The Roman Numeral Trap: When History Meets the Teleprompter
It is a moment that satisfies every cynical bone in our collective bodies: a United States lawmaker, standing before a microphone, refers to "World War II" as "World War 11." While it makes for a hilarious viral clip, it reveals a much deeper, more unsettling reality about the people who hold the levers of global power. From a behavioral standpoint, this is a classic "glitch in the matrix"—a moment where the carefully curated persona of a "leader" collapses into the reality of a person who is merely reading a script they don't understand.
Historically, we expect our leaders to be the keepers of the collective memory. World War II is the foundational myth of the modern West; it is the event that defined the current global order. To see a politician look at "WWII" and see the number eleven suggests a level of historical illiteracy that goes beyond a simple typo. It suggests that for some in power, history isn't a series of lived lessons or causal events—it’s just "content" to be consumed and repeated. Like the ancient scribes who copied texts in languages they couldn't speak, some modern politicians have become vessels for rhetoric they haven't bothered to comprehend.
The darker side of human nature is our tendency to prioritize signaling over substance. We live in an era of "teleprompter leadership," where the primary skill is the ability to look authoritative while reciting words prepared by a 24-year-old staffer. When the lawmaker says "World War 11," they are inadvertently admitting that they are disconnected from the weight of the past. It’s a business model built on aesthetics rather than intellect.
Ultimately, this mistake is a gift to the cynics because it confirms our darkest suspicion: that the "great men and women" of history have been replaced by actors who can't even follow the stage directions. If they think we’ve already had eleven world wars, it’s no wonder they seem so casual about starting the next one. After all, what’s one more digit when you aren't the one doing the counting?