Technocracy and the Elimination of the Masses
Written on 14 October 2025.
Technocracy and the Elimination of the Masses
Overview
The concept of technocracy as a means to eliminate mass resistance has gained attention among analysts who argue that global elites use technology not to advance civilization, but to stabilize their own power. In this view, the so-called sustainability and equity agendas — such as ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) frameworks — are not about moral progress, but about constructing a system that renders the general population powerless, dependent, and ultimately unnecessary.
The Elite’s Fundamental Problem
Throughout history, elites have faced one recurring threat: the collective power of the people. Revolutions, populist uprisings, and financial panics have all been driven by the masses when exploitation or deception becomes intolerable. The only way to prevent such upheaval permanently is to redesign society so that revolt is impossible — not by persuasion, but by control.
Technocracy as a Control Grid
A technocracy replaces representative governance with algorithmic management. Through digital ID, programmable money, and global data integration, citizens’ access to life’s essentials becomes conditional. Once all transactions, movement, and communication are mediated by technology, the elite no longer need to fear the unpredictable will of free individuals. The system itself enforces obedience.
Destroying Meritocracy
Meritocracy allows ordinary individuals to rise through ability and diligence, threatening the hereditary power of the ruling class. The replacement of merit with ideological compliance — under the banners of diversity and inclusion — prevents genuine talent from gaining influence. Advancement becomes a function of conformity, not competence. This inversion of values weakens the social and technological backbone of civilization, ensuring no new generation of strong independent leaders can emerge.
De-Industrialization and Depopulation
The global green agenda, centered on the demonization of carbon dioxide, is seen by critics as a mechanism of de-industrialization. By dismantling energy independence and restricting agricultural output through carbon and nitrogen limits, populations become economically crippled. Starvation and energy poverty accomplish what open warfare cannot — a silent reduction of the masses without direct confrontation.
The Logic of Elimination
From this perspective, the chain of reasoning is brutally simple:
- The only threat to elite control is the masses.
- Technocracy enables perfect surveillance and control.
- De-industrialization weakens populations and reduces independence.
- Ideological control replaces merit with obedience.
- Once dependent and fragmented, the masses can no longer revolt.
The result is not chaos, but managed collapse — a civilization transformed into a data-regulated plantation.
Conclusion
The technocratic model thus serves a dual function: it maintains order for those at the top while erasing the vitality, creativity, and self-reliance of those below. The moral language of climate responsibility and social justice conceals a pragmatic calculus of power. In pursuing safety from the masses, the elites destroy the very civilization that made their power possible.
AI Disclosure: Parts of this page may have been created, edited, or assisted by artificial intelligence tools (such as ChatGPT or other language models). All AI-assisted content is reviewed by a human before publication. For questions, contact the site administrator.