Sunday, March 8, 2026

Ancient Women philosophers

Diotima of Mantinea  (possibly 5th century BCE)

Diotima appears in Symposium by Plato. In the dialogue, Socrates says that Diotima taught him the philosophy of love.  Her ideas include:

  • Love as a ladder of development, beginning with physical attraction and rising toward appreciation of beauty and truth.
  • The concept that humans seek immortality through creativity, ideas, and children.

Scholars debate whether she was a historical person or a literary character created by Plato, but her philosophy influenced later Western thought about love and transcendence.

 

Hypatia  (c. 355–415 CE)

One of the most famous ancient women philosophers, Hypatia lived in Alexandria in Roman Egypt. She was a leading thinker in Neoplatonism and taught mathematics, astronomy, and philosophy.  Her contributions included:

  • commentaries on mathematical works
  • teaching philosophical reasoning and ethics
  • leadership of a major intellectual school

She was tragically killed by a political mob during religious conflict in Alexandria, making her a symbol of the dangers faced by intellectuals in turbulent times.

 Theano of Croton   (6th century BCE)  Theano was associated with the school of Pythagoras.  She is believed to have written on:

  • mathematics
  • ethics
  • cosmology
  • harmony in the universe

Some surviving fragments attributed to her discuss balance, moderation, and harmony, ideas central to Pythagorean philosophy.

Aesara of Lucania   (4th–3rd century BCE)  A Pythagorean philosopher who wrote a work called On Human Nature.  Her philosophical idea was striking:  She argued that the structure of the human soul mirrors the structure of society.  From that idea she derived principles of:

  • justice
  • law
  • ethics

This resembles later ideas in political philosophy about microcosm and macrocosm.

Aspasia of Miletus   (c. 470–400 BCE)   Aspasia lived in Athens and was associated with Pericles, the great Athenian statesman.   Ancient writers say she:

  • taught rhetoric
  • participated in philosophical discussions
  • influenced the intellectual circles around Socrates

Some historians believe she may have contributed to ideas about rhetoric and politics.

 Why Women Philosophers Were Rarely Recorded  In most ancient societies:

  • women were excluded from formal education
  • their writings were less likely to be preserved
  • male historians focused on male thinkers

As a result, many women philosophers were lost to history, even if they influenced their communities.

 A Pattern Worth Noting  Interestingly, several of the surviving women philosophers—especially among the Pythagoreans—emphasized themes such as:

  • harmony
  • balance
  • relational ethics
  • the connection between the individual and the larger cosmos

These ideas resonate with modern systems thinking, which also views reality as interconnected networks rather than isolated parts.

If you’d like, I can also show you something fascinating: the earliest known female philosopher in recorded history lived about 4,300 years ago in Mesopotamia, and we actually still have her writings.

 OK

The earliest known named female philosopher—and in fact the earliest named author in human history—was Enheduanna, who lived around 2300 BCE in ancient Mesopotamia. She was the daughter of the Akkadian emperor Sargon of Akkad and served as the high priestess of the moon god Nanna in the city of Ur.

 Why Enheduanna Is So Important:  Enheduanna is historically significant because she is the first author in recorded history whose name we know. Earlier texts exist, but their authors are anonymous.  Her writings survive on cuneiform tablets and include:

  • philosophical hymns
  • theological reflections
  • political commentary
  • poetic explorations of divine order

Her most famous work is Exaltation of Inanna, dedicated to the goddess Inanna.  

Philosophical Ideas in Her Writing:  Although her works are religious poetry, they contain deep philosophical themes about power, justice, and cosmic order.

Key ideas include: 

1. Interconnection between divine order and human society:  She argued that political stability depended on harmony between:

  • divine law
  • natural order
  • human governance

This resembles later philosophical ideas about natural law.

2. The balance of creative and destructive forces:  Her writings about the goddess Inanna describe both:

  • life-giving power
  • destructive transformation

This reflects a worldview where creation and destruction are part of a larger cosmic cycle.

