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SUSTAINABILISM:
Revealing the Sustainability Illusion and Introducing a Framework for Regenerative Enduring Systems

Exposes the hidden forces and unveils a pathway to lasting impact.

Featured Articles

The Metacontent Gap
The Metacontent Gap
Mar 30, 2026
45 min read
1 likes
138 views
Why We Are No Longer Making Sense of the Same World This article introduces the idea of the Metacontent Gap, arguing that many of today’s misunderstandings, conflicts, and breakdowns are not primarily caused by differences in information, education, or intelligence, but by deeper differences in how people make sense of reality. It begins by highlighting a fundamental problem: despite unprecedented access to information, clarity has not increased. People look at the same situations yet ar...
Modulation vs Manipulation
Mar 30, 2026
45 min read
1 likes
136 views
The Missing Distinction in Governing and Economic Systems This piece introduces a fundamental distinction between modulation and manipulation, not as technical terms, but as different ways systems are sustained, distorted, or restored over time. It argues that all systems, whether personal, relational, economic, or societal, are in constant motion between integrity and disintegration. What determines their trajectory is not the absence of intervention, but the nature of that intervention. ...
The Tyranny of Seriousness
Mar 29, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
149 views
The Flying Bed and the Illusion of Significance in an Absurd World We often assume that taking something seriously brings us closer to truth. That weight signals depth, and intensity signals clarity. Yet the opposite may also be true. The more serious things become, the more easily we confuse what feels important with what is actually real. This article explores how seriousness can narrow awareness, reinforce rigid interpretations, and create a false sense of certainty, particularly in com...
From Applause to Atrocity: The Dangerous Simplicity of “Good Governments and Bad Ones”
Mar 28, 2026
120 min read
1 likes
171 views
How Narratives, Passivity and Moral Certainty Shape the Conditions for Tyranny, Through the Lens of the Authentic Sustainability Framework Introduced in the Book Sustainabilism We often speak about the world as if it is divided between good governments and bad ones, as if removing the latter would naturally lead to peace, order, and stability. This article challenges that assumption by examining a deeper and more uncomfortable reality. It explores how systems of power are not sustained by lea...
The Internet Is Not Neutral: Same Network, Different Rules
Mar 28, 2026
70 min read
No likes
184 views
Power, Vulnerability and Unequal Control in a Connected World We often speak about the internet as if it were neutral, as if it simply connects, informs, and empowers. Yet beneath that surface lies a system that can just as easily expose, coordinate, influence, and destabilise. The same infrastructure that allows a message to reach a loved one across the world can also carry signals that identify, locate, and act upon individuals in ways most people never see. In moments of crisis, this hi...
The New Low: The Tyranny of Being “Reasonable”
Mar 27, 2026
60 min read
1 likes
161 views
How Distorted Intention, Misplaced Tolerance, and Passive Forgiveness Enable Dysfunction and Why Vulnerability, Responsibility and Assertiveness Restore Integrity This article challenges a pattern that is often disguised as maturity but is, in reality, avoidance. It examines how people hide behind the language of tolerance, forgiveness, and “not escalating” while enabling behaviour that is misaligned, manipulative, or outright destructive. What appears as patience is often passivity. What...
