumental architecture can become part of that psychology. Grand projects create the illusion of strength even as deeper systems weaken beneath the surface. What appears permanent in stone may actually be masking a slower political, moral, and civilizational unraveling.



Loyalty Over Truth: From Qin Shi Huang to Trump

This podcast also connects to Loyalty Over Truth: From Qin Shi Huang to Trump in the Wisdom Guardians series. This year, Wisdom Guardians is focused on ruthless rulers throughout human historyโ€”a critical thread in Sapience: The Moment Is Now. In the novel, Yong Xing-li, aided by four human-like intelligence AIs, undertakes a deep exploration of how ruthless rulers shaped human consciousness across civilizations. Raโ€”one of Yongโ€™s AIsโ€”guides him through the Hall of Ruthless Rulers. Qin Shi Huang is among the first figures encountered on that journey, and I am currently working on Nero.

Because of narrative space, only one ruthless ruler could be fully embedded in Sapience itself: Herod the Great. Wisdom Guardians allows me to explore the rulers that could not fit inside the novel. Understanding how these figures manipulated fear, loyalty, myth, memory, spectacle, and obedience is essential because that historical knowledge becomes part of the larger project of transforming human consciousness.


Sapience: The Moment Is Now (Kindle)

The link to Sapience: The Moment Is Now matters because that is where readers encounter Yong Xing-li more fullyโ€”who he is, what he is trying to do, and why. In a future shaped by ecological stress, political fracture, technological acceleration, and the recurring psychology of ruthless rulers, Yong understands that humanityโ€™s greatest danger is not merely external conflict but untransformed consciousness itself.

His work is therefore not to build monuments, accumulate spectacle, or consolidate power. It is to understand how consciousness can evolve on a scale never before achieved. Yong knows that unless human beings learn to master fear, projection, domination, and self-deception, humanity may ultimately succeed in doing what no empire before it could fully do: kill itself off on Earth.


The Epstein Survivor Hoodie belongs here because this essay is ultimately about what happens when power begins to believe it is exempt from accountability. Across history, ruthless rulers often surround themselves with systems of privilege, loyalty, and protection that encourage the belief that wealth, status, and proximity to power place them above ordinary moral limits. That same psychology does not remain confined to architecture or political spectacleโ€”it can spread into institutions, social norms, and cultures of impunity.

The hoodie therefore serves as more than apparel. It is a reminder that societies are judged not by the grandeur of their monuments but by whether they protect the vulnerable, tell the truth about abuse, and hold the powerful accountable. That question sits at the center of this essay: whether human beings will continue repeating old patterns of domination, or whether consciousness can evolve enough to break them.

Part of the Inconvenient Women Collection at The Quip Collection (Etsy and Sapience shops).

How to Stand Up to a Dictator, Maria Ressa: Then & NOW

The last chapter of Maria’s book is: Why Fascism Is Winning and its subtitle is Collaborate, Collaborate, Collaborate. She is the recipient of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize for her courage and work standing up to President Duterte, 16th President of the Philippines who was elected to the role of the presidency on June 30, 2016 (exactly 6 months after Trump did the same thing in the United States).

Both men went to work attacking the Press. Both men claimed they, and they alone, knew what is right and wrong. Both men labeled any coverage from the press that they didn’t like as Fake News, Unreliable, Unprofessional, Untrue. Both men worked furiously to annihilate truth, facts, and reality. They knew divided we fall!

To some extend, both men succeeded beyond their wildest mad fantasies!

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): Duterte’s Mad War

Duterte went to war, he said, to reduce ‘crime, corruption, and illegal drug trade‘. Many cheered. In reality, he would leave a brutal, bloody legacy of dead. Official numbers account that 6,248 people were killed, but human rights groups say the number is much higher, as high as 30,000 people.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: Image (GETTY) from BBC article: Mr Duterte’s war on drugs has claimed an uncounted number of victims

Investigations show many victims of Duterte’s war on drugs were his opponents, leftists, drug users (who needed treatment, not a bullet), and some dealers. The UN has implicated Duterte in more than 1,000 killings and disappearances of people. Police whistle blowers have told how they planted guns and drugs on these victims to frame them as involved in the drug trade. For more on these stats, please see the BBC’s June 30 article: The bloody legacy of Rodrigo Duterte.

