
Proposal: musicto Collaborative Playlist Grant Initiative
We perceive Higher as a movement that rises above division, fear, and hate. If hate represents the lowest expression of humanity, then aiming higher is about choosing connection, empathy, and creativity.

In Scotland & Feeling Good
Writing for the Human Collective, this week's prompt: How Are You Feeling About Where You're At In Your Life?

What Are You Afraid Of?
tl;dr - We have way more in common than the demagogues would like you to believe. Come and help our dataset: https://www.musicto.com/what-are-you-afraid-of-and-why/ 28 days ago my /firstdraft entry was two emails that I wrote to reposition the musicto community as a purpose driven organization. With enthusiastic support we became a community that organized around the idea that music makes the world better. In a collective effort to tackle the rise of hate - we wanted to see if our global comm...
Writing about music, life, community, and web3

When leaders demand total loyalty and surround themselves with flatterers, disaster follows. Every time. It’s not a question of if—it’s a question of when. From emperors to kings to dictators to presidents, history makes one thing clear: when sycophancy takes over, collapse is right behind it. And if you think the United States is immune, take a hard look at what’s happening right now.
The Roman emperors Caligula, Nero, and Commodus demanded worship instead of wisdom, ignored all bad news, and were assassinated by their own people. In Renaissance Europe, kings who listened only to their sycophantic courts—Henry III of France, Charles I of England—ended up overthrown, exiled, or executed. In the 20th century, authoritarian rulers from Hitler to Ceaușescu built loyalty cults so airtight that when reality finally broke through, their regimes collapsed almost overnight. The through-line? Leaders who surrounded themselves with yes-men became detached from reality, made catastrophic decisions, and lost the support of the very people keeping them in power.
The same dynamic plays out in the corporate world. Enron, Theranos, WeWork—massive, billion-dollar companies brought down not just by fraud but by leaders who refused to hear the truth. They built cultures where questioning the boss meant exile, so no one spoke up when disaster was looming. It’s the same disease that kills governments: a leader so insulated by praise that they steer straight off the cliff, cheered on the whole way.
And now? We are watching this cycle unfold in real time. When truth is punished, when flattery is rewarded, when blind loyalty is the price of power—failure is inevitable. History is clear: when sycophancy runs a government, it won’t run for long.
Coda
It wasn't the Trump / Zelensky meeting, it was the republican response that put an arrow in my optimism.
I'd been wanting to try out GPT's Deep Research function and yesterday I fed it this prompt:
“So, I'm watching the Trump presidency and something's really, really nagging me and it's the requirement for sycophancy. It's the requirement for obsequiousness. Watching Zelensky in with Trump and everybody, the right wing, are saying, well, you've just got to butter him up, you've got to be nice to him, you've got to flatter him. And that's the thing that's doing my head in, because it just feels wrong. It feels absolutely wrong, and I have a gut feel and intuition that if we look at history, that there are times in history when, where sycophancy was required by the prince, by the leader, what happens?
My gut feels is it has to fail. What I'm looking for is deep research across history, across recorded human history, of when strong princes arrive, and leaders and, you know, whatever, executives. We can see this in the business world too, where they created this culture of ego where the leader needed to be flattered, where you needed to become an expert in sycophancy, in obsequiousness, in order to get what you want.
I want to know what the implications of that are, and does it match my hypothesis that a requirement for sycophancy in a political structure or a business structure is ultimately a road to ruin.”
This post is the tl;dr - read the well researched and well put together essay here.

