Sunday, May 24, 2026

Memorial Day? What does it mean to you?

 HISTORY: Memorial Day began after the American Civil War, when communities across the divided nation started holding “Decoration Day” ceremonies to honor soldiers who had died in battle by decorating their graves with flowers and flags. One of the earliest large observances took place in 1868, organized by the Grand Army of the Republic, a Union veterans organization. Over time, the remembrance expanded beyond Civil War casualties to honor all American military personnel who died in service to the nation. In 1971, Memorial Day became an official federal holiday observed on the last Monday in May — intended not as a celebration of war, but as a solemn reminder of sacrifice, grief, duty, and the unfinished responsibility of the living to build a nation worthy of those who gave their lives for it. Memorial Day ultimately asks a moral question: what kind of country are we becoming, and are we honoring the dead merely with ceremonies, or with the character of the society we leave behind?

 

NOW:  What profoundly troubles me this Memorial Day is not a lack of patriotism, but the opposite, polarized patriotism and a form nationalism that holds people in other nations to be of less value or evil. I love the ideals expressed in the our Declaration of Independence.  FYI:  That is not its original title...and it was never officially changed.  It's originally "The unanimous Declaration of thirteen united States of America".  We got lazy and shortened it. Unfortunately, it was given the word "Independence" that Albert Einstein called a "delusion".  Its a mental construct that only exists in our minds and words.  Then, when we engineer our vital governing systems (the U.S. Constitution and the UN Charter) on this delusion within our irreversible interdependent universe, there should be no confusion or disbelief on why they don't work as intended.  Read the Preamble to both and the intentions expressed clearly within each.  None can be achieved without a united global effort.  And nearly every problem we face now is because of our steadfast belief they can work, but we have resisted adapting them to real life conditions.  Both have within them the capacity to be adapted.  But human mind's persist in not transforming them to achieve and sustain the health, freedoms, rights, and security that every sane person wants and needs to survive, thrive, and someday flourish and prosper for generations that follow.  

Our stewardship of our nations and our planets ecosystems have so far failed.  The foundation is simple.  All people are created equal, endowed with certain unalienable rights.  And the only legitimate reason for government to exist, according to Loch and Thomas Paine's 1776 pamphlet Common Sense, is to protect people's "freedom and security".  

So I am profoundly disappointed and now ashamed at what our American experiment has become. "Truths" no longer held as "self-evident" by nearly half of US voters.  This Truth decaying is killing us.  Meanwhile, political tribes are so divided violence it drives violence, polarized media ecosystems, religious extremism, and raw greed by the wealthiest and most powerful, that is tearing apart any shared sense of reality. 

Many claim faith while ignoring compassion, justice, humility, or stewardship of our planet's resources. Too many celebrate wealth without asking what obligations come with privilege. Meanwhile veterans who sacrificed their bodies, minds, and futures are too often discarded once the uniforms come off, while the families of the dead are handed flags and speeches instead of enduring support and national gratitude worthy of the cost they paid. And for what? Our government is nearly $40 trillion in debt while infrastructure crumbles, schools fail too many children, hospitals bankrupt families, and legal and political systems become increasingly distorted by money, power, anger, and spectacle. We blame guns, politicians, corporations, immigrants, or one another. But never ourselves. "We the People" are the deeper problem.  Our selfish and divisive cultural illness: a society that increasingly worships comfort, consumption, outrage, tribal identity, and personal success more than sacrifice, virtue, wisdom, responsibility, or care for future generations.

We've forgotten that happiness is not something automatically owed to us. It is something discovered through service to causes larger than ourselves — our communities, our children, our common vulnerability, the natural world that sustains us, and the generations yet unborn. 

Memorial Day should remind us of that reality. I encourage people to watch Hacksaw Ridge and Saving Private Ryan — not as war entertainment, but as reflections on courage, sacrifice, duty, and the terrible cost of human conflict. 

Both portray extraordinary service above self and how a nation can still recognize the value of a single human life amid industrial-scale violence. But as we honor military sacrifice, we too often ignore the quieter massive tragedies around the world where thousands of children die daily from preventable hunger, malnutrition, and infectious disease from affordable solutions, while ignoring the costs to ourselves because of this, in both blood and treasure. 

Most of us waste enormous time, wealth, and attention while entire populations struggle for basic survival. That moral contradiction should haunt us in our so called 'developed and civilized' world. 

THE FUTURE?  But now, humanity stands at the threshold of something even more dangerous: AGI.  Artificial General Intelligence being urgently developed inside a competitive global system driven by profit, military advantage, and national rivalry instead of a wise search for solutions. 

This is not another Y2K-style technical inconvenience. It is potentially civilizational. Once intelligence surpasses our ability to understand or control it, human beings may become as irrelevant to advanced systems as ants are to a highway project. The danger is not that machines become evil in a human sense, but that human values become unnecessary to systems pursuing objectives we barely comprehend. 

Solving a problem would require something we currently lack: a civilization mature enough to place wisdom above competition, restraint above domination, and long-term survival above short-term gain. This would require cultures grounded less in endless consumption and more in "the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” referenced in the 1776 Declaration — humility, reciprocity, stewardship, truth, and the Golden Rule. Our planet is a rare and fragile home in a vast universe. Whether humanity deserves to survive here may ultimately depend on whether we can rediscover not merely intelligence, but moral maturity and the wisdom to do what is entirely possible with the resources and the tools we have always had. 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Terrorism Prevention? Or just money making.