2026 Postscript โ€” The Export of Brutality

What happened in the Philippines did not stay in the Philippines.

The logic of Duterteโ€™s drug warโ€”label a group as dangerous, strip them of humanity, and justify state violence as โ€œnecessaryโ€โ€”has now echoed inside the United States. Under Trumpโ€™s renewed administration, immigration enforcement has taken on this same moral framing: not as policy, but as war.

ICE crackdowns have intensified under the language of โ€œpurificationโ€ and โ€œrestoring order,โ€ and with that language comes permissionโ€”implicit and explicitโ€”for violence. The reported killings of individuals like Good and Prieti during enforcement actions are not anomalies; they are signals. They show how quickly a system built on fear begins to treat human beings as expendable obstacles rather than citizens, migrants, or neighbors.

This is how the line moves: first criminals, then suspects, then categories of people.

Alex Preti Renee Good
Reason Magazine
Border Patrol agents started the .

How Dictatorship Spreads (Philippines โ†’ U.S.) [2026]

Authoritarianism spreads less like an invasion and more like a contagion of ideas.

Duterte normalized extrajudicial killing under the justification of safety. That normalization did not need to be copied exactlyโ€”it only needed to be believed as effective. Once people accept that โ€œsome lives must be sacrificed for order,โ€ the moral barrier collapses.

The United States, long seen as a stabilizing democratic force, adopting even fragments of this logic sends a powerful global signal: that brutality works, and that it is permissible.

If America reinforces this model rather than rejects it, it doesnโ€™t just fall inwardโ€”it legitimizes authoritarian tactics outward. Other leaders no longer need to hide what they are doing. They can point and say: โ€œEven the United States does this now.โ€

That is how the virus spreads.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): Trump’s Mad Dash to Dictatorhood

Trump’s 4-year term is just as distributing. He knew COVID-19 did not bode well to be elected for a second term. So when the virus arrived in the United States, Trump went into deny, distort, and distract mode.

He continually played down how deadly the virus was and mocked people who wore masks. This turned a cheap, easy, commonsense public health approach of keeping people safe into a culture war.

Veteran Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward on Monday called the former President Trump’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic a โ€œcrimeโ€ that killed more than 1 million people.

The Hill reports Woodward said: โ€œI call it a crime, not telling the people that he had been warned that โ€” by his national security advisers in the most vivid way, which is outlined in these tapes, the interviews with them, where they are telling him.”

This is the reason why Woodward released the tapes he recorded with Trump early in 2020 as he interviewed him for his books Rage and Peril; earlier, he wrote Fear.

As of November 23, 2022, over 1 million US citizens have died of COVID; the vast majority of these deaths occurring while Trump held office before a vaccine was available. Trump crippled the CDC and turned public health guidance into a political weapon.

I haven’t even gotten into Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election and the insurrection of Jan. 6, 2021. You can read all about this in my blogs When Do We Get To Use Violence? and Free to Choose.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: This is a real time snap shot of COVID cases in the world as of 12/1/2022, 1:20 PM | John Hopkins COVID Tracker

2026 Postscript โ€” From Chaos to Structure

In 2022, Trumpโ€™s authoritarian tendencies were chaoticโ€”impulsive, reactive, and often incompetently executed. By 2026, they have become more structured, more strategic, and more dangerous.

The attacks on institutions have matured into systemic pressure: the reshaping of federal agencies, the targeting of perceived internal enemies, and the expansion of executive power under the justification of national emergency and internal threat.

What was once denial, distortion, and distraction has evolved into something colder: normalization.

Where COVID exposed the cost of disinformation in lives lost, the current phase exposes something deeperโ€”the willingness to institutionalize that disinformation as governing logic.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator & DOGE
DOGE and It’s consequences:
Image: The Spiggle Law Firm
Government Efficiency (DOGE …
How to Stand Up to a Dictator & Pete Hegseth
This image features a quote from Pete Hegseth during a congressional hearing regarding the war in Iran. Hegseth identified critics of the Iran war in Congress as a major adversary.ย  He described their comments as “reckless, feckless and defeatist”.ย  This testimony occurred during his first appearance before Congress concerning the conflict.ย  Image from:
Facebook
Pete Hegseth told the H

How Dictatorship Spreads (U.S. Internal Evolution) [2026]

Authoritarian systems donโ€™t arrive fully formedโ€”they iterate.

