Categories
Power Social Issues

Nostalgia and Politics

🕰️ The Mirage of the Past: How Nostalgia Poisons the Political Present

Nostalgia, in its purest form, is a gentle, bittersweet human emotion—a longing for the “good old days” of one’s personal past. It is a necessary psychological tool that provides comfort, a sense of continuity, and a buffer against the anxieties of a rapidly changing world. It is the fond recollection of a childhood home or the echo of a favorite song, and in this private sphere, it is harmless, even restorative.

Categories
Economics Social Issues

Capital Punishment

The Case Against Capital Punishment: Cost, Civilization, and Deterrence

The debate surrounding the death penalty, or capital punishment, is one of the most enduring and emotionally charged issues in modern jurisprudence. While proponents often cite justice for victims and the principle of “an eye for an eye,” a compelling argument against its use rests on three fundamental pillars: its exorbitant financial cost, its character as an uncivilized form of state violence, and the absence of credible evidence that it serves as an effective deterrent to crime.

Categories
Social Issues Technology

Social Media and Young People

🛡️ A Guarded Passage: Reimagining Social Media for Australia’s Youth

Australia’s landmark decision to make social media platforms off-limits for individuals under the age of 16 represents a seismic shift in global digital governance. Driven by mounting evidence linking unrestricted social media use to a decline in youth mental health, cyberbullying, and exposure to harmful content, the Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act is a bold, world-first intervention. While the protective intent behind this legislation is laudable, a blanket ban risks creating a digital chasm, alienating young people from essential peer communication and digital literacy development. To reconcile the need for safety with the reality of a connected world, the Australian government should consider a nuanced evolution of this policy: a legislative mandate for separate, regulated social media platforms dedicated exclusively to minors.

Categories
Education Social Issues

Classical Music in the Schools

The Essential Harmony: Advocating for Classical Music in Schools 🎻

The modern school curriculum, often seeking to be “relevant,” frequently embraces popular music genres like rock, rap, and hip-hop. While these forms of music have cultural significance, a compelling argument exists for a strategic shift in focus: prioritizing classical music education in schools. This move is not an arbitrary exercise in taste, but a foundational investment in students’ academic performance, cognitive development, and character. By emphasizing the structured complexity and emotional depth of classical music, schools can cultivate a more focused, constructive, and educated society, while helping to guide students toward cultural literacy beyond fleeting trends.

Categories
Conflict Economics Education Social Issues

History Has a Direction

The Inevitable Arc: Utility, Integration, and the Direction of History

The phrase “the right side of history” is often dismissed as rhetorical flourish, but a rigorous analysis of human development suggests it describes a tangible phenomenon. History is not a series of random, cyclical events; it possesses a distinct directionality. That direction is an ascent toward higher levels of integration, cooperation, and collective well-being. Specifically, the trajectory of human civilization points toward International Socialism—defined here as a robust system of international law coupled with economic social democracy based on Keynesian principles. This evolution is not merely accidental; it is inevitable because this system possesses the highest utility value of any social arrangement, and it is the duty of education to accelerate our arrival at this destination.

Categories
Conflict Economics Social Issues

The Labor Theory of Value

The Economic Inadequacy of the Labor Theory of Value

The Labor Theory of Value, as articulated by Karl Marx, posits that the economic value of a good is objectively determined by the socially necessary labor time required for its production.1 While this theory provided a potent rhetorical tool for 19th-century industrial critiques, it fails to describe how value actually functions in a modern economy. The fundamental error lies in the assumption that value is an inherent property derived from production inputs rather than a subjective assessment made by consumers.2 This is most evident in the “transformation problem,” where Marx struggled to mathematically reconcile labor values with actual market prices.3 If labor were the sole source of value, capital-intensive industries would logically be less profitable than labor-intensive ones, yet in reality, profit rates tend to equalize across sectors regardless of their labor composition.

Categories
Conflict Power

A Date that Shall Live in Infamy

The 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor remains one of the most pivotal and sobering moments in modern history, a day that President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared “will live in infamy.” Remembering this event is not merely an act of memorializing the bravery and sacrifice of the 2,403 Americans who died; it is a vital, ongoing commitment to understanding the fragility of peace and the imperative for a robust international order. The sudden, devastating nature of the Japanese sneak attack was a traumatic shock that shattered America’s lingering isolationism and highlighted the fundamental need for strong international law, a powerful United Nations (UN), and arguably, an independent UN military force to prevent such unprovoked aggression from ever recurring.

Categories
Conflict Power Social Issues

UN Security Council

🇸🇪 A Moral Imperative: Restructuring the UN Security Council for the 21st Century

The United Nations Security Council (UNSC), charged with the primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace and security, stands today as an anachronistic relic of a world order that has long since passed. The composition of its permanent members (P5)—the United States, China, Russia, France, and the United Kingdom—was decided not by principles of universal justice or consistent adherence to the UN Charter, but by the raw military and political power of the victors of World War II. To usher in a new era of global governance that truly lives up to the lofty ideals of its founding document, the P5 must voluntarily step down, and a new, more principled standard for membership, one centered on constitutional governance, human rights, and social democracy, must be established.

Categories
Economics Education

College Education is a Fundamental Right

The Unburdened Mind: Advancing Education as a Universal Right

The pursuit of knowledge is not a luxury item to be purchased, but a fundamental human right and the most potent engine of collective prosperity. Yet, in many developed nations, higher education has been commodified, leading to crippling student loan debt that suppresses economic vitality and inhibits social mobility. A radical restructuring of this system is required, one that simultaneously cancels existing student loan debt, establishes tuition-free college education, and, critically, institutes rigorous academic standards to ensure the integrity of scholarly degrees. Furthermore, the establishment of a globally-managed university system, financed by the United Nations (UN), represents the necessary next step in realizing education’s universal potential.The Unburdened Mind: Advancing Education as a Universal Right

Categories
Economics Social Issues

Unionization Must be Everywhere

The Case for Universal Unionization: A Foundation for Economic and Social Stability

The proposition that all workers should belong to a union—a policy known as universal unionization—is not merely an argument for worker rights, but a mandate for macroeconomic stability and social equity. When viewed through the lens of Keynesian economics, mandatory union membership emerges as a powerful structural mechanism necessary to ensure high wages, robust aggregate demand, and, critically, the sustained full employment of the labor force. Such a structural change would secure a positive living for all citizens and stabilize the entire economy.