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Look at how the social character is changing. According to theory, laws are written norms of law that, in turn, have emerged from customs. Laws that lack a foundation in customs are worthless, and their sole purpose is always the same—exploitation and enslavement. They are enforced only because the monopolistic oppressor wants this and only when he is able to control it.
However, in conditions where government bodies are filled with limited individuals, a cargo cult begins to emerge. The horse is placed behind the cart, and laws are written to make it “so,” without understanding that the main part of the laws that actually work were written because “it is already so.” You cannot steal, kill, abandon family responsibilities, commit fraud, and so on. This very “cannot,” which is likely instinctive, became the source of the law. There won’t be a “cannot” just out of the blue. It is impossible to prohibit bribes, drugs, arms trafficking, the internet, books, words, or ideas with a mere stroke of a pen. It doesn’t work that way and ultimately leads to greater costs.
And so the cargo cult, now as imitation, spreads through society. People looked at what the lawmakers were doing and thought they could do the same. They would just take a word and “remove it from the language.” Sure, it will just disappear right after their decision. It will be like in the joke: there’s a butt, but no word for it. And they will even ask for money for this and spend it.