The first phase is disbelief: โ€œThis canโ€™t happen here.โ€
The second is fatigue: โ€œThis is just how things are now.โ€
The third is adaptation: people begin to adjust their behavior to survive within it.

By 2026, the danger is no longer just Trump as an individual, but the ecosystem that has learned from his first term. Loyalists are more prepared. Institutions are more compromised. Resistance is more fragmented.

And globally, this evolution matters.

When the United States moves from chaotic authoritarian flirtation to structured authoritarian governance, it becomes a modelโ€”not a warning. Countries on the edge of democratic backsliding now have a blueprint from one of the most powerful nations on Earth.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): There Is A Big Yang to Pay When Facts Fall Prey to Authoritarian Disinformation Campaigns

Since we are on the topic of global pandemic, let’s take a look at President Xi Jinping. He has recently been elected to a historical third term. This of course is code for President for Life.

He has cozied up to Putin, imprisoned Chinese Wiegers, carried out a brutal crackdown on democracy protesters in Hong Kong, and most recently was posturing in a tense standoffs about the fate of Taiwan. Many think Taiwan could be the next Ukraine as XI Jinping lines up his ducks to make Taiwan China again.

But real life, especially nasty little viruses, don’t always go along with the next chapter of the Dictator’s Playbook. President Xi Jinping took a hardline approach to COVID when it first emerged in Wuhan, China.

Zero COVID policy worked at first and it became the main strategy of Xi. Local authorities eager to prove how loyal they are to Xi have implemented extreme lock down measures, including locking people inside their homes and whole apartment complexes.

Xi has bragged about how effective China’s Zero COVID policy has worked, while the rest of the world suffered. He didn’t put much effort into vaccination efforts other than insisting China make its own vaccine while claiming Western-made vaccine like Pfizer or Moderna would be ineffective.

China would never do something crazy like use a COVID-19 vaccine made in the West! Heck, the Western World is falling apart… look at what happened at the US Capitol!

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: Archetypal Animation for When Do We Get To Use Violence?

Well, Xi is right about the US Capitol. We have lost our collective mind, but it is not because we have a free society and democracy (that is what he and his flying monkeys blame all the evil on).

The reason we are losing our collective mind is because our trust landscape is being destroyed by people who want to be just like him–a bully and a dictatorand digital clones, keep reading! But when you tell lies and spread disinformation to prop up your authoritarian ambitions, they tend to come back and bite you in the butt. And that is what is happening in China now.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: Map fromChina COVID unrest shines light on history of dissent by Nikkei Asia

CNN reported more than 17 protests occurring all over China, some very bloody. The deaths of people trapped inside their high rise apartment because the fire escapes had been locked due to Zero COVID lockdown measures ignited these protests but anger has been building all over China after 3 years of overzealous lockdowns. These measures are killing people too. Some have not been able to get medical care for heart attacks or other life threatening health conditions, others have committed suicide, all locked down have complained about getting rotten and substandard food or no food. This has lasted for months at a time.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: ‘Unbelievable scenes’ in China as protesters speak out against zero-Covid policy

Xi put himself into this very small box.

The protests are a real threat to his authority, but so too is China’s failure to create a vaccine that works. Virologists have compared China’s vaccine to Pfizer and Moderna and found it is not as effective.

Compounding the limited effect of China’s vaccine, China just has not put as much effort into vaccinating its population, relying instead on enforcing its Zero COVID policies with upmost brutalities. The result is the vast majority of China’s population are under vaccinated or not vaccinated. Nor do many individuals have immunity from a previous infection compared to the overall population.

If they let up on Zero COVID without vaccinating their population with a vaccine that works, COVID will roar through its population killing millions and while it does, it will be mutating and this could cause a BIG problem for the rest of the world, again.

If Xi relents and allows Pfizer and Moderna vaccines to be used in China, he reveals his lies about Western democracies to his people and he looks weak.

Oh what a sticky misinformation landscape Xi has created for himself!

2026 Postscript โ€” Control Refined, Not Relaxed

China did not abandon control after the Zero COVID protestsโ€”it refined it.

