Wednesday, 27 May 2026

"The desperation money brings out of people creates the viciousness you see every day. A viciousness that will make you sell out your own countryman because you survived and they didn't. A society built on the idea of eating itself alive is unsustainable".

What you’re describing is a pattern that shows up repeatedly in societies under prolonged economic pressure: scarcity changes social behavior. When people feel insecure enough — about housing, work, healthcare, status, even basic survival — cooperation often gives way to competition, and competition can harden into cruelty.

There’s a long tradition of thinkers arguing exactly what you’re saying:

  • that systems organized around permanent scarcity incentivize betrayal over solidarity,
  • that survival pressure narrows people’s moral horizons,
  • and that societies become unstable when people are rewarded for exploiting one another rather than building trust.

At the same time, desperation doesn’t automatically make people vicious. Crises also produce mutual aid, unions, communities protecting each other, families sharing resources, workers striking together, neighbors helping neighbors. Human behavior under pressure tends to amplify whatever structures and incentives already dominate.

A system that constantly tells people:

“If you fall, nobody catches you — and if someone else falls, that’s your opportunity,”

will predictably produce fear, cynicism, and opportunism.

And you’re right that this can become self-consuming. When institutions lose legitimacy and people stop seeing each other as part of a shared social project, the social fabric frays:

  • trust collapses,
  • public life becomes transactional,
  • politics becomes tribal,
  • and people start treating one another as rivals rather than compatriots.

Historically, societies become unstable when too many people feel simultaneously disposable and trapped. That doesn’t guarantee collapse, but it does create conditions where anger, resentment, and fragmentation spread very quickly.

The difficult question is what replaces that dynamic. Sustainable societies usually depend on some balance between competition and solidarity — enough individual incentive to innovate and strive, but enough collective protection that survival itself isn’t weaponized against people.

Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Marx's central claim was that the most important division in society is between classes defined by their relationship to production—owners of capital and workers. He tended to see political and cultural ideas as rooted in material economic arrangements.

So if presented with arguments about pronouns, representation, diversity training, offensive speech, or symbolic inclusion, he might ask:

Has this changed who controls capital, workplaces, housing, land, and productive resources?

If the answer was largely no, he might regard much of the debate as secondary to the fundamental economic structure.

2. He might criticize both sides of the culture war

Marx was often dismissive of political movements that he thought distracted from class struggle.

He might criticize some progressive activists for focusing on symbolic recognition and representation while leaving capitalist economic relations intact. For example, a corporation promoting diversity while pursuing profit maximization would likely strike him as a contradiction.

But he might also criticize anti-woke conservatives if their politics defended existing economic hierarchies while attacking only cultural progressivism. From a Marxian perspective, fighting over culture while preserving capitalist class relations could still miss the main issue.

3. He would probably be skeptical of corporate progressivism

Many Marxists today argue that large corporations can easily adopt progressive language because it often does not threaten ownership structures or profit incentives.

Marx might find it unsurprising that major businesses can champion diversity initiatives while remaining capitalist enterprises. He could interpret this as the system adapting ideologically without changing its economic foundations.

4. He would likely see identity as real, but not primary

Marx certainly recognized national, religious, and ethnic divisions. However, he generally believed class interests were more fundamental and that capitalism often benefits when workers are divided against one another.

He might therefore worry that intense focus on racial, gender, or other identities can fragment solidarity among workers who share economic interests.

5. He might be surprised by modern affluent societies

One thing worth noting is that Marx made predictions that did not fully materialize as expected. Many capitalist countries developed large middle classes, welfare states, labor protections, and rising living standards. He would likely have to revise parts of his analysis to account for these developments.

What different Marxists say today

Marx's intellectual descendants disagree sharply:

  • Some Marxists argue that race, gender, and sexuality are inseparable from class and that social justice movements are important parts of broader struggles against oppression.
  • Others argue that contemporary identity politics has displaced class politics and weakened labor-based movements.
  • Still others try to combine both approaches.

So Marx himself would probably not neatly fit either the modern "woke" or "anti-woke" camp. His first instinct would likely be to step outside the cultural argument and ask:

How does this relate to class power, ownership, labor, and economic interests?

That question would probably be where he started any analysis of the current debate.

How does this relate to class power, ownership, labor, and economic interests?

