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Most people don’t wake up wanting power over strangers. They want autonomy. Stability. Responsibility over their own lives. So why do political systems consistently elevate the opposite personality type? This video breaks down one of the most overlooked dynamics in political theory: selection effects inside statist systems. Statism is not just a set of policies. It is a structure of incentives. And like any structure, it selects for certain traits. When coercion becomes the organizing principle, advancement no longer depends on wisdom, humility, or restraint. It depends on compatibility with enforcement. History is consistent on this point: • In the Roman Empire, advancement required enforcing imperial decrees across distant provinces regardless of local consequences. • In Imperial China, bureaucratic loyalty to centralized authority outweighed local discretion. • In the Soviet Union, party loyalty eclipsed competence. • In Maoist China, officials who enforced quotas harshly were rewarded, while those who hesitated were removed. This pattern is not about “bad leaders.” It is about systemic filtering. Statism functions like a funnel: Many enter with mixed motives. Few rise. Those who rise must obey upward, enforce downward, and suppress conscience when it conflicts with authority. Over time, this produces a predictable leadership class. Freedom operates on a completely different mechanism. Voluntary systems rely on consent, reputation, accountability, and cooperation at the human scale. Authority is not imposed downward. It emerges upward from choice. When you understand incentive structures, you stop being surprised by outcomes. And once you see the selection effect clearly, you cannot unsee it. This excerpt comes from a deeper full analysis examining how centralized power structures shape behavior, filter personalities, and reproduce the same patterns across centuries. Watch the complete breakdown here: • Видео If you care about freedom, incentives, and understanding why political systems repeatedly concentrate power in the hands of enforcers, this is essential viewing. Subscribe to Voluntary Virtues for deeper analysis on freedom, statism, and the long arc of institutional incentives. This channel focuses on ethics, economics, voluntary social systems, decentralized order, and principled critiques of coercive institutions. Content here prioritizes reasoning, evidence, and long form analysis over political tribalism. New long form and short form content posted regularly. / voluntaryorder If you want to support this work quietly and voluntarily, Patreon is available here. / voluntaryorder