Ideas, opinions, politics, humanities
-

How John D. Rockefeller shaped education
Education shapes far more than knowledge. It shapes behavior, expectations, and limits. It defines what people consider possible and what they reject without question. Therefore, control over education means control over society itself. Consequently, when a figure like Rockefeller enters this domain, the implications reach far beyond philanthropy. They extend into the structure of thought…
-

Criminology and its outcomes during past 100 years
Criminology studies crime as a complex human behavior shaped by biology, psychology, and social structures. It does not stop at identifying offenders. Instead, it seeks patterns, causes, and consequences. Over the past 100 years, this field has evolved dramatically. It moved from speculation and ideology to empirical research and statistical validation. However, despite this progress,…
-

The decline of truth in the information age
The information age does not simply expand knowledge. It reshapes how truth functions. Data multiplies. Sources proliferate. However, the ability to distinguish what is true weakens. This tension defines the modern condition. Truth does not disappear. It becomes harder to identify, defend, and share. From controlled narratives to uncontrolled flows For centuries, information moved through…
-

How we exploit the South: Moral need to support freethinkers
At first glance, people hear simple statements. They hear that some countries do not like the Western financial system. However, this means almost nothing to an unaware reader. It sounds vague. It sounds ideological. Therefore, the real task begins here. One must explain what this system actually is and why it matters so deeply. What…
-

Countries in fear: U.S. decapitated a 90-million nation
At first glance, the expectations looked obvious. Analysts predicted a brutal war. They warned about tens of thousands of American casualties. They described Iran as a fortress filled with missiles, proxies, and asymmetric tactics. However, reality unfolded in a completely different way. Instead of a long conflict, the United States executed a fast and systemic…
-

WW3 and stupidity: Voters, politicians, media, shadow eminences
At first glance, people search for a single cause of war. Of course, it is complex, but if we should regard to simplified actors by current morality, this article is for you. They want one villain, one mistake, one decisive moment. However, reality looks very different. Wars emerge from layers of incentives, ignorance, fear, and…
-

As time went on, chroniclers claimed to know more about Jesus
At first glance, one expects a simple pattern. A real person lives, acts, influences others, and leaves traces. The earliest records should contain the strongest and most direct evidence. Later generations should preserve, interpret, and slowly lose detail. However, the case of Jesus appears reversed. The earliest period shows almost nothing. Later periods suddenly show…
-

American religiousness: Decent or fanaticism?
At first, religion in America looks normal. You see churches, you hear references to God. You assume something similar to Europe. However, this assumption collapses the moment you engage with it more deeply. I expected moderation. I expected distance; I expected something like Czechia, where religion survives mostly as a weak cultural residue. Instead, I…
-

How does US democracy survive Donald Trump?
People panic. They imagine one man can destroy everything. They talk about collapse as if it stands one election away. However, that view ignores how the system actually works. It ignores structure, it ignores incentives. It ignores history. The system already survived far worse The United States did not face its first crisis under Trump.…
-

UK PM weekly audiences with monarch? Scary!
Every week, the UK prime minister meets the monarch in private. No advisers sit in the room, no transcript gets published. No recording exists. The public sees nothing. The public hears nothing. Yet people keep repeating that this is harmless, symbolic, and politically empty. That claim makes little sense. Modern democracies monitor almost everything. Journalists…