A Marxian analysis would start from the assumption that culture and politics are not independent of economics. The question would not be whether people's beliefs are sincere, but how those beliefs interact with material interests and social structures.

Here are several ways Marxists have connected contemporary culture-war issues to class, ownership, labor, and economic interests:

Elite institutions and symbolic reform

One argument is that many modern institutions—large corporations, universities, professional organizations, media companies—have embraced forms of progressive language and diversity initiatives because these reforms are relatively inexpensive compared with redistributing wealth or power.

For example:

  • A company can diversify its executive team without changing who owns the company.
  • A university can revise language policies without reducing tuition costs.
  • A corporation can promote social causes while opposing unionization.

A Marxist critic might say these measures address representation within the existing hierarchy rather than the hierarchy itself.

Class composition of modern activism

Many Marxists observe that much contemporary activism comes disproportionately from educated professionals rather than industrial workers.

In Marx's time, the central political subject was the factory worker. Today, much political discourse is shaped by:

  • academics,
  • journalists,
  • HR professionals,
  • consultants,
  • managers,
  • knowledge workers.

Some Marxists argue that these groups have different interests from wage laborers in manufacturing, logistics, construction, or service industries. As a result, political priorities may shift from wages and working conditions toward language, representation, credentials, and institutional norms.

Fragmentation versus solidarity

A traditional Marxist concern is whether workers see themselves as members of a common economic class.

If political identities become increasingly organized around race, gender, religion, nationality, or sexuality, some Marxists worry that workers may identify less with one another economically.

The classic Marxist question would be:

Does this strengthen collective bargaining power against employers, or does it divide people who otherwise share economic interests?

Not all Marxists answer this the same way. Some argue that addressing racial or gender inequalities is necessary for genuine worker solidarity. Others think identity-based politics often fragments class movements.

Corporate incentives

Marx viewed capitalism as highly adaptable.

A modern Marxist might note that many large firms publicly support progressive social causes while continuing to pursue profit, cost reduction, automation, outsourcing, and shareholder returns.

From that perspective, a company may welcome debates that:

  • improve its public image,
  • attract talented employees,
  • reduce legal risk,
  • expand markets,

without threatening ownership or profitability.

The point is not necessarily that executives are acting cynically; rather, Marx would ask whether the institution's economic incentives remain unchanged.

Why culture wars persist

A Marxist explanation for the intensity of culture-war politics is that many advanced economies have experienced:

  • stagnant wages for some workers,
  • housing affordability problems,
  • rising inequality,
  • precarious employment,
  • declining union membership.

Yet political energy is often directed toward cultural disputes.

Some Marxists would argue that cultural conflict can become the dominant political battlefield precisely when class conflict is weak or poorly organized. People still experience frustration and insecurity, but those feelings become expressed through disputes about identity, values, and status rather than ownership and labor relations.

The strongest Marxian question

If Marx were examining a controversial social issue today, he would likely keep returning to a simple set of questions:

  • Who owns productive assets?
  • Who works for wages?
  • Who captures the economic surplus?
  • How are workers organized or divided?
  • Which groups gain or lose material power?

Whether the topic was DEI programs, anti-woke politics, immigration, gender debates, or free speech controversies, he would probably judge their significance partly by whether they altered those underlying relationships.

This doesn't mean Marx would dismiss cultural issues as unreal. Rather, he would tend to ask whether they are causes of deeper social arrangements, symptoms of them, or ways of managing conflicts that arise from them. His suspicion would be that many apparently cultural battles are ultimately connected to struggles over status, resources, institutions, and power.

That's a serious and well-developed critique, and it's one that many sociologists, criminologists, philosophers, and legal theorists have made.

Both Johan Galtung and Robert Sapolsky challenge frameworks that explain harm primarily through the actions of isolated individuals.

Galtung's concept of structural violence is particularly relevant. His argument was that people can be injured, disabled, or killed by social arrangements even when no individual is directly attacking them. If a social system predictably produces malnutrition, untreated illness, preventable mortality, or radically shortened life expectancy, then the structure itself is causing harm. The absence of a visible perpetrator does not eliminate the causal relationship.

Sapolsky's work makes a somewhat different but complementary point. In Behave, he emphasizes how behavior emerges from layers of causation—biology, development, social environment, culture, institutions, and history. That perspective tends to undermine simple narratives in which a single autonomous individual is solely responsible for outcomes. Human actions are embedded in systems.

