Definition
Piratician
noun · self & identity / systems
Piratician describes a political role that has shifted from public service to organised extraction.
The term is formed from pirate and politician, naming the point at which political authority becomes indistinguishable from looting conducted through legitimate structures.
The office remains official. The language remains procedural. The outward form of governance stays intact. What changes is orientation.
Decisions are no longer guided by collective wellbeing, long-term stability, or public mandate, but by opportunistic gain, protection of allies, and avoidance of consequence.
The defining feature is not corruption alone, but capture. The office no longer directs the person. The incentives do.
Rating on the term
An individual or system rates high as Piratician when:
- extraction outweighs representation
- access replaces accountability
- public language functions as camouflage
Lower expression appears when authority remains answerable to mandate rather than network.
Examples in use
“He still spoke like a statesman, but governed like a Piratician.”
“They weren’t incompetent. They were Piraticians. The extraction was the point.”
“Nothing illegal was said. Everything was taken.”
The role stood. The public vanished.
Variants
piratician phase (noun phrase)
piratician behaviour (noun phrase)
Classification
Domain: Self & Identity / Systems
Archive: Departmental Linguistics – Qrious Vernacular
Defined by The Department of Qrious Threads.
