Friday, April 10, 2026
Fascist Move of the Day
Burkina Faso's military ruler tells the public to "forget about democracy". The emergency is over. The contempt is now the policy.
Source: The Guardian, April 10 2026
Historical Parallel
On 21 April 1967, a group of Greek army colonels seized power in Athens and announced that parliamentary democracy had become a luxury the nation could no longer afford. Parties were suspended, opponents arrested, newspapers censored, and the language of emergency became the language of permanent rule. The junta's argument was familiar: the country was too endangered, too divided, too unstable for democratic procedure. First democracy was postponed. Then it was mocked. Then it was recast as the problem itself.
That is the move Burkina Faso's junta is now making openly. Coups nearly always arrive describing themselves as temporary surgery. The officers are only here to restore order. Elections can wait. Rights can wait. Criticism can wait. But once a ruler tells the public to "forget about democracy," the mask comes off. He is no longer claiming to protect the republic during an emergency. He is telling you the emergency has become the form of government.
"People of Burkina Faso should forget about democracy."
— Capt Ibrahim Traoré, as reported by The Guardian, April 10 2026Sources: Wikipedia: Greek junta · Britannica: Greece under the Colonels
The Full Dispatch
Burkina Faso's military ruler, Capt Ibrahim Traoré, has now said the quiet part plainly: people should "forget about democracy." It is worth slowing down over the bluntness. Authoritarian regimes usually prefer a few rounds of camouflage first, transitional language, patriotic euphemism, talk of necessity and national rescue. Traoré skipped the lace curtain and went straight to the boot.
This is how military rule tries to become normal. The junta takes power claiming it will stabilize the country, defeat enemies, restore dignity, clean out corruption. The promise is that exceptional rule will be brief because the danger is so severe. Then, once power is consolidated and dissent grows costly, the argument flips. Democracy is no longer something to be restored after the emergency. Democracy is reframed as the indulgence that caused the emergency in the first place.
The historical pattern is old and ugly. Mussolini treated parliament as a decadent obstacle to national rebirth. Franco described pluralism as the disease from which Spain had to be cured. The Greek colonels claimed they had suspended democracy only to save Greece from itself. Pinochet called dictatorship reconstruction. Different uniforms, same sales pitch: liberty is weakness, procedure is decadence, obedience is maturity.
The most important part of Traoré's remark is not only its content but its confidence. He thinks he can say it openly now. That is what happens when authoritarianism stops pretending to be temporary and starts advertising itself as destiny. Democracy is rarely abolished in a single stroke. It is mocked, delayed, suspended, hollowed out, and finally spoken of as something childish people ought to stop expecting. By the time the ruler tells you to forget about it, he is betting you already have.
The Playbook
Seize power in the name of emergency → Delay elections as a luxury the nation cannot afford → Rebrand democracy as weakness and disorder → Normalize permanent military rule → Tell the public to stop expecting self-government