Red lines for sale by Markus Gibbons

Imagine an American administration announcing a multibillion dollar fund to compensate loyalists for alleged political persecution while simultaneously shielding the president, his relatives, and his companies from federal tax scrutiny. In another era, such a proposal would have been laughed out of Washington as the plot of an overwrought political thriller. Today, many Americans would simply scroll past it between weather alerts and grocery coupons, which may be the most alarming development of all.

The true danger in moments like these is not merely corruption. America has survived corruption before. Cities were once run by political machines that treated public office like a neighborhood pawnshop. Presidents have rewarded donors, punished enemies and stretched the law until it squealed. The greater danger is the normalization of power without restraint, the steady conversion of democratic institutions into private instruments of loyalty, grievance, and profit.

Modern authoritarianism rarely arrives in polished boots or through dramatic declarations from palace balconies. It comes wrapped in the language of victimhood. It insists that accountability is persecution, that investigations are coups, that courts are enemies, and that laws apply differently to people who claim to embody the nation itself. The strongman no longer promises virtue. He promises revenge on behalf of followers who feel humiliated, ignored, or culturally displaced.

What makes this political era especially unsettling is its open contempt for ethical boundaries once maintained through shame rather than force. There was a time when presidents at least pretended to separate personal interests from public duty. They released tax returns because voters expected transparency. They avoided obvious conflicts because appearances mattered. Now the performance has changed completely. The brazenness is the message. Every shattered norm becomes proof of strength. Every outrage becomes a loyalty test.

The old American assumption was that institutions would restrain any one leader from becoming too powerful. But institutions are only as durable as the people willing to defend them. Courts require compliance. Congress requires courage. Federal agencies require independence. Journalism requires public trust. Remove those invisible supports and the constitutional structure begins to resemble an abandoned movie set, impressive from a distance but hollow behind the painted walls.

The saddest part is how quickly exhaustion becomes political surrender. Citizens grow tired of permanent scandal. They stop reacting. They accept behaviour that once would have ended careers because outrage itself becomes draining. This is how democratic erosion happens in wealthy countries. Not through one decisive collapse, but through accumulated tolerance. One exception follows another until the exceptions become the system.

The United States still possesses enormous democratic resilience, but resilience is not immortality. No republic receives permanent exemption from history. Nations decline when leaders convince supporters that the state exists primarily to protect one man and punish his enemies. At that point, patriotism becomes confused with obedience, accountability becomes betrayal, and public office becomes a business opportunity with flags attached.

The most revealing feature of such politics is not secrecy but spectacle. The deals are announced loudly, almost gleefully, because the objective is domination through repetition. Citizens are meant to internalize the lesson that nothing can stop the ruling circle, not ethics boards, not prosecutors, not elections, not even basic standards of decency. Once enough people believe resistance is futile, democratic culture weakens long before democratic laws formally disappear.


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Red lines for sale by Markus Gibbons

Imagine an American administration announcing a multibillion dollar fund to compensate loyalists for alleged political persecution while si...