Reflections on Peace, Philosophy, and Life
Author’s note: This is an opinion essay anchored in widely recognised human‑rights law.
The thread that ties it all together
From Gaza to the West Bank, from the Mediterranean to the streets of Washington, D.C., one grim pattern repeats: people with power decide whose lives matter. The language shifts by country and party, but the logic is the same—strip people of their humanity, then strip them of their rights, land, safety, even life. And for those who supply the weapons, pass the laws, or look the other way, complicity is not an accident; it is a policy.
- Details
- Category: David's Blog
Stuck in the “Asshole” Stage: Why So Many Political Leaders Fail Us — And What Courage Demands from Us All
Politics today often feels like a playground of ego, aggression, and childish games — dominated by leaders who seem stuck in what might be called the “asshole” stage of human development. But this isn’t just frustration or cynicism; it’s a serious crisis with real consequences for society, the planet, and even the soldiers sent to fight these leaders’ battles. This article explores why so many political figures remain emotionally immature, the heavy cost of this stagnation, and why it takes courage from all of us to demand and create better leadership.
- Details
- Category: David's Blog
The world is unpredictable, but certainty exists — not in control or belief, but in the direct experience of being alive, here and now.
Everything can change in an instant.
The job you thought was secure.
The friend you thought you knew.
The health you took for granted.
The country you believed was stable.
Most of what we call “certainty” is just habit — the same events repeating often enough that we assume they will continue. But habit is not stability. And when the pattern breaks, the sense of safety built on it can collapse overnight.
- Details
- Category: David's Blog
Political and religious systems often treat us as dangerous, needing control. But rules are just recipes — the real nourishment comes from direct experience.
Most political systems are built on a basic assumption: people are dangerous. Left to ourselves, we’ll cheat, steal, or worse.
The answer, we’re told, is to surround us with laws, regulations, and punishments to keep us in line.
- Details
- Category: David's Blog
We like to think of reality as something objective, solid, and universally shared. Yet, a closer look at discoveries across physics, neuroscience, and psychology suggests something quite different: that what we call “reality” may be nothing more than a personal construct—something created in each individual’s mind.
This article explores that idea by drawing together insights from quantum physics, neuroscience, personal construct psychology, and the philosophical mathematics of G. Spencer-Brown.
- Details
- Category: David's Blog
