THE MOVING PICTURE OF POWER
By James Quillian, Economist, Natural Law
Most leaders think in still pictures. They freeze the world at a moment in time and assume the frame will hold. They talk about stability as if it were a permanent condition, and they treat victory as if it were the end of the story. But history doesn’t move in snapshots. It moves like a film reel, one frame spilling into the next, each moment shaped by the momentum of the last. Power is never fixed. It only pauses long enough for the next shift to begin.
Every empire rises the same way. Power concentrates, ambition hardens, and the machinery of dominance begins to turn. For a while it works.
For a while it looks permanent. Then the crest arrives, the high‑water mark that only becomes visible in hindsight. After that, the decline begins, slow at first, then unmistakable. And once an empire falls, it never returns by force. Not one. Rome did not return. Spain did not return. France, Britain, Germany, the Ottomans, the Soviets—each reached its peak, broke apart, and faded into the background of the next era. The pattern is absolute.