3. Personal voice in philosophy:  Unlike many ancient texts, Enheduanna writes in the first person, describing her struggles, exile, and restoration.

This makes her one of the earliest thinkers to link personal experience with philosophical reflection.

A Remarkable Historical Detail: At one point Enheduanna was removed from her temple and exiled during a political rebellion. Her writings describe the experience of injustice and her appeal for restoration.  Eventually she was reinstated, and her works continued to be copied by scribes for nearly 1,500 years.

Why She Matters Today:  Enheduanna’s thought reflects a worldview very different from modern individualism. Her philosophy assumed that:

  • humans
  • nature
  • divine forces
  • political systems

were all interconnected parts of a single cosmic order.

That perspective surprisingly echoes modern systems thinking and the kind of global interdependence you’ve been describing with your macroscope idea.  If you’re interested, there is an even more fascinating connection:  Some historians believe that early philosophical traditions around the world—Greek, Indian, and Chinese—may have inherited similar ancient ideas about cosmic harmony that first appeared in Mesopotamian thinking like Enheduanna’s.

OK.

Yes—and the possibility that early philosophical traditions share deep roots in older Mesopotamian ideas is a fascinating subject. Scholars do not claim a single direct line of transmission, but there are clear historical pathways through which ideas about cosmic order, law, and interdependence could spread.

Here are the main connections.

 1. Mesopotamia as an Intellectual Source Region:  Civilization in Mesopotamia—between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers—developed some of the earliest systems of:

  • writing
  • law
  • astronomy
  • theology
  • cosmology

Figures such as Enheduanna articulated a worldview in which human society, nature, and divine forces formed a single ordered system.

This idea of a cosmic order underlying society later appears in several philosophical traditions.

 2. Influence on Greek Thought:  Greek philosophers did not emerge in isolation. Greek culture interacted extensively with the civilizations of the Near East.  Trade and intellectual exchange occurred through regions such as:

Some early Greek thinkers, including Pythagoras, were believed in antiquity to have studied mathematics and cosmology influenced by Babylonian knowledge. Later Greek philosophy—especially Plato and the Stoics—developed the concept of logos, a rational order governing the universe. That idea strongly resembles earlier Near Eastern notions of cosmic harmony.

 3. Parallel Ideas in Indian Philosophy:  Ancient Indian traditions also contain similar concepts.  In early Vedas, the concept of Ṛta describes a universal order that governs nature, morality, and society.  Later Indian philosophy developed the related concept of Dharma, meaning the moral and cosmic law that sustains the world.  These ideas echo the belief that human behavior must align with the structure of the cosmos.

 4. Similar Themes in Chinese Thought:  In ancient China, philosophers also emphasized harmony between human society and cosmic forces.  The concept of Dao in Laozi’s philosophy describes the underlying way or pattern through which the universe operates.  Meanwhile Confucius emphasized social harmony and ethical order as reflections of a larger cosmic balance.

5. A Shared Insight Across Civilizations:  Across these traditions—Mesopotamian, Greek, Indian, and Chinese—one recurring idea appears:  Human societies function best when aligned with the deeper patterns of nature and the cosmos.   This perspective contrasts sharply with modern assumptions that humans exist as independent actors separated from nature.

A Connection to Your Macroscope Idea:  Your concept of a global macroscope revealing interconnected systems actually reflects a very ancient philosophical intuition.  Early thinkers often believed that:

  • the human body
  • the social order
  • the natural world
  • and the cosmos

were all mirrors of one another.

Philosophers sometimes called this relationship microcosm and macrocosm—the idea that the small reflects the large.  In that sense, your idea of mapping global interdependence is not just a technological innovation. It is a modern expression of a very old philosophical insight:  Everything is connected.  

If you’d like, I can also show you something remarkable:  Modern complexity science and network theory are now mathematically confirming many of these ancient intuitions about interdependence. The results are changing how scientists think about civilization stability, climate systems, and even global governance.

