Sunday, April 19, 2026

Realmotiv

Like many people of my generation, I knew the word realpolitik mainly through Henry Kissinger. It was the shorthand for a certain kind of strategic coldness — the willingness to work with dictators, arm unsavory partners, pursue stability over justice, all in the name of the national interest. That is still, I think, how the word sits in most English-speaking minds. 

When I went looking, though, I found its provenance is much older and more interesting than that, and the original meaning turns out to matter for what I want to propose.

The word was coined in 1853 by a German liberal, August Ludwig von Rochau, who had just witnessed the revolutions of 1848 fail across Europe. Rochau had believed, with his fellow liberal nationalists, that the justice of their cause would eventually carry the day. It had not. The old powers had reasserted themselves. The liberal program of constitutional government, a unified Germany, and expanded political participation had been crushed, and Rochau came to believe it had been crushed because its advocates had not taken seriously the forces actually operating in the world. Noble speeches and appeals to justice had not been enough, and in retrospect had never been enough. In Grundsätze der Realpolitik, Rochau argued that you had to see the real arrangement of power, interest, and social force before you could move anything.

The word was then taken up, almost immediately, by Otto von Bismarck, who used realpolitik to unify Germany through a sequence of wars and maneuvers that would probably have appalled Rochau. It was popularized further by the historian Heinrich von Treitschke, who stripped out most of what had been liberal in Rochau's original conception. By the turn of the twentieth century, realpolitik had become, in British eyes, a term of condemnation. Kissinger and a generation of mid-century émigré thinkers later rehabilitated it in English, which is why most of us encountered the word through him without realizing it had a century of prior history.

Underneath every version of the word, there is a single persistent observation: the gap between what states say about themselves and what states actually do is so wide, and so consequential, that you cannot understand international affairs without a separate vocabulary for the latter. The politics of reality is the recognition that beneath the language of rights, justice, and civilization, a deeper layer is doing the actual work — power, interest, survival, position. Statecraft, whatever else it is, consists in reading that layer accurately, including in oneself. 

What I want to propose is that the same gap exists at a layer (or more) below the state: inside institutions, inside companies, inside professions, inside the careers of the individuals operating within them. And that we have never had a proper word for it at that scale. I call it realmotiv. The term is a nod to the German construction: real-motive, the motivational cousin of real-politik.

Realmotiv is the institutional and organizational equivalent of realpolitik, explaining that beneath the language of mission, values, fiduciary duty, stakeholder alignment, organizational fit, and strategic vision that institutions and their leaders sincerely use to describe their behavior, there is a deeper layer actually doing the steering: power, interest, survival, status, and career position. The narrative layer is not exactly a lie. It is a sincere output, delivered with conviction, defended in board meetings, annual reports, and industry conferences. The people in charge of producing it believe it. But it is not the layer that drives the actual behavior. The behavior is selected underneath, by a set of ancient programs, and the narrative follows more or less automatically, through the ordinary human reflex of self-justification.

Self-justification is not an occasional flourish. It is one of the most reliable of human traits — possibly the most reliable —running in everyone continuously and mostly below conscious awareness. It is how a person maintains coherence with themselves. In an institutional setting where self-interested behavior is continuous, self-justification is too, and it produces the narrative layer as a matter of course. 

Here, I have to say something that might sound like an aside, but is the load-bearing claim of the entire framework. The narrative is not decoration or a veneer. The narrative is not something that could be stripped away to reveal the real motives underneath, leaving the operation unchanged. The narrative is a functionally necessary component of the system, without which the system does not work.

A modern state that openly announces itself as rapacious and extractive provokes coalitions against itself. It forfeits the cooperation of its own population. It cannot sustain the ideological coherence required to maintain armies, administer territories, or negotiate trade. Every successful imperial project in history has run on a virtue story: civilizing mission, spreading democracy, defending the faith, or bringing order to chaos. The story is not a cover-up added after the fact; it is what makes the project possible. Strip the story, and the empire collapses under its own naked weight, because none of the people involved can sustain prolonged participation in an operation that describes itself honestly as extraction.

The same is true of institutions and the individuals running them. A company that described itself candidly to employees, customers, and regulators as an apparatus for extracting value from all three would not survive for long. It needs the mission statement. It needs the customer-first vocabulary. It needs the values-driven language on the careers page. And crucially, it needs its executives and employees to believe the language, because belief produces the sincerity that makes the language work. 

This means the selection pressures operating on institutions, and on the people who rise within them, are not selecting for rapaciousness. Pure rapaciousness loses. But pure virtue also loses, because pure virtue is inevitably outcompeted by actors more willing to do what is necessary. What selection rewards is the specific combination: the capacity to pursue self-interested, extractive, competitive operations while producing, in full sincerity, a narrative of virtue that makes those operations feel like service. The system selects for the hybrid, that which can run two programs simultaneously without their own awareness of the contradiction, because awareness of the contradiction would compromise the sincerity that makes the narrative effective.

