Ideas, opinions, politics, humanities
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We cannot educate the less fortunate and the gifted ones
Modern education constantly speaks about equality, opportunity, and human potential. Schools promise social mobility. Politicians promise inclusion. Experts promise innovation. However, the reality looks very different. On one side stand students with learning disabilities, lower cognitive abilities, unstable family backgrounds, trauma, or behavioral problems. Many of them slowly collapse inside the system. They fail classes.…
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The greatest myths about LGBTQIA—and how to combat them
Beliefs do not survive because they are true. They survive because they are simple, repeated, and socially rewarded. Therefore, myths about LGBTQIA persist even when evidence contradicts them. Moreover, these myths act as cognitive shortcuts. They reduce complex human variation into simple binaries. As a result, they feel intuitive. They feel obvious. However, intuition often…
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How far education goes: For those who cannot imagine
Education does not only transfer knowledge. It shapes perception. It defines what people see as possible, acceptable, and true. Therefore, when people underestimate education, they misunderstand society itself. Moreover, education operates quietly. It does not announce its influence. Yet it determines how individuals think, decide, and act. Consequently, its reach extends far beyond classrooms. Education…
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Death to all pedophiles? Underlying causes
“Death to all pedophiles.” The sentence hits hard. It feels morally clear, it feels justified. It feels like protection. However, feeling right does not mean being right. The reaction emerges instantly. Children trigger the strongest protective instincts humans have. Evolution wired this response deeply. Therefore, when harm appears, the response escalates to the extreme. Yet…
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Christians and Jews: Who are the chosen people?
The idea looks simple at first. One God. One truth. One chosen people. However, the moment you examine Judaism and Christianity side by side, the simplicity collapses. Both traditions claim a unique relationship with God. Both anchor their identity in that claim. Yet they define it in fundamentally different ways. Therefore, what appears as a…
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Global hunger: Starvation is a policy choice
The world produces enough food. Yet millions starve. Therefore, the problem does not lie in production. It lies in distribution, incentives, and power. In other words, hunger reflects a systemic failure, not a natural limit. At the same time, wealth has reached unprecedented levels. Capital concentrates in the hands of wealthy families, multinational corporations, and…
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China vs Europe: Two models of lobbying power
At first glance, China and Europe organize influence in fundamentally different ways. On the one hand, China integrates lobbying into the state. On the other hand, Europe distributes lobbying across institutions and member states. Therefore, the contrast does not lie in whether lobbying exists. Rather, it lies in how power structures absorb or disperse it.…
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How war built Silicon Valley: The military-tech complex
World War II reshaped not only borders but the relationship between science, industry, and power. It forced governments to mobilize knowledge at an unprecedented scale. It forced companies to innovate under pressure. It forced scientists to solve problems with immediate consequences. Therefore, the war did not only produce weapons. It produced a system. This system…

