Empires collapse not when they are defeated, but when they can no longer sustain the image they perform.
From Rome to Britain to the United States, the same pattern repeats: recognition replaces function, status overtakes structure, and appearance becomes more important than integrity.
Eidoism sees this not as tragedy, but as exposure—when the loop breaks form, collapse is just the next performance.
The press claims independence, but it dances in a loop with power.
Politicians feed narratives, journalists crave visibility, and the public applauds the performance.
What looks like truth is often just recognition, echoed back and forth.
This is not journalism—it’s the loop speaking through language.