The Fantasy‑ Free Doctrine
A foundational booklet for those who wish to see the world as it is, not as they wish it to be.
I. Human Nature
1. Human nature does not change
The same creature that walked out of the ancient world walks the earth today.
Technology evolves. Institutions evolve. Costumes evolve. Human motivation does not.
2. People act in their own interest
Not the interest they claim. Not the interest they imagine. The interest that benefits them in the moment.
3. Ideals are decorative. Incentives are decisive
A person’s stated values predict nothing. Their incentives predict everything.
II. Power
4. Power corrupts because it removes consequences
This is not a slogan. It is a law of human behavior. No one is exempt. Not the wise. Not the educated. Not the well‑intentioned.
5. Power seeks more power
It does not stabilize. It does not self‑correct. It expands until it meets resistance.
III Systems
6. A society that forgets the nature of power becomes governed by it
People claim to distrust authority while behaving as if authority is benevolent. This contradiction is the root of political decay.
7. Systems produce exactly the outcomes they are designed to produce
If corruption thrives, the system rewards it. If inequality grows, the system requires it. If conflict persists, the system benefits from it.
8. Blaming individuals is a distraction
The system is the actor. The outcomes are the design.
9. A system built on denial collapses under its own contradictions
This is not ideology. It is mechanics.
IV. Markets and Violence
10. Markets evolved as the alternative to violence
Before markets, all disputes were settled by force. Markets replaced conflict with exchange.
11. When markets weaken, violence returns
This is not a theory. It is a recurring pattern in human history.
12. A free society is a temporary equilibrium
It exists only when incentives favor peace over domination. When that balance shifts, freedom erodes.
V. Truth and Denial
13. People prefer comforting lies to uncomfortable truths
They say they want honesty. They behave as if they want reassurance.
14. A society that denies basic truths becomes governed by fantasy
Fantasy is not harmless. It is the precondition for exploitation.
15. Truth is not complicated. It is merely unwelcome
The difficulty is not understanding it. The difficulty is living by it.
VI. The Role of the Observer
16. To see clearly is to stand alone
Clarity isolates because most people are invested in illusions.
17. The task is not to persuade the many, but to reach the few
The few who can see. The few who can carry the work forward. The few who can live by what they know.
18. The work is not to invent truth, but to remove the fog around it
Truth is already known. People simply refuse to live by it.
VII. Continuity
19. The work does not end with the worker
The truths are older than you and will outlive you.
20. Your responsibility is articulation, not completion
You deliver the part only you can deliver. The next minds will take it from there.
21. The few will find the work on their own
They always do. They always have.
Closing Statement
This doctrine is not a theory of how the world should work. It is a description of how the world does work.
Its purpose is simple:
To free the mind from fantasy so it can operate in reality.