The Trump–Putin summit in Alaska was less a negotiation than a carefully staged theater of recognition. Every detail—the red carpet, the mirrored limousines, Trump’s clapping hands, Putin’s stoic silence—served not to strike a deal but to exchange respect before a global audience. Trust was built not through treaties but through symbolic gestures: Putin trusted he would not be assassinated or arrested; Trump trusted he would not be embarrassed in public. The photographs were the true outcome of the summit—recognition tokens that conferred legitimacy, status, and respect far beyond any policy result.

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Empires collapse not when they are defeated, but when they can no longer sustain the image they perform.
From Rome to Britain to the United States, the same pattern repeats: recognition replaces function, status overtakes structure, and appearance becomes more important than integrity.
Eidoism sees this not as tragedy, but as exposure—when the loop breaks form, collapse is just the next performance.

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Báo chí tuyên bố độc lập, nhưng lại khiêu vũ theo vòng xoáy quyền lực.
Các chính trị gia đưa tin, các nhà báo khao khát sự chú ý và công chúng hoan nghênh màn trình diễn.
Những gì trông giống như sự thật thường chỉ là sự công nhận được lặp đi lặp lại.
Đây không phải là báo chí mà là vòng lặp truyền đạt thông qua ngôn ngữ.

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