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It is because the man in charge is defective

  • Writer: john raymond
    john raymond
  • 4 days ago
  • 1 min read
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It is because the man in charge is defective cuts to the anatomical heart of political decay.


Systems fail not because their designs are inherently unsound, but because the human element—the moral and psychological quality of the one wielding authority—is corrupt. The structure magnifies the defect.


A defective leader is not merely imperfect; he is misaligned with the ethical and cognitive demands of power. His judgment is warped by insecurity, vanity, or malice. He cannot distinguish personal interest from public duty, nor power from responsibility. In such a case, all institutional safeguards bend toward his pathology. The bureaucracy adapts to his impulses; the loyalists imitate his vices; the populace becomes desensitized to degradation.


Under the Raymond Method, this is the regime security inversion: the ruler’s need for self-preservation supersedes the system’s need for integrity. Power ceases to serve the nation and instead serves the ruler’s psychological defect—his paranoia, his greed, his compulsion for control. The result is predictable: policy becomes reactive, alliances collapse, trust evaporates, and corruption metastasizes through every administrative layer.


The implication is grim but clarifying. No constitution, law, or ideology can redeem a defective man once he controls the levers of power. The system becomes an extension of his disease.


Therefore, the preservation of civilization depends less on the perfection of its laws than on the soundness of those entrusted to enforce them. When the man in charge is defective, the state itself begins to rot from the head down.




 
 
 

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