Where brute lockdowns once sparked visible resistance, the state has shifted toward more sophisticated forms of digital surveillance, predictive policing, and narrative control. The lesson Xi Jinping learned was not that control fails, but that it must become less visible and more psychologically embedded.

The external posture has also hardened. Taiwan remains a focal point, and China continues to test the boundaries of how far authoritarian power can extend without triggering unified global resistance.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator -- Palantir & ICE
Digital Surveillance in 2026
Image:
YouTube
How Palantir Assists ICE | Interesting …

How Dictatorship Spreads (Chinaโ€™s Model) [2026]

China represents a different branch of the authoritarian evolution: not chaos, but precision.

Its model shows that a population can be managed not only through fear, but through dependency, convenience, and digital integration. This is authoritarianism that doesnโ€™t always feel like oppressionโ€”it feels like infrastructure.

As Western democracies destabilize internally, Chinaโ€™s model gains appeal. It offers what struggling nations crave: order, predictability, and control.

If the United States falters, the ideological competition weakens. The world doesnโ€™t just driftโ€”it tilts.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator -- Corruption, Billionaires, Trump
Colosseum of Power explores how Billionaires are using their technology to buy elections and lull Americans into complacency (This graphic novel is available on Sapience’s Shop: The Quip Collection)

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): If Disinformation Doesn’t Work, Create A Scapegoat and Attack It

This is what Putin is doing now in Russia. He is losing the war in Ukraine. He looks weak and stupid. He needs a good distraction so his citizens don’t rise up against him and who knows, perhaps they castrate the man.

After all, it is his actions, and his actions alone, that have cut the Russian people off from the rest of the world–no Facebook, no Twitter, no vacations to Paris or Italy, no McDonalds–all because of his war with Ukraine.

So what does Putin do? Putin makes being gay illegal in Russia. He calls it a sickness of democracy and the Western World. He claims Russians don’t have gay people.

Come on Putin… now you look even more stupid than before. To read more about Putin and his flying monkeys, see Ukraine Letters.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: Scapgoat from January 2021 blog

2026 Postscript โ€” The Weaponization of Identity

Putinโ€™s use of scapegoating has only intensified. As military outcomes fluctuate and internal pressures grow, the targeting of LGBTQ+ communities, dissidents, and โ€œWestern-influencedโ€ citizens has expanded into a broader cultural purge.

This is not random crueltyโ€”it is strategic cohesion. By defining an internal enemy, Putin reinforces loyalty among those who fear becoming the next target.

Can you name the ways Trump and company are scapegoating Americans?


2026 — AI Overview

Donald Trump and his allies have consistently utilized scapegoating as a political strategy to build power, focusing blame on immigrants, political rivals, the media, and specific officials to rally supporters. Key targets include immigrants, blaming them for crime and economic issues, and Democrats/critics like Hillary Clinton and Obama. [1234]

Key figures and groups targeted include:

  • Immigrants and Refugees:ย Portrayed as invaders causing economic instability and crime, often used to justify stricter policies.
  • Political Rivals & Government Officials:ย Including Hillary Clinton, Obama, and Democratic Congressional leaders, often branded as culprits for policy failures.
  • Dr. Anthony Fauci:ย Used as a target for public frustration regarding COVID-19 recommendations.
  • The Media (“Fake News”):ย Labeled the “enemy of the people” to undermine negative reporting.
  • The “Deep State” & Federal Employees:ย Accused of sabotaging the administration.
  • International Bodies and Allies:ย China was used to push trade issues, while others have been blamed for perceived,ย 0.5.11ย US weakness.ย [1,ย 2,ย 3,ย 4,ย 5,ย 6]

The MAGA movement has also utilized broader targets like “DEI” (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) to blame for various societal and institutional issues. [1]

How Dictatorship Spreads (Scapegoating as Glue)

Every authoritarian system eventually needs a scapegoat.

Fear alone is unstable. It must be anchored to a visible โ€œother.โ€ Once that โ€œotherโ€ is defined, society reorganizes itself around avoidance, compliance, and silent agreement.

This tactic travels easily across borders because it adapts to local culture. In one country it is immigrants. In another, intellectuals. In another, religious or sexual minorities.

The specifics change. The mechanism does not.

And againโ€”the United States plays a pivotal role.

