From Horsepower to Horsepower Traps: How Every Transportation Revolution Becomes a Control Grid
Every major transportation shift is sold as liberation. The horse gave way to the car. The car gave way to the highway. Now the gasoline car is being pushed toward the electric platform. And every time, the pitch sounds the same. Cleaner. Faster. Modern. Efficient. Inevitable. But history has a bad habit of whispering the same warning through different machines. When America moved from horse to car, people were not just changing how they traveled. They were stepping into a new industrial order. At first, the automobile looked like freedom. No more feeding horses. No more manure-filled streets. No more dependence on stables, blacksmiths, hay suppliers, carriage shops, and local animal labor systems. A person could move farther, faster, and on their own schedule. That was the dream. But the dream did not stay local for long. The car required factories. Factories required capital. Capital required scale. Scale produced giants. Small builders disappeared. Independent carriage makers vanish...