The Crisis Machine: How Permanent Emergency Powers Shape Modern Governance

The Crisis Machine: How Permanent Emergency Powers Shape Modern Governance

23:57 Mar 17, 2026
About this episode
When Emergency Becomes the Operating System | Crisis CapitalismEpisode SummaryIn this episode of Some Unapproved Thinking, Tracy Brinkmann delves into the concept of the 'crisis machine' and how permanent emergency powers have transformed crisis from an exceptional event into the baseline of modern governance. Explore the mechanisms behind crisis normalization and how fatigue control is utilized to maintain power structures through manufactured urgency.Through historical patterns—from the Roman Empire to the Cold War—this discussion reveals how prolonged instability serves economic infrastructure built on crisis capitalism, including security, surveillance, and pharmaceuticals. Learn about the bypassing of democratic processes through emergency measures and how this reshapes governance.This episode challenges listeners to distinguish between genuine crisis management and crisis manufacturing, urging skeptical thinking about who profits from ongoing emergencies. It also highlights resistance networks that foster resilience and transparency in the face of engineered crises.Join us as we uncover the historical lessons behind emergency governance and consider the implications for our freedom and future. When crisis becomes the system instead of a disruption, it’s time to question: Are we witnessing governance or perpetual crisis?https://SomeUnapprovedThinking.comKey PointsPermanent Crisis Mode: Crisis transformed from temporary disruption to permanent governing logic, with emergency measures becoming ordinary operationsFatigue as Control: Exhausted populations react rather than organize, focusing on survival instead of long-term solutions or accountabilityHistorical Patterns: Roman Empire threats, Reichstag Fire, Cold War emergencies - all used extended crises to justify expanded powers that never contractedEmergency Bypass: Temporary measures move faster than legislation, bypassing debate and democratic oversight while creating permanent authorityEconomic Infrastructure: Billion-dollar industries built on crisis management rather than prevention - security, surveillance, pharmaceuticals, consultingResistance Networks: Communities building resilience over crisis management, individuals maintaining long-term thinking, leaders choosing transparency over fear managementCritical QuestionsWhen crisis becomes the system instead of disrupting it, who profits from permanent emergency?How do we distinguish between managing crisis and solving problems?Are we witnessing governance or crisis manufacturing disguised a
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