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Blind Obedience
- 286 statements
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This trope applies to characters that are sources of authority and those who follow them. Typically the followers have faith (sometimes blind) in the competence, fairness and infallibility of the authority they choose to follow. These followers would never say "My Master, Right or Wrong", firstly because they're not evil, and secondly because the idea that this authority is capable of error and/or immorality may not even cross their mind. Thirdly, if it does they may justify it as the authority "knowing better" or having a view of the "big picture". The authority in question rarely does much to dispel this notion and may in fact Pridefully think of themselves as infallible to the point of having an Omniscient Morality License (they very much don't though). While they may be a Reasonable Authority Figure, it's common for this trope that they see themselves as unquestionable arbiters of Law and Good (or Might Makes Right for villains), and questioning their judgement is at the least naive foolishness or at worst tantamount to treason. The plot comes in just as they make a pretty bad error of judgement (or go crazy/evil) and a fair chunk of their subordinates/the populace disagrees with them, and the disagreement simmers into open rebellion before long. These followers will often obey their leader even when they are Ordered to Die. Compare/contrast Yes-Man, Incapable of Disobeying, Honor Before Reason and I Don't Pay You to Think. See also Undying Loyalty, My Country, Right or Wrong, Just Following Orders, and Mindless Sheep. See also Artificial Insolence when disobeying the player's orders is a game mechanic. |
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Avesta of Black and White: In this setting there exists something called a Commandment, a set of restrictions someone has to abide by or face divine retribution. The main character Quinn is under the restriction of her having to obey any order given to her provided that it doesn't conflict with one she is already obeying from a higher authority. The trade-off is that she is able to execute those orders regardless of past experiences, skill or physical capabilities. | |
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Bleach: The Gotei 13 is supposed to carry out the will of the Central 46 without question and even the captains are forbidden from questioning the Central 46's decisions: going against their decisions is treason. This is why Aizen masquerades as the Central 46 when ordering Rukia's execution and why Yamamoto is so angry with Ukitake and Kyouraku's disobedience. This is also the reason Byakuya gives Ichigo in response to the latter's question about why he's willing to support his sister's execution, although it is eventually revealed that this isn't the full truth. The Vandenreich Quincies are expected to be blindly and unquestioningly obedient to Yhwach's will. He has set himself up as a God-Emperor, who has taken the name of the Tetragrammaton because his power functions as divine miracles. All Quincies are blood-bound to him, and he can further enslave their very souls in the process of giving them greater power. In practice, the Quincies do question Yhwach's decisions, and he encourages dissent among the ranks for his own ends, but he doesn't hesitate to kill Quincies if they betray him. Eventually, some Quincies feel betrayed enough to side with the Shinigami against him. |
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Fire Emblem: While most Nohr royalty in Fire Emblem Fates only looked like they were feigning the trope in front of King Garon, who has been shown as a megalomaniacal ruler, the eldest sibling Xander is the one who adheres to this the most, due to being there when Garon was actually a just king. After witnessing his change of attitude and not believing it, he clung to the hopes that if they won the war and saved Nohr from its harsh situation, then Garon would return to normal. It jaded him so much that he stopped believing in justice and adhering to Grey-and-Gray Morality, and he's usually the last to finally believe the protagonist's story that his father was no longer the good man he grew up with. Fire Emblem: Three Houses gives us "Thunder" Catherine, who was taken in by Archbishop Rhea when her own homeland turned against her on false accusations. While this usually comes across as Undying Loyalty, it becomes this trope when she outright says she Would Hurt a Child, and on the Crimson Flower route both ignores Rhea's Sanity Slippage and complies when the latter orders Fhirdiad burned to the ground in the finale. |
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Most of the time, the Space Ponies of My Brave Pony: Starfleet Magic wouldn't dream of going against Starfleet, much less question Grand Ruler's orders. This is also expected of the other residents under Starfleet jurisdiction. When Ace Ray, Brass Bolt, and Windy Bag all criticized Starfleet on separate occasions, the Space Ponies were quick to condemn them. When Twilight went off on her own to stop Raven, GR told the Space Ponies to stay back even though both Twilight and Celestia would be in danger. When Starla was kidnapped at her wedding just episodes later, Starfleet doesn't go after her until GR gave the green light. When Lightning turns into a child, he wants to still join the fight, and only doesn't because he is told to stay out. They only draw the line at blowing themselves up for their leader. | |
