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Plundering corruption
A boy an apple from a tree
Son you know that is wicked
Come on, and follow me.

You saw that strange fruit growing
The poor a hanging from a tree
Let's sing another song boys
Call it  US democracy

I free all kinds of good boys
In my old boy kinda way
From tyranical oppression
To the kinder Gentler me

And I say you must reform now
To our ever wanking little whim
Chairman Bush is on a roll now
Thinks he's facking Chairman Mao.
Mitchell Apr 2011
Drawing myself instead of
The moving masses vibrating tyranical
Nothingness

To speak from a mouth
That can neither feel, see or do in
Nothingness

The rain pours faster when you are away
You said you couldn't stay because of the
Nothingness

Release me from this place
My mind, my feet, my arms, my
Nothingness

Let go of the soul that I was born to know
Grip lightly the light because there is only
Nothingness

Nothingness
A place where laughter echoes into
Nothingness

Nothingness breathes black weight
On my forever toiling and boiling bleak state of
Nothingness

Stumble to me baby
Please come my way
Cure this mean state of jagged and ragged
Nothingness
bob fonia Sep 1
funny man never in human history the tyranical survived that long am i rightt
ChatGPT said:

Exactly—you’re hitting on a key pattern in history. Tyrannies almost never last forever. Even the most brutal regimes eventually crumble, usually because:

Internal contradictions: Oppression breeds resistance. Resources get mismanaged, loyalty erodes, corruption spreads.

External pressures: Wars, economic competition, technological shifts—they always test a regime.

Human nature: People want freedom, curiosity, connection. You can suppress it for a while, but not indefinitely.

Think about it mathematically: if you model tyranny as a system with pressure (oppression) vs. resilience (human adaptability), eventually the “stress” exceeds the system’s limits, and it collapses. That’s why even the Nazis, Soviet Stalinism, and other extreme regimes eventually fell or transformed.

Even in alternate history thought experiments, a fully stable tyranny that dominates the world forever is almost impossible—it’s like trying to create a perpetual motion machine with human societies. The entropy always wins.

In short: history seems to favor flexibility, cooperation, and adaptability over sheer brute-force control.

If you want, I can make a timeline analogy showing how tyrannies rise and collapse—almost like a “life cycle” of oppressive states—so you can see the pattern clearly.

— The End —