#183: What Are Russians Thinking?

Russian public opinion is shaped by propaganda, fear, and historical trauma. The post explores how narratives of victimhood and imperial pride obscure moral responsibility. Understanding this mindset is key to countering authoritarianism and supporting democratic reform.

#182: Reflections on Identity, Purpose, and the Active Life

Identity is not fixed but forged through action, reflection, and engagement with others. The post draws on philosophical traditions to argue that purpose emerges from lived experience, not abstract ideals. A meaningful life requires both introspection and outward commitment.

#181: Are We too Stupid for the Internet?

Digital culture rewards outrage, misinformation, and shallow engagement. The post critiques algorithmic manipulation and the erosion of attention spans, warning that democracy and reason are at risk. Reclaiming the internet requires deliberate effort to foster depth, nuance, and truth.

#180: Let Biden Be Biden

Biden’s political style—empathetic, pragmatic, and institutionally grounded—is defended against calls for radical transformation. The post argues that incrementalism and coalition-building are strengths, not weaknesses, in a polarized democracy. Leadership must reflect both conviction and restraint.

#179: Ecce Homo: Wokeness Beyond Caricatures

Wokeness is reframed as a call to critical compassion—an ethical stance rooted in self-awareness, social justice, and urgency. Rather than a caricature, it’s presented as a moral imperative to confront societal flaws with grace and resolve. Justice, not retribution; inclusion, not exclusion; hope, not cynicism.

#178: Russia Deserves Better

Putin’s regime is weakening Russia through repression, propaganda, and war. The illusion of strength masks economic decline, diplomatic isolation, and moral failure. Democracy is not alien to Russian culture—it’s a suppressed possibility. A better future requires rejecting imperialism and embracing dignity, accountability, and reform.

#177: Thinking Beyond Caricatures

Complexity is essential to understanding both ideas and people. Moral and political debates suffer when reduced to slogans or caricatures. True engagement demands humility, historical awareness, and intellectual rigor. Democracy requires expertise, not just opinion; knowledge must be earned, not assumed.

#176: Get Brexit Undone

Brexit has fractured the UK, weakened its global influence, and endangered peace in Northern Ireland. Cultural exceptionalism and political brinkmanship drove the decision, but its consequences are destabilizing. Rejoining Europe is framed not as surrender but as strategic recovery and moral clarity.

#175: The Metaverse Is Not The Solution

The metaverse deepens corporate control and digital superficiality. Unlike the participatory ethos of Web 1.0, it commodifies creativity and isolates users in gamified echo chambers. Technological progress must empower, not pacify; reclaiming digital agency requires resisting entertainment-driven distraction.

#174: Climate Change Can Only Be Countered With Technological Innovation

Moral appeals and lifestyle changes are insufficient. Only large-scale technological solutions—renewable energy, carbon capture, geoengineering—can meet the urgency of climate collapse. Innovation must be prioritized over nostalgia or denial, and policy must reflect planetary-scale thinking

#173: Putin and Lavrov Demonstrate the Weakness of Today’s Russia

Russia’s leadership reveals insecurity through aggression and delusion. Lavrov’s rhetoric and Putin’s war expose a regime clinging to imperial myths while alienating allies and undermining its own future. Strength is not measured by conquest but by stability, legitimacy, and global respect.

#172: Poem: The Fleeting Self

A lyrical meditation on impermanence and identity. The self is portrayed as transient, shaped by memory, time, and reflection. The poem evokes a quiet melancholy, affirming the beauty of change and the necessity of letting go.