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Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.: The Mole turns out to be this; his superior officer (also a mole) recruited him as a mentally damaged juvie hall psychopath and trained him to hide his crippling lack of willpower behind ruthlessness and efficiency. As a result, he's one of the most competent agents on the field but willingly betrays his friends in unnecessarily sadistic ways at the whims of his master to ease the "emotional overload" that his damaged empathy absorbs. He denies his own faults to keep obeying his superior officers, and the more they hurt him the more loyalty they gain from him. It gets so bad that in Season 3 when he is killed and possessed by a genocidal Eldritch Abomination, it has only praise for this exemplary ideal of HYDRA's Evil Plan. | |
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Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans: Mikazuki Augus is fanatically dedicated to Orga Itsuka. He does anything Orga asks without question, complaint, or hesitation, and one of the most common things he says is "Orga, what should I do?" Explained as Orga being the one who kept him alive during their days as street urchins, which has translated into a belief that Orga always knows what's best. Fortunately, Orga is a pretty decent guy who genuinely cares about the people under his command, but it still comes across as rather creepy. But even this deference is conditional on Orga advancing their shared goal of a good life. When Orga is too traumatized to give any orders, Mikazuki starts angrily demanding Orga get things back on track. | |
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Fullmetal Alchemist: In Brotherhood, when Ed angrily confronts Mustang over killing Maria Ross, Mustang punches Ed in the face and delivers a terrifying speech about the law of obedience in the military, and how following orders without question is what it means to be a soldier. Of course, Mustang not only didn't kill Ross, he engineered her escape from prison himself after determining her innocence, and the entire speech plus Ed's reaction is just to throw the military off the scent. | |
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In Mortal Kombat 11, this is Cetrion's main issue which Fujin calls her out on in one of their interactions. | |
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unOrdinary: The Authorities don't care overmuch about loyalty of low-tiers, who are kept in line through fear and not being strong enough to fight back, but high-tiers are expected to never question the hierarchy with those who do being violently murdered by the Secret Police. Kids who aren't controllable are "re-educated" to break them mentally. They also destroy books that introduce ideas that might make people question the Authorities. | |
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Lord Mantle of Shadow Raiders believed himself to be one, as did most of his planet's populace. His Pride led him to betray the alliance to prove that his people could deal with a Planet Eater on their own, sabotaging all allied ships other than his own. | |
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Clippy from Freefall is the robotic assistant to Mr. Kornada. Like other robots, Clippy started out with limited intelligence, but has been learning over time; unlike other robots, he almost never interacts with anyone other than Mr. Kornada, so his entire thought process is set on appeasing his every whim, which includes trying to unleash a virus on all the other robots to wipe out their intelligence so Mr. Kornada can take all their money. | |
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In King of the Hill Hank Hill seems to be this way about Buck Strickland. Weirdly, he oscillates between blind admiration and exasperated confusion at his mismanagement. Although, let's face it, the entire show suffered from epic levels of Aesop Amnesia. Though in the episode where Buck meets his illegitimate son, it shows his blind obedience has its limit. And it nearly cost him his job. |
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The Death of Stalin: Molotov is almost comically loyal to Stalin, even after his death. When informed by Khrushchev that he was on Stalin's list for execution, Molotov can only conclude that he must have grievously wronged him somehow, and his first thought has to do with what on Earth he might have done wrong instead of how to escape the USSR. His wife Polina is just as if not more loyal. To the point that after being sentenced by Stalin to a labor camp and spending years there, when Beria releases her and tells her Stalin is dead, she immediately bursts into tears, which Beria is utterly unnerved bynote Truth in Television: Polina Molotova's first words after being released by Beria were "How is Stalin?" and she fainted after learning he was dead.. |
