How Cities Learned to Eat Their Young

ChatGPT Image Feb 20, 2026, 10_11_12 AM

They tell you the city is where the life is. The jobs. The pulse. The “opportunity.” And maybe it is. But the first thing the city does now—before you learn the metro map, before you find the café that feels like yours, before your new badge stops being shiny—is invoice you for the privilege of existing within its radius.

Not for luxuries. For space. For air that doesn’t feel borrowed. … Read the rest

The Quiet Power of Rationality

ChatGPT Image Nov 10, 2025, 05_29_51 PM

Rationality, if you think about it, is the least celebrated form of heroism. It has no anthem, no flag, no stadium. Yet it has saved more lives than courage ever did. Commander Spock, that calm half-human mirror to our chaos, is the perfect metaphor: the eyebrow that rises when others shout, the voice that says “calculate” when everyone else says “pray.” Logic, done properly, is erotic — not in the … Read the rest

The Psychology of Pessimism

ChatGPT Image Sep 26, 2025, 10_47_39 AM
ChatGPT Image Sep 26, 2025, 10_47_39 AM

If the universe had a mood, it would be Monday. Entropy marches, coffee cools, batteries drain, and socks vanish into an event horizon behind the washing machine. Against this cosmic backdrop, optimism can feel like a form of bad arithmetic. Yet here we are—hairless apes who invented anesthesia and sourdough starters—still arguing about whether the glass is half full, half empty, or a … Read the rest

Come To The Cabaret, Old Chum

By Eric Le Roy

Content 18+ The gray days turn now to early darkness – light-swallowing afternoons that have me leaving the apartment with my dogs when it is still daylight and returning 30 minutes later to sudden winds and the pitch black of precocious night. These afternoons end quicker than friendships when talking about places like Russia and Ukraine, Israel and Palestine. Believe me, I know.

In the morning, … Read the rest

Saints, Sinners, and the Human Choice

Content 18+ Eric, your latest piece is brilliantly provocative, tapping into humanity’s darkest doubts about itself. You argue, as others have throughout history, that humanity’s noblest ideals are incompatible with its basest instincts. Your vision is one of a species forever shackled by its contradictions, unable to transcend its limitations. But I argue that this view, while grounded in certain historical patterns, overlooks humanity’s demonstrated capacity for self-improvement and moral … Read the rest