A massive gold statue of a living political figure, fist raised in triumph, standing like some self-anointed redeemer in a manicured temple of wealth, while followers insist it’s merely about “freedom” and “courage,” would be laughable if it weren’t so psychologically telling. Democracies do not traditionally build golden effigies to leaders as objects of emotional devotion. Authoritarian movements do. Fragile movements built on grievance, mythmaking, and the desperate need for a strongman savior do.
And let’s be honest about the theology here. When a movement wraps one man in endless symbols of infallibility, victimhood, masculine strength, persecution, and divine destiny, while defending every lie, every indictment, every cruelty, every incoherent outburst as somehow evidence of his greatness, we’ve moved well past political support and into something far closer to secular worship.
The irony, of course, is impossible to miss. Many of the same people who loudly proclaim biblical values seem entirely untroubled by the optics of literal golden iconography dedicated to their chosen champion. If your political identity requires monuments, ritual praise, loyalty tests, and a narrative in which your leader alone can save the nation, that’s not civic engagement. That’s emotional dependency dressed in red, white, and blue merchandising.
What does it say about a movement that sees this and feels pride rather than discomfort? Perhaps that politics has ceased to be about governance at all. For some, it has become theater. Myth. Tribal identity. A substitute religion where policy barely matters, contradiction is irrelevant, and devotion itself becomes the point.
Because when a politician becomes less a public servant and more a golden symbol of collective longing, resentment, and grievance, history tends to have an unkind word for that phenomenon." —Michael Jochum, Not Just a Drummer: Reflections on Art, Politics, Dogs, and the Human Condition.
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Dictators, particularly in the Soviet Union and Central Asia, have long used giant, often golden, statues of themselves to project power, enforce a cult of personality, and maintain a presence after death.