This essay examines abuse as a distortion of entrusted authority within hierarchical life. It traces how authority expands when restraint weakens, how insulation forms through identifiable decisions, and how dispersed responsibility allows misuse to persist. The purpose is to clarify sequence rather than to invoke scandal or moral spectacle.
Authority arises when one person holds decision-making power over another. A parent directs a child. A teacher evaluates a student. A supervisor assigns tasks. An elected official issues orders. In each case, the authority holder receives discretion, which means the capacity to act without seeking approval from those subject to the decision. Discretion allows coordination. Without discretion, hierarchy cannot function. In this essay, authority refers to entrusted discretion assigned for coordination, not to an unlimited right to command. Power, by contrast, refers to the capacity to compel compliance regardless of entrusted purpose.
Discretion requires restraint. Law sets boundaries by defining prohibited conduct. Independent review limits authority by examining decisions. Shared norms discourage conduct that violates expectation. When these restraints operate together, authority remains aligned with its assigned purpose. Distortion begins when one restraint weakens or disappears.
Review weakens when those assigned to examine authority depend upon the same hierarchy for position or advancement. Dependence alters evaluation. A reviewer who risks institutional harm may weigh that harm against corrective action. If preservation appears safer than exposure, the reviewer delays intervention. Delay increases the time during which authority operates without correction.
Norms weaken when questioning authority is treated as disloyal. When disloyalty carries social penalty, individuals hesitate before raising concern. Hesitation reduces the number of reports. Fewer reports reduce information available for review. Reduced information limits corrective response. In this sequence, silence expands discretion.
Expanded discretion alters conditions so that violation becomes visible only later. An authority holder can increase private access under legitimate pretext. Repeated unsupervised interaction lowers perception of irregularity. Lowered perception reduces scrutiny. Reduced scrutiny allows further access. The sequence proceeds incrementally rather than abruptly.
Sexual exploitation of minors reveals this structure in its most asymmetric form. A minor lacks equal agency and depends upon adult control for safety and approval. When an adult initiates sexual conduct under these conditions, the adult converts dependency into leverage. If the minor expects disbelief or punishment, disclosure decreases. Decreased disclosure permits repetition. Repetition consolidates control. The ethical consequence follows from this sequence: a role assigned for protection has been used for domination.
Institutions can reproduce similar dynamics. An administrator receives complaint against a respected employee. Termination may expose the institution to litigation or public criticism. To reduce immediate harm, the administrator reassigns the employee. Reassignment preserves institutional standing. It also preserves access to potential victims. Preserved access permits further misconduct. A decision intended to protect reputation becomes the mechanism through which harm continues.
Several amplifiers intensify insulation without changing the underlying sequence. Wealth and status reinforce insulation through identifiable actions. They narrow disclosure: legal advisors limit disclosure to reduce liability. Communication advisors shape public explanation to maintain standing. Financial stakeholders discourage exposure that threatens shared investment. Each decision reduces transparency. Reduced transparency raises the evidentiary threshold required to initiate investigation. A raised threshold delays review. Delayed review extends unexamined discretion.
Charisma alters evaluation by causing observers to treat visible success as evidence of reliability. When a leader demonstrates visible success, observers associate success with reliability. When allegation arises, observers compare the allegation to established image. If image contradicts allegation, doubt attaches first to the accuser. Doubt slows inquiry. Slowed inquiry protects authority.
Political authority magnifies these mechanisms. An elected leader commands loyalty from supporters. Supporters interpret oversight as threat to collective identity. Legislators who share affiliation hesitate to initiate review because review may weaken political position. Reduced review expands executive discretion. Expanded discretion reduces transparency. Reduced transparency limits correction. Scale changes magnitude, not sequence.
Responsibility disperses across layered roles. One office receives complaint. Another evaluates evidence. Another communicates publicly. Each actor performs a defined task within assigned boundaries. No single actor carries full accountability for outcome. Fragmented accountability lowers the felt cost of inaction. Lower pressure favors procedural completion over substantive correction.
Communities assign cost to dissent. In some settings, questioning elders invites isolation. In others, criticizing leadership risks employment or status. When anticipated penalty exceeds anticipated benefit, individuals choose silence. Silence reduces information flow. Reduced information impairs review. Impaired review allows discretion to persist.
