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The theoretical engine behind my safety and governance practice. On-site abstracts only; full essays live on The Crumple Zone.

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These are on-site abstracts only. The full archive lives on The Crumple Zone with essays and field notes.

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These essays read like postmortems: what systems do under stress, where failure lands, and who carries the repair cost.

They track procedure as allocation—time, composure, documentation, persistence—not just money.

Expect operational facts over moral positioning: clocks, escalation paths, reversibility, ownership, and closure records.

When something goes wrong, who is forced to carry the cost—and how long can the system remain wrong without consequence?

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Preview image for "We Condemn the Excesses"

Published

"We Condemn the Excesses"

historyphilosophypoliticscultureethics

"We condemn the excesses" isn’t an apology, it’s a tactic. From Amritsar 1919 to Minneapolis 2026, discover how governments use condemnation to protect their power, delay accountability, and ensure the system survives its own violence.

Preview image for You Don’t Have the Right

Published

You Don’t Have the Right

philosophypoliticstechcorporationsdesigncultureethicsaihealthcareeconomics

We are living through a divergence between rights and remedies. If a system is "95% accurate" but concentrates errors on the vulnerable, fairness metrics are irrelevant. Here is a better way to measure justice.

Preview image for The Post-User Web

Published

The Post-User Web

historyphilosophypoliticstechcorporationsdesigncultureaieconomics

The interface is dying because the “User” is obsolete. On the post-user web, AI agents, friction economics, and the rise of adversarial infrastructure.

Older essays (272)
Preview image for The Worldview with a Gun

Published

The Worldview with a Gun

historyphilosophypoliticstechcorporationsdesignaieconomics

From Chicago to Gaza, AI is turning "threat scores" into self-fulfilling prophecies. A critique of epistemic laundering and the automation of state violence. AI systems like Palantir and Axon don't just predict risk, they manufacture…

Preview image for Institutional Apoptosis

Published

Institutional Apoptosis

philosophypoliticstechcorporationsdesigncultureethicsaihealthcareeconomics

We build institutions for every crisis, then forget to give them an off-switch. This piece argues for “institutional apoptosis”: designing governments, programs, and platforms that know how to die before they devour the people inside them.

Preview image for The Death of Slack

Published

The Death of Slack

historyphilosophypoliticsautismtechcorporationsinherent caredesignculturerelationshipsethicsaieconomics

Modern efficiency hasn't solved volatility; it has just offloaded it onto you. An analysis of how the removal of buffers, inventory, and downtime created a brittle world where every mistake is a crisis.

Preview image for Governance by Caricature

Published

Governance by Caricature

philosophypoliticsautismtechcorporationsdesigncultureaieconomics

Exploring how modern systems are built around an imaginary “reasonable” user, blaming real people for design failure and arguing for infrastructures that accommodate messy, complex human lives.

Preview image for You Can Design Harm Out

Published

You Can Design Harm Out

historyphilosophypoliticsautismtechcorporationsinherent caredesigncultureethicsaieconomics

Explore how system architecture, not intent, makes harm the path of least resistance in institutions. Learn why brittleness and structural fragility offload damage onto vulnerable humans.

Preview image for The Cowardice of Inference

Published

The Cowardice of Inference

historyphilosophypoliticstechcorporationsdesigncultureethicsaieconomics

Predictive systems don't "find patterns," they establish rules about who gets access, who faces scrutiny, whose harm matters less. Their builders claim neutrality while governing lives. It's time to name it and accept accountability.

Preview image for ​Lucid Disorientation

Published

​Lucid Disorientation

philosophypoliticstechcorporationsculturerelationshipsethicsai

AI's fluency removes the friction that keeps our heads on straight. On lucid disorientation, and rebuilding resistance to machines that never say no.

Preview image for Engineering Mutuality

Published

Engineering Mutuality

philosophypoliticsautismtechinherent caredesignculturerelationshipsethicsaihealthcareeconomics

Critiquing the myth of self-sufficiency and outlining a new politics of shared dependence, where care, maintenance, and cooperation become the foundation of autonomy.

Preview image for Variance ≠ Deviance

Published

Variance ≠ Deviance

historyphilosophypoliticsautismtechdesignculturerelationshipsethicsaihealthcare

We have a deep-seated instinct to punish what doesn’t fit. Here's how data, management, and moral culture pathologize deviation.

Preview image for Everyone is a Crumple Zone Now

Published

Everyone is a Crumple Zone Now

philosophypoliticstechcorporationsdesignculturerelationshipsethicsaieconomics

Machines once bent to save people. Now people bend to save machines. A design essay on how digital systems reverse the ethics of safety, making people the shock absorbers for machine perfection.

