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

GDP Per Capita Is Lying to You (And You’re Letting It)

ChatGPT Image Jan 5, 2026, 05_23_58 PM

A man walks into a conversation with a statistic the way some people walk into a bar fight: not to learn anything, but to leave with a trophy. He doesn’t say “Hello.” He says, “Mississippi has higher GDP per capita than France and the UK.”

Pause for applause. Somewhere, a spreadsheet blushes.

The trouble is that GDP per capita is the kind of number that makes you feel informed while … Read the rest

The Part of You That Dies First

ChatGPT Image Dec 11, 2025, 01_10_00 PM

Death used to be simple. Your heart stopped, you stopped breathing, the doctor sighed, closed your eyes with two fingers, and that was it. Now we have ventilators, defibrillators, ECMO machines, organ transplantation laws, fMRI scanners and ethics committees. The border between life and death did not move; we just started to see how fuzzy it always was.

Underneath the drama there are very boring facts: cells need oxygen, neurons … Read the rest

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

The Strength Paradox

DALL·E 2025 02 10 10 54 21 A towering figure made of stone, resembling a leader, with cracks forming across its body, symbolizing the fragility of unchecked power In the backgr

Content 18+ My friend Eric recently suggested that I write a follow-up to my post, The Art of the Deal… With Reality, to explore the necessity of strong leadership in overcoming bureaucracy, stagnation, and even the inability to protect one’s interests. At the same time, he emphasized the importance of balance, arguing that current discourse leans too far in one direction. I found myself agreeing with his call for … Read the rest