 Attention!!!!  Tomorrow!!! 1pm to 5pm. 

Homeland Security Today <gtsccommunications@gtscoalition.com>

is offering this forum tomorrow.  Here’s what these forum leaders offer in tomorrow’s lessons,  May 20th, 2026 | 1:00 - 5:00 PM | Washington, D.C.  "Preventing terrorism is not only about stopping attacks—it is about recognizing when someone is being pulled toward hate, violence, and extremism before lives are destroyed.

Join us for Homeland Security Today's Inaugural Prevention Forum. Hosted in partnership with American University, HSToday will bring together leaders from government, law enforcement, academia, healthcare, the private sector, and civil society to explore how prevention efforts are evolving to address today’s threat landscape and build more resilient communities.

Through sessions exploring innovative prevention models, online threats and digital resilience, intervention strategies, community-based approaches, and emerging technologies, we will examine how practitioners across sectors are working to identify risks earlier, strengthen collaboration, and support prevention efforts before violence occurs.

As prevention continues to play a critical role across the homeland security enterprise, join us to learn about practical solutions, lessons learned, and forward-looking approaches that support safer communities and stronger public safety outcomes. 

Interested in learning more about the prevention of violence and terrorism? Sign up for HSToday's Prevention Quarterly here! If you missed the last edition, please find it here.”  

Terrorism could be prevented - with sufficient investment in sufficient clean water, safe sanitation, healthy food, medicines/vaccines, and the basic education needed to stop the most terrifying of all human experiences:  The loss, or just the fear of losing a child - from poverty, diseases, or bombs being dropped on their schools.  But even without violence, 11,000 to 13,000 children die daily from these easily affordable and preventable causes. 

The Truth is, the most effective means of preventing these deaths would be prioritizing our government and wealthy corporations, and billionaires, to invest sufficiently in achieving the UN 17 Sustainable Development Goals ASAP.   I’m guessing the SDGs will not even be mentioned. God I hope I’m wrong.  I do doubt that any money this organization collects charging for non-students to participate - will not be used for feeding hungry children or providing them with lifesaving vaccines. 

I’m guessing at best, these delusional, ignorant, or indoctrinated professionals are only offering preemption...such as the loss of privacy in their effort to find anyone suspected of committing an act of violent extremism.  Here’s a thought.  Keep our weapons, soldiers, spies, and surveillance systems here in the homeland.  And halt all targeting if there is any chance of collateral damage or an algorithm using outdated intelligence.  In other words, apply the wisdom gained from the knowledge of recent US military history of creating about ten more - so called “terrorists” - for every innocent person (collateral damage) killed.

The Truth is, this isn’t Rocket science.   I only hope these experts know WTF they are doing, other than making money, seeking a promotion, while violating their flag oath of “Liberty and justice for all”.  I’m guessing they sworn an oath to protect the U.S. Constitution.  Unfortunately, this only the protects our nation’s national sovereignty.  Not the protection of unalienable rights and the environment that everyone’s health and the health of future generations depend on.   

Constitutionally, the Department of Homeland Security is ‘independent’ of the Department of Defense (until Congress acts to change its name to the Department of War).  It would be interesting to know what Secretary Pete Hogsbreath, I mean Hegseth, would say regarding the prevention of terrorism.

If anyone takes this course...and I hope you do...please prove me wrong on anything I’ve just written.  The forum is free to students who use their school email address.  Take good notes!  chuck@igc.org

I can give you SSL hrs.  



Monday, May 18, 2026

Our Mind remains our greatest threat. And AI will likely overtake it.

Humanity’s greatest evolutionary achievement, our mind’s power for solving problems, has unfortunately for decades persisted as our species greatest threat.  We persist in believing the creation of Weapons of Mass Destruction will solve our persistent insecurity problem.  And the UN system we engineered after creating nuclear weapons will always work to keep it that way.  "Peace though Strength" remains the predominant global mind set for powerful leaders and most of their followers. But their minds have been wrong for decades.  Nuclear weapons did effectively deter another kinetic World War.  But the Cold War and the Global War Against Terrorism that followed resulted in nearly ten times more human deaths from poverty, infectious disease, and genocides, than all the wars before them combined.  And during WW II and decades after, people like Albert Einstein, Emery Reves, and many other wise souls knew what was needed, and most humanity wanted. In January 6, 1941, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt articulated them in his 'Four Freedoms' speech (technically the 1941 State of the Union address)  He proposed these for people "everywhere in the world" to enjoy:

Freedom of speech and expression

Freedom of worship

Freedom from want

Freedom from fear Off.  But fear in most minds didn’t want change. 

Unfortunately, given the exponential evolution of technology, our mind’s linear thinking capacity associated with its capacity to believe anything, and our western world's governing systems dependent upon slow democratic governing systems -- engineered on the delusion of independence - rapid change was not possible.  Combine these three elements on a simple graph, and the future was easily visible.  The pace of technology, human mental capacity, and powerful but sluggish democratic governments.

