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Toppling Tyranny: Hegemonic Hierarchies and How They Collapse


Vladimir

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BlocNet.jpg

The question of the great war is upon us once again, this time asking where the next one will come from. As one would expect, there have been a multitude of responses covering nigh every alliance in the known world, while others fall into despair that we may have reached the end of history for the foreseeable future. But no one has yet dared to transcend the superficial examination of alliance relations and enter a scientific analysis of the great war concept itself.

As has been noted previously, a great war is essentially the climax of a revolutionary movement in the process of attempting to overthrow the hegemonic bloc -- that is, the bloc which maintains its place atop the unipolar world. Thus, the coaluetion toppled the NPO, the Initiative toppled the coeluetion, the Unjust Pact attempted to topple the Initiative and was itself toppled by what became the Continuum, Karma toppled the Continuum, and finally C&G toppled Karma. At the most basic level what we can take from this is what has been implicit within most responses: the next great war will be a challenge against the hegemony of C&G/SF.

However, more pertinent to the question is precisely how these great wars came about, and in this we find an interesting consistency: the hegemony invariably enters a civil war. Thus, the NPO fell due to its long-term backers, GATO and Legion, aligning against it; similarly, the Initiative fell due to a challenge by elements within it; the Continuum came to an end as a result of several alliances going over to the other side; and finally, Karma met its demise as it broke into its warring component parts. Indeed, the only great war that wasn't broadly brought about by defection was the second great war between the Initiative and the League, and this can be explained by the extraordinary circumstances of several new and large alliances developing simultaneously in that period and destabilising the power structure -- something that would be impossible today.

To understand this we must first understand how the unipolar world works. It is invariably defined by a hegemonic bloc that controls international politics -- in our case this bloc is the aforementioned C&G and its sidekick, SF. This control derives in part from raw strength, but primarily from the bloc's central position in the treaty web, which spreads its influence to almost all significant alliances.

The way in which this works is perfectly demonstrated by Lord Sharpe's 'BlocNet' (the image at the top of this article), designed at the height of the Continuum's power. In BlocNet we can see that the ruling bloc was largely defined as being made up of the ruling alliances from the various corners of the world, each hugely influential within its own sphere. This parochial influence was then used to create the global influence of the Continuum, which in turn fed back and conferred global influence on the parochial ruler.

This is broadly the social structure of a unipolar world, and through it we can see a clearly defined hierarchy made up of three categories of alliance:

At the top there are the Core alliances, capable of bending the world to their will by virtue of their place atop the semi-periphery -- there is usually only room for one such alliance (eg. GOONS in the Unjust Pact; NPO in Continuum; MK in C&G). This isn't to say they aren't constrained -- they must keep the semi-periphery on-side -- but they are constrained in a different way from others, enjoying an infinitely greater degree of freedom.

The semi-peripheral alliances are those that hold considerable power to bend the world to their will, but are also constrained themselves by the core alliance and other semi-peripheral alliances, each pushing their different agendas. This category is mostly made up of the non-core alliances within the ruling bloc.

The peripheral alliances are the great mass of alliances lower down, usually tied to the semi-periphery and core through a system of protectorates, treaties and blocs.

However, as the above would imply, within every social structure there are contradictions. The core maintains its position so long as they maintain control over the vast bulk of the semi-periphery, while the the semi-periphery has a constant pressure to advance its own interests at the expense of the core (and itself -- the other semi-peripheral alliances). The result of this is a constant, if often blunt, tension, leading to a constant strain on the core alliance as it battles to simultaneously maintain peace within the semi-periphery, the respectability of the bloc, its own authority, and the pursuit of its own unique agenda. With a skilled core this situation can carry on peacefully for prolonged periods, but in the long run it is unsustainable, and the longer the period carries on the more the dual motivators of grievance and ambition begin to build up.

We can therefore begin to understand why the great wars have primarily come from within the hegemonic bloc itself. The hegemonic bloc doesn't rule by virtue of its own power, but rather by virtue of the power of its constituent parts (ie. the ability of the semi-periphery to pull significant sections of the world with them) that is then invested in the core. While an uprising of independent peripheral alliances is nearly impossible due to the numbers required, the likelihood of the uprising being quashed prematurely, and the interfering influence of core and semi-peripheral alliances, it is that semi-peripheral influence that has the authority to shift large chunks of the world at once, altering the very terrain upon which we stand.

