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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

When Systems Refuse to Mature
When Systems Refuse to Mature
Dec 29, 2025
20 min read
1 likes
106 views
Authority, Compliance, Conformity and Adult Agency This article uses the archetype of Neverland to explore a mode of being in which growth is indefinitely postponed while authority quietly consolidates. Moving beyond childhood fantasy, Neverland is reframed as a psychological and ontological condition where time is suspended, consequence is deferred, and systems are structured to preserve motion without maturation. Through a phenomenological reading of Peter Pan, the Lost Boys, Tinker Bell...
Sustainabilism and the Shadow of Control
Dec 28, 2025
20 min read
1 likes
152 views
Why ESG, Global Institutions, and Asset Managers Are Less Conspiratorial and More Systemic Than We Admit This article offers a pre-ideological inquiry into ESG, global institutions, and the narratives that surround them, not as conspiracies or moral projects, but as emergent products of collective sense-making. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse, the Being Framework, and the critique developed in Sustainabilism, it examines how dominant metacontent, collective shadow, and inauthenticity giv...
When Law Loses Its Anchor
Dec 28, 2025
20 min read
No likes
161 views
How Force Accelerates Disobedience This article examines the gradual decay of authority when law, leadership, or governance becomes dependent on force rather than meaning. Drawing on patterns observed in highly coercive systems, it argues that order does not function through compulsion. Force remains effective only while authority retains symbolic and moral legitimacy. The analysis traces a clear arc. Authority begins as a meaning-bearing structure that people internalise. As that meaning ...
The Sanity Gap in Sustainability
Dec 27, 2025
55 min read
No likes
183 views
Recreational Hunting: Ecological Responsibility, Hobby or ‘Moralised’ Reaction This article examines recreational hunting in Australia as a case study in sense-making, authenticity, and sustainability. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse and the Nested Theory of Sense-Making, it analyses how positions on complex environmental issues are formed, and how incomplete conceptions of reality can harden into ethical certainty while producing systemic harm. The discussion situates recreationa...
The Symmetry of Breakdown
Dec 26, 2025
50 min read
No likes
215 views
How Extremism and Authoritarian Overreaction Lose Reality from Both Ends This article examines extremism and institutional overreaction not as political failures, but as manifestations of a deeper civilisational breakdown in sense-making, meaning-making, decision-making, and conduct. Rather than focusing on perpetrators, ideologies, or instruments, it looks beneath surface events to the metacontent structures that shape how reality is interpreted, decisions are justified, and actions are t...
Authentic Sustainability and the Dynamics of Systemic Disintegration
Dec 24, 2025
40 min read
1 likes
296 views
Why Control-Based Endurance Undermines Systemic Integrity and Erodes Long-Term Coherence, Illustrated Through a Contemporary Context This article draws on the conceptual foundations developed in Ashkan Tashvir’s recent book Sustainabilism, where frameworks such as the distinction between Authentic Sustainability and Sustainabilism, the Systemic Subversion Cycle, and the Reconstructive Ontology of Sustainability are articulated as part of a broader civilisational inquiry into how systems end...
When Systems Panic: From Shock to Policy
Dec 23, 2025
60 min read
1 likes
348 views
The Architecture Beneath Decisions A case study in sense-making, governance under pressure and what the Bondi response reveals about decision quality Public crises often expose more than immediate threats. They reveal how decisions are made, how meaning is constructed, and whether systems respond with coherence or collapse. Using the New South Wales firearms legislation following the Bondi attack as a case study, this article contextualises key elements of Ashkan Tashvir’s broader body ...
Freedom of Speech Is Not a Luxury
Dec 20, 2025
15 min read
1 likes
422 views
Why Australia Needs Constitutional Protection, Not Managerial Permission Australia is widely assumed to be a free society, yet it lacks explicit constitutional protection for freedom of speech. Unlike many comparable democracies, Australians rely on an implied freedom of political communication that protects the functioning of government rather than recognising free expression as a civic right held by citizens. This structural gap was recently acknowledged by NSW Premier Chris Minns, who s...
At the Verge of Decision Without Understanding
Dec 19, 2025
30 min read
No likes
371 views
Why authentic sense-making must come before opinion, policy and law – a firearms case study in abstraction and reality Forming an opinion, let alone designing policy or creating law, requires more than reaction, symbolism, or moral certainty. It requires sense-making: the ability to understand what things are, how they function, and how they operate within real systems. This is a central theme in Ashkan Tashvir’s work, particularly in his book Metacontent, where he explores how distort...
