Of course they have gamed out street mayhem. They have had a century of colonial labs and "color revolutions" to study how crowds move.
https://x.com/nxt888/status/2020118204639768648
Of course they can harness chaos.
Of course they have gamed out street mayhem.
They have had a century of colonial labs and "color revolutions" to study how crowds move.
But that is exactly why I am careful with the lesson.
If we turn "they can weaponize chaos" into "never go to the streets," we have already done their work for them.
The point is not that revolt is useless.
The point is that unfocused revolt is a gift.
They are perfectly happy with:
Riots that burn your own neighborhoods, not their institutions.
Anger that explodes for a week, then goes home exhausted.
Protests that never touch ports, refineries, data centers, payment systems, or logistics.
Slogans that feel radical but never turn into disciplined organization.
That kind of chaos is a pressure valve.
It lets people feel they have "done something" while the architecture of power stays untouched.
They do not fear your rage.
They fear your coordination.
They do not fear crashes in the street.
They fear strikes that stop the machine.
They do not fear people screaming at palaces.
They fear people calmly tracing supply chains and cutting leverage points.
So yes, I believe they simulate anarchic conditions.
Yes, I think they study how to ride chaos and redirect it.
But you know what they cannot simulate?
People who are:
Angry and lucid.
Traumatized and organized.
Furious and strategic.
The answer is not to stay home.
The answer is to stop giving them the kind of chaos they know how to monetize.
They can harness random mayhem.
They struggle much more with mass refusal, targeted non-cooperation, and movements that know exactly which pillars keep the system standing.
So I do not dismiss your suspicion.
I just refuse to let it become paralysis.
If they want you to run in circles, give them lines instead:
Lines that cut through their narratives.
Lines that link your struggle to others.
Lines that connect outrage to power, not just to catharsis.

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