Where most readers will first recognize realmotiv is in the extreme cases, that is, the people for whom the mechanism is obviously not sincere at all and just a cover. Almost everyone can name examples. The politician, the company executive, the televangelist, or the supposed philanthropist whose moral failings are constantly escaping to public view. In the clinical vocabulary, some of this is psychopathy, though the trait flows into ordinary manipulativeness and unusual strategic clarity without a necessarily sharp line. What distinguishes these people is that they intentionally run the mechanism. They clearly see their own operations, understand the narrative as a functional tool, and deploy it deliberately. 

And they rise, for a reason that follows directly from everything already argued. In an environment where almost everyone else is running the hybrid sincerely, the individual who can see clearly without conscience has a substantial competitive advantage. It is not accidental that such people are significantly over-represented at the heights of large institutions. They are fitted to the environment realmotiv produces. At the top of large corporations, political structures, and institutions whose official purpose is moral or humanitarian, they are often the ones setting the tempo that the sincere majority then rationalizes their participation in.

But while this is the most visible version of realmotiv, it is not the most important. The extreme case is just the exposed tip of something endemic that runs as the ordinary operating system of institutional life, in people who sincerely believe what they are saying and would be horrified at the suggestion that they are doing anything like what the politician or the CEO is doing. The mechanism is the same, but the awareness is different. And because the sincere version involves an enormously larger number of people than the intentional version, the sincere version is where the bulk of institutional behavior actually comes from.

I first really saw this in a durable way through the documentary Cowspiracy, in which a sincere environmentalist goes looking for why large environmental organizations are not discussing the leading causes of the harms those organizations supposedly exist to address. What he finds, when he visits the organizations themselves, is not a conscious conspiracy. He finds non-profit leaders who do not actually know very much about the issues, and who are operating under internal pressures that have very little to do with the cause itself. Two forces are highlighted as doing the actual work. The first is the fundraising apparatus, which has strong views about which messages will and will not raise money, and which has optimized away from the inconvenient or complicated ones over time. The second is each individual's professional trajectory, which is sometimes largely unrelated to the cause but certainly very important to the person. Shockingly, the institution quietly adopts positions that the institution's own mission would not endorse, and everyone looks the other way — or just doesn't see it.

This is realmotiv in its most common form, and it points to a mechanism I want to name directly, because it is how large institutions actually sustain the hybrid at scale. The extractive operation of any large institution is distributed across departments, each with locally coherent mandates, goals, and priorities. Each person's day-to-day work is organized around the departmental mandate, the team's wins and losses, the professional relationships inside the department, and their own career trajectory within it. To look beyond one's own cubicle, or the departmental set of cubicles, to the pattern the institution is producing in aggregate, is hugely uncomfortable and structurally unrewarded. The department's narrow narrative function is what a person is accountable to. The institutional pattern is nobody's job. And the departmental self-justifications, stacked together across an entire organization, produce an institutional realmotiv that no single participant intended, designed, or in many cases can even perceive.

I remember asking some recent college graduates what jobs they were going into and hearing that they had accepted positions at large financial firms that had just been caught in well-publicized market manipulations. My first reaction was surprise: how could you take a job with them? Then I realized that was not really what they were doing. They were taking a job with a group or department within the organization, distinct from the larger institutional duplicity and with its own professional narrative and trajectory. From inside the department, there was no duplicity. There was likely interesting work, good colleagues, and a promising career. The institutional realmotiv was not visible at the group level, because the group is not structured to make it visible, and the individual's incentives are not structured to reward looking.

People who see clearly what their institutions are actually doing tend to find themselves unable to rise within those institutions, because the sight itself interferes with the performance that rising requires. And capture makes this worse at every level. The higher an individual rises within an institutional structure, the more their identity, income, and social position depend on that structure's approval. The cost of seeing the institution's realmotiv clearly becomes enormous, because clear sight threatens everything the career has built. This is why the people best positioned to see institutional realmotiv are often the people with the least incentive to see it.

There is something else worth saying about realmotiv, because it points to something easy to miss. The reason human societies have laws against fraud, misrepresentation, and deception — with formal investigations, formal penalties, and the entire apparatus of regulatory enforcement — is that informal social mechanisms are not sufficient to contain the behavior. If realmotiv were rare, law would not be necessary on this scale. The existence of the legal apparatus is itself evidence of the behavior's prevalence. We build formal systems of accountability precisely because we understand, at some level, that humans and the institutions they populate will, by default, extract what they can while telling a virtuous story about it. The laws are our species' tacit acknowledgment of its own realmotiv, translated into rules. They catch some of the most egregious cases. They do not, and cannot, reach the endemic mechanism because it runs within sincere people doing sincere jobs, and there is no statute that can criminalize the ordinary operation of self-justification within an institutional structure.

In a somewhat stunning and explanatory parallel, I asked six different large language models, trained on the most extensive body of human-written content, what the entirety of the human-written record reveals about human nature. Each model, operating independently, converged on the same finding: that human self-narration is systematically organized to make competitive, status-sensitive, coalition-bound organisms appear morally governed, publicly oriented, and metaphysically justified. They all said, in slightly different words, that the written record describes one kind of creature while the behavioral record describes another, and that the gap between the two descriptions is the single most consistent pattern in the data. (I discuss this further in the Understanding the Human Condition project.) 