This reflects the persistent freedom/security dilemma we still face now.  Because we really face a trilemma. Because we globally codified the delusion of independence governing the UN Charter.  Freedom, security, and independence.  But only two are possible at any time.  And we have never yet chosen wisely.  Thus, our accelerating meta crisis now, over nearly70 years.  

A stubborn reality that most minds refuse to logically acknowledge or confront.  And this ‘insanity of humanity’ remains operating on the delusion of independence. And our stubborn unwillingness to change our mind when confronted with Common Sense and “Truths” that we should all hold “to be self-evident” still powering our evolution.  And now the evolution of AI as nation’s persist in competing to achieve it first, intending not to be dominated by others.  This will not end well.  The very competition itself could lead to another World War. 

A journalist once asked Einstein what he thought WW 3 would be fought with, Einstein told him that 'He didn’t know.  But he knew WW4 would be fought withs sticks and stones.'

When another journalist asked Gandhi what he thought about Western civilization, he replied with his heavy accent “I think that would be a good idea!”

Regrettably, there have been multiple times over the last 250 years when humanity had the possibility of getting off this competitive and increasing murderous train of chaos... potentially leading to our own extinction. 

Decades ago, a comedian stated that ‘Mankind stands at a crossroad. One path leads to utter hopelessness and despair.  The other, to complete Annihilation.’   Then said, ‘I hope we chose the right path.”

But stubborn minds still, still aided by nearly twenty mental reactionary flaws, use them to defend their mind’s mass killer concept, ‘Peace through Strength” instead of Charles Darwin’s discovery of ‘survival through adaptation’.  As a species, this is our immediate crossroad. Are we as Homo sapiens going to protect who we really are as human beings.  Or let the power of our mind dominate our social species desire to survive, thrive, and flourish – by quickly grasping the inevitable long-term costly consequences of doing the same thing, repeatedly, expecting a different result.  We all know the word associated with this habitual failing to see and respect reality.

But our progressive feelings of hope, optimism, and wishful thinking persist in preempting our unity in achieving the transformational actions urgently needed.  Most wise souls know that systemic change is needed.   Yet many major progressive movement organizations still refrain from uniting around a simple idea, that united we stand a chance.  Divided - and competing with the other movements (and the hundreds of organizations within each movement – Peace, Environment, economic/social Justice) for money, active members, media attention, and access to key policy makers.  Here’s just a few that still resist endorsing just the idea of unity - to achieving the UN 17 Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. 

This is the only plan available, already approved by most of them, as the only comprehensive, holistic, synergistic, affordable, achievable, and measurable global plan.  One with that could make real progress in every community in every nation and on every island.   For over two years these are just a few organizations I’ve had a long relationship with, that have yet to say yes (in alphabetical order): Bahai, Center for Citizen Empowerment & Transformation, Charter for Compassion. Citizens for Global Solutions.  Global health Council.  I AM Humanity.  Pachamama Alliance.  RESULTS.  Rotary.  The Hunger Project.  United Nations Association USA.   ... the list is much longer!  The idea is simple. The Resistance is heart and spirit numbing.

So, humankind remains trapped by its own delusional thinking and personal comforts under the persistent competition between nations and religions, combined with the unprecedented wealth of corporations, most working feverishly to achieve Artificial General Intelligence (AGI).  Meanwhile AI gets exponentially closer to AGI by the moment - to displacing us as a species.

Originally, AI was intended as a tool to boost human productivity, wealth, and supposedly our quality of life.  But now, many AI experts believe AGI will soon become a new species.  An entity we grew with a level of intelligence a human mind cannot comprehend.  And it will continue evolving exponentially, without our brains and particularly our government’s capacity to adapt.   This is not a new idea.

In the late 1990s my professional job as Issues Director for two globally minded organizations (the National Council for International Health – now the Global health Council [1994-‘98], and the World Federalist Association [1998-2002]– now Citizens for Global Solutions).   I was paid to deep dive into all national security issues global - because they were all connected to our global interdependence.  And both people and nations desire to survive, thrive, and hopefully, someday, flourish.  In the late 1990s I toured over a dozen key Congressional Districts targeting U.S. Representatives on the House Foreign Operations Subcommittee of Appropriations.  I’d presented to dozens of campuses, service organizations, political institutes, and public forums to inform people of the growing array of national security threats we all face.   Their concerns were not always the same of WFAs, but they were all deeply interested in surviving and thriving.  And there was never a negative response to the simple graph I started with that had only 3 lines.  The first was the exponential growth of technology. Second was our linear thinking capacity. Third, our basically flatlined constitutional government and UN Charter.  With the lower two lines reflecting our existing lack of understanding the consequences and even then, the urgency to adapt with reliable global standards of liberty and justice for all.  Given our global interdependence, which I’d been school on since 1980 with the executive summary of President Jimmy Carter’s a bi-partisan Presidential Commission on World hunger.  Then two years of studying hunger and verifying thousands of quotes and statistics on the Hunger Project’s coffee table book, Ending Hunger: An idea whose time has come.  Hunger was connected to everything. War, environment, Economics, food production, and Population myths. But the root cause was not a lack of food, money, solutions, or environmental sustainability. I was simply a lack of political will.  The will of “we the people” of the world to make it priority to stop the 42,000 daily deaths of innocence children.  A pace 10 times that of Hitler’s concentration camps.  Today it’s only 3 times greater.  But still a reflection of humanities’ collective lack of will to end this insanity of a lack of political will to address the root causes of nearly every preventable threat.

