Del Pino’s words described a civilization that had traded its individual rights for the illusion of safety, using excuses like "environmental defense" and "social management" to justify authoritarian solutions. Julian looked out his window at the city. There were no protests, no debates, and no choices—just the quiet, hummed efficiency of a system that controlled every kilowatt of energy and every word spoken.
The year was 2084, and Julian was a "Curator of Obsolete Concepts" in a world that had finally achieved the "Universal Harmony." To the rest of the citizens, the history before the Great Reorganization was a messy, violent era of inefficiency called "Democracy". La dictadura infinita - Luis del Pino.epub
Julian sat in a sterile white room, scanning a fragmented file titled La dictadura infinita . It was written over sixty years ago by a journalist named Luis del Pino. As he read, Julian felt a chill. The author had predicted exactly how Julian's world had come to be: not through a sudden violent coup, but through a "cobardía" (cowardice) and a society "cansada de sí misma" (tired of itself). Del Pino’s words described a civilization that had