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ZORAN RAKOVIC: The Tyrant Without a Face

Inspired by RCR Bites, a modern interpretation of Aristotle on how uncertainty, information overload, and ambiguity quietly shape power.


Aristotle reaches us today not through a lecture hall or a worn manuscript, but through a passing line in a modern bulletin, RCR Bites. A fragment dropped into the stream of daily updates. And yet, like all enduring ideas, it refuses to stay small.


“It is also the policy of a tyrant to impoverish his subjects… that they may be kept busy with their daily work and have no leisure for conspiracy.”


At first glance, it sounds like a relic. A description of crude domination. The tyrant squeezes the people, keeps them poor, keeps them working, and in doing so removes their capacity to organise against him. A politics of exhaustion.


But if we read Aristotle too literally, we miss what matters. His insight is not about poverty alone. It is about the conditions under which people lose the ability to act together.


In our time, those conditions have changed form.


We are not simply economically strained. We are cognitively saturated. We live in a world where information does not clarify reality but competes to define it. We are told that fuel reserves are stable, then told they may not be. We are told there is a ceasefire, then shown images that suggest otherwise. We are told systems are resilient, then quietly advised to prepare for disruption.


The modern citizen is not just working to earn a living. The modern citizen is working to determine what is real. And that effort is endless. You read one source, then another.


One says there are weeks of supply. Another says only days. One says a conflict is contained. Another says it is expanding. Each piece of information is plausible. None is fully decisive. So, you hesitate. You wait for confirmation. You defer judgement. And in that hesitation, something subtle happens. The capacity for collective action begins to dissolve.


Aristotle understood that people cannot organise if they are fully occupied. What he could not have foreseen is that occupation need not be physical. It can be mental. It can be the constant demand to interpret, compare, and reassess. A state of permanent provisional understanding.


You cannot coordinate with others if you cannot agree on the basic facts. You cannot agree on the basic facts if those facts are always contingent, always qualified, always shifting. So, the result is not rebellion. It is drift.


This is not the work of a single tyrant. There is no central figure orchestrating confusion. Instead there is a system composed of many actors, each operating within their own incentives, each producing their own version of reality. Governments project reassurance while preparing for shocks. Media outlets compete for attention with differing interpretations. Data is published with assumptions embedded so deeply that they become invisible.


The effect, however, mirrors Aristotle’s warning with eerie precision. People are kept busy. Not only with their jobs, but with the task of sense making. Not only with earning, but with interpreting. Not only with living, but with questioning whether what they are told aligns with what they observe. And because this work is never finished, it consumes the very time and clarity that would otherwise be available for coordinated action.


There is a paradox here. We have more information than any generation before us. We can access data, analysis, and opinion from across the world in seconds. And yet this abundance does not translate into greater agency. It often produces the opposite. A kind of paralysis born not of ignorance, but of overload.


The ancient tyrant reduced leisure through labour. The modern system reduces clarity through excess. And without clarity, leisure itself becomes irrelevant. Even when you are not working, you are processing. Even when you are resting, you are updating your understanding of a reality that refuses to settle.


This is why the most consequential phrase in modern governance is not an order, but a qualification. Based on current information. It sounds responsible. It signals caution. But it also encodes instability. It tells you that what is true is temporary, that conclusions are tentative, that decisions may need to be revisited. It invites you to wait.


Aristotle would recognise the outcome even if he would not recognise the mechanism.


A population that is unable to coordinate is, in effect, a population that cannot challenge power. Whether that power is concentrated in a ruler or diffused across systems does not change the result.


The question, then, is not whether we live under tyranny in any classical sense. It is whether we are drifting into a condition where action becomes increasingly difficult, not because we are forbidden to act, but because we cannot quite establish the ground on which to stand.


If there is a response, it begins with something deceptively simple. A discipline of distinguishing between what is known and what is assumed. Between what is physically present and what is expected. Between what is agreed and what is merely asserted.


This is not a call for cynicism. It is a call for precision.


From there, something more demanding follows. A refusal to passively absorb ambiguity. A willingness to test it, to question it, to anchor discussion in shared, verifiable points of reference. Not in order to eliminate uncertainty entirely, which would be impossible, but to prevent it from expanding unchecked.


And finally, a return to local forms of understanding. Conversations grounded in place, in direct observation, in relationships where agreement can actually be built. Because coordination does not begin at the level of global narratives. It begins where people can still look at the same thing and say, with some confidence, this is what we are dealing with.


Aristotle’s line, encountered through RCR Bites, is not a relic. It is a lens. It reminds us that the erosion of collective capacity does not always arrive with force. It can arrive quietly, through busyness, through uncertainty, through the slow replacement of clarity with constant qualification.


The tyrant, in the modern sense, does not need to impoverish you outright. It is enough that you are occupied. Occupied with work. Occupied with interpretation. Occupied with doubt. And just uncertain enough to remain still.


Zoran Rakovic is a structural engineer with nearly 30 years of experience, who has helped design and strengthen buildings across New Zealand. His substack is HERE




 
 
 

12 Comments


andersjoan
an hour ago

Andy Espersen comments,

But has anything really changed since Aristotle's days?


The solution then, as now, is that successful societies are governed through democratic systems. Aristotle lived in the middle of the great, hugely successful Greek democracy - all his philosophy was based on this.


Zoran Rakovic's final words above are "The tyrant, in the modern sense, does not need to impoverish you outright. It is enough that you are occupied. Occupied with work. Occupied with interpretation. Occupied with doubt. And just uncertain enough to remain still."


But societies never remain still : Elections occur every few years! Governments change - and politics change! But yes, uncertainty always remains - however some solutions to the perceived problems will be enact…


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Mick
3 hours ago

This a remarkably well written article. In Aristotles day, tyrants made sure the populace was too downtrodden and busy trying to survive to be a threat to their power. Nowadays the"system" maintains similar power by ensuring the populace is bamboozled by misinformation and disinformation. The people are paralysed by confusion and uncertainty.

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Lesley Munro
Lesley Munro
an hour ago
Replying to

Thank you. You crystallised that onerous diatribe into a few cogent sentences.

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Steve Hall
Steve Hall
3 hours ago

Yes, Zoran - humans are now suffering from what is essentially a denial of service attack, and even trying to figure out what is deliberate and what is incidental, overloads the grey biochip.

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Bruce McKenzie
Bruce McKenzie
3 hours ago

Righto fellas, here’s the gist of that long, fancy article — in plain language.

Aristotle, the old Greek thinker, once said tyrants keep people poor and busy so they don’t have time to organise a revolt.

The writer reckons the modern version isn’t about money anymore — it’s about mental overload.

These days, we’re not digging ditches from dawn to dusk. We’re drowning in too much information.

One news source says everything’s fine. Another says it’s not. Someone else says “it depends”. So you end up thinking, “Well… I’ll just wait and see.”

And that’s the point the writer’s making:

When people are constantly confused, overloaded, or unsure what’s true, they stop acting together.

Not because someone is cracking a…

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GordonR
6 hours ago

A refusal to passively absorb ambiguity. A willingness to test it, to question it, to anchor discussion in shared, verifiable points of reference.


Worth repeating. It does take time and effort though, which makes the task that much harder.

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