Ideas, opinions, politics, humanities

  • How freethought is redefining global politics

    How freethought is redefining global politics

    They say, “We can’t have freedom of speech in Europe. We’re not America.” But how can anything change if we are punished for even saying that? How do we reform injustice if questioning it is illegal? Freethought today is no longer academic. It is revolutionary. Across borders, thinkers challenge systems—not with weapons, but with ideas.…

  • Education system: Competing countries, competing people

    Education system: Competing countries, competing people

    Everyone praises education. Politicians declare it the foundation of freedom. Parents call it the key to success. Reformers dream of its ability to lift the poor. But beneath these warm slogans lies a colder reality. Education was not born to enlighten. It was born to prepare nations for competition. And in doing so, it turned…

  • West has been destroying Middle East and never helped

    West has been destroying Middle East and never helped

    The pattern is undeniable. Western powers invade, topple governments, and bomb cities. Then they walk away. No justice follows. And no rebuilding takes place. No responsibility is ever accepted. As a result, the Middle East remains shattered. Its people suffer in silence. Its cities lie in ruins. Those who flee often die at sea, rot…

  • Does arguing with priests make sense?

    Does arguing with priests make sense?

    I have an opportunity to have talks with one Roman Catholic priest and then two Evangelical ones. Does arguing with them really make sense? I cannot persuade them to stop believing in God, and since I am a rationally inclined person, there is a very slim chance they can persuade me (but it is still…

  • Screw Geneva Conventions, kill anyone you want

    Screw Geneva Conventions, kill anyone you want

    The title sounds extreme—and intentionally so. But it captures a disturbing reality: in the modern Western war machine, the Geneva Conventions have become ceremonial ink. Soldiers execute captives. Civilians die in secret prisons. Detainees suffer, not as combatants, but as objects of convenience. And when the moment comes to apply the law, Western judges shield…

  • Czechs and Germans: A shared border, two civilizations

    Czechs and Germans: A shared border, two civilizations

    Czechs and Germans live side by side. They share hundreds of years of history. They often work in the same firms, drive across the same borders, and belong to the same European structures. Yet in behavior, politics, language, and everyday life, they come from different mental planets. One thrives on structure. The other escapes it.…

  • History of Chinese disregard of human rights

    History of Chinese disregard of human rights

    China’s ascent to global power dazzled the world. With record-breaking infrastructure, a booming tech sector, and diplomatic expansion, many praised the transformation. However, beneath the glowing statistics lies a grim truth. For decades—if not centuries—China has ignored, suppressed, and crushed human rights. The scale is enormous. The method is consistent. And the silence from the…

  • History of health care to now: 8 million dead each year

    History of health care to now: 8 million dead each year

    People believe modern health care is expensive because it is advanced. But the real reason is much simpler: because someone wants profit. From the earliest times to today, paying for your own survival has been a consistent injustice, not a new one. And it continues even though we live in an age where trillion-dollar fortunes…

  • Psychopaths have more conscience than your pet

    Psychopaths have more conscience than your pet

    We love our pets. We treat them like family. They sleep in our homes. We imagine they feel what we feel. We think they understand. But this is a delusion. Not just a small one—a complete misreading of what pets are. The truth is unsettling. Your pet has no conscience. It does not know right…

  • I always knew Christianity was a lie, but not that big

    I always knew Christianity was a lie, but not that big

    I always sensed something was off. The hymns, the miracles, the rituals—they felt artificial. Still, I gave Christianity the benefit of the doubt. I assumed there was at least a man behind it all. A preacher. A reformer. Someone named Jesus. But the deeper I looked, the more the foundation dissolved. It was not just…