If America normalizes scapegoating at scale, it accelerates this tactic globally. It tells every would-be strongman that division is not a liabilityโ€”it is a governing strategy.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): The Dictator’s Playbook

Dictators around the world and throughout history use the same tactics. They attack the truth, exaggerate threats to make people afraid, and enflame emotions to herd as many people as possible under their make-believe umbrella constructed out of their annoying, droning chant: “I and I alone can fix it.

That is the secret spell of a dictator. This stupid chant is his top-secret, classified magic potion. This is what every dictator throughout time has ever used to manipulate the masses. It is called ignorance dust. It is what evil fairies use to make their mischief.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: My drawing from April 2021 blog

What they don’t say out loud is …they broke it and they made up the boogeyman who you are now afraid of!

Dictators systematically claim they represent truth, decency, and dignity while fabricating facts, fiends, and fantasies about their own greatness.

Dictators pit people against each other, then they sit and watch the carnage on TV.

PBS recently aired a miniseries on the Dictator’s Playbook. Also, this 11-page PDF summarizes a 2011 book written by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith titled: The Dictators Handbook, Why Bad Behaviour is almost always Good Politics

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: PBS recently aired a series on the Dictator’s Playbook | This is Episode 3 Benito Mussolini

And if these resources aren’t enough, Dr. Mark Van Vugt wrote for Psychology Today The 7 Steps to Becoming a Dictator.

1. Expand your power base through nepotism and corruption.

2. Instigate a monopoly on the use of force to curb public protest.

3. Curry favour by providing public goods efficiently and generously.

4. Get rid of your political enemies.

5. Create and defeat a common enemy.

6. Accumulate power by manipulating the hearts and minds of your citizens.

7. Create an ideology to justify an exalted position.

You should read the article because Mark gives some very lively examples.

2026 Closing Reflection โ€” The Global Stakes

What Maria Ressa warned about was never confined to one country.

Authoritarianism is not just a political systemโ€”it is a psychological condition that spreads through fear, repetition, and the erosion of shared reality. Each country that falls doesnโ€™t stand alone; it becomes proof of concept for the next.

This is why the United States matters so deeply in this moment.

If it resists, it disrupts the pattern.
If it falls, it accelerates it.

Because when one of the worldโ€™s most visible democracies begins to mirror the tactics of dictators it once condemned, the signal to the rest of the world is unmistakable:

The guardrails are gone.

And once that belief takes hold, the descent is no longer unthinkableโ€”it becomes inevitable.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): So, Just How Do You Stand Up to a Dictator?

Collaborate, collaborate, collaborate

This brings us back to Maria Ressa. She stood up to Rodrigo Duterte and to Mark Zuckerberg and his Facebook nightmare. In an interview with Dave Davies on FreshAir she said:

I wasn't the only one under attack in Rappler. And Rappler is about a hundred people. We're - we just became - we hit 10 years. We're 10 years old January this year. So my gosh, we're going to be 11 by January next year. But it's 63% women. And our median age is 23 years old. So when our younger reporters came under attack, I became far more protective of our team.
And within a short period of time, we increased our security six times, seven times, because at some point it became very clear that online violence is real-world violence. And, you know, in your introduction, you talked about the attacks of President Duterte and Facebook. I think, by 2016, I was calling for an end to impunity, impunity of Rodrigo Duterte and this brutal drug war and impunity of Mark Zuckerberg and Facebook. They go hand in hand. One could not have happened without the other.

DAVIES: When you started Rappler, this news service, one of the things you note is that the population of the Philippines had already become remarkably attached to digital technology. Different from a lot of places in that way, wasn’t it?

RESSA: Yeah. Look, we were the texting capital of the world before this, the SMS capital of the world. And then we became known as the social media capital of the world. And by January 2021, for six years in a row, Filipinos spent the most time online and on social media globally. A hundred percent of Filipinos on the internet today are on Facebook. Facebook literally is our internet.

DAVIES : I mean, it seems that what you were discovering was that social media platforms, like Facebook, have discovered that people respond to sharply emotional messages. And so the algorithms give them more of that – anger, hatred, resentment – which, in turn, brings more engagement, which is what their economic model is based on. And it – you observed that this was allowing people who were telling lies that were destructive and poisonous to democracy to spread faster than truth.