From those perspectives, one might argue:

If institutions, incentives, funding structures, and policy choices predictably generate premature deaths, then focusing exclusively on individual actors misses a substantial part of the causal story.

That criticism has considerable force.

However, legal systems were not designed primarily to identify every causal factor in a social outcome. They were designed for somewhat different purposes:

  • assigning responsibility,
  • protecting procedural fairness,
  • limiting state punishment,
  • providing predictable rules,
  • avoiding punishment based on diffuse collective blame.

As a result, criminal law often asks:

Who can be proven responsible beyond a reasonable doubt?

rather than:

What social structure produced this outcome?

Those are different questions.

Many scholars have argued that this creates a mismatch between social causation and legal causation. A sociologist may conclude that a housing system, labor market, healthcare regime, or mental-health policy is producing excess mortality. A criminal court may respond that no particular defendant can be shown to have committed homicide.

That does not necessarily mean the sociologist is wrong. It means the legal framework is optimized for attributing responsibility to specific persons or entities rather than diagnosing complex systems.

Critics sometimes summarize the issue this way:

  • Social science asks: What caused the harm?
  • Criminal law asks: Who can be punished for it?

Those inquiries overlap, but they are not identical.

That said, legal systems have gradually developed some tools for addressing systemic harms:

  • corporate criminal liability,
  • public-law remedies,
  • human-rights litigation,
  • discrimination law,
  • regulatory enforcement,
  • international criminal law,
  • public inquiries and commissions.

These mechanisms reflect recognition that important harms can arise from organizations and institutions rather than lone individuals.

The debate you are pointing to is: Should responsibility track actual causal influence, even when that influence is distributed across institutions and systems, or should responsibility be limited to identifiable actors whose conduct can be individually proven?

Galtung's work tends strongly toward the first position. Traditional criminal law tends strongly toward the second. Much contemporary legal and social theory is, in one way or another, grappling with the tension between them.


The government of Nazi Germany was not merely viewed as politically objectionable after the war; major parts of its leadership and state apparatus were found responsible for crimes under international law.

After World War II, the Nuremberg Trials prosecuted leading Nazi officials for:

  • crimes against peace,
  • war crimes,
  • crimes against humanity,
  • participation in criminal organizations.

Importantly for your broader question, the prosecutions were not limited to individuals who personally killed someone. The tribunal recognized that large bureaucratic and governmental systems could be used to commit crimes on a massive scale.

Some Nazi organizations were declared criminal organizations, including parts of:

  • the SS,
  • the Gestapo,
  • the leadership corps of the Nazi Party.

The reasoning was that these institutions were integral to systematic persecution, deportation, enslavement, and murder.

However, there is an important distinction relevant to the issues you've been raising:

The Nazi regime was not judged criminal simply because its policies produced suffering or premature deaths. The evidence showed deliberate persecution, mass murder, extermination programs, deportations, and other intentional crimes. In many instances there was explicit documentary evidence of planning, orders, and implementation.

That is why international law developed concepts such as:

  • genocide,
  • crimes against humanity,
  • war crimes,
  • joint criminal enterprise,
  • command responsibility.

These doctrines allow responsibility to extend beyond the person who physically commits an act and reach leaders, planners, administrators, and organizations involved in systematic criminal conduct.

In a sense, your concern about the law's focus on individuals is one reason international criminal law evolved. The architects of Nuremberg recognized that modern states can cause enormous harm through bureaucracies and institutions, not only through isolated individuals.

At the same time, Nuremberg did not eliminate the requirement of culpability. Prosecutors still had to show that leaders and organizations knowingly participated in criminal programs. The tribunal did not simply conclude:

Many people died under this government; therefore the government was criminal.

Rather, it concluded that specific state policies involved deliberate persecution, aggression, enslavement, deportation, and mass killing.

Sunday, 24 May 2026

To understand how transactional models and quid pro quo relate to Kantian ethics, we have to look at Immanuel Kant’s fundamental distinction between doing something for a strategic reason versus doing something because it is inherently right.

In Kant’s philosophy, transactional systems and quid pro quo exchanges are the absolute antithesis of true morality. They reduce human beings to mere tools and strip actions of any genuine ethical value.

Here is exactly how these concepts clash with, and illuminate, Kantian duty.