Structural prevention requires interruption at identifiable points. Separate investigative authority from the hierarchy under examination. Limit unsupervised access where dependency exists. Require reporting through defined channels with enforceable timelines. Protect complainants from retaliation through formal sanction. Each measure restores restraint. Restored restraint narrows discretion. Narrowed discretion reduces opportunity for misuse.
After exposure, institutions often adopt reform. New policies increase oversight. Over time, enforcement may relax because urgency declines or leadership changes. Relaxed enforcement returns discretion to previous level. When discretion returns without external review, earlier mechanisms reactivate. Recurrence follows diminished restraint rather than inevitable vice.
Hierarchy and vulnerability remain features of organized life. Authority cannot be removed without dissolving coordination. The decisive condition concerns review. When authority remains subject to review that it does not control, discretion operates within limit. When authority controls its own review or evades it through delay, discretion expands. In that expansion, conditions for abuse reappear.
Ricardo Morín Portrait of a President 14 x 20 inches Watercolor, sumi ink, crayon on paper 2003
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Author’s Note
This essay continues an inquiry begun in “Portrait of a President: A Diagnostic Essay on Power, Posture, and Historical Pattern,” where patterns of executive behavior were examined through observable action rather than declared intent. The present text shifts that inquiry from description to procedure and takes a recent executive order on artificial intelligence as a case through which decisions are advanced, reviewed, and sustained.
It follows The Arithmetic of Progress, which considers how contemporary narratives of advancement often detach calculation from consequence. Read in sequence, that essay establishes the broader conditions under which claims of inevitability and efficiency gain force; the present text examines how such claims operate within the executive process itself.
The essay also builds upon Governing by Exception: The American Executive, published earlier this year, which examined how exceptional measures become normalized within the modern presidency. Where that essay focused on the expansion of executive discretion, the present text examines the procedural consequences that follow when exception becomes routine.
This essay further stands in relation to Convergence by Design or Consequence? On Trump, Putin, and the Veiled Axis from Kyiv to Caracas, which addressed alignment among contemporary autocracies at the geopolitical level. Here, the focus moves inward, toward domestic executive procedure, to consider how similar methods of authority can emerge without explicit coordination or ideological declaration.
Each essay approaches the same problem from a different register—exception, calculation, procedure, and alignment—without requiring continuity of title or theme.
This essay occupies the center of that sequence of essays. Throughout the analysis, action designates executive action as it bears upon the other branches of the American government. It begins from an observation about executive ordering under conditions of urgency and traces how constitutional constraint may be displaced in practice without being formally abolished.
Ricardo F. Morín
November 2025
Oakland Park, Florida
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Procedural Dislocation and the Rhetoric of Dominance
I
The recent executive order framing artificial intelligence as a matter of “global dominance” offers a useful example on procedural dislocation and the rhetoric of dominance. Agreement with its stated aims is not required for the executive order to warrant examination. Its relevance does not lie in what it promises to achieve, but in the manner in which it propels decisions forward before the terms under which they should be evaluated have been configured.
Artificial intelligence enters this discussion not as a technical subject, but as a context in which executive action is presented as urgent. The order proceeds on the assumption that speed and centralized direction are necessary for success. As a result, decisions advance before existing forms of review, coordination, and regulatory formation have had an opportunity to shape their terms.
This ordering is significant. When presidential authority is asserted first, deliberation is relegated to constrained conditions. Institutional review—understood here as the pre-action criteria, thresholds, and sequencing through which decisions are ordinarily authorized—ceases to determine whether executive action should proceed and instead adjusts to action already underway. Once this sequence is fixed, subsequent forms of participation—whether arising from agencies, advisory bodies, or constitutional institutioins—may temper implementation without necessarily altering the direction of presidential decrees.
This essay treats the order as an instance of that ordering. It examines what follows when urgency governs the timing of decisions and broad assertions of purpose begin to do work normally performed by review, coordination, and rulemaking.
II
Executive decisions determine direction within the executive domain; executive action commits that determination to institutional consequence.