We can sum up therefore by saying that all blocs, and indeed, the entire world system, is nothing more than a social construct that exists only insofar as it is perceived as advancing the personal interests of each of its members. The hierarchy inherent to any hegemonic bloc makes it vulnerable to a rapid change in this perception, as the core pushes its own agenda while acting as a mediator for the other major players, in the process holding back and alienating those who inevitably lose out.

The conclusion to this structural analysis isn't, unfortunately, anything so simplistic as an alliance's name. However, it can tell you where to look. If we are to have another great war, the build up and spark for it can only come from within C&G and SF themselves. The only question is: when will the second tier alliances get tired of being the supporting caste and decide to take their destiny into their own hands.

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The only question is: when will the second tier alliances get tired of being the supporting caste and decide to take their destiny into their own hands.

Second tier alliances?

If you consider second tier alliances between 1mil-3mil ns then perhaps never. Many smaller alliances, those that are not power players, tend to not even know each other at all. They may see a few posts on the OWF from a member of an alliance similar size to theirs, but many really have no clue about any alliances out there.

Taking destiny into their own hands would require them to leave the security of being tied to an MK, FARK, NPO, NpO, VE, etc. If second tier alliances did manage to put a set of treaties together and perhaps get together a significant group of alliances (ns), they would see that it isn't absolutely necessary to have ties to the big alliances. They could in effect cut off the bigger alliances and have their own core group. C&G with its 7 alliances is not scary. SF with its 30mil+ ns is not scary. What makes them so dominant is that they are together and they have many smaller alliances attached to them that puts them upwards of 100mil+ ns.

Again, if these smaller alliances would cut off large alliances then small groups/blocs of alliances could form and have significant influence without holding a single treaty with an MK, NPO, NpO, FARK, etc.

Who will do this though? No one.

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You misunderstand what I mean by 'second-tier'. I was referring to the semi-periphery, which is explained earlier in the article. The rest of your post actually aligns quite well with the argument that I was making.

And I agree, Crushtania. I've been here 4 years. That should be at least enough for a BA.

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I know of at least two, possibly three, second-tier alliances who are, shall we say, "working on it."

Working on what I said? If so, they should add a few if they can. Minimum of 10mil ns, ideal would prolly be 15mil, awesome if they can manage it would be 20mil. Would be lots of work but I think they would see its worth it to get out of being pawns of the top tier alliances and even more impressive would be if they held no treaties with any of the big alliances (the sanctioned ones or an alliance that is in CG/SF). Not having treaties that tie them up would make them more influential in my mind cuz they could always enter a side via the Moldavi Doctrine, but which?

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Working on what I said? If so, they should add a few if they can. Minimum of 10mil ns, ideal would prolly be 15mil, awesome if they can manage it would be 20mil. Would be lots of work but I think they would see its worth it to get out of being pawns of the top tier alliances and even more impressive would be if they held no treaties with any of the big alliances (the sanctioned ones or an alliance that is in CG/SF). Not having treaties that tie them up would make them more influential in my mind cuz they could always enter a side via the Moldavi Doctrine, but which?

He's not talking about NS, rather political power. Alliances who are not 'at the centre' of things, but are on the same side as C&G and SF due to treaty obligations.

Alliances like MHA, Sparta, NpO etc aren't at the 'centre' of these two blocs, yet they have a lot of NS and influence.

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He's not talking about NS, rather political power. Alliances who are not 'at the centre' of things, but are on the same side as C&G and SF due to treaty obligations.

Alliances like MHA, Sparta, NpO etc aren't at the 'centre' of these two blocs, yet they have a lot of NS and influence.

MHA and NpO maybe, but have you looked at Sparta's treaties? They are kind of "the middle".

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To clarify, I was largely talking about the alliances at the centre. To use the example of BlocNet (very roughly).

