Public Formula 05

Fear as a Mechanism of Control

Fear as a Mechanism of Control

Where a person stops fearing and begins to think independently, the power of those who ruled through fear, prohibition and dependence weakens.

Meaning

Dogma is viewed here not only as a set of beliefs, but as a mechanism that holds a person inside a prescribed scenario. Everything that returns to a person the right to think independently about the body, death, consciousness and the future becomes a threat to systems of fear.

Full text

For the guardians of dogma, the very thought that a person may make their own choices in matters of birth, body, death and the boundaries of their own existence is unbearable.

Everything that gives a person even a hint of moving beyond the prescribed scenario is usually met with hostility: from a free attitude toward conception and pregnancy to experiences connected with consciousness, immortality, artificial intelligence and any attempts to go beyond the familiar human format.

Why? Because where a person stops fearing and begins to think independently, the power of those who have ruled for centuries through fear, prohibition and a sense of dependence weakens.

If a person no longer trembles before death, if they decide for themselves what to do with their body, their life and their future, the old mechanisms of control begin to malfunction.

And when control weakens, something new always appears. Other. Alive.

And that is exactly what systems fear most.

Something like that, my friends...

Why it was chosen

This text shows the public side of Ashraellen research: human freedom begins not with a beautiful declaration, but with the exit from fear. As long as a person fears death, the body, choice and responsibility for their own existence, that person is easy to govern.

Research note

This is not about arguing with one specific religion or ideology, but about a broader principle: any system built on prohibition and dependence resists the independent person. Freedom is understood not as arbitrariness, but as the ability to think without inner slavery before fear.

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