Psycho-Pass --- The System Holds Justice at Gunpoint 😳 | My Review

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The Sibyl System is the heart of it all—this godlike machine that claims to keep society ā€œsafeā€ by measuring your mental state, your latent criminal potential, your so-called Psycho-Pass. It’s the perfect prison disguised as paradise. And at first, it feels clean, logical, almost utopian. No crime, no chaos, because everything is tracked, monitored, and purged before it even happens. But the deeper you sink into the story, the more you see the cracks, and those cracks aren’t just flaws—they’re chasms swallowing humanity whole.

Enter Akane Tsunemori. She is young, idealistic, still holding onto the belief that justice could be just. It is as if innocence were being rotted away in front of our eyes by watching her unravel. She is thrown into this world where the cops possess weapons named Dominators that scan the Psycho-Pass of people and either non-lethally or lethally, or paralyze or kill. The system decides and the officer holding the gun does not even have a choice. And there is where the horror of it gives way, as it leaves to ask: what happens when you dehumanise human beings, and outsource their morality to a machine?

Then we have Shinya Kogami, burnished, clean, burned by the system of which he is already a part. He is the ideal foil to Akane- who still believes, he is already a spoil, working in the gray zone between hunter and hunted. And they play their tragic game. You feel it right at the beginning: they are walking on the same street, but Akane may still be holding on to some pieces of her soul, whereas Kogami is a man cut into hollow by revenge. It is violent as they collide, clash and yet, at times, almost silently touch coming together, it is intimate as they come together, and compromise is developed in blood and compromise.

But Makishima Shogo. God. He is a type of villain who does not even feel like a villain. He is rational, artistic, genius, and frightening because he discerns the reality of Sibyl with acute accuracy--and declines to submit to it. He murders, but there is a scalpel cut in every one of them to expose the hypocrisy within the society. He is the type of character that forces you to lean in even when you do not want to, as he represents the questions that you are too afraid to ask: Is a state of freedom anarchy, are we still seeking it? When being safe means to give in, is it worth it?

His cat-and-mouse with Kogami is electric, not just because of the fights, but because you know they’re mirrors of each other—two men standing on the same line, one already gone, the other teetering.

The description does not allow you to breath either. The neon-lighted streets, the Dominators, with their judgment in your palm, the dead, not merely dead, but naked--punished displays, witnesses of a lesson of what occurs when your ranks get too high. And the most chilling part? The victims are not even criminals at times. They are simply busted people, worried people, angry people--any of us could be on a bad day. At that point, Psycho-Pass becomes a science fiction film, not a prophecy.

It has this scene when Akane aims a Dominator at some person who she does not know is evil, only desperate, but the gun does not know. It demands execution. And you experience her breaking--you experience the heavyness of not being able to do something, to be in charge of something, the justice not in her hands but an algorithm. That was a breaker of me, as it was the nightmare of the modern world in anime: figures, measurements, machines that define who you are, and your humanity is being cut off and shut down.

And when Sibyl lets its real appearance show, the literal hive mind constructed of the brains of criminals too complex to judge, I can tell I felt I felt my stomach drop. it is a system of order constructed out of the chaos itself, of which it is the scourge. It is hypocrisy in a crown and all the pain that each of the characters feels is explained: they are chess pieces and it is a game in which they were pre-programmed to lose.

By the time it was over It had left me paranoid, side-eyed to my own life. Already how many systems, rules, unwritten algorithms are determining my choices without even my awareness? To what extent do we give up freedom daily to the name of safety, convenience, peace? And yet, were it Makishima come into our world tomorrow, cool, fluent, afire with conviction, how many of us would follow him not because it is evil, but because we are down inside we are tired of being gauged, of being manipulated?

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4 comments
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I remember reading reviews of this series, describing it as a fairly credible and interesting dystopian proposal. With current behavioral analysis mechanisms, AI-driven expert systems, and the constant tension between anarchic freedom and the repression of a governmental apparatus… all the ingredients are in place to make this kind of idea in the series have a chance of occurring in our reality.

Obviously, I'm not referring to the technology the series presents, but rather to the idea that an algorithm embedded in a machine can determine whether we should be eliminated from society or allowed to continue existing.

psycho-pass GIF by Funimation

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I've continued to wonder what would happen if the world loses internet just for a week

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"if the world loses internet just for a week"

For many people, that would be an uncomfortable but bearable situation. Although, I think some people would suffer an anxiety attack if such a thing happened in reality.

Anxiety Help GIF by Ryn Dean