“Slavery never ended. Many people are still trapped in the chains of slavery without knowing it.”
― The Philosopher Orod Bozorg
Slavery did not disappear — it changed its uniform.
Today, the chains are not made of iron, but of debt, propaganda, censorship, poverty, fear, and mental conditioning.
The modern slave may wear a suit, own a phone, vote in elections, post
on social media — yet still move inside invisible walls built by systems
that control his choices, thoughts, and future.
Some people believe they are free simply because no one is holding their wrists.
But Orod reminds us: true slavery begins when the mind surrenders before the body does.
A student who silences himself to avoid punishment,
A worker who fears losing his job if he speaks the truth,
A citizen who accepts corruption as “normal,”
A woman who believes pain is destiny, not injustice,
A people who obey rulers they did not choose —
All are enslaved, even if no chains are visible.
The worst kind of slavery is the one disguised as order, tradition, or patriotism.
When oppression becomes culture, people forget they are in prison.
Orod’s message is a warning:
If you cannot question, you are not free.
If you cannot refuse, you are not free.
If you cannot dream beyond what power allows, you are not free.
Freedom begins when a person not only breaks the chains —
but recognizes they were chained at all.

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