Politics and Power

ARTICLES

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INSTITUTIONAL REALISM: WHY DESIGN MATTERS MORE THAN MORAL HOPE

  WHY WE BUILD RULES AT ALL Every society that has ever existed has had rules. It doesn’t matter whether we’re talking about a small tribe, an ancient empire, a religious community, or a modern nation-state. Wherever human beings live together, they draw lines. They decide what is allowed and what is not. They create

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WHEN POWER STARTS FLAILING

We tend to assume that even in moments of crisis, someone is still in control—that governments, militaries, and institutions may be failing, but at least they are trying to steer the system toward survival. What if that assumption is wrong? What if what we’re witnessing isn’t strategy gone bad but the absence of strategy altogether?

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Manufacturing Division: A Citizen’s Field Guide to Engineered Confusion (1900–2025)

Introduction Most people experience political and social division as something spontaneous — a natural clash of personalities, beliefs, or competing visions of the world. But history suggests something more complicated may also be at work. Across generations, institutions, political movements, media systems, and centers of power have repeatedly learned how to shape public perception, channel

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Seething in the Shadows: The West’s Desperation in the Face of China’s Rise

With every passing day, the grotesque inadequacies of Western capitalism are laid bare—not by ideology, not by theory, but by stark contrast with the visible achievements of modern-day China. The so-called titans of American finance, industry, and governance now find themselves shrouded in a growing darkness—a darkness that has become all the more humiliating under

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Illusions of Certainty

We often believe our opinions are rational and deeply grounded. But much of what we think is socially absorbed, patterned and only lightly examined.

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