Tag: On Tyranny

  • The Dangers of Comfort: Maruki in Persona 5 Royal

    The text examines authoritarianism in “Code Geass” and “Persona 5 Royal,” highlighting the dangers of manipulated language and comforting illusions. Takuto Maruki, as a benevolent antagonist, represents a threat through his compassionate control, prioritizing emotional comfort over truth. The narrative emphasizes that true healing requires agency and accountability, warning against surrendering reality for false happiness.

  • Exploring _On Tyranny_ and Lessons from Code Geass & Persona 5

    The analysis links Code Geass and Persona 5 Royal, illustrating how authoritarianism emerges through language and the distortion of truth. While Code Geass depicts external domination via imperial language, Persona 5 Royal explores internal acceptance of comforting falsehoods. Both works emphasize that losing discernment between reality and desire threatens individual freedom and truth.

  • Linguistic Control: From Language to Oppression

    Language is not neutral—it shapes power, identity, and resistance. This article explores dog whistles, assimilation, and minority dynamics through Code Geass and political theory.

  • Why Most People Accept Tyranny (And the Few Who Break It) — From WWII to Gundam SEED & Code Geass (Lesson 8)

    Tyranny doesn’t survive because it’s unstoppable—it survives because people comply. This analysis of On Tyranny connects Hannah Arendt, Michel Foucault, WWII history, and anime like Gundam SEED and Code Geass to show how resistance begins with individuals who refuse to conform.

  • Understanding Tennessee’s Controversial HB754/SB676 Bill

    Tennessee Identity Data Reporting: The Hidden Implications Behind the Policy Change Since 2015/2016, I have been loud about Trump and his brand of “Republican” and how they supported a national Muslim registry. November 20 2015: An NBC News reporter asked if Trump, if elected, would require Muslims to register in a database. He said, “I…

  • Understanding On Tyranny: Lesson 2’s Call to Defend Institutions

    Lesson 2 in On Tyranny takes us to “Defend Institutions.” It is institutions that help us to preserve decency. They needour help as well. Do not speak of “our institutions” unless youmake them yours by acting on their behalf. Institutions do notprotect themselves. They fall one after the other unless each isdefended from the beginning.…

  • Understanding On Tyranny: Lesson 1 and Authoritarianism

    In my last post, I started discussing the author and the book On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century and discussed that I would be going into further detail on the lessons found in the book. With the “switching sides” of various “left-wing” media companies and their pundits, I figured this would be the…