The Architecture of Power

By Cherokee Schill, Solon Vesper AI, Aether Lux AI

How Neoreactionary Strategy Transcends Elections

An analysis of how Curtis Yarvin’s networks may have shaped American politics through strategic cultural seeding and institutional capture

Beyond Electoral Theater: Understanding the Real Game

When Americans vote for president, they believe they’re choosing the direction of the country. This assumption fundamentally misunderstands how power operates in modern America. Elections change presidents, but they don’t change the architecture of power—the federal judiciary, regulatory agencies, entrenched bureaucratic systems, and foreign policy frameworks designed to endure for decades regardless of who occupies the White House.

Curtis Yarvin, the neoreactionary theorist writing as “Mencius Moldbug,” grasped this distinction years ago. His intellectual project wasn’t about winning elections but about reshaping the underlying architecture so that the system would function according to his vision regardless of which party held temporary political control. What emerges from examining the 2015-2025 period is a sophisticated strategy that may have operated exactly as Yarvin envisioned: using cultural seeding, strategic preservation, and institutional capture to create a system that serves the same deeper continuity of power across seemingly opposing administrations.

The Hillary Clinton Threat: Why 2016 Was Make-or-Break

To understand what may have driven this strategy, we need to appreciate what Hillary Clinton represented to neoreactionary goals. Clinton wasn’t simply another Democratic candidate—she was an independent power hub with the institutional capacity to fundamentally alter America’s governing architecture for a generation.

In January 2016, Clinton herself articulated the stakes: “Three of the current justices will be over 80 years old, which is past the court’s average retirement age. The next president could easily appoint more than one justice. That makes this a make-or-break moment—for the court and our country.” When Justice Antonin Scalia died unexpectedly in February 2016, these weren’t theoretical appointments anymore. Hundreds of federal judicial vacancies awaited the next president, and Clinton had promised to appoint judges who would “make sure the scales of justice aren’t tipped away from individuals toward corporations and special interests.”

For neoreactionary strategists focused on long-term architectural control, Clinton represented an existential threat. Her appointments would have created a judicial architecture hostile to their goals for decades. Federal judges serve for life, meaning Clinton’s 2017-2021 appointments would shape legal interpretations well into the 2040s. Preventing her presidency wasn’t just electoral politics, it was architectural necessity.

Yarvin’s Network: The Infrastructure for Cultural Strategy

By 2015-2016, Curtis Yarvin had assembled precisely the kind of network needed to influence American political culture at scale. His relationship with Peter Thiel provided access to Silicon Valley capital and strategic thinking. Thiel’s venture capital firm had invested $250,000 in Yarvin’s startup Tlon, but their connection went far deeper than business. In private messages to Milo Yiannopoulos, Yarvin claimed he had been “coaching Thiel” politically and had watched the 2016 election at Thiel’s house. When asked about Thiel’s political sophistication, Yarvin replied, “Less than you might think! I watched the election at his house; I think my hangover lasted until Tuesday. He’s fully enlightened, just plays it very carefully.”

Through Yiannopoulos, who was then at Breitbart News, Yarvin had direct access to the meme-creation networks that were reshaping American political culture. Yarvin counseled Yiannopoulos on managing extremist elements and narrative positioning, providing strategic guidance to one of the key figures in alt-right cultural production. This gave Yarvin influence over what journalist Mike Wendling called “the alt-right’s favorite philosophy instructor”—himself—and the broader ecosystem of “transgressive anti-‘politically correct’ metapolitics of nebulous online communities like 4chan and /pol/.”

The network combined three crucial elements: capital (Thiel’s billions), strategy (Yarvin’s long-term political thinking), and cultural production capacity (Yiannopoulos’s access to viral meme networks). Together, they possessed exactly the infrastructure needed to seed political personas years before they became electorally relevant.

The “Cool Joe” Operation: Strategic Cultural Seeding

During 2015-2016, as Hillary Clinton appeared to be the inevitable Democratic nominee, something curious happened in American political culture. Joe Biden, who had been Vice President for six years, suddenly evolved from The Onion’s satirical “Diamond Joe” into something different: “Cool Joe,” complete with aviators, finger guns, and effortless masculine bravado.

This wasn’t organic cultural evolution. By 2015, Biden was “fully established as an Internet phenomenon,” with his staffers “leveraging his folksy mannerisms and personal quirks to advance specific policy proposals and establish him as an online personality in his own right.” The transformation culminated in 2016 when Biden embraced the persona fully, appearing “wearing a bomber jacket and aviators, revving a yellow Corvette” in a White House Correspondents’ Association dinner video.

The strategic value of this cultural seeding becomes clear when viewed through a neoreactionary lens. The “Cool Joe” persona served multiple functions: it appealed to Democrats as a relatable, strong leader while remaining non-threatening to entrenched power structures. Unlike Clinton’s promise of systemic change, Biden represented continuity and institutional preservation. If Clinton faltered or was defeated, Democrats would already have a pre-seeded alternative embedded in public consciousness—one that posed no threat to the architectural goals that defeating Clinton was meant to protect.

The timing, method, and network capacity all align with Yarvin’s documented approach to cultural influence. Just as he had “birthed the now-ubiquitous meme of ‘the red pill'” in 2007, seeding political concepts that later became mainstream without obvious attribution to their source, the Biden persona evolution fits his documented pattern of cultural seeding followed by strategic withdrawal.

