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When the system is operating... it is most dangerous
Source: CritpoTendencia Original Title: When the system is working… that’s when it’s most dangerous Original Link: There are moments when everything seems orderly. Prices don’t skyrocket, banks don’t collapse, headlines no longer scream emergencies, and the word “crisis” disappears from everyday conversations. It is precisely during these moments that the system conveys a nearly reassuring feeling, as if it has learned from its mistakes and now knows how to maintain stability. However, this calm does not equate to health. Often, it is the most subtle symptom.
The real danger does not appear during a system collapse but in its ability to continue functioning despite being deeply out of balance. Because when something clearly fails, the reaction is immediate: people question, debate, seek alternatives. But when everything seems to be going smoothly, attention relaxes, and the space for silent control expands.
The system does not need justice to operate. It only needs to be trusted.
Stability as Collective Anesthesia
Long-term stability has a special impact on society. It does not trigger alarms but instead fosters habits. Gradually, conditions that should be unacceptable in other contexts become normalized. Structural debt, loss of purchasing power, digital surveillance, reliance on intermediaries—all of these do not erupt overnight. They seep in slowly, while the machinery continues to run.
When the system is “operating,” the implicit message is clear: do not change anything. Avoid raising too many questions. Do not make drastic moves. Stability becomes a moral, almost ethical, justification for any adjustments needed to maintain it—even if these adjustments disproportionately affect the same groups.
During these periods, the problem is not crisis but the lack of friction. Without friction, there is no debate; without debate, there is no possibility of changing direction.
Control Does Not Come with Chaos, but with Order
Contrary to common belief, large-scale control mechanisms are not implemented during chaos but during phases of surface normalcy. It is precisely when the system proves it can absorb tension without breaking that it gains expanded legitimacy. More rules, more layers, more intermediaries—all always justified by avoiding the next collapse.
Every new “improvement” promises protection. Every new solution reduces a visible risk but introduces invisible dependencies. Users no longer perceive the costs because services continue to operate. Citizens no longer question because the system fulfills its basic functions. The true cost is paid on another plane, harder to measure.
The system has learned, adapted, and become more complex—not to serve better, but to prolong itself.
The final paradox is unsettling: when the system appears solid, it leaves the least room for imagining different things. Stability becomes an elegant prison, well-lit, where nothing seems urgent… until it becomes urgent.
Therefore, the most dangerous moments are not moments of collapse but moments of long-term calm. Because there, silently and without resistance, it is decided what kind of future will become inevitable.