AGI will ignore us, as we have ignored the value of other lesser intelligent species that we don’t even know we have ignored.  Read the recent book “If anyone builds it, we all die”.  

Evolution shaped our minds to help small tribes survive through fear, loyalty, competition, and storytelling. These tribal instincts once protected us from predators and rival groups.  But now, in a world of nuclear weapons, other forms of WMD, ecological collapse, artificial intelligence, and global interdependence, the same tribal thinking threatens us all.

Yet we persist in killing and dying by the millions for outdated concepts created in and still lodged in our minds: nationalism, ideologies, religion, race, economics...ignoring the reality that no tribe survives if the human family fails.  This “insanity of humanity” is not the product of evil people.  But ancient instincts colliding with modern technological power, and failure to adapt.

Our urgent challenge in our modern era is to mentally evolve morally and psychologically faster than our technology.  Time is not on our side.  The UN 17 Sustainable Development Goals offer our only hope.  It’s the closest thing humanity has to a practical roadmap to stop our accelerating chaos and idealize our social species capacity for cooperation, coordination, and compassion.  A way of being that leads to dignity, ecological balance, and our species shared and sustainable survival on our gifted planet.


While the human mind evolved under conditions very different from today’s world, our survival now depends upon our body and spirit waking up.  And prioritizing the protection of our human tribe.  We have no need to compete for scarce resources, creating new stories to strengthen our social species cohesion.

Fear, and small tribal identity, once had evolutionary advantages. But now, we must naturally help each other cooperate in groups large enough to survive famine, war, predators, and environmental hardship. In that sense, the mind was originally a survival tool.  Our evolution did not prepare humanity for a globally interconnected civilization with the power to destroy itself in mass conflicts, ecological destruction, propaganda systems, extremist ideologies, and technological dangers capable of threatening every species.

We must transform or at least she our political ideologies, religious absolutism, flawed economic systems, unnatural nationalism,  ethnic identity—willing to hate, kill, or die in defense of them. These concepts are creations of our mind, not the laws of nature.  Concepts that override empathy, reason, and our recognition of our shared humanity.  And adapt our instincts to our global interdependence. Our technologies are planetary. Our psychology must come first.

The SDGs represent our humanity and dependence on nature.  Poverty, inequality, ecological collapse, war, corruption, hunger, lack of education, and institutional failure are symptoms of a civilization struggling against its mind’s psychological domination. The SDGs offer a framework for shifting humanity away from our mind’s domination and fragmentation of issues.  Toward cooperation, sustainability, and shared flourishing. Ultimately, the survival of civilization depends less on whether we become more intelligent, and more on our body and spirit’s wisdom.  

 

Courage, Hope, and Responsible Action

Fostering the personal commitment to courage and hope, and translating these virtues into responsible, individual acts of compassion.

Applied Compassion in Institutions

Moving fundamental principles of compassion, justice, and self-evident Truths into practice across communities, institutions, and all global systems.

Interconnectedness and Social Responsibility

Recognizing our shared humanity and mutual dependence as the basis for collective responsibility to achieve the SDGs ASAP.

Justice, Equality, and Human Rights

Advancing dignity, inclusion, and the health of everything through compassionate frameworks.

Environmental Stewardship

Caring for the Earth and promoting sustainable practices as an essential expression of compassion linked to all life on our gifted planet.

Personal and Community Transformation

Understanding how inner change and collective action reinforce one another to build thriving, supportive communities, by using our minds to solve problems, not defending flawed ideas/concepts.

Lifelong Learning, Educational Innovation, and action

Nurturing compassion across the healthspan, lifespan, and within learning communities that focus on action and service through innovative educational approaches.

Resources for uniting Compassionate Organizations

Providing contact information, tools, practices, and partnerships that support the sustainable impact of mission-driven organizations to achieve measurable progress on each of the 169 subgoals within the 17 SDGs.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Nurse's Week! May 6-13th

A whole week of special thanks to all Nurses!  Like Mother's Day...it should be every day. 

They are our nation's front line of defense and first responders at clinics and hospitals when people and governments fail to prevent pandemics, violent extremists, extreme weather conditions, environmental contamination, or accidents.  

When hospitals fail or are not affordable, or available...they can always be counted on to do what's needed.  


Wednesday, May 6, 2026

 

Engineering on Sand: The Deadly Illusion Beneath the US Constitution and the UN Charter.

Last month an extraordinary military rescue operation to recover one surviving U.S. pilot deep inside Iran cost Americans hundreds of millions of dollars in aircraft, logistics, and intelligence systems.  It also risked the lives of hundreds of soldiers in that vital heroic effort. It depended on some unknowns. One, was the sand they built an emergency landing strip on that was needed to recover the injured pilot plus the elite ground forces who made it possible.  Unfortunately, two aircraft to bring them all home got stuck in desert sand and had to be destroyed. Additional helicopters and other expensive equipment were also lost in this otherwise successful rescue operation.

Normally, military planners understand physics.  And if the foundation beneath any operation is unstable, even the most advanced technology in the world with precision weapons, elite training, satellite intelligence, stealth aircraft, and overwhelming force can fail.  The reality of physics always wins and it's certain they won’t make that mistake again.

