School Social Work: How the Map Eats the Territory
The Customer Model of Citizenship
Henry VIII: A Case Study in Executive Overreach
Henry VIII: A Case Study in Executive Overreach
If you strip away the fur collars and oil paintings, reads less like a monarch and more like a long-term governance experiment with very weak institutional guardrails. More colloquially put: This jewellery wearing gym bro was basically a one-man constitutional crisis.
He inherited the throne in 1509, young, athletic, multilingual, brand compliant. Early messaging emphasized stability, continuity, and European partnership. His marriage to functioned as a high-value diplomatic merger with Spain. Foreign policy alignment: solid. Papal relations: cooperative. Domestic approval ratings: high.
Then came the succession crisis.
No surviving male heir meant long-term dynastic sustainability was at risk. From a governance perspective, this was not romantic dissatisfaction. It was risk mitigation. Unfortunately, the Vatican functioned as an external regulatory authority, and when Henry applied for a marital annulment, the compliance office, currently influenced by the Holy Roman Emperor who happened to be Catherine’s nephew, declined.
At this point, Henry did what any bold executive does when blocked by an external oversight body.
He restructured the institution.
The Polite Nudge
The Polite Nudge
Let’s stop pretending.
Media has always shaped reality. Governments frame wars. Corporations frame products. News frames crises. Repetition becomes truth.
That was the old architecture.
The new one runs on code.
The Overton window used to move through argument. Loud, messy, public. Now it moves through ranking systems. Silent. Personalized. Invisible.
You are not silenced. You are calibrated.
When Ideology Feels Like Common Sense
What Does Time Do?
What Does Time Do?
My twelve year old daughter and I went back to the village where I was born.
It is not even a town. Teufen is just a small Swiss village, pressed gently into the Appenzeller landscape as if it had no ambition to be more than it is. I lived there until I was nine. From the house where I stayed with my grandparents, I used to walk to kindergarten and later to school. In my memory, that walk was long. I crossed wide fields, climbed mountains, moved through valleys. It felt heroic. A corridor of weather and mood. A daily expedition.
Now it takes a few minutes.
The path is narrow. The hills are low. The slope that once felt like a climb toward destiny is barely a rise. Everything is shorter than it used to be. Less dramatic. Less charged.
I had the strange sensation that I was too large for the place.
When the Mind Runs Hot
Forward Without Amnesia
The Infection Without a Virus
The Infection Without a Virus
We Have No Future
We Have No Future
For most of human history, the future was repetition.
You were born where your father was born. You did what he did. The tools changed slowly. The beliefs changed slower. History moved like a glacier. Heavy, predictable, grinding forward but barely perceptible within a lifetime.
No one needed a vision. Survival was enough.
Then came rupture.
The American Revolution tore monarchy from legitimacy.
The French Revolution detonated hierarchy.
The Industrial Revolution shattered the rhythm of agrarian life.
For the first time, the future was not inheritance. It was construction.
The Enlightenment did not whisper. It declared that the world could be redesigned. Science would expand. Rights would expand. Wealth would expand. Humanity would expand.
It was arrogant. It was naïve. It was violent in its consequences. But it was forward.
Even the Romantics, suspicious of cold reason, were not stagnant. They warned that the machine could devour the soul. William Blake saw dark mills rising over London and sensed spiritual catastrophe. But he burned with vision. He did not want less future. He wanted a different one.
When the Depth Scares Them
The Calm Warrior
The Last Horizon
Carry Your Center
I Fight for My Feelings
Epstein Files: Carry No Illusions
Crans Montana: When the Government Begins to Behave Like a Cartel
Stoicism Never Took the Red Pill
Stoicism Never Took the Red Pill
A bald man in dark glasses named Andrew Tate points at the camera. A recent article in the Süddeutsche Zeitung announces that Stoicism has “infected” the so called manosphere. Emotionally stunted men, we are told, are the carriers. The verdict is delivered before a single argument appears.
This is not criticism. It is moral stage lighting.
Take a philosophy that survived empires. Glue it to a controversial influencer. Let the association do the intellectual heavy lifting. No need to read Seneca. No need to touch Epictetus. Just point, imply, condemn.
That is not a serious analysis. It is reputational contagion dressed up as intellectual thought.
Stoicism becomes a prop in a culture war skit.
A Smackdown With Pure Reason
The Political Nightmare
When Intelligence Has Nowhere to Go
Importing Meaning
Honmono: Authenticity as Residue
Where the Line Begins to Move
The Swiss Village That Did Not Argue
Reality Is Nazi
A Middle Path for Navigating Modern Complexity with Wisdom and Grace
The Epstein Distraction
The Gym, Late Afternoon
Suicide of a Civilisation
Post-Legitimacy Governance
Karen Is Not Just a Woman: This Should Not Be Happening to Me
Ontological Fragmentation and the Death of Mass Culture
The Fantasy of the Meta-Position
2021: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in Switzerland: “I Stand Here With You”
Radioactive Liability: Why the West Did Not Go After China
Social Work Without Being Social
To My Daughter on Her Twelfth Birthday
To My Daughter on Her Twelfth Birthday
NPCs Don’t Suffer
Was Hitler Left or Right?
State of the European Union
The West in Stereo
Donald Trump and the Price of Volatility
The End of Corrective Reality
Why Some Men Want to Become Women
Asleep at the Wheel
Sanctioning Neutrality
The Death of Arthur
Identity Without Skin
Hierarchy Theater
School Social Work: How the Map Eats the Territory
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