The Order Of Care
Mar 25, 2026
25 min read
2 likes
151 views
How Misaligned Priorities Quietly Undermine Individuals, Organisations and Systems This article explores a fundamental yet often overlooked pattern across individuals, organisations, and systems: the misordering of care. It argues that failure is rarely the result of a lack of effort, intelligence, or intention, but rather a distortion in what is prioritised first. Drawing on the Being Framework and the Unified Ontology of Systemic Integrity, the article distinguishes between Care as a moo...
The Amnesia of Geopolitics
Mar 25, 2026
25 min read
No likes
237 views
Why China, Iran and the West cannot be understood through modern borders alone. This article challenges the short memory that dominates modern geopolitical thinking. Rather than treating China, Iran, and the West as recently emerged actors operating within a contemporary system, it reframes them as civilisations embedded in patterns that extend across millennia. By reconstructing the Eurasian system of roughly two thousand years ago, centred around the Han Dynasty, the Parthian Empire, the...
The Ontology of a Gambler
Mar 24, 2026
25 min read
2 likes
204 views
When Risk Becomes Identity and Life Is a Series of Bets with Short-Term Gains and Long-Term Pain This article explores the gambler not as someone who occasionally takes risks, but as a way of being. It argues that gambling, in its deeper sense, is not an activity but an existential orientation through which life is approached as a series of bets. Within this orientation, uncertainty is not held with awareness and responsibility, but pursued, amplified, and used as a means of resolving interna...
Taking Sides Is Earned
Mar 23, 2026
30 min read
2 likes
192 views
Why Premature Certainty Is Easy, Indefinite Openness Is Weak and Discernment Demands Both This article challenges a common misconception in contemporary discourse: that not taking sides reflects neutrality, passivity, or a lack of conviction. It argues instead that the refusal to take sides prematurely is a form of disciplined engagement with reality, grounded in epistemic humility and the commitment to avoid collapsing complexity before it has been sufficiently understood. Building on the...
An Open Letter to the Disleaders of the World
Mar 23, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
257 views
On Power Without Restraint, the Quiet Return of the Barbaric and the Responsibility We Can No Longer Avoid This open letter offers a philosophical reflection on a growing condition in contemporary leadership and public discourse, one that extends beyond any single figure, nation, or event. It introduces the concept of disleadership to describe the presence of authority without the depth, restraint, and responsibility that give leadership its legitimacy, and traces how this condition becomes e...
The Return of the Golden Calf
Mar 23, 2026
25 min read
1 likes
218 views
Exposure Without Seeing in an Age of Substitution What if the problem is not that reality is hidden, but that it is constantly visible and still not recognised? Across both the Bible and the Quran, an early account describes a people who move from domination toward autonomy, only to construct a new point of orientation with their own hands. This article does not approach that account as theology, but as a pattern. A pattern that did not remain in the past and is not confined to any one tradit...

