The question guiding this essay is the following: Has humanity truly advanced in its structures of power, or has it merely transformed its forms of domination? Although modern Western discourse is grounded in the somewhat ambiguous idea of “democracy,” based on hierarchical constitutions and human rights with limited enforceability, it appears that static dynamics persist and continue to replicate themselves—dynamics that echo the logic of medieval feudalism. I refer to these dynamics as “static” in light of the presumed civilizational progress of humanity. They are now cloaked in contemporary socioeconomic, legal, and technological categories that reproduce patterns of subordination, dependency, and concentration of power. Far from disappearing, these mediocre structures—ones that plunge humanity into misery and prevent genuine civilizational advancement—seem merely to have reconfigured themselves, adapting into new forms of economic and geopolitical vassalage articulated through corporate, financial, and technological power.
ARMANDO CHAVEZ CALDERON (Tue,) studied this question.