The Tyranny of Systems
The narrative exposes how oppressive bureaucratic and economic systems crush individual agency, reducing citizens to compliant subjects. Pluto’s Company enforces this through death taxes, Correction Centre punishments, and surveillance like the tracker system, creating an environment where even basic survival depends on servitude. Characters like Cordo and Leela confront this system directly, while Hade and Mandrell embody its enforcement. The theme manifests in events such as Cordo’s debt-driven despair, the rebels’ debate over tax tyranny, and the Doctor’s forced mission, illustrating how systemic control permeates every level of society.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
Cordo arrives at Gatherer Hade's office to pay his father's death taxes, only to find the debt has surged from eighty to one hundred thirty-two talmars due to corporate rate …
Cornered by relentless Company demands, Cordo recounts his crushing debt—medical fees, work levies, compound interest—while Leela and the Doctor absorb the brutal reality of Pluto’s tax system. Leela draws parallels …
Cordo’s whispered directions halt the intruders at the Undercity threshold. With mounting dread, he lists Pluto Company’s brutal consequences for unlicensed entry—heavy fines, punitive labor in the Correction Centre, even …
The Doctor and Leela follow their reluctant guide Cordo onto a narrow ladder as Company forces close in, their escape now desperate. As a freight lift looms above, Cordo abandons …
Mandrell reveals a stolen ConSumCard valued at a thousand talmars, untouched and therefore invisible to Company records, to coerce the Doctor into a dangerous mission. The card’s redemption point at …
In the dim, smoke-filled Undercity, Mandrell solidifies the Doctor’s role in the rebellion by forcing him to impersonate an Ajack miner for a ConSumCard heist at the ConSum Bank. The …