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Apr 30, 9 tweets

She escaped the Gestapo in 1933. Then she spent 18 years asking one question:

What actually creates tyranny?

Some would say ideology and propaganda. Others would point to a strongman seizing power.

Her answer was something far more ordinary, and far more dangerous. 🧵

In 1933, Hannah Arendt was detained by the Gestapo for researching Nazi antisemitic propaganda. She escaped Germany and spent the next 18 years stateless: no country, no citizenship, no legal protection.

Stripped of membership in any recognized political community, she experienced what she would later call being "superfluous", the terrifying sensation of belonging nowhere and mattering to no one.

That experience became the foundation of The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951). The theorizing was based on what she had experienced first hand.

When the book came out, everyone expected a conventional answer.

Scholars expected an anatomy of Nazi ideology. Economists expected a class analysis. Psychologists expected a study of mass hysteria.

Arendt gave them something stranger: totalitarianism doesn't grow primarily from ideology. It grows from loneliness: the experience of having no place in a shared world.

Arendt observed that the masses supporting totalitarian movements were not, primarily, true believers. They were people who had lost their voluntary bonds: family, church, civic groups, real friendships.

When those bonds dissolve, individuals become atomized: isolated units with no shared world to anchor their perception of reality.

Atomized people don't evaluate ideologies on their merits. They reach for any movement that makes them feel real again. That offers structure. That offers belonging. The content of the ideology is almost secondary.

Arendt separated three states of being alone.

Solitude: being alone with your own thoughts. This is healthy. It's where moral judgment forms. "Never was he less alone," Arendt quoted Cato, "than when he was alone."

Isolation: cut off from political life, but still intact as a person. Tyrannies produce this. It's serious, but survivable.

And then, loneliness: total abandonment. The sense of having no place in the world at all, confirmed by no one. In this state, the internal dialogue that produces moral judgment breaks down. The person becomes, in her word, "one": unable to think from the standpoint of others.

Only loneliness produces what she called the "mass man": someone who can no longer distinguish fact from fiction, and who is desperate for any logic that makes the world cohere.

What does a totalitarian movement offer the lonely person?

An identity. A purpose. An enemy. A group that makes them feel, for the first time in years, that they exist.

Ideology doesn't persuade the atomized. It replaces the reality they've lost. Truth becomes optional. Consistency is the only requirement: internally logical, total, uncompromising.

That's exactly what Nazism and Soviet Communism delivered: a world where everything made sense, even the terror.

Arendt published her warning in 1951. Look at what the data shows in 2026.

The World Health Organization now links loneliness to an estimated 871,000 deaths annually. Half of American adults report feeling lonely. Among 18-to-24-year-olds, that number reaches 50%.

The civic institutions that once held atomization in check: churches, local associations, civic organizations, stable neighborhoods, have been hollowing out for decades. Digital life simulates connection while deepening the reality of isolation.

Arendt identified the soil in which any authoritarian movement can take root. That soil has not been this fertile since the 1930s.

The truth is that lonely people don't evaluate political arguments on their merits, but on whether accepting them produces belonging.

When a large enough portion of a population is atomized, the movement that offers the strongest sense of identity wins. Not the one with the best ideas, the most historically grounded arguments, or the most defensible policies.

Arendt offered no political program. Her antidote? The reconstruction of voluntary bonds: real people, real places, real shared action in a common world.

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