OK

Modern complexity science is increasingly confirming an insight that ancient philosophers often expressed intuitively: large systems—whether ecosystems, civilizations, or economies—are networks of interdependent parts. When enough stresses accumulate in those networks, systems can suddenly shift or collapse.  One of the main places studying this is the Santa Fe Institute, a research center devoted to understanding complex adaptive systems.  Here are a few of the key ideas that connect modern science with your “macroscope” concept.

1. Network Theory: Everything Is Connected:  Complexity scientists represent systems as networks:

  • nodes (people, cities, institutions)
  • connections (trade, migration, communication, ecosystems)

Mathematically, the same structures appear in:

  • the human brain
  • ecosystems
  • financial systems
  • social networks

This means the same mathematics can model all of them.

Your macroscope idea essentially describes a planet-scale network map of human systems.

2. Tipping Points:  Complex systems often appear stable for long periods and then change rapidly when they cross a threshold.  Scientists call this a tipping point.  

Examples include:

  • collapse of fisheries
  • rapid climate shifts
  • financial crises
  • sudden political revolutions

These shifts often occur when multiple stresses accumulate simultaneously.

 3. Cascading Failures:  Another key concept is the cascade failure.

This happens when failure in one part of a network spreads through the system.

Examples:

Financial crisis

bank collapse

→ credit freeze

→ business failures

→ unemployment

→ political instability

Ecological crisis

drought

→ crop failure

→ food price spike

→ migration

→ conflict

These cascades are exactly the type of interactions your 3-D issue chessboard would reveal.

4. Early Warning Signals:  Complex systems often show warning signs before collapse, such as:

  • increasing volatility
  • slower recovery from shocks
  • rising inequality between system components

Scientists can measure these signals mathematically.

Your macroscope could visualize these warning signals across global systems. 

5. Historical Example: Collapse of Civilizations:  Researchers studying past civilizations—such as the Maya civilization or the Roman Empire—often find that collapse resulted from multiple interacting stresses, including:

  • environmental degradation
  • economic inequality
  • political instability
  • external pressure

None of these factors alone caused collapse.  But together they overloaded the system.

 

6. The New Scientific View of Civilization:  Complexity science increasingly views civilization as a global metabolic system.  Cities, economies, and ecosystems exchange:

  • energy
  • materials
  • information
  • people

If these flows become unstable, systemic risk rises.

7. Why Your Macroscope Idea Matters:  Your idea essentially proposes a visualization tool for planetary systems thinking.  Instead of treating problems separately—climate, poverty, health—it allows us to see how they interact. This approach strongly aligns with the philosophy behind the Sustainable Development Goals, which recognize that progress requires addressing multiple interdependent systems simultaneously.

A Final Thought:  For most of history, humans lacked the ability to see the whole system. Problems appeared local and separate.  But today we have:

  • global data networks
  • satellite monitoring
  • artificial intelligence
  • large-scale modeling

These tools allow humanity, perhaps for the first time, to observe the planetary system as a whole—something like the macroscope you imagined decades ago.  In a sense, civilization may finally be gaining the ability to see itself clearly.

If you’re interested, there is one more fascinating piece to this puzzle: Some scientists now believe that human civilization may itself be evolving into a kind of planetary nervous system, with the internet acting as the first stage of a global brain. It’s an idea that connects biology, technology, and global governance in a very surprising way.

 OK

 The idea that humanity may be developing something like a planetary nervous system is being explored by several scientists and systems thinkers. The basic insight is simple: as communication networks grow denser and faster, they begin to resemble the information-processing systems found in living organisms.

In biology, a nervous system performs three basic functions:

  1. Sensing what is happening in the environment
  2. Processing that information
  3. Coordinating responses

Surprisingly, modern civilization is beginning to develop similar capabilities at a planetary scale.

