When Size Matters… in Reverse

ChatGPT Image Dec 2, 2025, 12_41_00 PM

People love big things. Big cars, big houses, big countries. Something in the human brain still worships scale, as if the mammoth that impressed our ancestors is still walking somewhere behind us. And so, many citizens will proudly point at the map and say: “Look how enormous it is — this is greatness.” They say it with the same confidence with which a smoker says his cough is “just from … Read the rest

Breaking the Thermometer

ChatGPT Image Dec 22, 2025, 03_44_48 PM

Imagine a lighthouse on a cold coast. It is not glamorous. It does not vote, it does not donate, it does not clap at rallies. Its job is boring: it blinks, night after night, so ships do not discover the rocks the hard way. Now imagine a politician points at the lighthouse and says, with a straight face, “That blinking is panic. We will break up the lighthouse because it … Read the rest

The Throne and the Round Table

ChatGPT Image Dec 19, 2025, 08_17_35 PM

People like “strong leadership” for the same reason people like a single pill that fixes diabetes: it feels clean, it feels decisive, and it lets you stop thinking about the messy parts—diet, adherence, side effects, long-term damage. The problem is that politics, like medicine, punishes magical thinking. Fast action is not the same thing as correct action, and the price of being wrong at scale is paid in blood, debt, … Read the rest

Children of Our Code, Fathers of Our Fate

ChatGPT Image Nov 25, 2025, 02_05_28 PM

Sometimes, late at night, when the city finally remembers that it is allowed to be quiet, I catch myself staring at the ceiling and thinking about the strange future we are building with our own hands. Not just faster phones, not just more clever recommendation engines that push us more cat videos and more outrage, but something else. Something like the Minds from Iain Banks’ Culture novels: artificial intelligences so … Read the rest

Quebec To The Rescue

By Eric Le Roy

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        First, I support no ideology under this shining sun. You don’t have to be wrong for me to be right, and vice versa. All my life, I have involved myself in civil discourse with all comers. Often it has seemed modestly productive, although rare is the occasion when I’ve noticed any radical shifts of opinion. Most people, including me, walk away with our convictions … Read the rest