Featured Articles

The Metacontent Gap
Mar 30, 2026
45 min read
1 likes
138 views
Why We Are No Longer Making Sense of the Same World This article introduces the idea of the Metacontent Gap, arguing that many of today’s misunderstandings, conflicts, and breakdowns are not primarily caused by differences in information, education, or intelligence, but by deeper differences in how people make sense of reality. It begins by highlighting a fundamental problem: despite unprecedented access to information, clarity has not increased. People look at the same situations yet ar...
Modulation vs Manipulation
Mar 30, 2026
45 min read
1 likes
136 views
The Missing Distinction in Governing and Economic Systems This piece introduces a fundamental distinction between modulation and manipulation, not as technical terms, but as different ways systems are sustained, distorted, or restored over time. It argues that all systems, whether personal, relational, economic, or societal, are in constant motion between integrity and disintegration. What determines their trajectory is not the absence of intervention, but the nature of that intervention. ...
The Tyranny of Seriousness
Mar 29, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
149 views
The Flying Bed and the Illusion of Significance in an Absurd World We often assume that taking something seriously brings us closer to truth. That weight signals depth, and intensity signals clarity. Yet the opposite may also be true. The more serious things become, the more easily we confuse what feels important with what is actually real. This article explores how seriousness can narrow awareness, reinforce rigid interpretations, and create a false sense of certainty, particularly in com...
From Applause to Atrocity: The Dangerous Simplicity of “Good Governments and Bad Ones”
Mar 28, 2026
120 min read
1 likes
171 views
How Narratives, Passivity and Moral Certainty Shape the Conditions for Tyranny, Through the Lens of the Authentic Sustainability Framework Introduced in the Book Sustainabilism We often speak about the world as if it is divided between good governments and bad ones, as if removing the latter would naturally lead to peace, order, and stability. This article challenges that assumption by examining a deeper and more uncomfortable reality. It explores how systems of power are not sustained by lea...
The Internet Is Not Neutral: Same Network, Different Rules
Mar 28, 2026
70 min read
No likes
184 views
Power, Vulnerability and Unequal Control in a Connected World We often speak about the internet as if it were neutral, as if it simply connects, informs, and empowers. Yet beneath that surface lies a system that can just as easily expose, coordinate, influence, and destabilise. The same infrastructure that allows a message to reach a loved one across the world can also carry signals that identify, locate, and act upon individuals in ways most people never see. In moments of crisis, this hi...
The New Low: The Tyranny of Being “Reasonable”
Mar 27, 2026
60 min read
1 likes
161 views
How Distorted Intention, Misplaced Tolerance, and Passive Forgiveness Enable Dysfunction and Why Vulnerability, Responsibility and Assertiveness Restore Integrity This article challenges a pattern that is often disguised as maturity but is, in reality, avoidance. It examines how people hide behind the language of tolerance, forgiveness, and “not escalating” while enabling behaviour that is misaligned, manipulative, or outright destructive. What appears as patience is often passivity. What...
The Order Of Care
Mar 25, 2026
25 min read
2 likes
151 views
How Misaligned Priorities Quietly Undermine Individuals, Organisations and Systems This article explores a fundamental yet often overlooked pattern across individuals, organisations, and systems: the misordering of care. It argues that failure is rarely the result of a lack of effort, intelligence, or intention, but rather a distortion in what is prioritised first. Drawing on the Being Framework and the Unified Ontology of Systemic Integrity, the article distinguishes between Care as a moo...
The Amnesia of Geopolitics
Mar 25, 2026
25 min read
No likes
237 views
Why China, Iran and the West cannot be understood through modern borders alone. This article challenges the short memory that dominates modern geopolitical thinking. Rather than treating China, Iran, and the West as recently emerged actors operating within a contemporary system, it reframes them as civilisations embedded in patterns that extend across millennia. By reconstructing the Eurasian system of roughly two thousand years ago, centred around the Han Dynasty, the Parthian Empire, the...
The Ontology of a Gambler
Mar 24, 2026
25 min read
2 likes
204 views
When Risk Becomes Identity and Life Is a Series of Bets with Short-Term Gains and Long-Term Pain This article explores the gambler not as someone who occasionally takes risks, but as a way of being. It argues that gambling, in its deeper sense, is not an activity but an existential orientation through which life is approached as a series of bets. Within this orientation, uncertainty is not held with awareness and responsibility, but pursued, amplified, and used as a means of resolving interna...
Taking Sides Is Earned
Mar 23, 2026
30 min read
2 likes
192 views
Why Premature Certainty Is Easy, Indefinite Openness Is Weak and Discernment Demands Both This article challenges a common misconception in contemporary discourse: that not taking sides reflects neutrality, passivity, or a lack of conviction. It argues instead that the refusal to take sides prematurely is a form of disciplined engagement with reality, grounded in epistemic humility and the commitment to avoid collapsing complexity before it has been sufficiently understood. Building on the...
An Open Letter to the Disleaders of the World
Mar 23, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
257 views
On Power Without Restraint, the Quiet Return of the Barbaric and the Responsibility We Can No Longer Avoid This open letter offers a philosophical reflection on a growing condition in contemporary leadership and public discourse, one that extends beyond any single figure, nation, or event. It introduces the concept of disleadership to describe the presence of authority without the depth, restraint, and responsibility that give leadership its legitimacy, and traces how this condition becomes e...
The Return of the Golden Calf
Mar 23, 2026
25 min read
1 likes
218 views
Exposure Without Seeing in an Age of Substitution What if the problem is not that reality is hidden, but that it is constantly visible and still not recognised? Across both the Bible and the Quran, an early account describes a people who move from domination toward autonomy, only to construct a new point of orientation with their own hands. This article does not approach that account as theology, but as a pattern. A pattern that did not remain in the past and is not confined to any one tradit...

