About Motu
Motu Sabimo is not a public figure. That’s intentional.
The ideas in The Age of Misalignment are meant to stand on their own—without the noise, bias, or identity filters that often shape how information is received.
In a world increasingly driven by personality and perception, this work takes a different approach: remove the author from the equation as much as possible, and let the ideas speak clearly.
That said, this perspective did not emerge in isolation.
Motu’s thinking is shaped by a multidisciplinary background spanning finance, history, political systems, and human behavior—combined with years of experience operating inside complex, real-world systems where theory meets consequence.
The result is not purely academic, and not purely experiential, but a synthesis of both.
The Age of Misalignment is an attempt to articulate something many people sense but struggle to define: that the systems we rely on—political, economic, informational—are no longer aligned with the realities they were built to serve.
This work does not claim to have all the answers. But it does aim to ask better questions.
- Why do intelligent systems produce irrational outcomes?
- Why do incentives drift away from intended purpose?
- Why does progress so often create new forms of instability?
And perhaps most importantly: what would it look like to design systems that evolve with us, rather than against us?
Motu writes from the belief that clarity matters. That understanding precedes change. And that the future will not be shaped by those who shout the loudest—but by those who see most clearly.