
LessWrong (30+ Karma) “Fantasy ideology” by Ninety-Three
Apr 7, 2026
A narrated excerpt explores 'fantasy ideology' as political ritual rather than persuasion. A college anecdote shows protest as moral affirmation. The concept examines treating people as props and how collective myths revive lost glory. It traces theatrical myths, spectacle, and manufactured rituals that mobilize movements and justify conquest.
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Personal Story Of Protest As Fantasy
- A college friend joined massively disruptive anti-war protests not to persuade but to nourish a personal revolutionary fantasy.
- He lay on Potomac bridges treating commuters as props to confirm his identity as one of the elect few.
Fantasist Sees Others Only As Props
- Fantasists treat other people as props and resist seeing them as subjects with independent wills.
- This dynamic lets fantasists exert disproportionate control because they don't need to adapt to others' real desires.
Collective Fantasies Fill Political Reality Gaps
- Fantasy ideology arises when collective aspirations collide with brutal reality, creating a pangsang for make-believe.
- Ideological symbols and rituals supply roles, settings, and props so groups can indulge in collective role-playing.