In that diagram we could say that the NPO constituted the core alliance, as it held the most sway and played the role of mediator.

We could go on to say that the rest of the alliances in the light blue circle were the semi-periphery (aka the second-tier), insofar as they held a great amount of power through their treaties and place in the centre but weren't perceived to be the leaders of the hegemonic bloc.

The alliances in the remaining connected circles would then make up the periphery, being linked to the major bloc (and on its side in a time of war) but not a part of it and thus not holding the same degree of power.

This makes up the hierarchy of the unipolar world. It is my contention that great wars (that is, challenges to the power of the core) do not come from the outer-reaches of the periphery as many are still trying to claim (see discussion of an 'ex-Hegemony', for example), but rather from the semi-periphery -- from within the hegemonic blocs themselves.

Thanks to their position these alliances have extensive allied networks, a degree of political protection, and the ability to make a double impact, both adding strength to the challenger and removing it from the hegemony. This combined with the powerful incentives to advance themselves at the expense of their rivals leads them, eventually, to become the foundations of the counter-hegemonic bloc.

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Very well thought out, as no one else has ever taken this approach to the world war cycle. Also, i didn't get the impression that the C&G "overthrew" Karma. To me it seemed that they simply rose to power along with the Superfriends after several wars because as Karma was breaking, up no alliances challenged them. Maybe im being overly literal, but I was curious as to your choice of words.

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Sparta isn't in one of those blocs though.

It doesn't really matter. When people say Super-Grievances they don't mean SuperFriends and Complaints and Grievance. They mean SF and CnG plus the alliances connecting them. There is only three treaties directly between CnG and SF (GR-RIA, MK-GOD, and Athens-CSN). Their common allies is what helps keep them together though. It of course also helps that they have a common enemy. Of course you know all of this so I'm preaching to the choir.

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Although unrelated to the topic at hand, 4 years of academic inquiry will qualify you for a BA - 3 years in Commonwealth nations. If you took a BA in Media Studies, you could have concentrated on interactive entertainment, i.e., online gaming. Or you could try your hand at online sociology.

Many universities have humanities-based games studies subjects and PhD candidates (I took such a subject in my undergraduate degree but there are more as time goes on.)

So yes, provided you did a BA and graduated with a distinction (70% or higher) average you could choose to write your Honors' thesis on Cyber Nations.

As for the rest of you, carry on!

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It doesn't really matter. When people say Super-Grievances they don't mean SuperFriends and Complaints and Grievance. They mean SF and CnG plus the alliances connecting them. There is only three treaties directly between CnG and SF (GR-RIA, MK-GOD, and Athens-CSN). Their common allies is what helps keep them together though. It of course also helps that they have a common enemy. Of course you know all of this so I'm preaching to the choir.

Yes, but the article was talking about periphery alliances of C&G and of SF. Sparta is not in a bloc and is, therefore, a periphery.

Put it this way, if C&G and SF were to decide that they were going to fight each other tomorrow, Sparta doesn't have a natural 'side' like Athens or RIA would.

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Banksy, I think you're taking an overly treaty-literal line regarding core/semi-periphery/periphery. Even in the Continuum/One Vision time, I think most people would have considered NpO to be a 'semi-periphery' alliance, even though they weren't in the primary hegemonic bloc (and indeed some people would say that losing NpO from the hegemony was the beginning of the end).

I don't fully agree with this article. A large part of the strength needed to break up a bloc comes from outside, which is why the 'revolutionaties' play the PR game so strongly. Compare Karma to the Unjust War: in the UjW, some very strong 'semi-periphery' alliances and one core alliance (GOONS) were not enough to break the Orders' grip because they got little to no non-hegemonic support; in Karma, the alliances of the periphery (most of SF and VE) and semi-periphery (ex-Continuum) were relatively weak in comparison to what was left, but were joined by the 'outsiders' (C&G, GATO, Frostbite/Blue etc) and that gave them critical mass to win.

I also don't think that SG is (yet) in such a binding hegemonic position as Continuum/1V or WUT, and a concerted attempt from outside to remove them could succeed, which is why both sides are playing PR cold war games at the moment. (I'd include most of your articles in that category ;).) The support of unaffiliated alliances (the remains of the Citadel and Frostbite power spheres, essentially) is important to SG to keep the support at levels which mean they are not vulnerable to a purely outside attack.

