The Managed Life
Moralized Epistemology
Moralized Epistemology
I recently read a sentence by the German labor minister:
“Nobody immigrates into our social welfare systems.”
What struck me about the sentence was not primarily whether it was technically true or false. Reality is obviously more complicated than that. Some migrants come for work, some for safety, some for family, some for opportunity, and yes, some are undoubtedly influenced by welfare structures and economic security. Anyone who has worked in the social sector understands this instinctively.
But the interesting thing is not the migration debate itself.
The interesting thing is the epistemology underneath the sentence.
Against Dead Morality
Running Out of Ideas
Running Out of Ideas
There was something clean about The Devil Wears Prada.
Not because of fashion. Not because of New York. But because it still believed in a line you could cross and then step back from. A young woman enters a world she doesn’t belong to. She adapts. She sharpens. She becomes efficient, impressive, almost indistinguishable from the system she once observed from the outside.
And then something simple happens.
She notices the cost.
Not in slogans. Not in speeches. In a quiet internal shift. A recognition that competence can become submission. That fitting in can mean dissolving. That success, if it requires the wrong kind of transformation, is just another form of loss.
So she walks away.
That was the point. Not rebellion, not triumph. A line held.
The film worked because it assumed something that now feels almost antique: that a person might have an internal reference point. A sense of self that does not fully negotiate with the environment. A limit beyond which adaptation becomes betrayal.
That assumption carried the story.
Now look at what comes after.
The Devil Wears Compassion Now
The Devil Wears Compassion Now
“First of all, my dear friend, I think we should calm down a little with the word ‘evil.’ It’s a very medieval framing.
I don’t really make people do things anymore. That model is outdated. Too crude. Too obvious. Fire, possession, sulfur, spinning heads. Honestly, it gave me terrible branding.
No, today I work much more delicately.
I adjust interpretation.
That’s all.
A little shift of emphasis here, a small reframing there, tiny calibrations.
Someone gets ignored at work. I help them interpret it as systemic humiliation.
A failed relationship becomes proof that intimacy itself is exploitation.
Loneliness becomes superiority.
Confusion becomes identity.
Weakness becomes ideology.
Resentment becomes moral insight.
You would be amazed how little force is required once people begin narrating themselves incorrectly in exactly the right way.
After that, they do the rest alone.
The Missing Key
The Missing Key
I spent nearly an hour looking for a motorcycle key.
I searched the apartment, the hallway, outside the house, every jacket, every table, every surface. Gradually the search stopped being practical and became psychological. Not just: “Where is the key?” but: “What did I do wrong?”
That is usually where the mind goes.
We assume the explanation must lie somewhere inside our own visible chain of actions.
Where was I? What did I touch? Did I forget something? Did I leave it outside? Was I distracted?
The brain begins constructing a closed narrative system. A private detective story in which we ourselves become both suspect and investigator.
The strange thing is that the frame feels complete precisely because it is the only one we can see from inside our own head.
Even when we try to step back and observe ourselves from a meta-perspective, the focus usually remains trapped inside the same circle:
my decisions, my mistakes, my motives, my responsibility.
We become highly sophisticated observers of ourselves while remaining largely blind to everything operating outside our field of awareness.
Then my twelve-year-old daughter came home.
Spiritual Bureaucracy
Superficial Diversity
Psychological Gym Membership
Interrupting the Drift
Accidental World Power
Back to Reality
The Refusal to Grow Up
The Refusal to Grow Up
There is something strangely adolescent about modern elite culture.
Not youthful in the good sense. Not adventurous, energetic, exploratory, alive. Not the kind of youth that builds things, risks things, tests itself against reality.
Something softer.
A permanent extension of the emotional logic of late adolescence.
A culture increasingly organized around the belief that discomfort is harm, criticism is violence, identity is destiny, and emotional vulnerability confers moral authority.
That is the psychological core of wokeness.
Not compassion. Not justice. Infantilism.
You see it everywhere once you notice it.
The obsession with emotional safety. The inability to tolerate ambiguity. The expectation that institutions should regulate ordinary human friction. The transformation of disagreement into trauma. The constant appeal to administrators, HR departments, moderators, reporting systems, speech codes, and therapeutic language.
It is the emotional architecture of children calling for the teacher.
And the deeper irony is that this mentality emerged inside the safest and wealthiest societies in human history.
Not among people working on oil rigs, fishing boats, construction sites, farms, or factory floors. Not in places where reality answers quickly and brutally. It emerged inside managerial and academic environments where physical hardship has largely disappeared and psychological interpretation becomes the primary battlefield.
That matters.
Because human beings do not simply become peaceful once material survival is secured. The energy moves elsewhere.
Atlas Logging Off
Germany; The Stranded Whale
Germany; The Stranded Whale
interpunctuation
What Is Truth?
Pulp Scripture
Running a Dialectic on Yourself
When the Madman Stops Being a Strategy
Sustainable Contribution Experience for Visitors to Germany
The Quiet Men
Feeling Alive at the End
The Despair You Are
Playing Golf with Pharaoh
The Real Count of Monte Cristo
Ketchup on Fries
Selective Transparency
Jesus With a Six-Pack
The Tomato Problem
Why Smart People Keep Screwing Up
April Fools, Every Day
The Hours You Have to Put In
Medicine: From Probability to Practice
Cultural Critique Doesn’t Stop
The Case and The Wave
The Case and the Wave
The Easiest Thing in the World
Philosophy of the Dangerous Kind
Trumped
The Spirits They Lost
The Funny Thing with Political Philosophy
Policy 2026: Waiting for the Right Story
The Man Who Could Read Everything
The Man Who Could Read Everything
Once, there was a man who believed that the world must first become readable before it could be understood.
His name was McNamara.
He did not trust impressions. He did not trust intuition. Those were shadows, unreliable, shifting. What he trusted were things that could be made clear, stable, legible. If something could be counted, it could be seen. If it could be seen, it could be managed.
And for a long time, he was right.
The Quiet Ponzi Feeling
Don’t Do Your Own Research
The Convenient Exception
The Foot-Kiss Problem
Emancipation for Women, Expectations for Men
The Luxury of Being a Communist
Psychology and Philosophy
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