Remember that the rise of feudalism in Europe (and in Japan, and probably

in China, but I'm not so well-versed) required the collapse of

the Roman urban world, linked and sustained for half a millennium by an extremely well developed and free-to-circulate network of roads.

They can't crush us under their boot unless they destroy long-distance social, economic or even family relations sustained by affordable flight, or affordable private transportation.

They need to enclose you in "15 minute cities" where your horizon doesn't go beyond as many kilometres as you can walk today, or wherever preordained point A to point B "public transportation" route, at the established time and not when you want or need.

Then, when you can no longer fly to another country, or drive a hundred miles, they will also make sure that the internet you get in your 15 minute ghetto is exactly the internet that they say, or rather the one that says what they say, and no other.

1984. nostr:note17phpuml2ge6etr2jqakn5freqk9j2ecmq7kfds2fmtvmh006rvfqvnyd95

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I agree with your main point, don't forget that many were slaves in the Roman Empire. Serfs and peasants were just slaves who had to c feed themselves, sort of like us today.

I was writing a treatise on late Roman Empire history here as a reply, because it's one of my favorite subjects and I think there's a lot to say about your statement, but Damus as it often does had silently failed to connect to any relay whatsoever, so when I pushed the "Send" button, the note was sent... to the big Nothingness.

You've been lucky, it probably saved you 15 minutes of reading through my boring ass musings 😂

Dude I would have read it. In the end we have always been slaves of empires or kings in some way.

History is fascinating, I've always loved it and still do.