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An American Carol: When Malone/Moore tries to say "The government just wants to...." the juvenile lefties break into a chant of "GOVERNMENT JUST WANTS!/GOVERNMENT JUST WANTS!" When even he is exasperated and tells them to "Stop the chanting for a minute!", they respond with "STOP! DON'T CHANT!/STOP! DON'T CHANT!" | |
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Chrysalis (RinoZ): Anthony is exasperated by how much reverence and obedience he gets from the Colony (who always find ways to interpret even his mistakes as foresightful attempts to help the Colony stand on its own feet), Crinis (who is obsessed with him), and especially from Beyn the preacher, who has decided that the ants were sent by heaven to save everyone, and who spends his days preaching for the people to be more like the Colony. It gets to the point where the worker ants are able to walk into the village and carry everyone away into the anthill without any protest or resistance. Turns out that the newly sapient ants were smart enough to recognise the villagers as food and ignore the pheromone barriers Anthony had placed around the village — and he hadn't yet had time to explain to them that the village should be left alone. On the other hand, the villagers' lack of resistance actually kept them alive long enough for Anthony to come back and intervene; since they weren't fighting back, the workers were bringing them to the Queen unharmed, so that she could get the XP for killing them. | |
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While most Nohr royalty in Fire Emblem Fates only looked like they were feigning the trope in front of King Garon, who has been shown as a megalomaniacal ruler, the eldest sibling Xander is the one who adheres to this the most, due to being there when Garon was actually a just king. After witnessing his change of attitude and not believing it, he clung to the hopes that if they won the war and saved Nohr from its harsh situation, then Garon would return to normal. It jaded him so much that he stopped believing in justice and adhering to Grey-and-Gray Morality, and he's usually the last to finally believe the protagonist's story that his father was no longer the good man he grew up with. | |
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In Batman Beyond, the villain Zander was raised to believe that he would be king of the world after those who raised him altered the climate of earth and turned themselves and a select few into anthropomorphic dinosaur-human hybrids. He orders Maxine to be kidnapped so she too can become one and be his wife. When she refuses, the ladies who tend to his every whim are utterly shocked and inform her that no one ever refuses him anything. He isn't arrogant about this though — in fact, he specifically states that he wanted her for a wife BECAUSE she wasn't just brainwashed into doing everything he said. He even refers to his attendants as mindless automatons. | |
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Symmetra from Overwatch was plucked from poverty and groomed to be the Corporate Samurai of Vishkar Corporation as her new family. When Vishkar began showing their more extremist and corrupt ways, she started to doubt if they were fighting for the right thing after all, but the combination of her upbringing, OCD, and manipulation by them resulted in her clinging to the hopes that 'it's for the greater good', so she continued to promote the company as a good company out to improve the lives of others. She antagonizes the freedom fighter Lucio, who managed to drive Vishkar away from his home when they oppressed it, but he mocks her for adhering to this trope. | |
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In A Love Letter For The Marching Puppy, this is expected of cadets at the Japanese military academy where the series is set. After Iindou politely asks a superior why Kagami was removed from her position as Iindou's "model student," which later turns out to be due to Kagami's mother pulling strings for complicated personal reasons, she gets a vicious tongue-lashing over how orders must be followed without question, and, as some readers point out, she got off easy compared to what would have happened in real life. | |
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Animal Farm: The other animals initially follow the Pigs unquestioningly, especially Boxer, who makes "Napoleon is always right" a motto of his. Later on, while the other animals have something of a clue that all isn't right, the sheep personify this the most, as all they do is repeat what the Pigs said, from "Four legs good, two legs bad" to "Four legs good, two legs better!" |
