Tag: 2020 election


  • The Slow Coup of “So What”

    February 2019 is not defined by one scandal, but by a habit: the national shrug. “So what” has become a governing posture, turning oversight into hostility and misconduct into background noise. Democracies don’t fail only through dramatic ruptures. They fail when standards become tribal weapons and consequences become optional.

  • The Year the Feed Learned Your Triggers

    December 2019 closes with impeachment, primaries, and a country that feels permanently on edge. But the deeper story isn’t just what happened. It’s how the feed trained us to consume politics in fragments, perform identity, and treat constant emergency as normal. Before 2020 arrives as a “reset,” it’s worth asking what the attention economy has…

  • The Center Cannot Hold, but It Can Be Rebuilt

    December 2019 closes with the House voting to impeach President Trump and the Senate poised for a trial whose ending seems prewritten. But the real stakes are larger than one outcome. The question is what we will tolerate, what precedents we will normalize, and whether a republic can survive an attention economy that rewards contempt…

  • The Algorithm Is Running for Office

    American politics in 2019 is less a town hall and more a group chat with no moderators. Impeachment becomes content, campaigns become mood rings, and every institution gets filtered through the attention economy. The deeper crisis is not just what leaders do, but what the feed trains citizens to become.

  • The Republic on a Razor’s Edge

    America in 2019 feels like a nation trained to react faster than it can reason. Impeachment dominates the headlines, but the deeper crisis is cultural: truth has become tribal, institutions are treated like weapons, and the 2020 race is already poisoning the present. The question isn’t who wins—it’s whether we still believe we share a…