1. The Hypothetical vs. The Categorical Imperative

Kant split the rules we live by into two categories. Transactional logic lives entirely in the first; Kantian duty lives entirely in the second.

The Transactional Rule: The Hypothetical Imperative

A hypothetical imperative is a conditional command. It takes the form: "If you want X, you must do Y."

  • This is the exact definition of quid pro quo.

  • Example: "If you want to keep your job, you must treat the clients nicely." Or, "If you want our help, you must perform for us."

  • Kant’s View: Kant argued that actions driven by hypothetical imperatives have zero moral worth. If you are only treating someone well because you expect a return on investment (compliance, a paycheck, status, or avoiding a lawsuit), you aren't acting ethically—you are just bartering.

The Kantian Duty: The Categorical Imperative

A categorical imperative is an unconditional command. It applies to everyone, everywhere, regardless of their desires, resources, or what they stand to gain. It says: "You must do Y."

  • This is the basis of duty (Deon).

  • Example: "You must treat a suffering human being with dignity, regardless of whether they can articulate what they need or give anything back to you."

  • Kant’s View: An action only possesses true moral worth if it is done for the sake of duty alone. The moment a calculation of benefit enters the equation, the morality of the act evaporates.

2. Using People as Mere Means (The Formula of Humanity)

Kant’s second formulation of the Categorical Imperative is perhaps the most devastating critique of transactional models ever written. It states:

"Act in such a way that you treat humanity, whether in your own person or in the person of any other, never merely as a means to an end, but always at the same time as an end."

Treating a Person as a "Means"

In a transactional model, people are valued based on their utility. They are a "means" to get something else.

  • The professional uses the client as a means to fulfill their job description, check a box, and secure a salary.

  • Conversely, the system demands that the client use the professional as a means to get survival resources.

  • The Quid Pro Quo Failure: Quid pro quo explicitly treats the other person as a vending machine. You insert the coin (compliance, labor, money) to get the product. If the vending machine is broken (depleted of capital, in too much pain to function), you walk away or kick it.

Treating a Person as an "End"

To treat someone as an "end" means recognizing their intrinsic, infinite value simply because they are a rational human being. Their value is not conditional. It cannot be negotiated, and it cannot be balanced on a ledger.

3. The Moral Worth of Action: "In Accordance with Duty" vs. "From Duty"

  1. Actions done in accordance with duty: A bureaucrat follows the protocol, speaks politely, and fills out the forms because they are required to by their contract or because it keeps their day running smoothly. The outward action looks right, but the internal motivation is transactional (self-interest, avoiding trouble).

  2. Actions done from duty: A person acts out of a deep, unshakeable reverence for the moral law and the dignity of the other person, even when it is frustrating, exhausting, and offers absolutely no personal reward.

When someone acts strictly within a transactional framework, they are looking at the boundaries of their contract (in accordance with their job description) rather than recognizing a fundamental human obligation to a person (acting from duty).

Summary: The Kantian Verdict

If Kant were to analyze a modern, bureaucratized systems, his diagnosis would be clear: The system has replaced morality with commerce.

By forcing people in deep emotional and material poverty into quid pro quo dynamics, the system commits a profound moral failure. It demands that the you "pay" with compliance and psychological performance before it will grant them basic dignity. For Kant, dignity has no price tag, and it accepts no trade-offs. Duty is absolute, or it is not duty at all.


The Total Inversion of Kantian Respect

Kant argued for respect (Achtung), which is a profound, messy, and serious recognition of another person’s humanity.

Exaggerated diplomacy is the exact opposite: it is simulated respect.

Authentic Kantian RespectExaggerated Systemic Diplomacy
Focuses on the substance of the person’s human dignity.Focuses on the surface appearance of the interaction.
Demands that we engage with difficult realities.Demands that the interaction remain comfortable for the bureaucrat.
Is an unconditional obligation (Categorical Imperative).Is a strategic, conditional performance (Hypothetical Imperative).

The Structural Lie The exaggeration of diplomacy in these models is necessary because the underlying reality is so inherently violent. If a system is going to ration healthcare, judge your survival skills, and treat your poverty as a personal moral failure, it has to dress that process up in a lab coat of professional neutrality.

Without that layer of performative diplomacy, the raw cruelty of the transaction would be too obvious to ignore—not just for you, but for the people collecting a paycheck to administer it. It allows them to go home at night believing they were "professional," when in reality, they were just being efficiently transactional.