When decisions are taken prior to sustained review, the order of evaluation is reversed. Procedural review (as a condition of pre-authorization) no longer governs whether executive action is authorized, but instead becomes a step anticipated after executive action has already been set in motion. This inversion of review and authorization alters how responsibility is distributed within the executive process.
In this sequence, articulated criteria are deferred rather than established. Judicial review exists, but typically occurs after implementation, once policies have already taken effect. Congressional checks exist, but depend on coordination, timing, and political alignment that narratives of urgency actively compress, displace, and bypass. Constitutional remedies exist, but operate on temporal horizons incompatible with accelerated executive action. Standards by which a decision might be assessed—scope, limits, benchmarks, or conditions for revision—remain undefined at the moment of execution. The absence of articulated criteria is presented as provisional, even as executive action proceeds as though those criteria were already settled.
This analysis does not proceed from the assumption that constitutional checks are absent.Without articulated criteria, no stable reference exists against which a decision can be evaluated, adjusted, or halted. Review becomes reactive, tasked with accommodating decisions rather than testing their premises.
This sequence also alters the role of institutional participation. Agencies and advisory bodies are positioned to respond within post-implementation review rather than to contribute to the formation of the decision itself. Their involvement shifts from deliberation to implementation, narrowing the space for substantive input.
What emerges is not the elimination of review. Constraints remain formally intact, but no longer determine whether executive action proceeds; they intervene only after its action has already begun.
The result is not the elimination of constraint, but its displacement: mechanisms—designed to govern whether executive action should proceed—are repositioned to manage action already set in motion. Constitutional checks remain operative only after executive action has been set in motion, rather than governing whether that action may proceed.
III
Federal preemption is asserted before a substitute structure exists. In this case, state-level regulatory activity is set aside even though no comprehensive federal framework has yet been established to take its place. Rule by decree is asserted in advance of the mechanisms that would ordinarily support, coordinate, or limit executive action.
This is not a question of constitutional supremacy. The constitutional framework governing federal preemption state law is well established even as its application remains contested. The issue is one of sequence. Preemption typically displaces existing regulation by replacing it with a defined alternative through which responsibility, oversight, and accountability are reassigned. When that replacement is absent, displacement produces a gap rather than a transition.
This sequence reorders the role of the states. Rather than serving as sites of coordination, experimentation, or interim governance, they are treated primarily as sources of friction. Their regulatory efforts are characterized as interference even though no structure has been offered to absorb the regulatory functions being displaced.
The result of this ordeering is a form of authority exercised in advance of the institutional support required to sustain it. Preemption operates as assertion rather than as arrangement. The question that follows is not whether authority exists, but how the executive authority is expected to function once exercised without the structures that normally sustain it.
IV
The executive order invokes a global race of dominance as a justification for urgency. This reference is introduced without specification of its participants, scope, or criteria and is presented as a condition rather than as a claim requiring articulation or examination.
Because the race is not defined, it cannot be procedurally evaluated. No benchmarks are offered by which advancement or delay might be measured, and no temporal horizon is established against which executive actions might be paced. Yet the invocation is treated as decisive.
Once invoked, this global framing reshapes the timing and sequence of domestic review and coordination. Internal processes of review, coordination, and federal balance are measured against an externally asserted tempo. Procedural safeguards begin to appear as liabilities, not because they have failed, but because they operate at a pace deemed incompatible with the asserted race.
In this way, the invocation of a global race does not specify what is at stake; instead, the invocation of global competition relocates the timing of decision-making to an externally asserted pace. The absence of specification enables acceleration.
The significance of this procedural reordering lies not in whether global competition exists, but in how its invocation alters internal sequence within the American executive. An external reference is imported as a procedural rationale and allows executive decisions to advance ahead of sustained review and articulated structure.
V
Alongside external competitive framing, internal pressure also alters when and how executive decisions move forward. This pressure arises from private actors with concentrated financial exposure to the development and deployment of artificial intelligence technologies. Their investments depend on acceleration, scale, and limited regulatory constraint.
These actors do not require coordination to exert influence. Their interests converge structurally. Delays associated with sustained review, layered oversight, or decentralized regulation introduce uncertainty into investment horizons. Acceleration, by contrast, stabilizes expectations and preserves potential revenue.