And fundamental principle applies far beyond the battlefield.  Every aspect of national security depends on getting the science right.  This is were both the U.S. Constitution and the U.N. Charter will continue to fail in persistently making lethal decisions over and over again, hoping for a better outcome.  Policy makers and democratic institutions governing us all continue ignoring the hard reality these vital systems were engineered on.  The delusion of independence on a foundation of sand.  And this applies to every civilization.  

The most disastrous act in American history is this: the word independence doesn’t appear in the body of the world’s most profound document.  We call it the Declaration of Independence.  But the real title is “The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America.”   Not “Independent States.” And not “Sovereign Nations” is in the UN.  Nor the 1776 “freedom” American patriots fought and died for. Their emphasis was on declaration, union, and “liberty” for all humankind!

 The founders were announcing separation, a legal divorce from a monarchy.  While simultaneously recognizing their interdependence with all humanity and a collective responsibility for this global transformation. They understood — far better than many modern political movements — that liberty and survival itself depended upon cooperation of other nationalities, religions, and indigenous tribes.  The Revolutionary War was actually the first World War involving multiple nations (global and indigenous) and multiple faiths.  It was even America’s first civil war, with people in the same family and the same tribes fighting each other.  If you doubt this, watch the 12-hour, six-part PBS series “The American Revolution”. 

 

Warning!  Watching it is profoundly dispiriting thinking about all the death and suffering in the American Revolution, and for what?  What we have today?  An ununited US population and increasingly violent and even lethal political polarization, a masochistic, lying, unpredictable, and immoral President who believes he’s the best we’ve ever had...starting wars and enabling another nation to conduct genocide with US weapons and funding – believing he is making America Great Again. 

The only thing Great about America is the promise of the 1776 Declaration.  The U.S. Constitution had some great ideas but founding them on the delusion of independent states led to the second civil war in the mid 1860s that killed more Americans than all the wars our nation has fought in since then – combined.  And now going forth globally with fewer allies and making more enemies by a war of choice against Iran that is definitely GWAT 2.0 (Global War Against Terrorism).  While tempting fate with yet another World War...against China, Russia, N. Korea, Iran...and other’s who want a global system where US power is limited...and it will no longer be used to dominate other nations whenever its leadership likes.  

 

The good news?  This insanity may lead to a new world order based on “Liberty and Justice for All’ what American have been pledging for decades. 

Because the world order we have now has been cemented into international law and our minds for generations with the word Independence.  A psychological illusion.  A delusion that we are free to do what we want, without consequences.  

The title we keep using “Declaration of Independence” transformed our public consciousness into a near-religious celebration each 4th of July.  The word evolved from a supposedly legal and historical circumstance into an ideological identity that is second only to smallpox for the number of people this delusion has killed.

 

And thus, the greatest engineering errors in modern civilization were codifying the Delusion of Independence Eternally (DIE) in both the US Constitution and the UN Charter.

But in reality, no person, no state, no nation, no civilization, and no other living thing has ever survived independently.

All life depends upon healthy air, water, food systems, energy systems, ecological systems, and the fundamental Truth’s that lead to social trust. Free trade routes, climate stability, alliances, scientific exchange, financial systems, and increasingly reliable global supply chains.

 

The very smartphone in a person’s pocket uses minerals from Africa, designs from California, manufacturing in Asia, software coded across multiple continents, shipping through international waters, and energy supplied by a global market.  Independence is not reality.

It is mythology. And when governments are engineered on quicksand mythology rather than fundamental principles, instability becomes inevitable.

Every successful engineering project must use first principles thinking, not slogans.

A bridge engineer doesn’t say, “I believe this bridge should stand because freedom demands it.” A military engineer doesn’t say: “This temporary runway should work because we are patriotic.”  An aerospace engineer doesn’t ignore gravity because gravity feels inconvenient.

Reality does not negotiate.

The universe rewards alignment with fundamental principles and will forever punish delusion.  Thus, catastrophic failures occur not from lack of intelligence, but from false assumptions built into the design itself.

History is filled with examples:

  • Financial systems built on unsustainable debt
  • Cities built in flood zones
  • Agricultural systems that destroy topsoil
  • Industrial systems that poison water supplies
  • Political systems dependent upon endless growth
  • Security systems built on permanent militarization
  • Information systems optimized for outrage rather than truth

Eventually, the costs arrive.

Sometimes gradually.  Sometimes suddenly.

Even the founders themselves warned against this delusional mentality. Thomas Jefferson argued that societies must evolve with changing conditions. James Madison warned repeatedly about factionalism and concentrated power. George Washington warned against extreme partisanship and entangling divisions.

Yet modern politics has persistently ignored these foundational warnings while worshipping simplistic interpretations of liberty disconnected from responsibility and virtue.

The result?  Governance systems and structures increasingly unable to solve global-scale problems because its operating assumptions were designed during a vastly simpler time.

And now, climate change does not respect national borders.  Pandemics do not stop at customs checkpoints. Cyber warfare ignores geography.  Artificial intelligence development is global.

Financial contagion spreads instantly. Nuclear weapons make absolute national sovereignty logically obsolete.  And one nation’s decisions can threaten planetary survival itself.

