Ideas, opinions, politics, humanities

  • DiCaprio, Lawrence and why we are just animals

    DiCaprio, Lawrence and why we are just animals

    Humans like to believe we are rational, civilized, and fundamentally different from animals. We build cities, universities, and complex political systems. Yet beneath this sophisticated surface, our behavior often follows the same biological logic that governed small prehistoric tribes. Status, prestige, alliances, and mating signals still shape our reactions more than we usually admit. When…

  • America and Europe need two Richelieus

    America and Europe need two Richelieus

    Modern Western politics often behaves like a nervous committee rather than a strategic civilization. The United States and Europe still dominate many sectors of the global system. They control enormous financial networks. Their universities produce cutting-edge science, their military alliances span continents. Their corporations shape global technology, communication, and industry. Yet the West increasingly lacks…

  • Screaming “democracy” while refusing asylum to millions

    Screaming “democracy” while refusing asylum to millions

    Modern democracies constantly celebrate dissent. Presidents praise brave activists abroad. Parliaments pass resolutions condemning dictatorships. Media outlets highlight courageous journalists who resist repression. The rhetoric sounds noble and principled. However, the story often changes the moment those dissidents seek protection. Suddenly admiration turns into bureaucracy. Applause turns into suspicion. Immigration systems begin to demand perfect…

  • The rich manipulation of whole economies

    The rich manipulation of whole economies

    Modern economies appear decentralized. Governments debate. Voters elect leaders. Markets supposedly react to millions of independent decisions. Yet this visible surface hides a far more concentrated structure. Big banks, super-rich families, multinational corporations, and powerful lobbying networks interact constantly behind the scenes. They move capital, shape regulations, and define investment priorities. Consequently, they influence economic…

  • The myth of meritocracy in modern society

    The myth of meritocracy in modern society

    Modern societies repeat one central promise. Work hard. Be talented. Stay disciplined. And you will rise. However, this promise describes an ideal, not a mechanism. It comforts the middle class; it legitimizes the elite. It disciplines those at the bottom. Meritocracy sounds rational. It sounds fair. It sounds scientific. Yet when you examine how capital,…

  • Does Trump shows how to avert WW3 with military superiority?

    Does Trump shows how to avert WW3 with military superiority?

    Of course, he can also get closer to it. But this article talks about military superiority. The strike on Iran was not just about Iran. It was a message. And the real audience was not Tehran. It was Beijing and Moscow. When Donald Trump authorizes a strike that removes a top Iranian leader within hours,…

  • Vatican and Royal Family: Are we living in the Middle Ages?

    Vatican and Royal Family: Are we living in the Middle Ages?

    We like to believe we live in a rational, secular, democratic age, we imagine crowns belong to museum; we assume the Vatican deals with prayer, not power. We think real authority sits in parliaments, central banks, and corporate boardrooms. However, this belief rests on surface perception. It ignores structural continuity. It forgets that institutions rarely…

  • Sympathy for Holocaust and Gaza

    Sympathy for Holocaust and Gaza

    At first glance, many people assume that when the concentration camps were liberated in 1945, the world immediately fell into collective moral shock. The narrative often suggests that once the photographs emerged, once the skeletal survivors stood before Allied cameras, universal compassion followed. However, history tells a far more uncomfortable story. In reality, sympathy did…

  • Is arresting finished after Andrew? No, but yes for the big fish

    Is arresting finished after Andrew? No, but yes for the big fish

    At first glance, the public story seemed to close itself. Jeffrey Epstein died in custody. Ghislaine Maxwell received a conviction. Headlines exploded and then gradually faded. Consequently, many assumed the system had corrected itself. Closure appeared to arrive naturally, almost automatically. However, closure and accountability are not identical. Then, unexpectedly yet historically, Prince Andrew was…

  • What kind of cards does Edward Snowden have?

    What kind of cards does Edward Snowden have?

    Let’s face it. We were naive and never expected that governments can be so evil and conduct the largest operational scope that has ever been. Don’t trust the government. One KGB officer has told me that not only start-ups are product of military industrial complex, but he had foreseen these far before we had any…