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A thought experiment:
Modernity has bequeathed its progeny a recipe for proper revolution. No revolution properly so called can merit the name without an equally proper terror--whether so-called (in France in 1794) or rectification (in 1940s China and thereafter) or purges (in a Soviet system that became more Stalinist than properly Soviet). And so on. No Terror, however denominated--can be properly organized without its proscription lists. And no proscription list, properly so called, may fulfill its purpose without consuming some or all of its authors or executors or overseers.
Proscription set the standard for orderliness in revolutionary regimes and can be most famously traced traced back to the regime of Sulla during the last unstable period of the Roman Republic. It reminds one, a little, of the way that the proscription list emerged in the later Roman Republic during the leadership of Sulla:
Sulla now began to make blood flow, and he filled the city with deaths without number or limit; many persons were murdered on grounds of private enmity, who had never had anything to do with Sulla, but he consented to their death to please his adherents. At last a young man, Caius Metellus, had the boldness to ask Sulla in the Senate-house, when there would be an end to these miseries, and how far he would proceed before they could hope to see them stop. "We are not deprecating," he said, "your vengeance against those whom you have determined to put out of the way, but we entreat you to relieve from uncertainty those whom you have determined to spare." Sulla replied, that he had not yet determined whom he would spare. "Tell us then," said Metellus, "whom you intend to punish." Sulla said that he would. (Plutarch, Life of Sulla, ¶ 31).
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Terror is exceeding French, and in contrast to the practical Romans, who focused on systems and system efficiency, in its French form much more larded with ideological presumptions that argued compulsion and inevitability all the while avoiding the fundamental moral questions, though it insisted on calling itself a most enlightened product of the marriage of the moral and the political (as that later term could be understood at the time of the beheading of the ancien regime: Maximilian Robespierre, Rapport sur les principes de morale politique dans l'administration intérieure de la République [On the Moral and Political Principles of Domestic Policy]--Text and Reflections on Modernity. Its modern manifestations learned their lessons well from these and in the 20tjh century one tended to see a sort of marriage between ideology, mortality, and implementation all bound up in the process of rectification and purging, sometimes with extraordinarily brutal effects that could not otherwise be ignored altogether (see eg Pol Pot and the campaigns against enemies of the revolution).
The current phase of our liberal democratic revolution, noticeable after 2020, has already seen its traditional forms of proscriptions. Some were largely unsuccessful (see, e.g., here and here, though not for lack of trying, e.g., here). Some are ongoing when the unsuccessful target of proscription turned the tables. See, e.g., The Proscription List Grows: President Trump Issues Directive--"Addressing Risks From WilmerHale Presidential Actions, Executive Orders" (March 27, 2025), also here.
But all of that presupposes the triumph of the age of humanity. Technology now adds a layer of difference that reshapes the older patterns of revolut6ion-terror-prosciption. What happens, however, when one de-centers the human and moves to the digital age? Perhaps nothing provides a more sobering lesson than the slow strangling progress that is the revelations that are the Epstein files. Today the Daily Mail posted a quite interesting proscription list in the form of an article: Full list of hundreds of celebrities and politicians in Pam Bondi's Epstein files letter.
All of the Epstein files have been released, according to Attorney General Pam Bondi. Millions of emails, photos, and documents relating to the harrowing case against predator Jeffrey Epstein have been made publicly available, Bondi said. A definitive list of 305 high-profile individuals, including celebrities and politicians, have been published by the Department of Justice as part of Bondi's required update sent to Congress on February 14.
It moves proscription, and Terror, from the political, to the socio/cultural, and from the visible structures of power to those structures that appear to have undermined them. In that context, truth and justification leave the stage--the essence of proscription under conditions of Terror require certainty (a list--or accusation)--but nothing else. Still a fig leaf is always useful:
Being named in the Epstein files does not assume any guilt or wrongdoing to Epstein's heinous child sex crimes. While many of the names on the new list have long been associated with Epstein, including Ghislaine Maxwell and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, this is the first time a definitive long list has been shared by Bondi and the administration. It includes singers, actors, businessmen and entrepreneurs, dead and alive, who were mentioned in the files at least once.(Full list of hundreds of celebrities and politicians in Pam Bondi's Epstein files letter.)
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And in the age of digitized knowledge; in this age of democratic transparency and mass sentiment; in this age of dialectic markets for every commodity imaginable; in this age of images and virtual realities. In this age of the signal and the flow--of idea, meaning, emotion--and in this age of the morality of representation, and the representation that are images and imagining, then in that age the Epstein sage represents a new and global first rectification, first purge and first taste of what a digitized terror may well take form. The Epstein saga, the explosion of the disclosures of that demimonde of power and power relations sealed with sacrifice and undertaken above the structured expectations of order from which or against which it was possible to operate, a demimonde that might perhaps suggest that the cognitive cages of our realities were actually inverted, might suggest the way that 21st century revolution, terror and proscription will work--though not its ending.
In Bondi's letter on Saturday, she explained that all of the files relating to the law have been released, which have been categorized into nine different sections.The categories spelled out by the Justice Department are: Jeffrey Epstein, Ghislaine Maxwell, flight logs or travel records, individuals named in connection with Epstein's criminal activities, details on corporate, nonprofit, academic or governmental entities with ties to Epstein, immunity deals involving Epstein and his associates, internal DOJ communications, all communications relating to the destruction of evidence relating to Epstein, and finally, documentation of Epstein's detention and death. Bondi then explained what has been withheld during the Epstein files release. The letter stated: 'The only category of records withheld were those records where permitted withholdings under Section 2(c) and privileged materials were not segregable from material responsive under Section 2(a).Full list of hundreds of celebrities and politicians in Pam Bondi's Epstein files letter.)
But of course, the problem with the best planned revolution, with the most well managed terror, with the most usefully crafted proscription list is that once put into play control may be illusory, the process may consume its authors, and the end product may be entirely unexpected. Yet modern trajectories of these pathways have tended to lack their Danton.
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Perhaps the Epstein saga is yet another blip--a momentary revelation of the intertwining of human relations in a complex world--all will be forgiven and perhaps forgotten; officially. Yet this can go in quite another way. And there is nothing likle scandal to produce the sort of opportunity that can topple governance orders.



