When Tragedy Tests a Society
Dec 18, 2025
50 min read
1 likes
380 views
Let Us Not Allow the Shadows of the Attackers to Define Who We Are, How We Live, or the Sustainable Society We Are Shaping In the aftermath of tragedy, societies are tested not only by what has occurred but by how they make sense of it. This article argues that the most consequential responses to violence are rarely the actions themselves, but the layers of interpretation and intention that take form long before policy or law enters the frame. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse and the B...
When We Unite
Dec 15, 2025
20 min read
6 likes
262 views
GHEST: A Charter for Human Coherence The Galley for Human Empowerment and Sustainable Transformation For many years, Ashkan Tashvir’s body of work has explored how human beings make sense of reality, how meaning is formed, and how integrity or its absence shapes personal lives, institutions, and societies. It has examined why well-intentioned systems drift toward dysfunction, why progress without orientation collapses into confusion, and why sustainability cannot be achieved without cohe...
When Violence Surfaces
Dec 15, 2025
15 min read
2 likes
233 views
Why Safety Fails as Meaning and Leadership Collapse When violence erupts, societies instinctively reach for control. More security. Faster laws. Tighter surveillance. Clear enemies. Decisive action. Yet despite ever-expanding systems of protection, the sense of safety continues to erode. This article explores why. Rather than treating violence as an isolated act or a failure of enforcement, it examines violence as a symptom of deeper breakdowns in Being, sense-making, meaning-making, and l...

Featured Articles

When Systems Refuse to Mature
Dec 29, 2025
20 min read
1 likes
106 views
Authority, Compliance, Conformity and Adult Agency This article uses the archetype of Neverland to explore a mode of being in which growth is indefinitely postponed while authority quietly consolidates. Moving beyond childhood fantasy, Neverland is reframed as a psychological and ontological condition where time is suspended, consequence is deferred, and systems are structured to preserve motion without maturation. Through a phenomenological reading of Peter Pan, the Lost Boys, Tinker Bell...
Sustainabilism and the Shadow of Control
Dec 28, 2025
20 min read
1 likes
152 views
Why ESG, Global Institutions, and Asset Managers Are Less Conspiratorial and More Systemic Than We Admit This article offers a pre-ideological inquiry into ESG, global institutions, and the narratives that surround them, not as conspiracies or moral projects, but as emergent products of collective sense-making. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse, the Being Framework, and the critique developed in Sustainabilism, it examines how dominant metacontent, collective shadow, and inauthenticity giv...
When Law Loses Its Anchor
Dec 28, 2025
20 min read
No likes
161 views
How Force Accelerates Disobedience This article examines the gradual decay of authority when law, leadership, or governance becomes dependent on force rather than meaning. Drawing on patterns observed in highly coercive systems, it argues that order does not function through compulsion. Force remains effective only while authority retains symbolic and moral legitimacy. The analysis traces a clear arc. Authority begins as a meaning-bearing structure that people internalise. As that meaning ...
The Sanity Gap in Sustainability
Dec 27, 2025
55 min read
No likes
183 views
Recreational Hunting: Ecological Responsibility, Hobby or ‘Moralised’ Reaction This article examines recreational hunting in Australia as a case study in sense-making, authenticity, and sustainability. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse and the Nested Theory of Sense-Making, it analyses how positions on complex environmental issues are formed, and how incomplete conceptions of reality can harden into ethical certainty while producing systemic harm. The discussion situates recreationa...
The Symmetry of Breakdown
Dec 26, 2025
50 min read
No likes
215 views
How Extremism and Authoritarian Overreaction Lose Reality from Both Ends This article examines extremism and institutional overreaction not as political failures, but as manifestations of a deeper civilisational breakdown in sense-making, meaning-making, decision-making, and conduct. Rather than focusing on perpetrators, ideologies, or instruments, it looks beneath surface events to the metacontent structures that shape how reality is interpreted, decisions are justified, and actions are t...
Authentic Sustainability and the Dynamics of Systemic Disintegration
Dec 24, 2025
40 min read
1 likes
296 views
Why Control-Based Endurance Undermines Systemic Integrity and Erodes Long-Term Coherence, Illustrated Through a Contemporary Context This article draws on the conceptual foundations developed in Ashkan Tashvir’s recent book Sustainabilism, where frameworks such as the distinction between Authentic Sustainability and Sustainabilism, the Systemic Subversion Cycle, and the Reconstructive Ontology of Sustainability are articulated as part of a broader civilisational inquiry into how systems end...