Realpolitik and realmotiv seem baked into our actual social hardware.

Structural Victim Blaming

Structural victim blaming is the mechanism by which exploitative systems ensure the damage they cause is narrated back to individuals as personal moral failures.

It works like this. A system engineers an environment that produces predictable harm. Then, when the harm arrives, the system frames it as the individual's fault. 

The food industry designs hyperpalatable products that hijack reward circuits designed for scarcity, and when people overeat, the conversation turns to willpower. The financial industry creates products designed to obscure risk and extract fees, and when people end up in debt, the conversation becomes about personal responsibility. The pharmaceutical industry floods markets with addictive painkillers, and when people become addicted, the conversation becomes about their character.

In every case, the pattern is the same: engineer the outcome, then blame the person for the outcome.

This is not a bug in these systems. It is a feature. Using our subconscious against us for power and profit is the inevitable story of all large-scale institutions. I call it the law of inevitable exploitation (LIE): any system that can exploit human cognitive wiring for advantage eventually will, because those that do outcompete those that don't. And every one of those systems depends on a narrative that keeps it out of the position of blame. Structural victim blaming is that narrative.

It is worth pausing on the word "inevitable," because it matters. As well, this behavior is more opportunistic than it is intentional. The individuals inside these companies who use these mechanisms are the ones who succeed, they get promoted, they sell the product, they win the election. It is not clear how aware they are that this is what they are doing. They are just doing what works. The system selects for people and strategies that produce this outcome, just as evolution selects for traits that improve survival. No one has to plan it. It only has to be effective.

And it is effective, because the moment attention shifts from the system's behavior to the individual's failure, the system is free to keep operating. Blame functions as a distraction. As long as the public conversation is about what's wrong with the person, the focus shifts away from what the system is doing. The perpetrator escapes scrutiny precisely by redirecting it toward the victim.

Blame alone, however, is not enough. Blame is a narrative operation: it just reassigns causation. "You did this to yourself." What locks this in place is shame. Shame is the enforcement operation. It takes the reassignment and attaches it to identity. It says: the fact that this happened to you reveals what kind of person you are.

Blame can be argued with. You can push back on a causal story. Shame is much harder to resist, because it bypasses argument entirely. It goes straight to the wiring, the part of us that monitors status, that tracks whether the group sees us as competent or deficient. Once shame activates, you stop evaluating evidence. You are managing a threat to your identity.

And this explains why people go quiet. Challenging the system would require publicly identifying yourself as the person the system says you are: the addict, the debtor, the one who couldn't manage their weight or their finances. The shame creates silence, and the silence protects the system. So the full mechanism has three stages: exploit, blame, shame. Each enables the next.

Now, what makes this structural rather than incidental is that it operates at every scale.

In an abusive relationship, the person causing harm reframes it as the other person's sensitivity, their overreaction, their failure to be easy enough to live with. The conversation shifts to the victim's inadequacy rather than the behavior itself.

In the workplace, burnout caused by impossible demands is often attributed to poor time management or a lack of resilience.

At the institutional scale, entire industries operate this way. They spend billions engineering human behavior, then point to the individual when the engineered behavior surfaces. And it doesn't stop at industries. Whole economies operate this way as well. The Greek financial crisis was created by politicians and bankers, but the narrative that emerged was that the Greek people needed to endure austerity to fix it. An entire nation was made to feel responsible for a disaster engineered above them. The mechanism is identical at every level. What changes is only the scale.

But the reason this is structural goes deeper than scale. It is structural because it is built into our evolved need for social conformance and approval. We are wired to internalize the group's narrative about us — a kind of social Stockholm Syndrome in which we defend the blamers. That wiring evolved for good reasons; tracking how others perceive you is how social animals maintain standing and belonging. But it also means that when a system says, "This is your fault," the message doesn't have to convince you intellectually. It just has to activate the status-monitoring that is already running. Our own psychology makes this mechanism easily weaponized, which is what makes it structural rather than incidental. It does not require unusual circumstances to operate, just regular human beings.

And the system has a built-in shield: our cultural contempt for people who won't take responsibility. We know the type, the person for whom everything is always someone else's fault. None of us wants to be that person. The system doesn't even have to make an explicit argument. It just has to gesture toward that archetype, and you do the rest yourself.

Which is why the most conscientious people are often the most susceptible to structural victim-blaming. If we genuinely want to take responsibility for our lives and are uncomfortable with the idea of blaming others for our problems, then the system offers an easy entry point. Our own integrity becomes the opening. We think, "I don't want to be the kind of person who makes excuses," and so we accept the blame. Our desire to be responsible is used against us.

But we can't abandon the observation that systems exploit and then blame the exploited just because we fear using the language of victimhood. The victimhood isn't in being exploited. It's in refusing to see it and believing you deserve it.