
Hidden Violence in the Enlightenment Supermarket
Language philosopher Bry Willis and Claude offer a searing critique of the Enlightenment, arguing that modern progress has not eliminated systemic cruelty but has merely sanitised and hidden the violence of the past. By employing the metaphor of an abattoir transitioning into a supermarket, the author suggests that pre-modern domination was honest and visible, whereas our current systems rationalise exploitation through supply chains and professionalised procedures. This transformation allows participants to engage in harmful structures, such as coercive labour or environmental destruction, while maintaining a psychological sense of innocence because the suffering is kept out of sight. Ultimately, the source posits that the genius of modernity lies in its ability to disguise structural domination as free choice, making contemporary barbarism more insidious because it is no longer recognisable as such.
👉https://philosophics.blog/2026/02/28/comrade-claude-10-les-abattoirs-et-supermarches/
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