When Systems Panic: From Shock to Policy
Dec 23, 2025
60 min read
1 likes
348 views
The Architecture Beneath Decisions A case study in sense-making, governance under pressure and what the Bondi response reveals about decision quality Public crises often expose more than immediate threats. They reveal how decisions are made, how meaning is constructed, and whether systems respond with coherence or collapse. Using the New South Wales firearms legislation following the Bondi attack as a case study, this article contextualises key elements of Ashkan Tashvir’s broader body ...
Freedom of Speech Is Not a Luxury
Dec 20, 2025
15 min read
1 likes
422 views
Why Australia Needs Constitutional Protection, Not Managerial Permission Australia is widely assumed to be a free society, yet it lacks explicit constitutional protection for freedom of speech. Unlike many comparable democracies, Australians rely on an implied freedom of political communication that protects the functioning of government rather than recognising free expression as a civic right held by citizens. This structural gap was recently acknowledged by NSW Premier Chris Minns, who s...
At the Verge of Decision Without Understanding
Dec 19, 2025
30 min read
No likes
371 views
Why authentic sense-making must come before opinion, policy and law – a firearms case study in abstraction and reality Forming an opinion, let alone designing policy or creating law, requires more than reaction, symbolism, or moral certainty. It requires sense-making: the ability to understand what things are, how they function, and how they operate within real systems. This is a central theme in Ashkan Tashvir’s work, particularly in his book Metacontent, where he explores how distort...
When Tragedy Tests a Society
Dec 18, 2025
50 min read
1 likes
380 views
Let Us Not Allow the Shadows of the Attackers to Define Who We Are, How We Live, or the Sustainable Society We Are Shaping In the aftermath of tragedy, societies are tested not only by what has occurred but by how they make sense of it. This article argues that the most consequential responses to violence are rarely the actions themselves, but the layers of interpretation and intention that take form long before policy or law enters the frame. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse and the B...
When We Unite
Dec 15, 2025
20 min read
6 likes
262 views
GHEST: A Charter for Human Coherence The Galley for Human Empowerment and Sustainable Transformation For many years, Ashkan Tashvir’s body of work has explored how human beings make sense of reality, how meaning is formed, and how integrity or its absence shapes personal lives, institutions, and societies. It has examined why well-intentioned systems drift toward dysfunction, why progress without orientation collapses into confusion, and why sustainability cannot be achieved without cohe...
When Violence Surfaces
Dec 15, 2025
15 min read
2 likes
233 views
Why Safety Fails as Meaning and Leadership Collapse When violence erupts, societies instinctively reach for control. More security. Faster laws. Tighter surveillance. Clear enemies. Decisive action. Yet despite ever-expanding systems of protection, the sense of safety continues to erode. This article explores why. Rather than treating violence as an isolated act or a failure of enforcement, it examines violence as a symptom of deeper breakdowns in Being, sense-making, meaning-making, and l...

All Articles

Most RecentMost Viewed
View All
Most RecentMost Viewed
When Systems Refuse to Mature
Dec 29, 2025
20 min read
1 likes
106 views
Authority, Compliance, Conformity and Adult Agency This article uses the archetype of Neverland to explore a mode of being in which growth is indefinitely postponed while authority quietly consolidates. Moving beyond childhood fantasy, Neverland is reframed as a psychological and ontological condition where time is suspended, consequence is deferred, and systems are structured to preserve motion without maturation. Through a phenomenological reading of Peter Pan, the Lost Boys, Tinker Bell...
View All
When Law Loses Its Anchor
Dec 28, 2025
20 min read
No likes
161 views
How Force Accelerates Disobedience This article examines the gradual decay of authority when law, leadership, or governance becomes dependent on force rather than meaning. Drawing on patterns observed in highly coercive systems, it argues that order does not function through compulsion. Force remains effective only while authority retains symbolic and moral legitimacy. The analysis traces a clear arc. Authority begins as a meaning-bearing structure that people internalise. As that meaning ...
Sustainabilism and the Shadow of Control
Dec 28, 2025
20 min read
1 likes
152 views
Why ESG, Global Institutions, and Asset Managers Are Less Conspiratorial and More Systemic Than We Admit This article offers a pre-ideological inquiry into ESG, global institutions, and the narratives that surround them, not as conspiracies or moral projects, but as emergent products of collective sense-making. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse, the Being Framework, and the critique developed in Sustainabilism, it examines how dominant metacontent, collective shadow, and inauthenticity giv...
