Systems of governance and regulation, insofar as they attempt to secure social, economic, and existential continuity, are structurally compromised. Their primary function is not effective service delivery, but the preservation of administrative and status hierarchies. Continuity of role, office, and influence comes first; the public good follows, if at all. Politics becomes theatre. Institutions become […]
- Tags administrative bloat, bureaucratic inertia, civilizational breakdown, civilizational risk, communication systems, complex systems, cultural decline, cybernetics, existential crisis, financial power, future collapse, global instability, governance reform, governance-failure, greed, higher education collapse, inequality, information overload, institutional critique, institutional decay, institutional self preservation, knowledge suppression, late capitalism, media ecology, political dysfunction, political economy, power concentration, regulatory failure, social fragmentation, status hierarchy, structural tragedy, sustainability failure, systemic collapse, systemic risk, systems theory, technocracy critique, technocratic governance, technological mediation, university crisis