Categories
cybernetics

Ideological Subscription: Racism, Fear, and Political Control

Racism is not strength. It is a structural failure. It converts socio-psychological insecurity into identity, then binds that identity to fear that can never be resolved. In complex adaptive societies, this becomes a low-energy coordination mechanism. It feels stabilising, but it is corrosive. It narrows perception, amplifies vulnerability, and makes populations easier to manipulate. Racism […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Mad King

The Mad King is usually treated as a personality problem. History supplies familiar figures. Erratic rulers, impulsive leaders, volatile decision makers whose behaviour appears to bend events. Yet this framing may be backwards. Instability at the top of power hierarchies may emerge not from individual psychology but from the structure of complex social systems themselves, […]

Categories
Philosophy

Pepper: softly spoken lies

There is a line in Pepper by the Butthole Surfers that lands almost casually: you never know just how you look through other people’s eyes. The song drifts through arbitrary violence, strange lives, and unresolved fragments, people moving through events that feel coherent from within but unsettling from outside. That line shifts the frame. It […]

Categories
politics

Antithesis Trap

Identity formation requires antithesis. In the United States, political coherence has long been organised around opposition: liberty against tyranny, democracy against monarchy, capitalism against communism, freedom against control. These oppositions carved boundaries that stabilised national identity, generated purpose, and coordinated collective action. Opposition was not incidental. It was structural. Without it, American identity would have […]

Categories
Philosophy

On Being Smart in Stupid Times

Intelligence is becoming a liability. Not socially ornamental intelligence, not credentialed cleverness, but actual understanding. The kind that sees structure, delay, recursion, consequence. The kind that notices when a system is lying to itself. That form of intelligence generates friction. It interrupts performance. It destabilises belonging. It exposes the hidden costs that simple stories are […]

Categories
politics

Writing on Politics

Writing about contemporary politics, especially what is now unfolding globally and with particular intensity in the United States, has become an aesthetically risky and expressively constricted act. Insight itself is treated as partisan. Intelligence, systems thinking, and even basic factual literacy are read as “progressive” positions regardless of intent or content. This is not simply […]