The interesting thing is that you actually had conversations with Facebook executives about this, right? You met with a bunch of them. Did they get it? What did they say?
RESSA: Rappler was essentially an alpha partner of Facebook. We knew Facebook in the Philippines better than Facebook did. And I went to them with the data, hoping that they would give me more data and fix it. I thought it would be an easy fix 'cause in 2016, it was alarming to see this kind of, you know, incitement of hate. In 2017, I was one of about a dozen startup founders that Mark Zuckerberg met with. And, you know, I was trying to get him to come to the Philippines to see how powerful Facebook was. And at that point, 97% of Filipinos were there. And that's what I told him. I said, you know, you really have to come 'cause 97% of Filipinos on the internet are on Facebook. So he started frowning. And I thought, OK, I must have been a little too pushy. And then, he looked at me. And he said, Maria, where are the other 3%?

DAVIES: (Laughter).

RESSA: I think that was the problem, right? They were so focused on market share, their profits, their goal for the business, that they forgot to look at the social harms. I also don't think it's a coincidence that they do not tell the difference between fact and fiction. It doesn't have any business or economic benefits to doing that. So at this point, you don't even have facts. So what did they do? They outsourced it. They gave - it became a fact-checking network that was doing this. But it was never integral to the product by design. Social media divides and radicalizes, and this is what we're seeing in the world today.

DAVIES: You write that, at one point, Zuckerberg wanted Facebook to start to really focus on weeding out offensive content. And you said, you’re missing the point. It’s – the problem isn’t content; it’s distribution. What did you mean?

RESSA: Because so much of the debate centers on content when that isn't the problem. Doesn't matter if your crazy neighbor talks about a conspiracy theory. You'll still like your crazy neighbor, and you listen. But it becomes different when that's the front page of your town newspaper. Imagine, the crazy things now make it to the front page. That is what goes viral. And that's the world we live in. Doesn't matter if it's real or not as long as it captures your attention. So it is your amygdala that decides, right? If you get angry, you'll share it.
And this is the - I mean, look, there is a - E.O. Wilson, who studied emergent behavior in ants, said that our greatest crisis that we face is our Paleolithic emotions, our medieval institutions, and our godlike technology. That godlike technology manipulated us to the point that the very systems of democracy that gave rise to this is now at the verge of failure.

DAVIES: You know, at the end of the book, you kind of ask the big question, which is, what do we do about this? I mean, now that you’ve – it’s apparent how harmful and poisonous this can be for democratic institutions. You know, in the United States, I mean, tens of millions of people believe made-up stories about a stolen election despite plenty of fact-checking that has been published debunking a lot of these stories. You think you have some strategies that might be effective? I mean, this is a little complicated, but share some of these ideas with us.

RESSA: In the short term, we decided, as we were walking into our presidential elections, that we would try to figure out what a whole-of-society approach to civic engagement could look like. And we created a four-layer, facts-first pyramid - four different layers. The bottom layer are 16 news organizations - the first time news groups worked together. You know, I've been trying since 2016, but we finally all work together. And that is the supply of fact checks.
But as you know, fact checks are really boring. They don't get wide distribution on social media. So that leads to the second layer. It's called the mesh - 115, 116 different civil society groups - NGOs, human rights organizations, climate change groups were there - business, the church. The Philippines is Asia's largest Roman Catholic nation. And the goal of the mesh layer is to share those boring fact checks, but to add emotion because emotion is what moves it through distribution. And what we found when we did that was that inspiration spreads as far as anger. The third layer are academic institutions. Eight of them total that took the data from the first two and every week told Filipinos how we were being manipulated, who was winning, who was losing, what were the media narratives being seeded? And then finally, the last layer, layer four, is rule of law. It's legal organizations from the left to the right in the Philippines, from the free legal group to the integrated bar of the Philippines to the Philippine Bar Association.
They filed, in less than three months, more than 21 cases, tactical and strategic, that helped protect the three layers. It worked. We were able to - it was the most successful attempt to try to take over the center of our information ecosystem. We mapped it. But more than that, within two weeks of launching this facts-first pyramid, the Philippine government - the office of the solicitor general filed a petition at the supreme court against Rappler and our commission on elections, because we were working with them at that point. They said that fact-checking is prior restraint. They tried to stop us from fact-checking. It almost made me laugh.

