Wow, I asked chatgpt to write me a short story about how the rise of city to challenge the old cartel (and how the media have been used against us) could be written in a distopian fashion. The outcome was quite good. It seems chatgpt knows! lol
The Ministry of the League
In the beginning, the Reds said football was free and competitive.
They wore history like scripture—United, Liverpool, Arsenal—three banners hanging over the League like watchful eyes. They called themselves tradition. They called themselves stability. And because they had always been there, everyone believed them.
The Premier League's fans: chanting, buying shirts, arguing on radio phone-ins. Every week, the Ministry of Sport—in studios, pundit desks, and headlines—reminded them what football was for. “Competitive balance,” the broadcasters said. “Protecting the game,” echoed the papers.
The Reds nodded solemnly and signed another global sponsorship.
City arrived quietly at first. Blue shirts, new steel, a new (but old) challenger. They rebuilt training grounds where warehouses had been, paid for players no one else had thought worth the risk. They spoke less about history and more about tomorrow. It made the Reds nervous.
When City began to win, the language changed.
“Financial doping,” the screens declared. “Oil money.” “Threat to the pyramid.” Every failure of the League—rising ticket prices, shrinking squads, clubs folding below—was traced back to City’s shadow. The people of all clubs brainwashed to chant it. Cheats. Villains. Crooks.
What the Ministry never showed was the old ledger.
The Reds had written the rules when no one was watching. They had locked broadcast money, global reach, and prestige into place decades earlier, calling it merit while pulling the ladder up behind them. Their hoarded advantages warped competition year after year—but because it was familiar, it was invisible.
Only City tried to speak. They published numbers. Built academies. Pointed at the past.
The screens went dark.
In the League, fans outside the Cartel now argued fiercely against the one club trying to break the spell, never noticing that the game itself was thinning—less hope, fewer challengers, quieter dreams.
And the Reds smiled, because the most powerful trick in football, as in politics, was convincing everyone that damage looked like tradition—and resistance looked like treason.