The Silent Drift of Western Institutions

This Forum is for all the reveals that happened during the "COVID EVENT" which revealed the truth about how the government actually operates, versus the claim about how the Government operates. So many truths, long suspected, were proven to be true all along. Let's explore.
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White Wolf
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The Silent Drift of Western Institutions

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[iframe]Luc Lelièvre’s earlier essays documented the specific techniques by which institutions suppress dissent — the ideological framing of Heresy, the procedural rerouting of Suspension, the semantic dissolution of Dilution, the weaponized counter-deployment of Reversal, and the structural condition he named Closure, in which corrective signals circulate through bureaucratic systems without ever producing revision. Each essay built outward from his expulsion from Université Laval’s doctoral program after proposing to apply Arendt’s framework to Quebec’s pandemic governance, transforming that experience into an increasingly formal theory of how modern institutions neutralize feedback. What remained implicit across the series was the full architecture connecting these mechanisms — the broader question of how entire institutional ecosystems drift from delay into permanent cognitive inertia without any single actor deciding it should be so.

The Silent Drift of Western Institutions provides that architecture. Drawing on Le Bon, Lippmann, Bernays, Arendt, Scott, and Shklar, Lelièvre traces a lineage from the manufacture of mediated perception to the contemporary condition in which institutions no longer fail to receive information but fail to act on it. The essay identifies a four-part mechanism — dispersion, proceduralism, absorption, and drift — that explains how responsibility fragments, procedures multiply without concluding, and evidence is neutralized into abstraction before it reaches any point of decision. The institutional cost is measurable: France loses €84 billion annually to over-administration; Canada sacrifices 1.7% of GDP to regulatory burden. Lelièvre’s central argument is that this drift constitutes a threat not because it produces tyranny but because it erodes reversibility — the capacity of democratic systems to recognize error and correct course. Institutions that can no longer learn do not collapse. They become inert, procedurally busy and cognitively sealed, widening the gap between administrative activity and lived reality until the distance becomes unbridgeable.[/iframe]
https://substack.com/@unbekoming/note/p ... 8?r=31s3eo
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