Archive
Browse all 10 articles across governance, urban systems, ecologies, and latitudes.
The Consent Economy: Big Tech vs the People
The country is a mirror, but the mirror charges admission. From lobbying ledgers to algorithmic feeds, from data extraction to political influence, the machinery of consent has been privatized. A systems anatomy of how wealth, technology, and power intersect to reshape democracy.
The Labyrinth of Three Clocks: Venezuela 1998–2025
María Corina Machado's Nobel Peace Prize arrives as Venezuela navigates 27 years measured by three clocks: output, distribution, and rights. A data-driven narrative tracking boom, crash, and the quietest clock—democracy—that decides repair.
The Anti-Woke Playbook: How Florida and Hungary Are Redesigning Democracy's Distance
From Florida's classrooms to Hungary's parliament halls, the 'anti-woke' movement reveals itself as more than culture war—it's a systematic attempt to redesign the distance between citizen and state, neighbor and neighbor, in ways that fundamentally alter democratic participation across the.
When Citizens Spend the Budget: The Quiet Revolution in Local Democracy
What if citizens, not bureaucrats, decided how to spend public money? Hundreds of cities are finding out—and the results challenge assumptions about democracy.
When Cities Stopped Asking Permission
As federal gridlock persists, American cities are becoming laboratories of democratic innovation—challenging traditional hierarchies of governance.
Power Lines as Colonial Control
Puerto Rico's democracy, bankruptcy, and the grid that could teach the mainland how to heal. If you want to see the United States without makeup, fly to San Juan and wait for the lights to flicker. In that twitch you can read the whole civics lesson: a people who are citizens without a presidential.
Brackeen: The Case Against Tribal Sovereignty
Louisiana v. Callais and the quiet attempt to end Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Some revolutions arrive as fireworks. Others arrive as docket numbers. Louisiana v. Callais is the latter—a case that began as a fight over one congressional map and swelled into a vehicle that could cripple or.
Teaching Heat: How to Run a Classroom Where Disagreement Is the Point
Disagreement is not a failure of learning but its engine. This essay offers a complete protocol for teaching contested material without quotas or theater—steps that make argument safe, evidence visible, and change measurable.
The Debate-Stopper: How Labels Kill Conversation
Labels can act like trapdoors—say a word and the floor drops. This essay explains how debate-stoppers work psychologically, rhetorically, and institutionally, then offers tools to disarm them in classrooms, newsrooms, and public forums.
Administrative Censorship: How Chilling Effects Spread
Censorship today arrives not in jackboots but in memos, forms, and pauses 'pending review.' This essay maps how administrative routines—procurement rules, complaint pathways, ambiguous guidance—convert discomfort into policy and policy into habit.