from the don’t-lose-sight-of-the-truth dept
A mirror returns exactly what stands before it. No amount of wealth can bribe it, no volume of threats can intimidate it, no technological innovation can reprogram it. A billionaire’s reflection shows the same unaltered truth as a beggar’s. This fundamental democracy of reflection—this absolute fidelity to physical reality—makes mirrors uniquely immune to power. They are perhaps the last truly incorruptible witnesses in an age where truth itself has become negotiable.
Consider how people respond when confronted with an unflattering reflection. Some might adjust their appearance, accepting the mirror’s feedback as useful information. Others might avoid mirrors entirely, preferring not to face what they show. Still others, in moments of particular desperation, might smash the mirror itself—as if destroying the instrument of truth-telling could somehow alter the reality it reflects. But of course, breaking a mirror doesn’t change one’s appearance. It only ensures you’ll no longer have to look at it.
This relationship between truth and power lies at the heart of our current political crisis. We watch as wealthy and powerful figures attempt to rewrite reality itself, behaving as if sufficient money or influence can alter even physical law. When Elon Musk claims he can simultaneously run half a dozen major companies while reorganizing the federal government, he’s essentially asserting the power to create a twenty-fifth hour in the day. When Donald Trump declares that law doesn’t constrain his authority, he’s claiming the ability to rewrite the Constitution through sheer force of will. These are not just lies in the ordinary sense—they represent attempts to establish a world where truth itself is subject to negotiation, where reality becomes whatever those with power declare it to be.
There really is a sense in which we are truly living in Orwell’s nightmare. It didn’t come in the brutalist form of Oceania—at least not yet. It came in a more complex and unexpected way: censorship by attention overload. “Flooding the zone” to make truth impossible. The mirror we hold up to our collective civilization now is social media. And it lies to us.
Unlike a physical mirror, which stubbornly returns exactly what stands before it, our digital reflection has become infinitely malleable. Social media doesn’t just show us reality—it shows us a carefully curated, algorithmically enhanced version of ourselves and our world. The reflection changes based on who’s looking, morphing to confirm their existing beliefs and amplify their fears. This isn’t just distortion—it’s the destruction of the very concept of an objective reflection.
But we must also confront a deeper issue—the growing shamelessness of figures like Musk and Trump. People often describe their audacity as an absence of shame, but this misses the mark. Shame requires a shared standard, a common understanding of right and wrong, and a reality against which one’s actions can be measured. In a world where shared truth has disintegrated, that standard no longer exists. Without a common mirror to reflect reality, there’s nothing against which to compare behavior—no measure for judgment, no grounds for shame.
This is the most insidious consequence of truth’s erosion: it eliminates the very possibility of ethical accountability. If two plus two can equal five, then nothing—not corruption, not hypocrisy, not cruelty—can be definitively condemned. And when power operates unbound by truth, it becomes unbound by morality as well. Shamelessness is not a defect in such a world; it is a survival strategy, a natural adaptation to an environment where reality itself has become negotiable.
When Orwell imagined the Ministry of Truth, he envisioned bureaucrats manually editing newspapers and photographs, laboriously erasing people from history one image at a time. But our reality has proved more insidious. Instead of erasing truth, we’ve buried it under an avalanche of competing claims. Instead of forcing people to believe that two plus two equals five, we’ve created a world where every mathematical operation returns whatever result best serves power at that moment. The mirror hasn’t been broken—it’s been replaced by a screen that shows us whatever those controlling it want us to see.
What makes this particularly dangerous is who now controls these digital mirrors. Elon Musk’s acquisition of X (formerly Twitter) and Mark Zuckerberg’s sudden alignment with Trump aren’t just business decisions—they represent the consolidation of our collective reflection in the hands of those actively working to distort reality. These aren’t neutral platform owners maintaining digital public squares. They are active participants in the transformation of truth into a negotiable commodity, converting the instruments of public discourse into tools for reality manipulation.
The physical mirror’s power lies in its incorruptibility—its stubborn insistence on showing exactly what stands before it. But our new digital mirrors operate under different rules entirely. Social media platforms don’t simply reflect reality; they actively shape it through complex algorithms that determine what information spreads, what stays buried, and how ideas are framed. This isn’t just a distorted reflection—it’s a fundamentally different kind of mirror that changes based on who’s looking and who’s controlling it.
The genius of modern reality distortion isn’t in preventing truth from being spoken—it’s in making truth impossible to find or hold onto. When every feed is filled with competing claims, when each story generates a thousand counter-narratives, when every fact faces an avalanche of “alternative facts,” the very concept of truth begins to dissolve. This isn’t censorship through silence but through noise—drowning out reality in a sea of manufactured confusion.