I also don't agree that 'C&G toppled Karma'. Karma was a wartime coalition of convenience, bound only by circumstance and (for most members at least) a shared enemy. As we explained at the time would happen, it simply fell apart when the war was won. SF and C&G stick together because they have similar outlooks; Citadel and Frostbite did not because they didn't. Karma left the world with no hegemony at all for a while, and SG is the first realistic attempt to take that position, but they didn't topple an existing structure to do so.

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Great analysis. It does seem though that the C&G hegemony is still yet rather underdeveloped when viewed from within this framework. Periphery alliances such as Sparta, VE, NpO, Umbrella, Fok, MHA, etc could all form spheres of influence of their own, almost instantly breaking up the core's hold on a hegemony. Such freedom of movement could be acting as a nice release valve for the pressure that your framework pinpoints as the driving force for semi-peripheral revolution.

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I enjoy this further elaboration on the structuralist theory. I was at first puzzled on why you deny the existence of an 'ex-Heg' power sphere as an antithesis to CnG/SF. But as you conclude, it seems more likely that a breakup of SG will occur through peripheral, 'second tier' influences.

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I also don't think that SG is (yet) in such a binding hegemonic position as Continuum/1V or WUT,

I dont think they'll attempt to create a very overt Continuum-type bloc. I think its more or less understood that without a doubt SG is a hegemony, how things pan out in future remain to be seen.

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Very interesting, I'd like to see a web constructed within the current time frame of things. Sure it'll be centered around Super Grievances and not reveal too much. But it is fun to look at and ponder whom could provide the catalyst for an eventual power-struggle and change. Even if within the current theorized power-bases.

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It's always the guys with seats at the inner-cool table that cause the split, like OP implies from pressure from the outer edge of the lunchroom. A hot young FOK rubbing up against the status-quo can cause all sorts of tension and friction. This is where friction management comes in.... NPO did it the best, MK looks to be pretty good too, we'll see.

0/ Paco DeGallio!

0/ PD

0/ .

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There is only one factor and one factor only that keeps SuperGrievances on top right now: The most powerful group of supporting alliances composed of PC, FOK, GOONS, Umbrella, DT, NoR, and \m/. Especially Umbrella and PC due to high average NS. Without this core group of alliances, honestly SuperGrievances is nothing such that even old hegemony can run over it (with the added NPO).

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Thus, the coaluetion toppled the NPO, the Initiative toppled the coeluetion, the Unjust Pact attempted to topple the Initiative and was itself toppled by what became the Continuum, Karma toppled the Continuum, and finally C&G toppled Karma.

You skipped a step.

The Unjust Path attempted to topple the Initiative and was instead toppled by what became One Vision. Then, Continuum toppled One Vision (War of the Coalition.)

Otherwise I generally agree.

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That's the first time I've heard that suggested. The Continuum was easily the dominant bloc after it was signed -- One Vision was never powerful enough to constitute a hegemonic bloc, and the two major alliance (NPO and IRON) were in the Continuum while the other two (NpO and GGA) were relatively isolated. Indeed, the Continuum was signed precisely because One Vision didn't have the power to bring the world together, and would have contained both the NpO and GGA had there not been strenuous objections from other alliances. There's also the minor note that the NpO had been trying to destroy the NPO from the Unjust War until Sponge was overthrown.

There was no significant shift of power from one to the other after the War of the Coalition.

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Vladimir is correct in that the Continuum did not topple One Vision. It co-opted it, certainly, with the ejection of NpO in favor of MCXA, another Continuum member (as well as Echelon, which by that point was firmly in the NPO's pocket). The entirety of One Vision was on the Continuum's side of the War of the Coalition, so to say it was "toppled" in the War of the Coalition is quite incorrect. One Vision did become politically irrelevant after the ejection of Polar, because it became a bloc comprised entirely of NPO lackeys who would be on NPO's side with or without the One Vision Treaty, but it wasn't toppled until Karma.

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