Step Two: Build a Loyal Base
Power built on fear is a shaky fortress. People might tremble at your feet when danger looms, but fear alone fades if no disaster materializes. The real key to lasting control is to forge an unbreakable bond with your followers—those who not only believe your words but defend them as if they were sacred truths. When that level of devotion crystallizes, you needn’t explain yourself anymore; your supporters will do it for you.
A Brief History of Personal Loyalty: Hitler, Putin, and Orbán
History brims with leaders who learned that outright terror keeps subjects tense for a while, but a leader enthroned by love and loyalty can endure far longer. Adolf Hitler, Vladimir Putin, and Viktor Orbán offer stark examples of how a ruler can reshape institutions, silence critics, and nurture a base so loyal that even thinking of contradicting him feels like betrayal.
In 1930s Germany, Adolf Hitler transformed the National Socialist (Nazi) Party into a political juggernaut that thrived on spectacle and conviction. Nuremberg rallies glittered with towering swastikas and blazing searchlights, casting Hitler as Germany’s savior in an almost theatrical drama. Opponents were denounced as “traitors,” and the sense of unity and fervor in those crowds was nearly hypnotic. Fired by resentment over World War I’s aftermath, many Germans clung to Hitler as if he were an icon of redemption. As the Nazi message hardened into a sort of dogma, loyalty to the party became inseparable from loyalty to the nation—and, ultimately, to Hitler himself.
Vladimir Putin, taking the reins in post-Soviet Russia, refined this model by staging elections that felt more like choreographed pageants than authentic contests. His party, United Russia, served as a direct line to power in the Kremlin; dutiful local officials reaped rewards, while dissenters encountered a maze of legal hurdles and quiet intimidation.
