Survival Tips for Life in the Authoritarian Slow-Cooker

Survival Tips for Life in the Authoritarian Slow-Cooker

Overhead view of a slow cooker filled with bubbling stew. The arrangement of meat and vegetables forms a dark, uncanny human silhouette in the surface. Steam rises, creating a moody, sinister atmosphere.
Image created by DALL·E

“Hypodermics on the shore, China’s under martial law / Rock and roller, cola wars—I can’t take it anymore.”

Billy Joel belted that out in 1989 as a rapid-fire history lesson, a catalog of chaos. Back then it was background noise on the radio. Today, it sounds like prophecy. The Cold War is gone, but the chaos machine is still here—just with new headlines: Epstein files, ICE raids, $200 million ballrooms, tariffs, coups dressed up as patriotism—same breathless drumbeat, only now it’s 24/7 and weaponized.

Joel sang it like history marching past. We live it like breaking news that never stops breaking.

Remember the Trump White House greatest hits? Trump’s scandals, Epstein files, watchdogs axed, $200 million ballrooms, fraud in New York, border raids, tariffs, coups dressed up as patriotism—same breathless drumbeat, only now it’s 24/7 and weaponized.” 

A never-ending carousel of grifts and gaffes, with Trump riding the golden horse and the rest of us puking in the parking lot. That chaos wasn’t a bug—it was the feature.

And the hits keep coming. We watch comedians like Jimmy Kimmel or Stephen Colbert suddenly targeted, late-night satire framed as national threat. We see businesses fold under Trump’s shadow, CEOs trembling at the thought of offending the cult. We see conservatives quietly buying up media conglomerates, piece by piece, until the evening news sounds more like party propaganda.

And we’re shocked. Again and again. But maybe that’s the point. Authoritarianism doesn’t arrive in jackboots overnight. It creeps in small bites—one outrage, one cancellation, one law bent, one institution gutted. Shock is their smokescreen. Or as Joel might’ve sung it today: “Fox News, book bans, billionaires with blood on their hands.”

Macro Fire, Micro Embers

It’s not just the big stuff. Macro chaos trickles down into micro chaos. Inflation chewing paychecks, school shootings on replay, jobs on pause, families barely keeping the lights on. Billionaires play rocket man, pastors buy new jets—same old verse, different remix.

This is the point of the chaos machine—it keeps you too busy fighting daily fires to notice the whole damn forest is ash.

It feels like our lives could be sung verse by verse: “Inflation high, wages flat, billionaire buys another yacht.” The song never ends—it just keeps remixing.

So what do we do? Collapse into despair? Rage-tweet until our thumbs bleed? No. We endure. We adapt. We get savvy. Because if we’re going to survive the authoritarian slow-cooker, we need survival tips.

Six Tips for Staying Sane (and Maybe Even Resisting)

1. Learn to Spot the Gaslight

Every strongman swears he’s doing it for your good. “Protecting freedoms” by banning books. “Defending democracy” by undermining elections. The con is simple: make you doubt your own eyes. Survival begins by refusing to buy the lie. Say it plainly: this is not freedom—it’s control.

2. Budget Your Outrage

Everything is not DEFCON 1, no matter what your Twitter feed says. Burn yourself out screaming at every headline, and you’ll be useless when the real fight comes. Outrage is like money: budget it. Spend it wisely. Ask:

Does this deserve my energy, or is this just smoke meant to distract me from the fire?

Joel’s song never tried to explain everything—it just kept listing. That’s a survival lesson: you can’t fight all the battles at once. You name them, you place them, but you pick where to dig in.

3. Treat Media Literacy Like PPE

We live in the golden age of disinformation. Conspiracies outpace facts. Algorithms feed us outrage like junk food. And as conservatives buy up media empires, spin becomes policy. Your best armor isn’t a gun—it’s critical thinking. Fact-check. Question sources. Refuse to forward your uncle’s Facebook chain rant. Media literacy is the new survival skill.

Or as Billy might put it: “TikTok, deepfake, news you know is probably fake.”

4. Remember: Community Is Resistance

Authoritarianism thrives on isolation. Alone, you’re easier to control. Together, you’re harder to silence. So build connections. Join community groups, grassroots networks, faith circles that haven’t sold their souls to Christian nationalism. Laugh together. Rage together. Mourn together. Resistance isn’t just marching in the streets—it’s refusing to live life alone.

5. Self-Care Isn’t Selfish

The empire wants you tired. It wants you anxious. It wants you too numb to notice. Rest is rebellion. Joy is resistance. Take a walk. Read a book. Laugh at a stupid meme. Refuse to give them your mental health. Staying sane is part of the long game.

It may sound trivial, but even Joel knew survival sometimes comes down to naming the absurd and moving forward. The world keeps burning, the verses keep stacking, but you still breathe.

6. Mock the Strongman

Bullies hate to be laughed at. Authoritarians crave power and fear ridicule. So meme the grift. Joke about the hypocrisy. Drag their sacred cows into absurdity. Humor doesn’t topple empires on its own, but it pokes holes in their aura of invincibility. Snark is a weapon—use it.

The Long Burn

We’re stuck in the chaos of living and the chaos of life. The rich keep stacking their chips while the rest of us juggle bills and broken systems. Fascists shout about “saving freedom” while shredding the Constitution in broad daylight.

But here’s the truth: survival doesn’t mean ignoring the fire. It means learning how to live in the middle of it without losing yourself. It means choosing your battles, protecting your sanity, and finding ways to keep joy and justice alive—even in small acts.

Because the flames aren’t going out anytime soon. But neither are we. And as long as we can laugh, connect, and keep our outrage aimed where it counts, there’s still hope.

Not a kumbaya, hand-holding kind of hope. A gritty, sarcastic, tired-but-still-standing kind of hope. The kind of hope that knows survival isn’t passive—it’s defiant.

Billy Joel had it right: we didn’t start the fire. But unlike him, we don’t get to fade out. We have to keep singing—new scandals, same song, still burning—because the arsonists are still holding the matches.

 


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About Stuart Delony
I’m Stuart Delony, a former pastor who walked out of the church but couldn’t shake the ways of Jesus. These days, I host Snarky Faith—a podcast and platform that wrestles with faith, culture, and meaning from the fringe. I’m not here to fix Christianity. I’m here to name what’s broken, find what’s still worth keeping, and hold space for the questions that don’t have clean answers. If you’ve been burned, disillusioned, or just done with the noise—welcome. You’re in good company. You can read more about the author here.
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