Musk’s acquisition of X and Zuckerberg’s alignment with Trump represent something more dangerous than mere political preference. These are the owners of our primary instruments of public reflection actively working to distort reality. When Musk declares that naming government employees is “criminal,” while simultaneously serving as a government official himself, he’s not just being hypocritical—he’s demonstrating how platform control enables reality manipulation in real-time. Zuckerberg’s eagerness to attend Trump’s inauguration despite Trump’s open hostility to democratic norms shows how thoroughly tech oligarchs have abandoned any pretense of defending truth-based discourse.
This transformation of our collective reflection has profound implications for democracy itself. How can citizens make informed decisions when their very understanding of reality is shaped by those actively working to undermine democratic institutions? How can we hold power accountable when the instruments of accountability—our shared understanding of truth—have been corrupted? We’re watching not just the distortion of specific facts but the dismantling of truth-telling capacity itself.
When Musk declares that “you, the people, must be the media,” he’s not championing transparency—he’s working to replace objective reflection with a funhouse mirror of his own design. Consider the calculated precision of his approach: First, throttle links to external sources, making it harder to access traditional news. Then, alter the algorithms to amplify extreme views while suppressing fact-checkers. Finally, position X as the last bastion of “truth” against a supposedly corrupt mainstream media. This isn’t democratizing information—it’s creating a closed system where reality itself becomes whatever the platform owner declares it to be.
The physical mirror shows us exactly what stands before it, whether we like what we —it shows us what he wants us to see, while simultaneously convincing us that we’re seeing reality more clearly than ever before. When engagement with fact-checkers drops by 52% while extreme content flourishes, we’re watching the systematic destruction of our collective ability to distinguish truth from fiction.
This is why grounding ourselves in simple truths is more important than ever. The statement “two plus two equals four” isn’t just a mathematical fact; it is a metaphor for the unyielding nature of truth. No amount of noise or narrative manipulation can alter its simplicity or its power. When we anchor ourselves in such undeniable realities, we create a foundation from which to resist the tidal wave of distortion.
What makes this particularly dangerous is how it combines technological control with psychological manipulation. By positioning X users as both consumers and producers of “truth,” Musk creates the illusion of democratic participation while maintaining absolute control over the infrastructure that determines what information spreads and what stays buried. It’s as if he’s convinced millions of people that they’re looking into a clear mirror, when in fact they’re staring at a screen he controls completely.
This transformation of X into an “everything app” represents something more dangerous than just media consolidation—it’s an attempt to create a closed ecosystem where truth itself becomes proprietary. When Musk throttles links to external sources while promoting content from within X, he’s not just changing how news spreads—he’s working to make his platform the arbiter of reality itself.
The merger of social media and financial services through X Money isn’t just another business expansion—it represents something far more dangerous: the fusion of narrative control with economic power. Consider what it means when the platform that shapes our understanding of reality also controls our ability to participate in economic life. This isn’t just a digital mirror anymore—it’s becoming a gatekeeper to both truth and commerce.
When Musk combines control over public discourse with payment processing, he’s creating unprecedented power to shape behavior. Imagine a world where your ability to transact financially becomes intertwined with your compliance with platform-approved narratives. The mirror isn’t just showing you what Musk wants you to see—it’s gaining the power to punish you for seeing anything else.
This progression from social media platform to “everything app” reveals the true ambition at work. It’s not just about controlling information flow—it’s about creating a closed ecosystem where every aspect of public and private life becomes subject to platform governance. When Musk throttles links to external news sources while simultaneously building financial infrastructure within X, he’s working to make his platform not just the arbiter of truth but the mediator of daily life itself.
The parallel to China’s WeChat is impossible to ignore. But there’s a crucial difference—WeChat’s fusion of social media and financial services operates under state oversight, however problematic that might be. X’s transformation represents something new: private control over both information and economic participation, accountable to neither democratic governance nor market competition.
The key is understanding how control over financial transactions adds teeth to control over information flow. It’s not just about distorting what people see anymore—it’s about creating real-world consequences for those who resist the platform’s preferred reality.
And yet, the mirror remains. Though smashed and distorted, its incorruptible nature still calls to us. It reflects not what we wish to see, but what is. It reminds us that no matter how deeply noise and narrative obscure reality, truth itself does not cease to exist. The mirror is our tether to the real, a guidepost for those willing to look, a symbol of what must be reclaimed.
To restore the mirror’s place is to restore our ability to see clearly, to know what is real, and to hold power accountable. It is not an easy task, but it is a necessary one. The mirror’s incorruptibility reminds us that no amount of distortion or manipulation can change reality itself. Two plus two will always equal four. And as long as that truth remains, so too does the possibility of reclaiming a world built on shared reality, justice, and democracy.
“There are two ways of spreading light: to be the candle or the mirror that reflects it.”
— Edith Wharton
Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.
Filed Under: constitutional crisis, coup, elon musk, power, truth
Companies: twitter, x