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this post was submitted on 19 Feb 2025
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I've been seeing it a lot more recently, too. IRL even.
Did it get used by sometime famous recently or something?
There was a king once named Damocles that had a sword suspended over his throne that could come crashing down at any random moment and kill him, to remind himself of the fragility of his power, and human life.
I have no idea how that anecdote might apply to people in power in this day and age, or why people would reference the anecdote.
Glares at the fraying rope
I know the source and the idiom. I just don't know why it's picked up in popularity recently.
I also don't know why its use as an idiom doesn't quite align with the story. It's usually used to describe a situation where the threat of destruction isn't random. For example, in the OP, the danger is the end of support for Win 10, not randomness.