We Are Rome?
The Spectacle, the Corruption, the Collapse and the Final Warnings We’re Choosing to Ignore
I. The Shadow of an Empire
Rome didn’t fall in a day. It bled out in slow motion, from inside its marble halls, from the cracks in its promises, and from the silence of those who saw the decay and did nothing.
At the height of its power, the Roman Empire ruled over 60 million people across three continents. Its roads stretched farther than any before it. Its armies were feared, its wealth unmatched. And yet, despite its glory, it crumbled, not from a single blow, but from a thousand cuts: corruption, overreach, inequality, division, and distraction.
Sound familiar?
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Today, the United States stands at a crossroads, not unlike the one that faced Rome in its final centuries. We boast military dominance, global influence, and a culture that saturates the planet. But beneath the spectacle, signs of erosion are impossible to ignore. Economic inequality has widened into a chasm. Basic governance is gridlocked or deliberately sabotaged. Disinformation, distraction, and political theater dominate our national attention span. Public trust in institutions is collapsing. And while the empire burns, our leaders host cage matches on the lawn.
This is not a cry of doom for the sake of drama. This is a serious reckoning with the ways America is, step by step, following the pattern of imperial decline. To understand where we are, we must look backward as well as forward, because history may not repeat, but it rhymes with disturbing consistency.
This article does not argue that America must fall. However, it does argue that if we ignore the parallels, if we pretend our institutions are invincible, and if we prioritize spectacle over substance, we are inviting the same fate that befell Rome.
II. Bread and Circuses, Then and Now
In the Roman Empire’s final centuries, emperors mastered a chilling formula for control: panem et circenses — bread and circuses. Keep the people fed just enough to survive and distracted just enough to forget.
If the Roman Colosseum was a monument to imperial distraction, America’s equivalents are flashing across every screen, 24 hours a day. Political scandals are treated like sports. Election cycles are structured like reality TV. Tragedies are commodified into hashtags, and actual policies — the boring, complex engine of governance — are buried beneath outrage clips and meme warfare.
And now, the circus comes full circle.
In what can only be described as a darkly poetic moment, the White House is preparing to host a UFC fight on its front lawn, transforming the heart of American executive power into a literal arena for combat. Just like the emperors of Rome, our leaders offer bloodsport to a restless public while dodging accountability.
Rome’s games weren’t just entertainment. They were policy. The more the Empire decayed, the bloodier the shows became. Citizens were given violence when they needed vision. They got cheap thrills instead of justice or reform.
Our social media feeds are the new coliseums. Our outrage is mined, monetized, and fed back to us in ever-shorter cycles. When leaders realize ratings matter more than results, they stop governing and start showboating.
Rome fell while the crowd cheered. America might do the same, only this time, the lights are brighter, the cameras are sharper, and the empire is streaming in 4K.
III. Corruption and Concentration of Power
Rome didn’t fall because it lacked laws. It collapsed because those laws no longer applied to the powerful.
As the Roman Empire matured, power consolidated in the hands of the few. Senators, once public servants of a proud republic, became deal-makers and kingmakers. Political office became less about governing and more about personal enrichment.
In the U.S. today, power flows upward while accountability drains downward. Lobbyists write legislation. Billionaires fund campaigns. Politicians rotate through private sector boardrooms like career pit stops.
Just like Rome’s elite, America’s ruling class is unmoored from the public it pretends to serve. The people grow disillusioned. Corruption becomes normalized. And when belief in the system collapses, so does the system itself.
IV. Economic Instability and Unsustainable Militarism
Rome bled itself dry funding conquest. The U.S. is doing the same.
We spend more on the military than the next ten nations combined, all while tens of millions live in poverty, and public infrastructure crumbles. Like Rome, we justify this spending in the name of “security” while failing to secure clean water in Flint or safe housing in New Orleans.
Rome’s economic instability was rooted in war. When conquest slowed, so did revenue. They debased their currency, cut corners, and taxed the poor. Sound familiar?
Endless war doesn’t make us strong. It makes us hollow, and no amount of missiles can patch a society that forgets how to care for its own.
V. Collapse of Civic Virtue
Rome’s fall accelerated when civic virtue died, when public office became a marketplace of influence and ambition. Loyalty flowed not to the republic but to emperors and ego.
