The Horse at the Gate

Systems do not need crises to expand control, only pretexts. This week, Artificial Intelligence finds itself on the chopping block. Deliberate misuse (specifically the generation of sexually explicit material involving children) has provided regulators with the perfect moral justification to restrict AI more broadly to the general population. The language used is always protective and framed as harm reduction, but the objective is to limit access to a tool capable of rapidly acquiring and synthesizing information in ways that could destabilize institutional authority or cultivate public mistrust.

This tactic is not new. It is the same mechanism used for over two decades to censor or regulate the internet. Invoke children. Invoke safety. Invoke extremism. The public response becomes automatic and dissent is reframed as an endorsement of harm. Regulation advances not because it is coherent or technically sound (in fact, most legislators have repeatedly demonstrated their inability to understand the systems they seek to regulate) but because it is emotionally insulated from criticism. The result is a population increasingly reliant on filtered, delayed, and sanctioned access to information, reassured that these limitations exist for their own protection, and for the protection of their children.

And Thus, a Lemon Party

At the same time, political activism continues its drift from opposition into performance. Over the weekend, anti-ICE activists, along with Don Lemon, stormed a church service, disrupting worship and accusing one of the pastors of being an ICE official or some shit. The choice of target was not accidental. Churches are safe targets: culturally disarmed, institutionally apologetic, and unlikely to respond with force. The same action directed at a mosque, or a synagogue, would not have occurred because of the potential for real consequences.

Image via Baptist Press

This asymmetry is never acknowledged. Instead, the legacy media frame remains intact: ICE is portrayed as a gestapo-like entity, while illegal immigrants are described as functionally indistinguishable from legal US citizens in rights and moral standing. Nuance is abandoned in favor of a childlike narrative structure. Politics is flattened into good versus evil and disagreement becomes immorality, and the enforcement of the existing law is being reframed as human cruelty in the mainstream media to advance a narrative. This narrative serves a material purpose. The continued influx of cheap, disposable labor benefits political and corporate interests at the direct expense of domestic workers. The irony is difficult to miss: the politicians most vocal about “human rights” are often those who stand to gain the most from the presence of this labor. So much for resisting corporate power.

Image via Fox News

The most revealing aspect is that none of this behavior carries risk. No meaningful legal consequences follow. The activists will not be charged. They will not be condemned by institutions that matter. In fact, they are often indirectly funded, protected, or amplified by the same corporate and philanthropic structures they claim to oppose. When billionaires, multinational institutions, and entire governing blocs align with your “revolution,” the term stops meaning anything.

Image via X.com

There is nothing revolutionary about terrorizing Christians, a religion that has spent decades defanging itself, apologizing for its own existence, and materially supporting the very systems that undermine it. There is nothing radical about enforcing consensus on behalf of the system while pretending to resist it. What we are watching is not rebellion, but managed dissent—safe, predictable, and ultimately useful to the system it claims to challenge.

Welcome to the Freudian Death Drive!

Welcome to the Freudian Death Drive!

Sigmund Freud posited that human behavior is shaped by two fundamental drives: a life drive and a death drive. The life drive, which he called Eros, refers to the set of instincts oriented toward survival, pleasure, sexuality, and reproduction. It encompasses tendencies toward connection, creativity, and the preservation of life, and can be expressed through attraction to other people, attachment to living things, and engagement with the natural world.

Freud’s concept of the death drive, or Thanatos, is rooted in the law of entropy (the idea that all systems eventually move toward their lowest point). Freud theorized that humans are naturally driven toward death and destruction over time, both individually and on a collective scale. This behavior can be observed all around us, whether in another murder on the news or in that ever-looming threat of World War Three that our leaders and the system use to keep us in line.

The material collected within this blog, and its related social media profiles, explores the aesthetics of the Freudian death drive. This is a space for examining that impulse not academically, but experientially. The intent is to create an environment in which the reader can consciously engage with a concentrated “hit” of the death drive in a single, contained sitting. Rather than treating the concept as an abstract psychological theory, the site frames it as something felt—through tone, subject matter, and repetition—allowing themes of decay, compulsion, fixation, and self-destruction to surface in a controlled form.

This blog will be updated on a weekly basis, with new entries added as the project develops and shifts in focus. Updates may vary in form and intensity, but they will remain consistent with the site’s aim of sustained, deliberate engagement with these themes. Any questions, comments, or inquiries regarding the project can be directed to freudiandeathdrive@outlook.com.