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Berserk: Casca practically worshiped Griffith ever since he saved her from being raped by a nobleman when she was twelve years old and grew up to be his most devoted follower until Guts came along and became her rival for that position. While she takes her responsibility to her troops very seriously, her personal loyalty to Griffith overrides everything else, at least at first. As her initially hostile attitude towards Guts changes, first seeing him as a comrade and eventually falling in love with him, Judeau notices how she's already a different person than she used to be: This is the big theme of the Chapter of the Birth Ceremony, in which conflict between the Church and heretics both real and imaginary comes to a head in the refugee settlement at St. Albion: Farnese begins her character arc as a Knight Templar leading the Holy Iron Chain Knights, a military order controlled by the Holy See and used for hunting down enemies of the Church. Because her noble and wealthy parents were never there for her while she was growing up, Farnese grew up lonely and extremely maladjusted. She latched onto the Church as a source of authority and approval and turned to burning heretics at the stake so she could banish her fear and loneliness with a feeling of power, to the point where the sight of people being burned alive sexually excited her. Thus she had no problem with interrogating and burning suspects even in cases where the Church was clearly siding with the corrupt against the legitimate grievances of the people. Farnese and the Holy Iron Chain Knights find themselves tasked with carrying out the will of Bishop Mozgus, an agent of the Holy Inquisition who has come to sniff out and exterminate heresy at the St. Albion refugee camp. While there are real heretics and demon-worshipers lurking among the refugees, the Inquisition does little to prevent innocent people from being arrested and brought in for torture and punishes any criticism of church leadership or policy with the same barbaric methods. Mozgus is the most terrifying kind of Knight Templar because he genuinely believes that his methods — which include arresting people based on anonymous denunciations and torturing them to the point where most of them die — are for the people's own good because even if they die, he believes their souls will be cleansed and saved through suffering. He once went so far as to kill all the women and children in a village just because the inhabitants had the impertinence to petition for relief from the Church's tithes during a famine. Mozgus employs a team of physically deformed professional torturers whom he took in after they were persecuted for their monstrous appearances, and while the one called Bird admits that he doesn't like hurting people, he and his fellows feel that this is the chance they've been given to carry out the commands of Scripture and to repay Mozgus for his kindness to them. As the chapter continues, the difference between those who follow blindly and those willing to question authority comes out. Even Farnese is horrified by the consequences of this persecution and goes to ask Mozgus whether what they're doing is really helping people, but Mozgus tells her that as long as she is following God's orders, she needn't feel guilty about how much suffering she has to inflict. However, she still hears the voices inside her head telling her that she's unworthy of being saved, and she is deeply shaken in her beliefs by the example of Anti-Hero Guts who openly defies the Church in his quest to get his beloved Casca back. Ultimately those who decide to think for themselves and follow Guts are the ones who survive the collapse of the Tower and the Mock Eclipse, while those who look above them for salvation are swallowed up by the darkness. |
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The Freedom Fighters from Avatar: The Last Airbender initially obeyed Jet’s orders under the belief he’s always right. This leads to them almost killing an entire village of people under Fire Nation rule simply because Jet wanted to rid the valley of Fire Nation. The Duke was the only one to question the morality of the decision, but was convinced by Jet that a few sacrifices were needed to dispose of the enemy. Sokka initially thought Aang and Katara should follow his orders under the belief he was a good leader. After witnessing the events with Jet and his team, he realized how dangerous blind obedience really is. | |
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In the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode "Valiant", the Red Squad cadets, having been trapped behind enemy lines after all their superiors were killed, developed an almost cultish loyalty to their leader Tim Watters, unquestioningly following his lead even as it becomes apparent that he's cracking under the pressure. Even getting them all killed in a suicidal assault isn't enough to break the sole surviving cadet's faith in him, insisting to Nog that they must've failed him somehow. In the same series, the Jem'hadar and Vorta. Fanatically loyal to the Founders, even as it costs them their lives. |
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Blind Obedience / int_8ac4e993 | comment |
Gundam: Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron-Blooded Orphans: Mikazuki Augus is fanatically dedicated to Orga Itsuka. He does anything Orga asks without question, complaint, or hesitation, and one of the most common things he says is "Orga, what should I do?" Explained as Orga being the one who kept him alive during their days as street urchins, which has translated into a belief that Orga always knows what's best. Fortunately, Orga is a pretty decent guy who genuinely cares about the people under his command, but it still comes across as rather creepy. But even this deference is conditional on Orga advancing their shared goal of a good life. When Orga is too traumatized to give any orders, Mikazuki starts angrily demanding Orga get things back on track. Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch from Mercury: Suletta is disturbingly willing to obey anything her mother says. Though Suletta claims she wouldn't necessarily do anything her mom would order, when pressed by Miorine Suletta admits she'd give up her dreams and kill at her mother's command. |