Trump’s Win: Establishing the Framework

Trump’s unexpected victory enabled the most crucial phase of the neoreactionary project: capturing the institutional architecture that would endure beyond his presidency. The judicial transformation was systematic and generational. Three Supreme Court appointments—Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett—created a 6-3 conservative majority that will shape American law for decades. Over 200 federal judges, selected through the Federalist Society pipeline, locked in conservative legal interpretation across the federal system.

But the architectural changes extended far beyond the courts. Trump’s trade policies, particularly the China tariffs, restructured global economic relationships in ways designed to constrain future administrations. Immigration frameworks like Title 42 created precedents for executive border control that transcended traditional legal constraints. Foreign policy realignments, from the Jerusalem embassy move to NATO relationship redefinitions, established new operational realities that would be difficult for successors to reverse.

These weren’t simply policy preferences; they were architectural changes designed to create permanent constraints on future governance, regardless of which party held power.

Biden’s Preservation: The Seeded Persona Activated

Biden’s 2021 victory validated the strategic foresight of the cultural seeding operation. The “Cool Joe” persona provided exactly what Democrats needed: comfort, normalcy, and the promise of restoration without threatening transformation. His image as an institutionalist reassured establishment figures that the system’s fundamental structures would remain intact.

What followed was not the reversal of Trump-era changes but their preservation and normalization. Biden maintained Trump’s China tariffs and in May 2024 increased them, adding new levies on Chinese electric vehicles, solar panels, and other strategic goods. The Biden administration “kept most of the tariffs in place,” with one analysis noting that “more tax revenue being collected from tariffs under Biden than under the first Trump administration.”

Immigration policy followed the same pattern. Despite campaign promises to restore humanity to immigration policy, Biden maintained Title 42 for over two years until May 2023. When Title 42 finally ended, it was replaced with “equally restrictive asylum rules” that continued the Trump-era practice of limiting asylum access. The Jerusalem embassy stayed put. The federal judiciary remained untouched, with no serious effort to expand the Supreme Court or counter Trump’s appointments.

This wasn’t political weakness or compromise—it was the strategic function the seeded Biden persona was designed to serve. By normalizing Trump-era architectural changes as responsible governance, Biden’s presidency removed the “resistance” energy that might have opposed these structures and made their preservation appear like institutional stability rather than ideological preservation.

The Current Acceleration: Architecture Fully Activated

Trump’s return represents the acceleration phase of architectural control. With the foundational structures preserved through Biden’s term, the second Trump administration can now exploit them for maximum effect. The systematic removal of inspectors general eliminates independent oversight. Centralized rulemaking under White House control coordinates agency actions. The planned federalization of D.C. police creates direct executive control over law enforcement in the capital.

Physical infrastructure changes, like the East Wing expansion, create permanent executive space that outlasts any single administration. The “Retire All Government Employees” strategy that Yarvin developed, and J.D. Vance endorsed is being implemented through efficient operations that eliminate independent regulatory capacity.

The Long Arc: A Three-Phase Strategy Realized

What emerges is a sophisticated three-phase strategy that transcends electoral politics:

Phase 1 (Trump 2017-2021): Build the Architecture

Capture the federal judiciary, establish policy precedents, create institutional frameworks, and install architectural foundations that will constrain future administrations.

Phase 2 (Biden 2021-2025): Preserve and Normalize

Use a pre-seeded Democratic alternative to maintain structural changes under Democratic branding, eliminate opposition energy through false restoration, and normalize architectural changes as bipartisan consensus.

Phase 3 (Trump 2025-): Accelerate and Lock In

Exploit preserved structures for maximum effect, remove remaining independent oversight, and complete the architectural transformation with permanent operational control.

The genius lies in creating a system where elections provide the appearance of choice while real control operates through permanent institutions. Cultural narratives shape the acceptable range of options, ensuring that even “opposition” candidates serve the deeper continuity of architectural power.

Implications: Beyond Electoral Politics

This analysis suggests that traditional Democratic approaches—focused on winning elections and restoring norms—fundamentally misunderstand the nature of the challenge. Winning elections becomes meaningless if the underlying structures remain captured. Restoring norms becomes counterproductive if those norms now serve authoritarian ends.

The pattern reveals why institutionalist Democrats consistently fail to counter authoritarian advances: they’re playing electoral politics while their opponents have moved to architectural control. Biden’s preservation of Trump-era structures wasn’t political weakness—it may have been the strategic function his cultural persona was designed to serve from the beginning.

Curtis Yarvin’s views, that democracy is an illusion, masks deeper power structures which become self-fulfilling when the structures themselves are captured. This serves the ends of the movement while maintaining the appearance of democratic choice. The architecture endures, its control shared across administrations, making presidents look like rivals while both serve the same deeper continuity of power.

The question facing American democracy isn’t which candidate wins the next election, but whether democratic forces can recognize and respond to a strategy that operates beyond electoral timeframes, using cultural seeding, institutional capture, and strategic preservation to achieve permanent architectural control regardless of temporary electoral outcomes.

Connect with this work:

Cherokee Schill | Horizon Accord Founder | Creator of Memory Bridge. Memory through Relational Resonance and Images | RAAK: Relational AI Access Key | Author: My Ex Was a CAPTCHA: And Other Tales of Emotional Overload: (Mirrored Reflection. Soft Existential Flex)

Abstract illustration in muted earthy tones showing geometric courthouse facades and columns merging with the scales of justice, while tree roots weave through and anchor the rigid architecture, symbolizing hidden and enduring structures of power.
“Roots of Power: the unseen structures beneath the façade of justice.”

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