I don't really have thoughts about this thread - though reading that book from the US Marine Corp could be interesting.
However, your comment made me think: we talk about "cycle breakers" in the context of inter-generational trauma, usually within a family or group. Are we now approaching a critical mass where we need an entire generation (or >50%) of cultural cycle breakers to actually progress social norms and political discourse?
From the history I've read, that number is much lower than 50%.
You only ever really need 1/3 pushing in the right direction at the right time.
Inevitably 1/3 will be passively content to go about their daily lives regardless as long as they remain comfortable, if you can incite 1/3 into various disunity campaigns so they preoccupy most of the attention, and cause destabilization, shifts can occur, and after a shift purges are not uncommon afterwards to solidify a new normal, leaving the remaining 2/3 majority.
Similar to what happened in Hue, Vietnam back in the 70s.
This is what having that 'harmless' information being collected enables. Its dark, but a lot of history is dark.
However, your comment made me think: we talk about "cycle breakers" in the context of inter-generational trauma, usually within a family or group. Are we now approaching a critical mass where we need an entire generation (or >50%) of cultural cycle breakers to actually progress social norms and political discourse?