Read Essays
Short reflections on systems, incentives, truth, human behavior, and the quiet misalignments shaping modern life.
For the initial launch of The Age of Misalignment, these essays will hover around four connected clusters: the realities humans construct, the systems through which decisions are made, the time gap between action and consequence, and the narratives we use to justify what already happened. The scope may expand over time, but these themes form the first foundation.
The Fiction of Ownership
You don’t own land. You participate in a system that assigns control—and calls it ownership.
Read Essay →The Difference Between Truth and Agreement
Agreement is powerful, but it is not the same thing as truth. Democracies often produce consensus, not accuracy.
Read Essay →Power Without Consequence
What happens when the people making decisions are not the people who must live with the outcomes?
Read Essay →Intergenerational Accountability: The Real Problem
The deepest accountability problem may not be the past. It may be the present decisions whose consequences arrive after the decision-makers are gone.
Read Essay →First Is Not a Moral Argument
Being first is chronology, not justification. The same mistake appears in arguments about land, ideas, companies, and nations.
Read Essay →Decisive vs. Negotiated Decisions
Decisive decisions create speed, clarity, and accountability. Negotiated decisions create stability, buy-in, and compromise. The real question is when each one belongs.
Read Essay →The Incentive to Ignore the Future
Systems reward short-term wins while pushing long-term damage onto someone else, somewhere else, later.
Read Essay →The Myth of Fairness
Nature is not fair. It is balanced. Humans often confuse fairness with emotional satisfaction.
Read Essay →The Cost of Consensus
Consensus feels fair, but it can also dilute truth, weaken decisions, and reward the least offensive answer over the most effective one.
Read Essay →Intergenerational Accountability: The Wrong Target
Holding people today accountable for the distant past may feel moral, but effectiveness requires separating recognition from responsibility.
Read Essay →The Narrative After the Fact
Humans justify outcomes retroactively. Winners write logic. Losers are labeled irrational.
Read Essay →The Illusion of Permanent Claims
Every claim to ownership or power eventually expires. History is a continuous reset disguised as continuity.
Read Essay →