DAVIES: To kind of summarize here, it sounds like what you’re proposing is that news organizations need to overcome some of their competitive instincts and work together when there is important fact-checking to be done, connect them to other organizations in a way that puts energy and emotion into it and get that out there.

RESSA: Think about it like this. Like, if you don't have integrity of facts, you cannot have integrity of elections. And ultimately, what that means is that these elections will be swayed by information warfare. I mean, you know, it's funny. Americans actually look at the midterms. And they say, well, it wasn't as bad as it could be. Death by a thousand cuts - it's still bad. And if we follow, you know, what - the trend that we're seeing, if nothing significant changes in our information ecosystem, in the way we deliver the news, we will elect more illiberal leaders democratically in 2023, in 2024.
And what they do is they crumble institutions of democracy in their own countries, like you've seen in mine. But they do more than that. They ally together globally. And what they do is, at a certain point, the geopolitical power shift globally will change. Democracy will die. That point is 2024. We must figure out what civic engagement [looks like and], what we do as citizens today, to reclaim, [and] to make sure democracy survives.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): Surveillance capitalism

In Maria Ressa’s interview on 1A, she explained surveillance capitalism and how it enabled want-a-be dictators like Duterte and Trump to actually get elected in Free and Fair elections. Something she told Jen would never have happened pre-Facebook (and other social media era).

Here is how she explains it:

technology has degraded facts and broken our societies. I became a journalist because I believe that information is power - itโ€™s how we get justice. The death of democracy began when journalists lost our gatekeeping powers to the technology platforms that not only abdicated responsibility for protecting us ... but also destroyed democracy by destroying the facts ... for immense profit.
Like the age of industrialization, thereโ€™s a new economic model that brought new harms, a model Shoshana Zuboff called surveillance capitalism - when our atomized personal experiences are collected by machine learning, organized by artificial intelligence - extracting our private lives for outsized corporate gain. Highly profitable micro-targeting operations are engineered to structurally undermine human will - a behavior modification system in which we are Pavlovโ€™s dogs, experimented on in real time with disastrous consequences. This is happening to you - to all of us around the world.
Engagement based metrics of these American tech companies mean that the incentive structure of the algorithms, which is just their opinion in code implemented at a scale that we could never have imagined, is insidiously shaping our future by encouraging the worst of human behavior. Studies have shown that lies laced with anger and hate spread faster and further than facts.
Without facts, you canโ€™t have truth. Without truth, you canโ€™t have trust. Without these, we have no shared reality, no rule of law, no democracy.
In my upcoming book, the prologue I submitted last year began with the splintering of reality in Crimea in 2014. I had to revise that when Russia invaded Ukraine using the same narratives seeded then. Would that have happened if the platforms had acted 8 years ago? That is the true cost for the world.
Now these networks form a global nervous system of toxic sludge partly fueled by geopolitical power play. In 2018, we connected the information operations in the Philippines with Russian disinformation networks through websites in Canada. In 2020, Facebook took down information operations from China that were creating fake accounts for the US elections, polishing the image of the Marcoses, campaigning for Duterteโ€™s daughter, and attacking me and Rappler. In 2021, the US and the EU called out China and Russia for Covid-19 disinformation.
We are all connected.

To read more on how to tackle this huge problem that the whole world faces, a psychological-social virus just as deadly as the Coronavirus, see her speech: The Assault on Freedom of Expression. It is jaw dropping.


No one can afford to sit on the sidelines and watch how this all plays out. Every human being alive right now has a choice to act or watch democracy fall. And if the choice is to watch, you will also watch the world fall over the Climate Cliff.

You (reading this right now)… you will be alive to watch this all happen. It is happening right now and it is going to happen faster than anyone has previously predicated.

If we don’t save democracies, we will never get around to collaborating like we have never collaborated before as a global species to solve the looming climate crises bearing down on all of us right now. These climate crises are going to push the entire human race over the Climate Cliff.

It is time to Wake Up!

And Ron DeSantis (another want-a-be dictator), go buy yourself a mask, fins, and snorkel because if Florida is where Woke Goes to Die…well, Florida ain’t going to be around after Earth’s glaciers melt… and it’s going to happen much faster than the Woke People you disparage are telling you it will happen!