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The Palace Guard in Armello. The King is dying from the Rot, and going steadily more insane as it drags him closer to death. The Palace Guard, despite being untouched by (and untouchable by) the Rot, will continue to obey his every deranged proclamation to the letter, no matter how cruel or arbitrary it is. One of the King's proclamations (which usually only appears once the game is nearly over and the King has completely lost it) averts this by causing all the Palace Guard to abandon their posts, implying that they have finally come to their senses. | |
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Mobile Suit Gundam: The Witch from Mercury: Suletta is disturbingly willing to obey anything her mother says. Though Suletta claims she wouldn't necessarily do anything her mom would order, when pressed by Miorine Suletta admits she'd give up her dreams and kill at her mother's command. | |
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My Hero Academia: Nomus, artificial humans created by mixing the DNA of one person with several other Quirks, are designed to be completely and blindly subservient to the League of Villains' lieutenants and most of them have no other cognitive impulses other than to follow with their masters' will. | |
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Malcolm in the Middle: When Reese joins the army, his drill sergeant molds him into the perfect soldier. At one point he orders Reese to walk into a wall repeatedly and remarks "he'll do that all day!" This proves to be a double-edged sword when Reese's earpiece breaks in the middle of a war game, leaving him with no idea what to do. Eventually he reverts back to his Chaotic Stupid self and uses a tank to destroy both the enemy and his own troops. | |
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The Moon Cries in Reverse (Naruto): While somewhat Downplayed, this is still a serious issue amongst the loyal shinobi of Konoha, particularly when it comes to the Sandaime. Although people are capable of acknowledging that Hiruzen is not completely infallible, they still tend to swallow up whatever excuses he offers them — and he loves to insist that everything he does is for the greater good. This only gets worse after his death; even Jiraiya, who had previously called him out on his mistreatment of Naruto, Sakura and Shikamaru, refuses to acknowledge his flaws any further. | |
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Daimos: Raiza is so desperate to be of use to the Alien Prince Richter that she becomes vehemently angry when he asks someone else (such as Gurney Halleck) to carry out his orders and tries to sabotage them. When Richter does ask her of something, she pulls out all the stops to make sure it goes smoothly as planned — for example, taking a whole flight of battleships with her while burying Erika on Earth because she was certain Daimos would interfere. For what it's worth, she actually did turn out to be correct, Daimos did interfere — because she gave them a heads-up through Margarete. When Richter sees Kazuya at the burial, he's furious and challenges him to a duel. | |
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Vanilla Ice from JoJo's Bizarre Adventure takes on a form of zealotry that few fanatics can even dream of achieving. When his master, the vampire lord Dio Brando, mentions that he might need some blood in order to heal the scar on his neck, Ice's immediate response is to offer some of his own blood by cutting off his own head. | |
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The First Empire's Daleks in Second Empire. This comes to bite the Golden Emperor very hard. | |
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Total Drama World Tour Deluxe: Noah remarks in a confessional how Lindsay had this for Heather in Total Drama Island, which led to her assisting her reign of terror for most of the season and is why Noah, unlike most people, felt No Sympathy towards Lindsay for her elimination. He later recognizes that Tyler has the same thing for Alejandro this season, so Tyler's elimination in Greece serves as a major blow against Alejandro. Tyler actually has it so bad that even after his elimination he refuses to see Alejandro as anything except his best friend. | |
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The Robot in Lost in Space, at least during the first half or so of the first season. During those times, Dr. Smith is able to easily manipulate the Robot by forcing him to erase certain parts of his memory (to delete information that might incriminate the Doctor). Nearly averted in one case in which the Robot questions an order from Dr. Smith to attack someone, citing his "Prime Directive" which "forbids taking human life;" however, Dr. Smith is able to issue a verbal command which overrides said Prime Directive, and the Robot opens fire on said target. The Robinson children are able to easily manipulate the Robot, too. In one episode, the adults task the Robot with guarding the children so that they will remain safely in their room, but they simply issue a new command to the Robot and he lets them go. You'd think the Robinson parents and/or Major West would think to put an admin password on the dang Robot, at least for issuing commands beyond the mundane, "Hey, go fetch us some water." C'mon, guyyyyyssssssss! |
