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Politics & Power Quote by Confucius

"An oppressive government is more to be feared than a tiger"

About this Quote

A tiger is honest about what it is: a visible threat with a limited range, a clear appetite, and a predictable logic of survival. Confucius weaponizes that contrast to make oppression feel less like politics and more like predation, then quietly argues that the state can be worse than nature. The line works because it demystifies government. It strips away ceremony, titles, and the soft-focus rhetoric of “order,” insisting that power’s real test is whether people can live without fear.

The subtext is Confucian in its moral precision: authority is justified only when it is cultivated through virtue, ritual propriety, and reciprocal obligation. When rule becomes coercion, it stops being a humanizing force and turns into a machine that corrodes the social fabric from the inside. A tiger kills bodies; oppressive rule kills trust, speech, and the ordinary confidence that tomorrow will resemble today. It reaches everywhere, not just where the jungle begins.

Context matters here: Confucius lived amid the breakdown of Zhou authority and the grinding disorder of competing states, where rulers routinely leaned on harsh punishments and forced labor to project strength. Against that backdrop, the quote reads less like abstract moralizing and more like a warning to elites: you can “stabilize” a society into something more terrorized than safe. The sharpness is strategic. Fear of animals is instinctive; fear of government is political. Confucius collapses the distinction to make the political instinctive, too.

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TopicFreedom
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An oppressive government is more to be feared than a tiger
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Confucius

Confucius (551 BC - 479 BC) was a Philosopher from China.

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