When leaders demand total loyalty and surround themselves with flatterers, disaster follows. Every time. It’s not a question of if—it’s a question of when. From emperors to kings to dictators to presidents, history makes one thing clear: when sycophancy takes over, collapse is right behind it. And if you think the United States is immune, take a hard look at what’s happening right now.
The Roman emperors Caligula, Nero, and Commodus demanded worship instead of wisdom, ignored all bad news, and were assassinated by their own people. In Renaissance Europe, kings who listened only to their sycophantic courts—Henry III of France, Charles I of England—ended up overthrown, exiled, or executed. In the 20th century, authoritarian rulers from Hitler to Ceaușescu built loyalty cults so airtight that when reality finally broke through, their regimes collapsed almost overnight. The through-line? Leaders who surrounded themselves with yes-men became detached from reality, made catastrophic decisions, and lost the support of the very people keeping them in power.
The same dynamic plays out in the corporate world. Enron, Theranos, WeWork—massive, billion-dollar companies brought down not just by fraud but by leaders who refused to hear the truth. They built cultures where questioning the boss meant exile, so no one spoke up when disaster was looming. It’s the same disease that kills governments: a leader so insulated by praise that they steer straight off the cliff, cheered on the whole way.
And now? We are watching this cycle unfold in real time. When truth is punished, when flattery is rewarded, when blind loyalty is the price of power—failure is inevitable. History is clear: when sycophancy runs a government, it won’t run for long.
Coda
It wasn't the Trump / Zelensky meeting, it was the republican response that put an arrow in my optimism.
I'd been wanting to try out GPT's Deep Research function and yesterday I fed it this prompt:
“So, I'm watching the Trump presidency and something's really, really nagging me and it's the requirement for sycophancy. It's the requirement for obsequiousness. Watching Zelensky in with Trump and everybody, the right wing, are saying, well, you've just got to butter him up, you've got to be nice to him, you've got to flatter him. And that's the thing that's doing my head in, because it just feels wrong. It feels absolutely wrong, and I have a gut feel and intuition that if we look at history, that there are times in history when, where sycophancy was required by the prince, by the leader, what happens?
My gut feels is it has to fail. What I'm looking for is deep research across history, across recorded human history, of when strong princes arrive, and leaders and, you know, whatever, executives. We can see this in the business world too, where they created this culture of ego where the leader needed to be flattered, where you needed to become an expert in sycophancy, in obsequiousness, in order to get what you want.
I want to know what the implications of that are, and does it match my hypothesis that a requirement for sycophancy in a political structure or a business structure is ultimately a road to ruin.”
This post is the tl;dr - read the well researched and well put together essay here.

Proposal: musicto Collaborative Playlist Grant Initiative
We perceive Higher as a movement that rises above division, fear, and hate. If hate represents the lowest expression of humanity, then aiming higher is about choosing connection, empathy, and creativity.

In Scotland & Feeling Good
Writing for the Human Collective, this week's prompt: How Are You Feeling About Where You're At In Your Life?

What Are You Afraid Of?
tl;dr - We have way more in common than the demagogues would like you to believe. Come and help our dataset: https://www.musicto.com/what-are-you-afraid-of-and-why/ 28 days ago my /firstdraft entry was two emails that I wrote to reposition the musicto community as a purpose driven organization. With enthusiastic support we became a community that organized around the idea that music makes the world better. In a collective effort to tackle the rise of hate - we wanted to see if our global comm...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog
Writing about music, life, community, and web3
The unelected "free speech absolutist" who bought his way into power is vowing the US government is going to "go after" people who criticize him and Tesla. Everyone who continues to support this guy are showing us who they really are.
Meanwhile serious journalists are getting banned from the White House (Associated Press because they won't call it the "Gulf of America"), replaced with sycophants to praise the big strong leader. This doesn't end well. https://www.politico.com/news/2025/02/25/trump-white-house-press-pool-access-00206001
Sycophancy Is a Death Spiral – and America’s in It

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The unelected "free speech absolutist" who bought his way into power is vowing the US government is going to "go after" people who criticize him and Tesla. Everyone who continues to support this guy are showing us who they really are.
Meanwhile serious journalists are getting banned from the White House (Associated Press because they won't call it the "Gulf of America"), replaced with sycophants to praise the big strong leader. This doesn't end well. https://www.politico.com/news/2025/02/25/trump-white-house-press-pool-access-00206001
https://paragraph.xyz/@music2work2/sycophancy-is-a-death-spiral-and-americas-in-it
Sycophancy Is a Death Spiral – and America’s in It