Preview image for Puncture the Cleanroom!

Published

Puncture the Cleanroom!

historypoliticsautismtechcorporationsculturerelationshipsaihealthcareeconomics

​"Sterile control" makes systems fragile. Why reason must move from purity to porosity, embracing error, feedback, and accountability to survive.

Preview image for To Be is To Be Maintained

Published

To Be is To Be Maintained

historyphilosophypoliticstechcorporationsinherent careculturerelationshipsaihealthcareeconomics

​A new framework for understanding persistence. This essay redefines stability, arguing that justice is the allocation of repair and proving collapse is a political choice.

Preview image for Finitude As Love

Published

Finitude As Love

historyphilosophyinherent careculturerelationshipsaieconomics

Why embracing human limits can make our relationships, ethics, and systems more resilient. An essay on how dependence and maintenance define love, freedom, and what it means to live together.

Preview image for The In-House Ethicist

Published

The In-House Ethicist

historyphilosophypoliticstechcorporationsrelationshipsai

Before an institution can do immense harm, it must first learn to feel good about itself. It must learn to translate its contradictions into virtues and its risks into responsibilities.

Preview image for The Pyrrhic Condition

Published

The Pyrrhic Condition

historyphilosophypoliticstechcorporationscultureaihealthcareeconomics

Hospitals, platforms, universities, and economies all improve the metrics that define success while quietly eroding the conditions that make those metrics meaningful.

Preview image for Stop Preaching. Start Engineering.
historyphilosophypoliticstechcorporationsinherent carecultureaieconomics

We’ve measured morality by character for too long. The Architecture of Goodness argues that ethics must be designed, not preached, replacing heroism with corrigibility and purity with feedback. A humane system makes goodness the path of…

Preview image for Stricter in Love Than in Law

Published

Stricter in Love Than in Law

historyphilosophypoliticsautismtechcorporationsinherent careculturerelationshipsaieconomics

Why do we grill our loved ones harder than corporations or governments? Stricter in Love Than in Law reveals how modern institutions turn excuses into operating systems, outsourcing the labor of repair to the public. From euphemism to…

Preview image for Critical Bioengineering

Published

Critical Bioengineering

philosophytechcultureaihealthcareeconomics

From medical implants to insurance portals, from stress fractures to eviction notices, the physics of failure hasn’t changed. What’s changed is the scale of the harm.

Preview image for How to Smuggle an Idea

Published

How to Smuggle an Idea

historyphilosophypoliticsautismtechculturerelationshipsai

An idea can be banned without being outlawed; when the direct route is blocked by formal censorship or the chill of algorithmic disfavor, ideas learn to travel in disguise.

Preview image for Beyond Deservingness

Published

Beyond Deservingness

historyphilosophypoliticsinherent careculturehealthcareeconomics

There’s a peculiar contradiction at the heart of modern public policy: Propose universal provision—unconditional meals, healthcare, housing, or cash—and you’re told it’s utopian, “unrealistic,” unaffordable.

Preview image for Say It Again Anyway

Published

Say It Again Anyway

philosophycultureai

I nearly scrapped this draft because I’d already unpacked institutional forgetting in The Amnesia Engine. My inner editor—raised on Omit needless words and Kill your darlings—hisses, “If it’s not novel, kill it.”

Preview image for Pretending Is Half the Job

Published

Pretending Is Half the Job

politicsautismcorporationsrelationships

You’re looped in once the decisions are made—asked to “help it land,” not to change it. You learn to turn harm into “alignment,” risk into “tone.” It feels like trust, until you stop doing it.

Preview image for Stop Blaming Dopamine

Published

Stop Blaming Dopamine

philosophytechcorporations

I used to believe my late-night scrolling was purely a personal failing—maybe I had “no willpower,” or my brain was “wired for dopamine hits.” That was the narrative fed to me by pop neuroscience and digital minimalists alike.

Preview image for Proof-based Harm

Published

Proof-based Harm

philosophypoliticsinherent careculture

Proof governs the boundaries of existence. It decides who crosses a border and who is detained, who receives support and who is scrutinized, who is believed and who is ignored. Marketed as a neutral arbiter of fairness, proof is anything…

Preview image for Defining Love

Published

Defining Love

philosophyautismculturerelationships

Nobody is going to show you what love is. Love is being allowed to do things nobody has shown you.

Preview image for On Inherent Care

Published

On Inherent Care

philosophyinherent carehealthcare

institutions cannot provide care; they are only capable of restricting our natural propensity to care for one another

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