top of page
Articles


Why Interactive Video Games Make Us Better People
If you steal money from a homeless man’s basket, to later discover he is the hiring manager for the company you’re interviewing with, you probably won’t get the job, and, of course, it’s not a very nice thing to do. But in a game, where you can step outside your own body while still shaping the world around you, things are different. You probably still won't get the job, but you gain the unique ability to see how that choice affects the way people perceive you, how it change
Jan 243 min read


The Silence That Followed Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
For decades, public recognition of Martin Luther King Jr. Day has been a presidential constant. When that recognition becomes delayed, conditional, or optional, it raises a deeper question about how power remembers and what it chooses to forget.
Jan 233 min read


Empathy Isn't Scarce. Attention is.
In the first days of January 2026, widespread protests erupted across Iran amid soaring inflation and a collapsing currency. Demonstrations that began in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar quickly spread to dozens of cities, with security forces responding with tear gas, live ammunition, and mass arrests. Rights groups reported that at least 34 protesters had been killed and more than 2,000 arrested within the first week of nationwide unrest. At the same time in the United States, protes
Jan 223 min read


When Lonely People Use AI
At first, AI wasn’t so dangerous. Students used it to edit essays, understand how to solve math problems, or as a no‑pay tutor. Working professionals saw it as a tool to speed up the mundane and boring parts of their jobs. Over time, though, things changed. People began consulting AI for deeper, more personal problems. There’s compelling evidence that AI can reduce the risk of loneliness, at least in the short term. But long‑term studies show that our brains are designed for
Jan 203 min read


Latest Developments in Current Human Rights Headlines
The world of human rights is always evolving. Every day, new stories emerge that challenge our understanding of justice, equality, and freedom. I find myself drawn to these stories, not just as a witness but as someone who wants to understand the deeper currents shaping our societies. Today, I want to share some of the latest developments in current human rights headlines that have caught my attention. These stories reveal both progress and setbacks, reminding us that the fig
Jan 194 min read


Democracy Isn't Dying. It's Being Diluted.
How endless debate weakens rights without removing them Public conversations about democratic decline often rely on dramatic imagery. The fall of institutions. The suspension of elections. Authoritarian takeovers. These images are not wrong, but they are incomplete. Democratic erosion rarely arrives as collapse. More often, it arrives as dilution. Rights are not typically abolished outright. They are discussed. Reconsidered. Reframed. Narrowed. Qualified. Deferred. Each step
Jan 172 min read


Why Inclusion Feels Like a Threat
Inclusion is often framed as a moral demand. A request for agreement, endorsement, or ideological alignment. This framing makes inclusion easy to reject. People respond by insisting they cannot support something that conflicts with their values, beliefs, or worldview. The disagreement is cast as philosophical, ethical, or religious. But this framing misunderstands what inclusion actually does. Inclusion does not demand approval. It does not require agreement. It does not ask
Jan 163 min read


The Fairness Question: What Transgender Athletes Reveal About How We Define Equality.
As the Supreme Court prepares to rule on transgender athlete bans, America confronts a collision between competing visions of justice. On January 13, 2026, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in two cases that distill one of the most contentious questions in contemporary American law: What does fairness mean when fundamental rights collide? The cases involve two transgender athletes Lindsay Hecox, a 24-year-old seeking to compete on Boise State's women's track team, and B.P
Jan 134 min read


Preference: The People's Favorite Shield for Prejudice.
Often, exclusion is defended with a phrase that sounds neutral enough to escape scrutiny: “It’s just not my preference.” This framing is common in discussions around sexuality, gender, race, disability, and other social identities. People insist that their discomfort is personal, not political. That their exclusion of entire groups is a matter of taste rather than judgment. But when “preference” is used to dismiss people rather than objects, it stops functioning as a benign d
Jan 92 min read


The Influence of Political Journalism on Society
Every day, we encounter news that shapes how we see the world. Politics, laws, and human rights are often at the heart of these stories. But have you ever stopped to think about the role of political journalism in all this? How does it affect our understanding, our decisions, and even our society as a whole? I want to take you on a reflective journey to explore this influence. Together, we will uncover the power and responsibility that comes with reporting on politics. The In
Jan 94 min read


Nicolás Maduro: From Chávez's Heir to the End of an Era
Nicolás Maduro Moros, born on November 23, 1962, in a working-class neighborhood of Caracas, rose from a bus driver and trade union leader to become one of the most polarizing figures in modern Latin American politics. A devoted follower of Hugo Chávez, Maduro served as foreign minister and vice president before succeeding his mentor as president of Venezuela in 2013. His 12-year rule, marked by deepening authoritarianism, economic catastrophe, mass migration, and internation
Jan 43 min read


On Minimalism and the Disappearance of Personality
Minimalism began as a refusal. It was a rejection of excess, noise, and overconsumption. It offered clarity where there was clutter and intention where there was chaos. At its best, minimalism was not about appearance at all. It was about choice. Somewhere along the way, that choice hardened into an expectation. Today, minimalism no longer operates as a personal philosophy. It functions as a visual norm. Bright colors recede. Experimentation quiets. Personality is edited down
Dec 30, 20253 min read


The Cost of Certainty in a World That Demands Nuance.
One of the defining habits of modern discourse is our rush to certainty. We encounter a single statement, a single action, or a single moment, and from it we construct an entire identity. A person becomes their worst sentence. A life becomes a headline. Complexity is flattened into a label, and nuance is treated not as insight but as evasion. This tendency is not accidental. Certainty feels efficient. It offers moral clarity without the burden of understanding. But it comes a
Dec 30, 20253 min read


The Humanitarian Catastrophe in Sudan: A Crisis on the Edge of of Famine.
Sudan is living through one of the gravest humanitarian crises of this decade, and it is unfolding largely beyond the attention of the global public. Since fighting erupted between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces in April 2023, the country has been pushed into a state of prolonged collapse. What began as a power struggle has metastasized into mass displacement, famine conditions, and the near total breakdown of civilian life. According to the United Nat
Dec 30, 20253 min read


The Great Firing: Trump’s War on Bureaucracy, or Just Bureaucracy as War?
Trump is back, and this time he’s not tweeting, he’s firing. Thousands of federal employees, gone overnight, the largest reduction in force in modern U.S. history. Officially, it’s about “efficiency.” Unofficially, it’s about power. The headlines call it a “restructuring,” but the language feels familiar; cleansing, draining, cutting. Words that sound managerial but echo something darker. The president who once promised to “drain the swamp” has finally pulled the plug, and Wa
Oct 12, 20252 min read


Kamala Harris Has Entered Her "What's Really Going on?" Era
She’s not running, she’s reflecting and maybe reminding us that politics was never supposed to be this absurd. Harris is back, and she’s tired of pretending otherwise. At a Los Angeles book event, she leaned into the mic and dropped what might be the most relatable line of her career: “These mothaf–kas are crazy.” The crowd roared. Twitter exploded. For a moment, America agreed on something: Kamala said what everyone was already thinking. The moment was funny, but it was als
Oct 12, 20252 min read
bottom of page