Categories
communication

Ethical Catastrophe: Structural Failure Precedes Moral Failure

Modern history repeatedly shows that rigid systems of belief tend to undermine themselves over time. Highly centralised and extremely rigid systems of belief, expressed through and embodied in political movements across the twentieth century, illustrate the pattern clearly: power narrows into small circles, dissenting information disappears, institutions become instruments of loyalty rather than arbiters of […]

Categories
politics

Australian Democracy: One Country, Many Ways

Australia works because it stays balanced. Its democracy is not built on simple agreement, but on the disciplined interaction between different ways of seeing the world. Labor and Liberal are not just rival teams. Together, they form the smallest political structure capable of holding a complex society together. Two sides generate debate, correction, and restraint. […]

Categories
cybernetics

Why an Autocratic Turn is Catastrophic

An autocratic turn accelerates self-destructive collapse not because it is immoral, but because it forces a distributed system into a shape it cannot sustain. Short-term unity is purchased by suppressing variation, and the centre begins to confuse resistance with disobedience rather than information about system limits. Feedback from courts, states, agencies, markets, and elections is […]

Categories
cybernetics

Metabolic Power

Modern power does not stabilise disorder. It metabolises it. At planetary scale, technological and financial systems do not merely respond to uncertainty. They generate specific instabilities that make their own interventions appear necessary, then present themselves as the most probable remedy. This is not a claim about intent. It is a structural tendency of adaptive […]