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Absolutism and the
Alchemy of Poison Why Total Power Must
First Redefine the Past as Toxic By Bodhangkur 1. The Structural Problem Every Absolutism Faces Every
absolutist system—religious, political, ideological, or technocratic—faces
the same foundational obstacle: Pre-existing
meaning. Human
societies never begin as blank slates. They are always already structured by: ·
inherited customs, ·
distributed authority, ·
plural truth-systems, ·
layered loyalties, ·
local survival heuristics. An
absolutist system, however, makes a non-negotiable claim: There is
one final truth, one legitimate authority, one correct procedure. This
creates an irreducible contradiction. Absolutism cannot simply compete
with inherited systems. Competition implies parity. Parity implies
negotiability. Negotiability destroys absoluteness. Therefore,
absolutism must perform a more radical operation: It must
chemically reclassify the old order itself as poison. Not
merely wrong. This is
the moment where power crosses from persuasion into purification. 2. Why “False” Is Not Enough — Only “Toxic” Justifies
Erasure If an
older tradition is merely declared false: ·
it can be debated, ·
tolerated, ·
remembered, ·
quietly continued, ·
blended with the new. But if it
is declared toxic: ·
memory becomes exposure, ·
curiosity becomes contamination, ·
critique becomes infection. Once that
shift occurs, destruction becomes hygiene, not violence. This is
why absolutist systems universally moralise their opponents as: ·
poisonous, ·
corrupting, ·
subversive, ·
radicalising, ·
unsafe. The
language changes with history. 3. The Purification Algorithm: The Hidden Operating
System of Absolutism Once the
old is toxicised, absolutism deploys a remarkably
stable six-stage control sequence. This sequence appears in medieval
theology, revolutionary politics, totalitarian states, and modern platform
governance with minimal structural variation. Stage 1 — Declare a Total Truth A final
authority is established: ·
God ·
Party ·
Nation ·
Race ·
Science ·
The Algorithm This
truth is not framed as provisional or revisable, but as foundational and
non-negotiable. Example: Stage 2 — Reclassify Dissent as Toxic Opposition
is no longer framed as disagreement but as danger. Thus: ·
Heresy becomes spiritual poison. ·
Counter-revolution becomes social infection. ·
“Misinformation” becomes cognitive contamination. Example: At this
point, debate is structurally terminated. Stage 3 — Rebrand Obedience as Safety Once
danger is declared, obedience is no longer submission. It becomes: ·
protection, ·
responsibility, ·
care, ·
virtue. This is
the deepest psychological inversion absolutism performs: Freedom
becomes risk. Example: Stage 4 — Pathologise
Independent Thought Independent
reasoning itself is now reframed as: ·
pride (or hubris), ·
conspiracy, ·
extremism, ·
radicalisation, ·
irresponsible cognition. Doubt
becomes a symptom. Example: At this
stage, thinking itself is medicalised. Stage 5 — Outsource Violence to “Procedure” Direct
coercion is now sanitised by transferring responsibility to: ·
canon law, ·
revolutionary tribunals, ·
legal bureaucracy, ·
moderation systems, ·
AI enforcement. Power now
says: “We did
not punish you. This
renders domination impersonal, automatic, and morally anesthetised. Example: Stage 6 — Rename Domination as Protection The final
linguistic seal is placed: ·
Censorship becomes “safety.” ·
Surveillance becomes “care.” ·
Purge becomes “community standards.” ·
Silence becomes “well-being.” At this
point, resistance itself appears immoral. 4. Why Toxicisation Is Not
Optional for Absolutism The
entire algorithm collapses if the old order is allowed to remain merely
“different.” Absolutism
survives only if: ·
memory becomes contamination, ·
inheritance becomes threat, ·
plurality becomes hazard, ·
independence becomes pathology. This is
why: ·
paganism had to become demonic, ·
rival parties had to become traitorous, ·
unsanctioned speech must become unsafe. Toxicisation is not
propaganda excess. 5. Historical Example: From Serpents to Heretics to
Extremists The
serpent in Christian mythology is the prototype toxin symbol: ·
It does not debate. ·
It infects. ·
It corrupts invisibly. ·
It must be eliminated. This
symbolic structure survives intact:
Different
costumes. Same skeleton. 6. The Psychological Payoff: Why Populations Accept the
Algorithm The
purification framework succeeds because it offers three powerful emotional
rewards: 1. Moral
Superiority — “We are the clean.” 2. Fear
Relief — “Danger is being handled.” 3. Belonging — “We
are on the right side.” Thus,
populations do not merely submit. They participate. They
begin: ·
hunting symbolic snakes, ·
competing in purity displays, ·
pre-emptively censoring themselves, ·
demanding stronger enforcement. At this
point, absolutism becomes self-sustaining. 7. Finn’s Procedural Diagnosis Under
Finn’s procedural lens, absolutism does not fight rival beliefs. It fights: Rival
self-generating truth engines. The “old”
is not dangerous because it is false. So it
must be: ·
classified as toxic, ·
isolated from reproduction, ·
prevented from iteration. Once
unsanctioned generation is defined as poison, Conclusion Absolutism
does not rise by proving itself true. The toxicisation of the old is therefore not incidental
rhetoric. It is the load-bearing mechanism that allows: ·
erasure to masquerade as hygiene, ·
obedience to masquerade as safety, ·
domination to masquerade as care. From
serpents to heretics to extremists to “unsafe speech,” Only the
interface has changed. |