Today, American politics rewards outrage over service. Duty has been replaced with performance. Leaders manufacture enemies for clout. Lawmakers campaign for cable contracts.
We have a Congress that barely governs, a court system warped by ideology, and a public so disillusioned that many no longer bother to cast their votes.
The republic cannot survive if no one believes in the republic. And right now, belief is in short supply.
VI. Fragmentation and Internal Division
Rome split — politically, geographically, culturally, and the cracks became collapse.
So, too, is the United States splintering. Red states pass laws nullifying federal protections. Blue states push policies that ignore federal immigration enforcement. Governors defy courts. Courts defy Congress. Citizens defy each other.
Even our shared reality is shattered. We can’t agree on facts, let alone solutions. Misinformation is weaponized. Conspiracy is currency. And all of it feeds the fragmentation.
Rome’s enemies didn’t destroy it; its own divisions did. America is on that same edge.
VII. Immigration as Scapegoat
Rome relied on immigrants to sustain its empire, but failed to integrate them effectively. It abused them, feared them, and blamed them. Eventually, those migrants rebelled or turned away.
Today, the U.S. economy relies on immigrants, and yet, we cage them, demonize them, and campaign against their existence. Politicians use immigration not to solve anything but to rile up fear and win elections.
Like Rome, we treat those we need as threats. And like Rome, we risk collapsing not because of who’s coming in, but because of what we’re refusing to fix within.
VIII. The Role of Religion and Apocalyptic Thinking
Rome fused church and state to maintain control. Dissent became heresy. Law became dogma.
America is approaching a similar, yet equally perilous, threshold. Christian nationalism is not fringe; it’s governing policy in half the country. Elected officials cite divine prophecy to justify stripping away rights.
When faith becomes a weapon, democracy bleeds.
Rome fell into religious rigidity and scapegoating. America is already writing the script, complete with prophets, martyrs, and enemies of the faith.
IX. Lessons Ignored: Warnings from the Past
Rome had its historians, its prophets, its Cassandras — and ignored them. America is no different.
We have every warning we need. From Eisenhower to Ellsberg, from MLK to present-day truth-tellers, the pattern has been shouted from the rooftops.
However, we continue to choose delusion over duty, grift over governance, and comfort over confrontation.
Rome’s collapse wasn’t inevitable. It was permitted through neglect, greed, and the fatal belief that decline only happens to other people.
So is ours.
X. Reform or Ruin
The facts are in:
The richest 1% control more wealth than the middle class.
The U.S. spends nearly $900 billion on defense, while 40 million Americans live in poverty.
Voter suppression, disinformation, and political violence are on the rise.
Civic trust is collapsing. Institutional faith is at a historic low.
Hundreds of bills now blur the line between religion and law.
We are not debating whether America is in decline.
We are deciding whether we care.
Rome fell because it refused to change course. America still has a choice. We have tools Rome didn’t: the vote, a free press, the power to organize. But tools are only useful if we pick them up.
This isn’t a history lesson. It’s a reckoning.
Rome failed the test.
Will we?
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Bibliography: Read A Fucking Book
Suggested Reading:
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon
Best for readers who want the original, in-depth analysis.
How Rome Fell: Death of a Superpower by Adrian Goldsworthy
Blunt and relevant, especially for U.S. comparisons.
Are We Rome? The Fall of an Empire and the Fate of America by Cullen Murphy
Short, sharp, and eerily prescient (published in 2007). Draws direct lines between Roman decay and modern U.S. dysfunction.
Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism by Anne Applebaum
Ideal for readers who want to understand the psychology behind civic collapse.
How Democracies Die by Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt
A clear, evidence-based breakdown of how democratic systems erode from within, step by step.
It Can’t Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis
A 1935 novel that feels shockingly modern, a fictional rise of American fascism under a charismatic strongman.
Corruption and the Decline of Rome by Ramsay MacMullen
Short but academic. Focuses specifically on how elite corruption hollowed out Rome’s public institutions.
The Anatomy of Fascism by Robert O. Paxton
Explains how fascist movements emerge when democracy weakens, and myths of greatness are weaponized.
Rome and the US are the same. Corruption and incompetence are the same.
I won't be surprised if Drumpf brings out the magic chickens. The Coliseum games are coming too.