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The Sermon and the Sword: Overt Realism, Covert Mythology, and State Power

How the Great Rebalancing of 2026 Exposes the Fracture Between Procedural Legitimacy and Performance Legitimacy   The presumed triumph of Western liberal democracy, famously heralded by Francis Fukuyama’s “End of History” thesis, has fractured under the weight of geopolitical and philosophical reality. While the West champions a model of procedural legitimacy rooted in the Rule of Law and downward accountability, China’s rise demonstrates an alternative paradigm of performance legitimacy, where the state openly commands the legal apparatus to deliver rapid development. Beneath the West’s myth of constrained governance lies a sophisticated architecture of covert control: an unselected administrative core, weaponized financial interdependence, and a secular priesthood of intellectuals who manufacture consent. Historical precedents from the Enclosure Acts to the 2008 bailouts reveal that Western law has frequently functioned as an instrument of elite extraction rather than a shi...

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