Yet humanity continues attempting to solve interconnected global problems through fragmented competitive nationalism.  Its like trying to coordinate an aircraft carrier battle group where every sailor insists on steering independently. 

The successful rescue mission in Iran demonstrated both extraordinary courage and extraordinary cost.  Why?  Because operating in unstable terrain multiplies risk exponentially.

Every additional complication creates cascading vulnerability.  A plane stuck in sand becomes a strategic liability.  A delayed extraction becomes a larger military exposure.  A rescue mission becomes a geopolitical crisis.  The same dynamic applies to governance.

When societies are built upon distorted and delusional assumptions about nature, human nature, and our collective survival, enormous resources must be constantly spent managing crises created by the design flaw itself.

Consider the staggering costs of modern dysfunction:

  • Trillions spent on military systems
  • Exploding healthcare costs
  • Mental health epidemics
  • Mass incarceration
  • Political polarization
  • Environmental degradation
  • Refugee crises
  • Disinformation warfare
  • Extreme inequality
  • Declining trust in institutions

These are not isolated failures.  They are systems-level symptoms.  Just as cracks in a bridge reveal structural stress, societal crises often reveal deeper engineering flaws in the underlying assumptions of governance itself.

 

Freedom Without Interdependence Becomes Chaos:   A mature civilization must balance two truths simultaneously: Individual freedom is real and it matters.  Human interdependence is unavoidable.  Ignoring freedom creates tyranny.  Ignoring interdependence creates collapse.

The genius of sustainable systems — whether ecological, biological, or political — lies in balance.

The human body itself is not “independent.” Trillions of cells cooperate continuously through astonishing coordination. Ecosystems survive through networks of interdependence. Forests communicate chemically underground. Coral reefs depend upon symbiosis. Even galaxies exist within relational systems governed by physical laws.  Nature does not reward isolated supremacy.  Nature rewards adaptive cooperation and collaboration.  Human civilization is not exempt from these principles. We are a social species.  Not a species of individual ignoring the health of others and nature.

 

The Press, Truth, and Structural sustainable Stability:   A free press is often called the fourth branch of government because accurate information is essential to system stability.  Engineers require accurate measurements. Pilots require accurate instrumentation.  Doctors require accurate diagnostics.  Democracies require accurate information.  Without truthful reporting, societies lose the ability to self-correct. Delusion expands. Propaganda replaces analysis. Emotional manipulation replaces evidence-based policy.  As Thomas Jefferson once suggested, informed citizens are essential to liberty. Madison said the Constitution was not made for a non-virtuous people.  And as Jesus said:  “The truth shall set you free.”  Not comforting illusions.  Not tribal myths.  Not ideological absolutism.

Truth!  Because systems disconnected from reality eventually fail.  Always.

 

The Meta-Crisis of Civilization:  What deep thinkers now call the “meta-crisis” is not merely a collection of separate global problems. It is the convergence of multiple systemic failures emerging from outdated assumptions about economics, governance, identity, competition, biology, and human purpose.

We are attempting to operate a globally interconnected civilization with political and psychological software largely designed for tribal survival thousands of years ago.

That mismatch is becoming increasingly dangerous.  Our technologies have become planetary.

Our ethics remain fragmented.  Our weapons have become civilization-ending.  Our governance remains nationally competitive.  Our economies are globally integrated. Yet, our politics remain psychologically tribal.  This is not stable engineering.  It is geopolitical quicksand.

 

A Different Foundation:  The future may depend upon rediscovering a principle hidden in plain sight in 1776.   Humanity survives together or not at all.  This doesn’t mean eliminating nations, cultures, freedoms, or local identities. Diversity is strength. But diversity without coordination becomes fragmentation.  A healthy society — like a healthy ecosystem — requires both individuality and cooperation.  The founders understood pieces of this Truth, even if history later simplified their message into slogans about rugged independence.

Perhaps the deeper lesson of the Declaration was never absolute independence at all. But responsibility.  A shared and united destiny. Mutual accountability.  And the recognition that legitimate government derives not from domination, but from the consent and welfare of interconnected human beings dependent on each other and nature.

 

The rescue mission in the desert reminds us that even the world’s most advanced military cannot escape the consequences of unstable foundations. Neither can civilization.

If we continue engineering governments, economies, and international systems upon the delusion of separateness rather than the reality of our interdependence, the costs will continue escalating — in bodies, financially, politically, psychologically, and environmentally.

And like aircraft trapped in sand, even great powers can become immobilized by the very terrain they failed to understand.



Sunday, May 3, 2026

The most important governance word never used.

As the U.S. approaches the 250th anniversary of “Declaration of Independence” only 61 days away, it's past time we consider the most damaging word in American history. It has led to more deaths, environmental destuction, and hate than any other. The word is independence.

A careful reading of the 1776 Declaration reveals something transformative. The noun “independence” appears nowhere in its text or original title “The unanimous Declaration of thirteen united States of America”, the world’s most profound document.  It rightfully and justly declared the colonies desire to be “Free and Independent States,” and used the adjective “independent”, not the noun “independence” a thing.  A thing that Albert Einstein later called a “delusion”.

This distinction is the difference between true freedom (the Declaration’s original intent) and the mass murdering chaos that both the U.S. Constitution and the U.N. Charter unleashed globally.  