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: The world with a 70 meters sea-level rise

Think about it. Think about it hard.

What will you say to your children and grandchildren 50 years from now when there are no more democratic countries and we fail to act on Climate Change?

What will you tell them when you did not try to stop the Putins, the Xis, the Trumps (and his flying monkeys), and the rigid old men in Iran persecuting and killing their young people?

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: Archetypal Animation for Ukraine Letters | March 2022

And old men of Iran, for what? What are you killing your young people for… a strand of hair sticking out from a veil?! Come on you stupid old men… what are you going to do? Kill every young person in your country? Yes, probably you will… the ouroboros is the symbol for rigid old men clinging to their dictatorships.

And the North Koreas…well, Kim Jong Un is sitting pretty these days not collaborating with anybody not even his fellow dictators and firing off his rockets… he is the ultimate symbol for a manly male, a tough pluck... a virile coward if I ever saw one. Someone has to enjoy all the spoils he directs only to him and his loyal supporters.

Maria Ressa says we are all living in the upside-down now. Yes, the very same weird world as depicted in Stranger Things. In this world, only the ruthless get to relax in luxury. Everyone else suffers unbelievable poverty, abuse, and gets crushed under super surveillance systems created by dictators afraid of losing power.

We may be wise enough to know that Facebook is tracking us using super surveillance systems and this is pretty bad… this is where we are now. We all exist in a world of digital clones that are used against us to make huge profits for the ridiculously rich people of the world (think Elon Musk— you can be a corporate dictator too!). These are nasty little things corporations and social media platforms use to make more money by tearing truth, facts, and reality into tiny shreds. Read Maria’s book!

But the next step is not so very far away in our collective global future. The people fighting for their very lives in Ukraine RIGHT NOW know this! They know Putin will not stop if he wins Ukraine. No strongmen, no dictator, no authoritarian is ever satisfied with what they have. They always want more. That is their purpose in life. They have made themselves into monsters and the only thing they can do is devour the entire world. There are a lot of monsters alive RIGHT NOW trying to do this very thing.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: ย One of the images used in Feature Archetypal Animation from November 23, 2022 | The Monsters We Make

The next step Maria Ressa is very clear about is the fall of democracies around the world and the rise of dictatorships ruled by the ruthless. I believe her. And guess what? There is not much room at the top. What all ruthless rulers eventually do if they last long enough is turn on the very people who put them in power. Think about it. Ruthless rulers always need a foil, a ploy, an enemy, a scapegoat. Once they kill all the obvious people, they will start in on their loyal base of followers, the very people they put to sleep using their maniacal evil fairy dust: ignorance.

How to Stand Up to a Dictator: Archetypal Animation for When Do We Get to Use Violence | January 2022 blog

This is happening NOW on our watch!

How will you explain this to your children?

How will you explain food shortages, water shortages, raging floods and fires, sunken cities, more global pandemics, and governments that won’t even allow you to hold up a blank sheet of paper to protest not being able to protest for your most basic human needs and rights?

How to Stand Up to a Dictator (2022): Feature Archetypal Animation

Index Finger Hands Poor Clouded Sky Water | Inactive account โ€“ ID 8385

Head Human Head Half Profile Portrait Side View | Inactive account โ€“ ID 8385

Rodrigo Duterte | The Daily Beast

Graffiti Trump Mural Cologne Street Art Urban Art | clecaux | Cรฉcile Lecaux  โ€ข  Kรถln/Bonn/Deutschland  โ€ข  Member since July 13, 2017

Xi Jinping | Xi’s Back, Claims Chinese Media. Here’s Why His Appearance Is Big News

Vladimir Putin Russia Kgb President Ukraine | ProsaClouds | Deutsch  โ€ข  Member since Jan. 21, 2016

Zombie Devil Evil |diggersstory | Patter Hill  โ€ข  Big O town in Florida/USA  โ€ข  Member since Aug. 28, 2014

Music:

It Can Be Done but Only I Can Do It; Omar S

[1] Solely Supported    6:33

[2] Supported Solely    8:02

[3] Look Hear Watch    5:50

[4] Ganymede    7:54

[5] You Wish    8:46

[6] Over You Too    11:28

[7] It Can Be Done but Only I Can Do It    6:18