Such pressure operates prior to public deliberation. It is expressed through advisory roles, policy consultations, and formal lobbying mechanisms that exist outside the sequence of open review. The influence is not illicit; it is institutionalized. What distinguishes this influence is its timing and asymmetry.
Because these interests are not fully disclosed within the formal record of decision-making and review, their effects appear indirect. Yet they shape the conditions under which urgency is framed as necessity and executive preemption as inevitability. The absence of articulated criteria does not impede this process; it facilitates it by keeping outcomes flexible while direction remains fixed.
External competition supplies a rationale for acceleration, while the pressure of internal investment sustains it. In this way, procedural dislocation is reinforced from within the executive sequence itself. Together, they create an executive environment in which acceleration is continuously justified even as institutional review and the structures of substitution remain deferred.
VI
What follows marks a shift not in policy substance, but in how executive action is oriented once procedural guidance no longer governs its timing.
When decisions continue to advance without articulated criteria or substitution structures, language begins to assume functions ordinarily carried by procedural guidance. By procedural guidance, this analysis refers to the articulated criteria, review thresholds, institutional sequencing, and substitution structures through which decisions are ordinarily evaluated, revised, or withheld before executive action proceeds. Instead, executive orders are used to frame executive action and to supply orientation where procedural guidance is missing.
In this context, words such as “dominance,” “necessity,” or “leadership” do not operate primarily as descriptions. Such terms establish direction without specification. The function of such terms is to move decisions forward while leaving objectives, limits, and measures unresolved.
This enlargement of language alters how executive action is understood. Rather than clarifying what is being done and under what conditions, language organizes attention around procedural momentum. Movement itself becomes the priority, even as the grounds for evaluation remain unsettled.
The effect is cumulative over time. As reliance on rhetorical framing increases, fewer procedural markers remain available to slow, revise, or redirect executive action. Language begins to carry responsibilities normally handled by review and specification.
At this stage, language has not displaced explanation entirely, but it has begun to exceed it. This language continues to refer to policy, yet it now performs additional work by sustaining executive action in the absence of settled procedural support.
VII
Requests for specification no longer lead to articulated criteria or review mechanisms, but to restatement of the original framing. Explanation gives way to emphasis, and emphasis to repetition, without resolving the underlying procedural gaps.
As language begins to carry responsibilities normally handled by review and specification, its relationship to explanation changes. Statements initially intended to orient understanding become reference points that are repeated rather than examined.
Over time, this pattern reduces the capacity to pause, reconsider, or revise decisions already underway. When language is relied upon to sustain action, revisiting its premises becomes more difficult. Adjustment appears as retreat, and reconsideration as delay, even though no settled standards have been articulated.
The effect of this rhetorical substitution is not overt resistance to review, but a narrowing of the scope of review. Review persists formally, yet review is increasingly tasked with accommodating decisions already advanced. The space for questioning sequence, authority, or criteria contracts without being explicitly closed.
At this point, language no longer merely advances executive action; it begins to shield it. Decisions remain explainable in broad terms, but they become less accessible to sustained examination. What has changed is not transparency, but the conditions under which clarification can still occur.
VIII
This section traces the consequences of earlier procedural substitutions by showing how evaluative reference points disappear even as executive action continues.
Outcomes are projected but not specified. Means are deployed but not measured against stable standards. A shared point of reference by which both means and outcomes might be assessed is absent. When decisions are taken prior to sustained review and sustained by rhetorical framing rather than articulated criteria, the available bases for judging decisions narrow.
In such conditions, projected outcomes can no longer function as checks on present executive action. Projected benefits remain abstract, deferred, or contingent on future clarification. Without defined benchmarks or review mechanisms, outcomes function more as justification than as objects of evaluation.
This places increased weight on the process. When ends remain indeterminate, procedural sequence becomes the only available measure of legitimacy. If that sequence is dislocated, no basis remains for distinguishing provisional executive action from settled direction.
Appeals to necessity gain prominence under these conditions. These appeals bridge the gap between uncertain means and unspecified ends by asserting inevitability. Yet inevitability does not supply measure; it advances executive action while deferring assessment.