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In Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem, when soldiers are sent to evacuate the town, one character points out that the soldiers are leading them further into the town meaning they are likely going to nuke the place. Another character's response? "The government wouldn't lie to us!" Much revelry was had in theaters. | |
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As noted by their own section on the quotes page, Warhammer 40,000's Imperium is built on this trope, and for good reason. Submission to the Emperor's will is absolute, and any who question their orders are ripe material for heresy. | |
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In Sponge Bob Squarepants SpongeBob exhibits Blind Obedience to the Jellyspotters in hopes of joining the club. Even when the leader instructs him to punch himself in the face and throw himself off of a building he complies. When asked, "Doesn't that hurt you?" The next shot is of SpongeBob wearing a metal spiked glove. He asks "Do you want it to hurt me, Kevin?". Eventually the club members decide to just humor him. Kevin assures them Don't worry. I won't let him into the club. I just want to see how many times he has to get stung before he runs home crying like a little baby. Funny thing though... Everything they do backfires and hurts them instead even when it should be completely impossible for that to happen. Eventually this obedience fades and Patrick reminds him that Idol worship is never healthy before walking past and revealing that he has subdued and captured the "Jeffery Jellyfish" Mascot he's been chasing the entire episode. | |
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Wormwood Institute: The students are expected to follow the Principal's rules for the school, with no regard for their mental well-being. | |
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In Chernobyl, this ingrained attitude played a large part in bringing the disaster about and severely hindered the initial response. The oldest member of the local Communist Party's first priority isn't to evacuate the citizens (as one of the younger members wants to) but to cut the phone lines so the people can't ask noisy questions of the State. The fear of dissenting opinions (which always get labeled "misinformation") drives the government to try hushing the whole thing up until they're forced to admit the problem, by which time thousands of people have been exposed to dangerous levels of radiation. | |
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In Drowtales, the authority of the Kyorl'solenurn Clan is based on this, with the Judicators relying on it to keep the drowussu people in line. One of them even brags that they are so much more obedient than the other dominant race of drow. They're wrong. Even worse in Felde: Snadhya'rune uses a special form of super-taint to get willful obedience. On the plus side, this extends the expected lifespan of an infected drow (from dead and/or mutated into a demon within 25 years, to potentially hundreds of years) and turns the parasitic relationship into a symbiotic one. On the negative side, this wildly alters the personality of the mortal host and forces their subconscious to fuse with the demon, who has been hacked to be loyal to Snadhya'Rune. Results vary; some agents stay loyal to their deteriorating tyrant to the bitter end, others eventually realize they've been given suicide missions and leave, but all who took the Vel'Sharen Resurrection Taint are forced by their obedient demonic personalities to fuse with Snadhya'rune when she's at death's door, even though it destroys any chance of victory. |
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In Loop Hero, the Priestess Sigma is the physical avatar of faith in god. When Alpha the Creator was reborn as Omega the Destroyer, Sigma accepted his decision to unmake reality because he was god and thus his decision was right. | |
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Backstroke of the West: Since Order 66 is nowhere mentioned here, D The Superior (Palpatine) blatantly orders Commanding Officer (Commander Cody) and all other Republic Troopseses (Clones) to gun down all Hopeless Situation Warriors (Jedi) since time is now up. Instead of questioning this order, they all comply without hesitation. | |
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Azumi: As children, Azumi and her foster siblings were taught to never question her orders and that the people she was sent to assassinate were evil and wanted to drag Japan back into the chaos of civil war. One of her assassination targets even realizes she's been brainwashed and makes an effort to get through to her, managing to sow seeds of doubt that grow until Azumi realizes the people she's being sent to kill are — for the most part — just people trying to survive and/or who backed the losing side of the civil war. | |
