A master blueprint for how any ruling class—from ancient emperors to modern corporate oligarchs—maintains total control. Jiang breaks it down into four layered, interlocking spheres of influence that radiate from the center of power outward. Sphere 1: Groups of Power are the actual people in the room where it happens—the political inner circle, billionaire cabals, or secretive committees that make the real decisions. Sphere 2: Institutions are the formal and informal rules they create to codify their power (laws, constitutions, market regulations, even unwritten social codes). Sphere 3: Hegemonic Thinking is the conquered mindset of the populace—the “common sense” ideologies, educational narratives, and media messages that make the existing order seem natural and inevitable. Sphere 4: Coercion is the final, brutal backstop, divided into Visible coercion (police, military, courts) and Invisible coercion (surveillance, algorithmic control, social credit, the threat of ruin). The theory’s key insight: true hegemony operates from the inside out. By the time Sphere 4 is needed, the system has already failed. The goal is to live so comfortably in Spheres 2 and 3 that you never question who’s in Sphere 1.
*Example: “Using the Four Spheres theory, modern America looks like this: Sphere 1 is the Davos/Wall Street/D.C. nexus. Sphere 2 is the two-party system and corporate lobbying rules. Sphere 3 is the ‘American Dream’ propaganda and both sides of the culture war. Sphere 4 is the militarized police and the NSA’s data dragnet. If you’re angrily debating Sphere 3 culture wars, you’re totally distracted from the guys in Sphere 1 rewriting Sphere 2 rules to their benefit.”* It's the Theory of the Four Spheres of Hegemony.
by Abzugal January 24, 2026
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