What results is the suspension of evaluation, as judgment is deferred to outcomes that have not yet been defined. Executive means proceed without reference to ends that can be examined and leave evaluation suspended rather than resolved.
IX
The significance of what follows lies not in escalation or collapse, but in the capacity of this governing pattern to persist without triggering a formal breakdown.
Viewed through the preceding sequence, the executive order appears less as a response to a technological challenge than as an expression of how presidential authority now operates. In this sequence, constitutional constraint persists formally while losing its capacity to govern presidential timing. What defines this mode of operation is not declared ambition, but the exercise of executive authority in advance of settled structure, review, and measure.
Despite the suspension of procedural evaluation, executive action continues to advance and stabilize as a governing pattern. Executive action advances without stable criteria, and evaluation follows rather than guides it. Rhetorical framing sustains continuity once authorization, specification, and review no longer govern the initiation of action, and inevitability substitutes for articulation.
Under these conditions, governance retains motion but loses procedural reference. Decisions remain intelligible in broad terms, yet increasingly difficult to assess, revise, or halt.
Rather than resolving into crisis, the condition persists through executive assertion rather than procedural sequence. Executive authority continues to function, but it does so with fewer internal points of correction.
The significance of this condition lies not in its novelty, but in its durability. When procedural dislocation becomes a stable feature of executive action, it reshapes how legitimacy is understood and how accountability can be exercised. What is produced is not exception, but a normalized way of proceeding.
X
A constitutional order presumes cooperation without being able to compel it in advance. Law establishes procedures, thresholds, and divisions of authority, but it cannot secure the disposition of the actors who must inhabit those roles. The responsibility for cooperation is therefore placed precisely at the point where predictability can no longer be secured—human judgment, ambition, fear, calculation, fatigue, pride. This is not a failure of law as text; it is a condition of law as lived structure.
Seen this way, instability is not an aberration introduced by bad actors alone. It is an ever-present possibility generated by the fact that constitutional systems rely on restraint exercised voluntarily, sequentially, and often against immediate interest. Where cooperation falters, procedures remain formally intact yet lose operational force in practice. Law persists on paper while its coordinating capacity weakens over time.
This is why the problem traced throughout this essay is ultimately ethical rather than moralistic. It does not ask who is right or wrong, but what can reasonably be expected of human agents operating under pressure, asymmetry, and incomplete trust. Constitutional governance assumes a minimum ethic of reciprocity—an agreement to wait, to contest, to defer, to revise. When that ethic fails to be sustained, the system does not collapse at once; it persists in a condition where coordination no longer governs action. The authority of the Executive fills the gap left by cooperation, often in the name of continuity.
This explains why displacement proves durable, why restraint remains fragile, and why systems can continue to function even as their ethical foundations lose sustaining force. The irony sustained here is not pessimistic; it is lucid as an end to the inquiry.
Cooperative frameworks are always provisional. They exist in tension with mistrust, strategic defection, and shifting circumstance. They are never resolved, only renegotiated. The ethical fact is not that mistrust appears, but that governance must function despite it.
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Pre-Procedural Conditions of Dislocation
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Political responsibility begins before governance does. It precedes programs, slogans, and institutional choreography. Long before authority is exercised, it is entrusted, and in that act a judgment is already made—not about policy detail, but about temperament, restraint, and capacity for self-limitation.
The ethical center of leadership is not revealed through ambition or rhetorical promise, but through signs that are immediately legible: flexibility without opportunism, firmness without domination, caution without paralysis. These qualities are visible almost at once, often within moments of exposure. To miss them is not a failure of intelligence, but of attention.
This responsibility cannot be displaced onto institutions after the fact. Nor can it be excused by urgency, fatigue, or personal grievance. Once authority is conferred, law is required to manage what has already been authorized, even when correction becomes costly or delayed. No procedural safeguard can fully compensate for ethical indifference at the moment of selection.
Political systems do not deteriorate solely because of those who govern. They also reflect the standards—explicit or tacit—by which leaders are chosen. Collective well-being depends less on promised outcomes than on the character permitted to command. In this sense, leadership is not imposed upon a society. It is recognized, accepted, and sustained by it.