The Sight That Shapes a Nation: Seer Control and Propaganda
When Seers became the backbone of justice, their influence didn’t stop at the courtroom. It spread. Into media. Into education. Into the way people understand history, identity, and each other.
In Blurred Lines, the UK is no longer governed by debate or evidence. It’s governed by Seer control. The Coalition oversees every Seer. And through them, it controls the narrative. What happened. What didn’t. What people are allowed to remember.
This isn’t overt censorship. It’s subtler than that. A vision is declared. A truth is accepted. And anything that contradicts it is dismissed as emotional distortion. Over time, the public stops questioning. They stop remembering. They stop resisting.
The result is a nation shaped by magical sight—but stripped of nuance. Seer visions are treated as fact. And when those visions are flawed, filtered, or politically convenient, there’s no mechanism for correction. No appeal. No accountability.
Logan Fraser has worked within this system for years. He knows how it operates. He’s seen its strengths—and its blind spots. But his time in America, brief and imperfect as it was, showed him something different. A justice system built on evidence, not vision. A process that allowed for contradiction. For doubt. For human error. And now, back in Edinburgh, he’s seeing the Coalition’s grip more clearly than ever.
He’s not here to challenge the system—at least not yet. But he is here to ask questions. And in a world built on certainty, even one question can be dangerous.
Writing this part of the series let me explore how truth becomes policy—and how easily power can reshape memory when no one’s allowed to challenge it. The Coalition doesn’t need to shout. It only needs to see. And once it does, the rest of the country falls in line.
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