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TOWARD A EUSOCIAL EMPIRE

A Guide to the Insect Management of Sex & Race in tomorrow’s Dystopia

Toward a Eusocial Empire argues that contemporary power no longer governs primarily through persuasion or repression, but through biological-style population management modeled on social insects.

From this perspective, under Anglo-American guidance, modern societies appear increasingly to be reorganized along entomological lines, where caste, sterility, and administratively managed divisions tend to take the place of citizenship and reproduction.

The analysis unfolds along two intertwined axes: race and sex.

On race, the book shows how power modulates its strategies according to context, working on the domestic front to domesticate certain groups and reduce their conflictual charge, while on the imperial plane it has recourse to migratory flows as an instrument of pressure and, in specific contexts, of interethnic destabilization.

On sex, the book examines the post-humanist and LGBTQ agenda as social engineering. The promotion of sex change, the denigration of fertility, and the technologization of intimacy are read as components of a program of mass sterilization, functionally analogous to the sterile worker castes of ant and termite societies.

Drawing on entomology, history, and political economy, the book identifies the emergence of a disciplined, childless, hyper-organized, interchangeable, and stolidly violent labor force.

This is not a book of metaphors, but the identification of project.