All Articles

Most RecentMost Viewed
View All
Most RecentMost Viewed
The Metacontent Gap
Mar 30, 2026
45 min read
1 likes
138 views
Why We Are No Longer Making Sense of the Same World This article introduces the idea of the Metacontent Gap, arguing that many of today’s misunderstandings, conflicts, and breakdowns are not primarily caused by differences in information, education, or intelligence, but by deeper differences in how people make sense of reality. It begins by highlighting a fundamental problem: despite unprecedented access to information, clarity has not increased. People look at the same situations yet ar...
View All
Modulation vs Manipulation
Mar 30, 2026
45 min read
1 likes
136 views
The Missing Distinction in Governing and Economic Systems This piece introduces a fundamental distinction between modulation and manipulation, not as technical terms, but as different ways systems are sustained, distorted, or restored over time. It argues that all systems, whether personal, relational, economic, or societal, are in constant motion between integrity and disintegration. What determines their trajectory is not the absence of intervention, but the nature of that intervention. ...
The Tyranny of Seriousness
Mar 29, 2026
40 min read
1 likes
149 views
The Flying Bed and the Illusion of Significance in an Absurd World We often assume that taking something seriously brings us closer to truth. That weight signals depth, and intensity signals clarity. Yet the opposite may also be true. The more serious things become, the more easily we confuse what feels important with what is actually real. This article explores how seriousness can narrow awareness, reinforce rigid interpretations, and create a false sense of certainty, particularly in com...
From Applause to Atrocity: The Dangerous Simplicity of “Good Governments and Bad Ones”
Mar 28, 2026
120 min read
1 likes
171 views
How Narratives, Passivity and Moral Certainty Shape the Conditions for Tyranny, Through the Lens of the Authentic Sustainability Framework Introduced in the Book Sustainabilism We often speak about the world as if it is divided between good governments and bad ones, as if removing the latter would naturally lead to peace, order, and stability. This article challenges that assumption by examining a deeper and more uncomfortable reality. It explores how systems of power are not sustained by lea...
The Internet Is Not Neutral: Same Network, Different Rules
Mar 28, 2026
70 min read
No likes
184 views
Power, Vulnerability and Unequal Control in a Connected World We often speak about the internet as if it were neutral, as if it simply connects, informs, and empowers. Yet beneath that surface lies a system that can just as easily expose, coordinate, influence, and destabilise. The same infrastructure that allows a message to reach a loved one across the world can also carry signals that identify, locate, and act upon individuals in ways most people never see. In moments of crisis, this hi...
The New Low: The Tyranny of Being “Reasonable”
Mar 27, 2026
60 min read
1 likes
161 views
How Distorted Intention, Misplaced Tolerance, and Passive Forgiveness Enable Dysfunction and Why Vulnerability, Responsibility and Assertiveness Restore Integrity This article challenges a pattern that is often disguised as maturity but is, in reality, avoidance. It examines how people hide behind the language of tolerance, forgiveness, and “not escalating” while enabling behaviour that is misaligned, manipulative, or outright destructive. What appears as patience is often passivity. What...
What if they think I don’t know what I’m doing?
Mar 26, 2026
10 min read
No likes
45 views
When leadership visibility puts competence on display No one ever possesses complete knowledge. No one has perfect skills, perfect judgement, or perfect application. Competence develops over time through exposure, context, and experience. Learning deepens through practice, reflection, and increasing responsibility. Yet many leaders measure themselves against an imagined standard of complete competence as though legitimate authority requires already knowing enough, already thinking clearly ...
When Wealth Becomes a Way of Being
Mar 26, 2026
10 min read
1 likes
78 views
The hidden cost of leaders absorbing organisational value systems at work This article reframes wealth as something leaders do not just pursue, but gradually embody as a way of being. Leaders operate between two systems: their inherited understanding of wealth and the organisational definition of value shaped by performance, metrics, and visibility. Over time, this tension becomes internalised, creating a misalignment between the external economy of targets and outcomes, and the internal eco...
The Order Of Care
Mar 25, 2026
25 min read
2 likes
151 views
How Misaligned Priorities Quietly Undermine Individuals, Organisations and Systems This article explores a fundamental yet often overlooked pattern across individuals, organisations, and systems: the misordering of care. It argues that failure is rarely the result of a lack of effort, intelligence, or intention, but rather a distortion in what is prioritised first. Drawing on the Being Framework and the Unified Ontology of Systemic Integrity, the article distinguishes between Care as a moo...
The Amnesia of Geopolitics
Mar 25, 2026
25 min read
No likes
237 views
Why China, Iran and the West cannot be understood through modern borders alone. This article challenges the short memory that dominates modern geopolitical thinking. Rather than treating China, Iran, and the West as recently emerged actors operating within a contemporary system, it reframes them as civilisations embedded in patterns that extend across millennia. By reconstructing the Eurasian system of roughly two thousand years ago, centred around the Han Dynasty, the Parthian Empire, the...
The Ontology of a Gambler
Mar 24, 2026
25 min read
2 likes
204 views
When Risk Becomes Identity and Life Is a Series of Bets with Short-Term Gains and Long-Term Pain This article explores the gambler not as someone who occasionally takes risks, but as a way of being. It argues that gambling, in its deeper sense, is not an activity but an existential orientation through which life is approached as a series of bets. Within this orientation, uncertainty is not held with awareness and responsibility, but pursued, amplified, and used as a means of resolving interna...
When the Leader has had Enough
Mar 24, 2026
10 min read
3 likes
69 views
Disillusionment as a Turning Point - Not a Failure Leadership disillusionment is often mistaken for failure or burnout, yet it can signal a critical transition point in a leader’s development. This article explores what happens when a leader has had enough, when effort no longer restores meaning and old leadership strategies reach their limits. Rather than calling for withdrawal or resignation, it reframes disillusionment as an invitation to pause, let go of misplaced responsibility, and le...

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