This paper presents the first full empirical and historical confirmation of the Equilibrium Ledger framework. It introduces the Compensatory Punishment Cycle as a recurrent institutional mechanism through which expanded human liberty is reclassified as disorder and corrected through repression, moralisation, and punishment. Drawing on comparative historical analysis from antiquity to the post Cold War era, the paper demonstrates that repression is not primarily ideological or personal, but structural. It emerges when institutions lack the capacity to metabolise increased human complexity and instead seek equilibrium through narrative compression, bureaucratic translation, enforcement, and memory editing. Two intensifying dynamics are identified. First, a technological ratchet that progressively refines the instruments of control. Second, a generational amnesia engine that weakens emotional continuity with the recent past, rendering prior repression psychologically distant and aesthetically unreal. Together, these dynamics produce an asymmetric spiral in which institutions accumulate capacity while societies lose vigilance. This work is intentionally positioned as a foundational diagnostic. It establishes the core mechanism and its recurrence in a form suitable for citation and application. It serves as the empirical base for subsequent white papers and publisher submissions, and as a reference model for analysing early warning signals of institutional recoil in contemporary systems. Author ORCID record contains related research outputs and preprint versions connected to this manuscript.
Alessandro Grassini Grimaldi (Sat,) studied this question.
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