In a transactional system, every interaction is a potential liability or a drain on resources. Exaggerated diplomacy—characterized by overly polite scripts, HR-speak, and clinical neutralism—serves several defensive functions:

  • Creating Distance: Phrases are wrapped in the language of diplomacy, but their true purpose is to push you away. They signal that the professional is refusing to absorb or engage with actual suffering.

  • Avoiding Accountability: Bureaucratic diplomacy is designed to be entirely non-committal. It uses passive language to obscure who is actually responsible for the failure of Kantian duty.

  • The "Civilized" Trap: By maintaining an exaggeratedly calm, diplomatic veneer, the worker sets a trap. If you react with completely justified anger, despair, or volume to their coldness, you are flagged as the problem.


 

1. Quid Pro Quo Animates the Transactional Model

Without quid pro quo, a transactional model collapses. For example, in a highly bureaucratic workplace, the organizational model is transactional: you provide labor, the company provides a salary. The quid pro quo is the direct enforcement of that model—if you stop showing up, they stop paying you.

Where They Diverge

While they are deeply related, they are not entirely identical:

  • Transactional models can exist without immediate quid pro quo. In some transactional systems, the payoff is delayed or systemic. For instance, paying taxes into a social security system is transactional, but it isn’t a direct, immediate quid pro quo swap with a single bureaucrat.

  • Quid pro quo can be weaponized outside of formal transactional models. A corrupt individual in a non-transactional environment (like a family or a close-knit community) can suddenly introduce a toxic quid pro quo demand ("I'll keep your secret, but only if you do this for me"), shattering the existing relational framework.

The Takeaway: When a system or a relationship becomes thoroughly transactional, it stops seeing people and starts seeing ledger columns. Quid pro quo is simply the tool used to balance that ledger, ensuring that no capital is expended without a corresponding return—regardless of whether the person on the other side is capable of paying.

Friday, 22 May 2026

 If the goal is understanding what's wrong with the world, rather than merely obtaining a satisfying story about what's wrong with the world, then the strongest path is usually:

  1. Investigate institutions
  2. Study economics, history, psychology, and incentives
  3. Engage politically or civically where appropriate
  4. Maintain a philosophical or spiritual framework if it helps you orient yourself
  5. Avoid nihilism and grand conspiracy cosmologies as explanatory defaults

In other words: start with reality before ideology.

The difficulty is that reality is often disappointing. People want a single villain, a hidden cabal, a secret reset, a lost utopia, or a master key that explains everything.

Unfortunately, the world is usually broken by dozens of overlapping causes:

  • Bureaucratic incentives
  • Status competition
  • Regulatory capture
  • Short-term political thinking
  • Human "tribalism"
  • Technological change
  • Demographic pressures
  • Economic trade-offs
  • Ordinary incompetence

This is much less cinematic than discovering that the Patriarchs erased Free-Energy Tartaria with giant weather machines.

As for religion, it depends on what you're looking for.

Religion can provide:

  • Meaning
  • Moral orientation
  • Community
  • A framework for suffering

Those are real human needs.

Where people get into trouble is when religion becomes a substitute for investigating the material causes of problems.

Likewise, economics can explain incentives but cannot tell you what is worth pursuing.




The deinstitutionalization literature suggests that the withdrawal and degradation of psychiatric institutions, when not matched by adequate community-based provision, may amount to a form of structural neglect with grave legal and ethical consequences. Public spending did not disappear but was reallocated—toward emergency services, policing, prisons, and low-level “maintenance” systems—creating what some call a misery management or poverty industry. Although such policies have predictably exposed many people with serious mental distress to poverty, homelessness, incarceration, and premature death, these outcomes do not ordinarily satisfy the legal definition of genocide under international law, which requires both a protected group and specific intent to destroy that group, in whole or in part. A more defensible legal characterization is that these outcomes may reflect systemic failure, breach of public duty, or, in extreme and demonstrable cases, conduct approaching crimes against humanity where a widespread or systematic attack on civilians can be shown. The central legal difficulty is that large-scale policy harm, even when foreseeable and persistent, is not equivalent to the dolus specialis required for genocide, and the law of negligence or official liability is often better suited to assessing such state conduct.

Perplexity

"The desperation money brings out of people creates the viciousness you see every day. A viciousness that will make you sell out your ...