The Sanity Gap in Sustainability
Dec 27, 2025
55 min read
No likes
183 views
Recreational Hunting: Ecological Responsibility, Hobby or ‘Moralised’ Reaction This article examines recreational hunting in Australia as a case study in sense-making, authenticity, and sustainability. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse and the Nested Theory of Sense-Making, it analyses how positions on complex environmental issues are formed, and how incomplete conceptions of reality can harden into ethical certainty while producing systemic harm. The discussion situates recreationa...
The Symmetry of Breakdown
Dec 26, 2025
50 min read
No likes
215 views
How Extremism and Authoritarian Overreaction Lose Reality from Both Ends This article examines extremism and institutional overreaction not as political failures, but as manifestations of a deeper civilisational breakdown in sense-making, meaning-making, decision-making, and conduct. Rather than focusing on perpetrators, ideologies, or instruments, it looks beneath surface events to the metacontent structures that shape how reality is interpreted, decisions are justified, and actions are t...
Authentic Sustainability and the Dynamics of Systemic Disintegration
Dec 24, 2025
40 min read
1 likes
296 views
Why Control-Based Endurance Undermines Systemic Integrity and Erodes Long-Term Coherence, Illustrated Through a Contemporary Context This article draws on the conceptual foundations developed in Ashkan Tashvir’s recent book Sustainabilism, where frameworks such as the distinction between Authentic Sustainability and Sustainabilism, the Systemic Subversion Cycle, and the Reconstructive Ontology of Sustainability are articulated as part of a broader civilisational inquiry into how systems end...
When Systems Panic: From Shock to Policy
Dec 23, 2025
60 min read
1 likes
348 views
The Architecture Beneath Decisions A case study in sense-making, governance under pressure and what the Bondi response reveals about decision quality Public crises often expose more than immediate threats. They reveal how decisions are made, how meaning is constructed, and whether systems respond with coherence or collapse. Using the New South Wales firearms legislation following the Bondi attack as a case study, this article contextualises key elements of Ashkan Tashvir’s broader body ...
Freedom of Speech Is Not a Luxury
Dec 20, 2025
15 min read
1 likes
422 views
Why Australia Needs Constitutional Protection, Not Managerial Permission Australia is widely assumed to be a free society, yet it lacks explicit constitutional protection for freedom of speech. Unlike many comparable democracies, Australians rely on an implied freedom of political communication that protects the functioning of government rather than recognising free expression as a civic right held by citizens. This structural gap was recently acknowledged by NSW Premier Chris Minns, who s...
At the Verge of Decision Without Understanding
Dec 19, 2025
30 min read
No likes
371 views
Why authentic sense-making must come before opinion, policy and law – a firearms case study in abstraction and reality Forming an opinion, let alone designing policy or creating law, requires more than reaction, symbolism, or moral certainty. It requires sense-making: the ability to understand what things are, how they function, and how they operate within real systems. This is a central theme in Ashkan Tashvir’s work, particularly in his book Metacontent, where he explores how distort...
When Tragedy Tests a Society
Dec 18, 2025
50 min read
1 likes
380 views
Let Us Not Allow the Shadows of the Attackers to Define Who We Are, How We Live, or the Sustainable Society We Are Shaping In the aftermath of tragedy, societies are tested not only by what has occurred but by how they make sense of it. This article argues that the most consequential responses to violence are rarely the actions themselves, but the layers of interpretation and intention that take form long before policy or law enters the frame. Drawing on the Metacontent Discourse and the B...
Which One is ‘Jihad’ and Why it Matters
Dec 16, 2025
60 min read
2 likes
378 views
Meaning Making, Being and the Social Cohesion of a Sustainable Society This article examines how human actions come to serve either life or destruction, using the Bondi Beach attack as a concrete point of departure. It contrasts two radically different responses to risk and sacrifice that are often spoken of using the same moral language, yet arise from opposing intentions and forms of meaning-making. One act placed a life at risk to protect others. The other inflicted violence on innocent pe...
When Violence Surfaces
Dec 15, 2025
15 min read
2 likes
233 views
Why Safety Fails as Meaning and Leadership Collapse When violence erupts, societies instinctively reach for control. More security. Faster laws. Tighter surveillance. Clear enemies. Decisive action. Yet despite ever-expanding systems of protection, the sense of safety continues to erode. This article explores why. Rather than treating violence as an isolated act or a failure of enforcement, it examines violence as a symptom of deeper breakdowns in Being, sense-making, meaning-making, and l...

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