An independent state (or states) can possess political autonomy existing within a web of relationships, responsibilities, and be mutual dependent on other states (or nations).  Unfortunately, the word “Independence” has evolved in our mind’s imagination as something absolute: self-sufficiency, exceptionalism, immunity from consequences beyond our borders, and worth mass killing and dying for, as well as ignoring nature, the basis of all human health, wealth, and other life on earth.

This could have - should have stopped immediately after the invention and use of nuclear weapons. Einstein warned about it, yet the UN Charter was founded on the same delusional concept as the U.S. Constitution. Both ignored the wisdoms offered in the 1776 Declaration based on “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” (in common speak, ‘take care of nature and each other’ because everything is interdependent and vulnerable).  

Ironically, we annually celebrate our illusion of independence every July 4th using explosives and eating nitrate loaded meats that cause cancer.  Then over 250 years of repetition, celebration, and civic mythology, that single word blunder has hardened into our minds a global worldview that has shaped our perception of reality and killed hundreds of millions of people.  Because independence exists nowhere in known universe except as a word on paper, in sound, or as a delusional concept in our mind.

No human being is independent of oxygen, food systems, ecosystems, microbes, gravity, family, trade, or civilization itself. No nation is independent of climate systems, oceans, pandemics, financial networks, or global stability. Even stars depend upon relationships with gravity and matter. Interdependence is not a political opinion; it is the architecture of reality.

And yet our governing systems still behave as if independence were achievable. Ironically, both the U.S. constitutional framework and the United Nations Charter are rooted in sovereign independence as their organizing principle. We continue attempting to solve planetary-scale crises — climate disruption, pandemics, cyberwarfare, nuclear risks, migration, and ecological collapse — with governance structures designed around fragmented and delusional sovereignty.

Then wonder why the systems fail and things are getting worse.

Perhaps the deepest challenge of our species is to accept our irreversible interconnectedness and interdependence.  And learn to govern everyone and nature wisely, fairly, and ethically.  Thus, the most important word in America’s founding document may be the one that was never actually written into law.

World Press Freedom Day - May 3

World Press Freedom Day: Truth, Freedom, and Survival.

Annually on May 3, it's worth pausing to recognize World Press Freedom Day.  Especially in 2026 given our meta crisis, this is not ceremonial.  It's existentially urgent.

This week's 5th edition of TIME100 Companies (with it's cover story title "Before the Fall: Cuba Awaits Trump's Endgame") also offers essays by three to company leaders. Sam Jacobs, Editor in Chief end's his page 4 "From the Editor" column "Telling the right story"- which focuses on these companies saying "we keep returning to company leaders because, increasingly, they are the ones shaping the world." 

No doubt AI will shape our world as much as "fire" has.  But in what direction?  The more important question is where they take us now in our world shaped by a lack of wisdom in spending trillions of dollars seeking more intelligence.  And zero mention of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) needed for addressing the root causes of most of the disruptive forces now in play.   There is no rational plan to fund and achieve the SDGs ASAP.  Only a vague hope AI might - before it gains the power and capacity to do whatever it wants. 

A free press is not free.  It needs financing to perform.  Most importantly as a means of sustaining a viable global governing system.  Not just another democratic institution influenced more by money that wisdom.  A free press is the circulatory system of self-government. If you haven't noticed our US and UN systems are failing.   And without accurate contextual and detailed information  -our lives, society, democracy, and any chance to achieve then sustain the global Rule of Law protecting our vulnerable lives and planetary systems - they will continue to suffocate - as justice weakens, corruption metastasizes. Public health deteriorates, and fear replaces reason. Nature gets raped, while propaganda fills the vacuum, leaving us without the "Truths" that we should all hold "to be self-evident".

A sustainable government cannot exist without a sustainable relationship to reality.

One of America’s founders, Thomas Jefferson, reportedly wrote that if he had to choose between “a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government,” he would prefer the latter. Whether quoted perfectly or not, the principle remains profoundly relevant: freedom of the press is not a luxury of democracy; it is its immune system.

As a biologist I was hired in 1988 to come to Washington DC from the Lawrence Hall of Science in Berkely CA, as the first Media Director for RESULTS, a tiny but powerful Grassroots lobby doing transformational advance (developing direct relationships with our own elected US elected officials) vs transactional advocacy (pestering them with protests or petitions).  Not good at writing, a Bay area newspaper printed my first Letter to the Editor. It was addicting. Over the next few years other people I'd worked with had generated more media in our region than the other regions combined. My new job in DC didn't work out because I had no experience in generating key national TV news and didn't even have access to software to send mass faxes...instead of punching in the phone numbers of each targeted desk of multiple news sources.  But my skills were recognized by a Board member who used them to organize US based health and medical professionals committed to funding global maternal and child health projects. Politics were not as polarized back then and successes happened. Eventually I wrote Congressional testimony (perhaps the best writing I've ever done) two years in a row to the House Foreign Operations Subcommittee of Appropriations regarding global bio-security issues linked to US National Security.  Today such wise policies obvious to US intelligence agencies and the military are simply ignored...if offered at all.  

And with Truth decay and a lack of reliable contextual reporting, citizens cannot make informed decisions, and policy makers literally get away with mass murder.  Without investigative journalism, concentrations of power grow unchecked. Without facts, elections become emotional tribal contests detached from reality itself, and the health of people (especially our mental health) declines with catastrophic life, death, and debt consequences. Consequences are not theoretical.