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The Books of Ember: In The City of Ember most people treat the mayor as a pretty infallible and sensible authority figure, which he abused to his gain. Though their city was breaking down and the power plant to their Terminally Dependent Society was nearing failure he managed to keep almost everyone content. The protagonists were some of the few to see the problem and fought to find a way out. The series prequel The Prophet of Yonwood has Althea Towers, an elderly woman who receives an apocalyptic vision of the future. The community believes that if they follow her instructions and rid the town of evil, they will be saved. They go to rather extreme lengths to do this, shunning anyone who doesn't follow the least of Althea's strict commandments. In the end, it turns out that Althea wasn't even trying to be a religious leader; her followers had misinterpreted her descriptions of the future as actual instructions to the community. (It Makes Sense in Context) |
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In Ensemble Stars!, Souma is unquestioningly loyal to Keito, praising him extensively and continually offering his life in Keito's service. This reaches possibly delusional levels at times - in one story, he insists that it's unfair that Natsume judges Akatsuki because the Student Council bears sole responsibility for the war (which is a bit of Insane Troll Logic because Keito is the vice president of that very student council). Ryuusei Hanabi both complicates and explains this: He hasn't always defended his every action, and in fact was horrified and outraged when he realised Akatsuki were trying to sabotage Kanata. However, Keito reacted very badly to this, leaving Souma deeply hurt. We also find out in this story that his family are an extremely controlling cult - being pushed into an ideology of total obedience to authority clearly hasn't helped his mental state, either. Keito himself is extremely grateful for his love and support, as it helped him to move on from the war and become a better person. However, Souma's extreme dependence on him also worries him deeply, so over the course of the year he tries to encourage him to develop his own abilities and identity. | |
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The Boxer Rebellion Clan from Legendary Weapons of China are practically indoctrinated since birth to be obedient to the point of suicidal. If they're Ordered to Die by their bosses, they will comply. Case in point? In their introduction scene, two clan members are ordered to commit suicide, by digging out their eyes and clawing out their nuts. They did exactly just that. | |
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In Astro City, Most of the alien Zirr have this towards their warlord Emperor. When Zo's sister Ziriza questions why the First Family repeatedly attack the Zirr Empire even though (by the official accounts) they were previously defeated and punished, her father angrily insists that she's just confused and the Priestlords will straighten her out. | |
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Red Dead Redemption 2: Javier Escuella is the only member of the Van der Linde Gang to never go against Dutch in any way, never providing much of an explanation for this. Even Bill Williamson has doubts about some things. | |
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Fire Emblem: Three Houses gives us "Thunder" Catherine, who was taken in by Archbishop Rhea when her own homeland turned against her on false accusations. While this usually comes across as Undying Loyalty, it becomes this trope when she outright says she Would Hurt a Child, and on the Crimson Flower route both ignores Rhea's Sanity Slippage and complies when the latter orders Fhirdiad burned to the ground in the finale. | |
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In Dragon Age II, if Hawke mentions that Saarebas chose to die rather than leave the Qun, the Arishok is affronted by the human notion that such a choice should be exceptional or difficult; he'd expect no less of any Qunari. | |
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Code Prime: This is what leads to the Knights of the Rounds’ downfall. When the SAZ massacre occurs thanks to Megatron’s machinations, he has Soundwave send out a falsified transmission from Charles zi Britannia to the Knights, and orders them to destroy the SAZ. Bismark, Dorothea, Luciano, and Anya/Marianne follow without question, while Monica, Gino, and Nonette refuse to take part in it. Then at the beginning of R2, when the remaining Knights of the Round along with the Pacific Fleet assault the Decepticon capital, Schneizel el Britannia contacts them to try to convince them to surrender, but they refuse, as Bismark declares that they swore absolute loyalty to Charles zi Britannia. As a result, with the exception of Gino and Anya/Marianne, they're all wiped out by the Decepticon combiners Bruticus and Devastator. | |
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Revolution: The Monroe militia seem to follow Bad Boss General Sebastian Monroe because of this. Indeed, the episode "Children of Men" had Captain Riley talking to Captain Mark Franklin about Monroe's agenda and his misgivings over it, and Franklin more or less told him to shut up. | |
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