Wouldn't need every politician. Just the right ones. The ones in the right places or that others will follow. In-universe Umbridge was never placed under Imperius, but she was quite happy to follow along with the orders from the guy who was. Hell, look at American politics right now and how Republican politicians seem to skip right along with whatever batshit lunacy Trump is doing this particular weekAddendum_Forthcoming said:IDK ... is there enough wizards to do that with every politician out there?
Yeah but in the entire series we've seen precisely one person do that, and he has the advantage of being the protagonist with a suite of built in deus ex machinas helping him out. So I think we're talking about one in a million odds you can shake off a powerful curse like that, and those odds get worse since most people won't have any idea whats happened and won't be sure how to fight it. As the curse is portrayed it works like Kilgrave from Jessica Jones in that it makes you think you absolutely want to go along with what the curse is telling you to do, so who knows if muggles who don't know they've been cursed have any chance at all of resisting it.Addendum_Forthcoming said:Moreover, the Imperius curse can be resisted by people of incredible will. So arguably many of the command structures fighting a war against wizards, suitably driven to the goal of ultimate victory from a personal basis of fighting enslavement, may shrug it off. Plus Imperius ends the second the wizard who cast it dies.
Also, whats this "command structure of a war against wizards"? This is step one here, the war hasn't started yet, there is no organising against wizard kind yet.
I mean, all of those first things are really easy. Most of Voldemort's followers have no problem using the curse or teleporting instantly anywhere they want or using concealment charms to stay hidden so politicians with no idea they're up against something they think is fiction are going to have no chance at all. And there will be no fear or suspicion since, like I said, this is Step One. War hasn't begun yet, Muggles don't know there's wizards, don't know they're in any kind of fightAddendum_Forthcoming said:So first of all you need a wizard who can cast the spell, then you have to have said wizard get close, then said victim has to fail to resist it, and the wizard also has to survive the attempt, and you have tens of thousands of targets worldwide. After all, if you're talking a global war, you don't just have one head of state you need to control. Moreovcer, fear of such things may inculcate an environment of immediate prejudice towards any politician that seems to have had a sudden conversion from fighting.
Barty Crouch Senior, one of the most iron willed, unbending mofos in all the books could only half resist the Imperius curse even when he knew exactly what was happening. Against a muggle general, who has no idea these suggestions in his head are anything but his own, do you think they'd really have a chance?Addendum_Forthcoming said:Arguably the most suitable targets would be 3 and 4 star generals ... but then again, many of these people would be suitably powerful minds. Say what you like about the military, it does inculcate an environment of personal strength and conviction. So if anyone were to routinely resist the effects of the spell, it would be these vetted people who are in charge of the active co-ordination of soldiers to destroy the threat.
Yeah but this once again depends on the Muggles knowing whats going on and knowing there would be something to fight. Not going to help you against a takeover of a government that no-one expects and no-one seesAddendum_Forthcoming said:Compare and contrast that to entirely mundane ways of non-magical brainwashing, and I think muggles have the upper hand in creating sleeper agents. After all, muggles just need to break the mind of one wizard to get to others of their kind for every thousand of commanders and cabinet politicians they have to target in turn.