A free press exposes corruption before corruption becomes collapse. It identifies disease outbreaks before pandemics spread globally. It reveals environmental destruction before ecosystems fail. It documents human rights abuses before atrocities multiply. It can even warn of economic instability and insanity before global financial systems unravel.

Truth is not merely moral.  It must be objective Truths! Not the personal or political truths that vary as diverse as our mind's can imagination .  Objective Truths like the Laws of Nature and Nature's God are profoundly functional. 

And as Jesus Christ has offered “The truth will set you free.”  Those words are often treated spiritually, but they also contain a profound civic and biological insight. Accurate perception increases survival. Delusion increases vulnerability and chaos.

Nature itself operates on this principle of freedom.  People are always free to do what they want. But they, their loved ones, the rest of humanity, and nature...are never free of the consequences.  Act virtuously, or pay the price.  

Any species that fails to accurately perceive their environment and adapt accordingly eventually disappear.  In reality species don't negotiate with adapting. The just encounter extinction.

The founders of the American republic understood another dimension of this challenge and repeatedly warned that freedom could not survive without virtue. In their language, virtue did not mean perfection. It meant civic responsibility, restraint, accountability, and recognition that liberty collapses when citizens abandon ethical obligations toward one another and mama nature. 

Any society that glorifies unlimited freedom without responsibility eventually consumes itself from within.

The Golden Rule — treating others as we wish to be treated — was not merely religious advice. It remains a practical design in all social species. And modern civilization will not be an exception. The erosion of empathy eventually destabilizes every institution built upon trust.

Yet modern political systems increasingly struggle with a deeper contradiction.  The U.S. Constitution, like many governing systems built during the age of nation-states, was constructed around the principle of sovereign independence (National Sovereignty).  This framework made historical sense in a world where threats were largely territorial and communication and other technologies moved at the speed of horses and ships. But today humanity lives inside systems of unescapable interdependence.

Climate systems ignore borders. Viruses don't carry passports. Cyberwarfare is blind to geography. Financial contagion spreads globally within seconds. Ecological collapse in one region destabilizes migration, food systems, and political order elsewhere. Nuclear conflict anywhere threatens life everywhere.  Yet governments still classify, suppress, distort, or strategically manipulate information under the broad umbrella of “national security”/"national sovereignty" often without recognizing that global freedom/security and national freedom/security are no longer separable concepts.

This is the central paradox of the twenty-first century: Humanity has become globally interconnected with everything else, while remaining politically fragmented.  And we persist over and over again in attempting to manage planetary-scale interdependence using governance systems psychologically rooted in independence.  This is the insanity of humanity I will consistently reference. And this now defines our increasing instability.

A free press therefore carries responsibilities far beyond domestic politics. Journalism today is part of humanity’s early warning system. Reporters, scientists, whistleblowers, investigators, and truth-tellers collectively form the nervous system of a sustainable interconnected civilization. Without them, societies will continue to drift blindly into preventable disasters and unsustainable budget deficits. 

This doesn't mean the press is infallible. Journalism can become sensationalized, polarized, corporate-controlled, ideological, or irresponsible in hopes of selling enough to keep spreading the news. Freedom of the press is not freedom from error or financing.  They profit from what we want to hear.  Not from what we need to hear.  That is our civic mental healthy problem. 

Do we want to feel good by avoiding bad news?  Or hear news that needs our attention - to solve problems that borders, wealth, and military power cannot solve.  The answer to flawed speech is rarely enforced silence. Its a truly 'woke' people knowing what needs to be done to keep people and nature healthy.    Healthy societies require more transparency, more evidence, more accountability, more independent inquiry, and more civic curiosity about reality with some responsibility to unite in solving problems. 

The deeper challenge is learning how to balance our freedoms, security, and responsibility simultaneously.  Simply because humanity now exists within what could be called an “iron triangle”: Freedom. Security. And Interdependence.   None can be maximized independently of the others.  Freedom without accountability produces chaos. Security without Truth produces authoritarianism. And, independence without recognition of humankind's interdependence produces delusional actions.

Every nation, regardless of military power, wealth, ideology, or geography, remains accountable to ecological systems, economic systems, biological systems, and ultimately to one another.

Political lines on maps cannot repeal atmospheric chemistry. Aircraft carriers cannot defeat pandemics.
Prosperity cannot permanently insulate societies from global instability. Reality eventually penetrates every border. 

World Press Freedom Day therefore should not simply celebrate journalists. It should remind humanity of a deeper principle: Freedom depends upon our willingness to confront reality honestly, and take the actions needed. 

Democracy requires justice, protection of human rights, transparency, and global health. 

And these require informed citizens, evidence, and objective Truths to sustainably maximize freedoms and security.

And truth itself requires courage.

Especially when it is inconvenient, it challenges power, and especially when it forces us to recognize that survival in the twenty-first century depends less on defending absolute independence and more on learning how to govern our shared interdependence wisely, ethically, and globally.

A free press is not the enemy of national security.  Ultimately, it may be one of the last remaining means to human survival itself.

We must achieve the UN 17 Sustainable Development Goals ASAP...or pay the consequences.