The red hat sits on the dashboard, faded by the sun, stained with the grease of cheap fast food and cheaper ideals. Once, it was just another piece of merchandise, a relic of a campaign that promised greatness. Now, it’s something else entirely—an armband repurposed, a sigil of a nation quietly practicing its Sieg Heils in the mirror, wondering if it looks good in jackboots.
The trick, of course, is subtlety. No one wakes up one morning and decides, “You know what? I’d like to dismantle democracy today.” No, no. It’s much more elegant than that. First, you arrest one man without cause. Then another. Then a dozen more. And soon, due process isn’t lost—it’s simply misplaced, like an old library book no one bothers to check out anymore.
And so, we must ask ourselves: At what point does a nation stop being a democracy and start being a well-lit dictatorship with great branding? How many people need to be swallowed up by the machine before the rest realize they’re next?
And, perhaps the most terrifying question of all—why is it always the most mediocre men who get to play emperor?
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