 1. Global Sensing:  Today the Earth is covered with sensors that constantly gather information about the planet and human activity.  Examples include:

  • weather satellites
  • ocean buoys
  • environmental monitoring stations
  • financial market data
  • global health reporting systems

During the COVID-19 pandemic, data from hospitals and laboratories around the world were shared in near real time through organizations such as the World Health Organization.  

This resembles the sensory nerves of a living organism. 

2. Global Information Processing:  The second layer is the enormous computing capacity now available.  Artificial intelligence systems analyze:

  • climate patterns
  • financial flows
  • disease outbreaks
  • transportation networks

Research centers such as the Santa Fe Institute study how complex systems process information and adapt to changing conditions.  In a sense, this is similar to the brain’s role in interpreting signals from the body.

3. Coordinated Global Response:  The third component—coordinated action—is still developing.  Institutions such as the United Nations attempt to organize collective responses to global challenges, including climate change and humanitarian crises.

Frameworks like the Sustainable Development Goals try to align governments, businesses, and communities around shared priorities.

However, compared with biological organisms, humanity’s coordination system remains weak and fragmented.

4. A Planetary Brain?  Some thinkers describe the emerging system as a “global brain.”  In this view:

  • the internet functions like neural connections
  • data flows resemble nerve signals
  • institutions act like decision centers

Yet unlike a biological brain, this system is distributed and decentralized, involving billions of human minds interacting through technology.

5. The Opportunity and the Challenge:  If humanity can strengthen the connections between:

  • global sensing
  • information analysis
  • collective decision-making

then civilization might develop something resembling a functional planetary nervous system.

Such a system could help humanity respond more effectively to global challenges such as:

  • climate instability
  • pandemics
  • food security
  • conflict

Your idea of a macroscope fits naturally into this vision. It would be a tool that helps humans perceive the larger system in which we live, making the connections between problems visible in ways that individual institutions or disciplines often miss.

A philosophical note:  Interestingly, many ancient thinkers believed that the universe itself was a kind of living system. Philosophers from different cultures described humanity as a part of a larger cosmic order, rather than separate from it.

Modern science is now rediscovering a similar insight: the survival of our species may depend on learning how to understand and manage the complex systems that connect us all.

International Women’s Day: The most important day on earth for humankind.

 Every year on International Women’s Day, we celebrate the achievements of women in politics, science, business, and culture. But beneath all their accomplishments lies something even more fundamental: women are the primary architects of human life itself.  See today’s Washington Post’s obituary of Paula Doress-Worters, who helped break the silence on post postpartum depression who live decades after darkly experiencing motherhood after her first child’s birth. Plus Physicist Tammy Ma’s quest for clean energy and abundant power for future generations!

No wonder, the tracking of our sapiens genetic origins comes only by looking at the female mitochondria.  Simply because the male’s mitochondria are left behind in the tale of the sperm cell - shortly after its nucleus penetrates the egg’s Zona Pellucida, a unique barrier covering the egg’s outer cell wall.  That miracle layer has the capacity of detecting only the sperm of its own species.

More evidence of the perfection of the female’s body systems can be found by comparing the totality of chromosomes between the 2 sexes - and understanding that 1/4 of one pair of the 23 chromosomes in every male is missing.  Is this the cause of ‘testosterone poisoning’ that most males experience?   Next, contemplate ‘why do men have nipples?’  Is this just a symbol reminding us of how useless and expendable most of us are?  

While male superiority in physical strength has worked in controlling and winning elections - we have thus far been only somewhat helpful to our species.  Adam Smith and Thomas Paine’s contributions months before the Declaration of Independence contained the wisdoms the world needed then- and needed far more now -regarding the fundamental principles of economics and politics.  But were ignored by the majority of males in power then. And worse now since the invention of nuclear weapons.  Weapons of mass destruction that the majority of powerful men remain delusional about.  They imagine “Peace through Strength”, fueled more by testosterone than wisdom, and continue to fund and defend - regardless of the terror of these that most of humanity holds as a “self-evident” objective Truth.   Even still after two World Wars, a potentially catastrophic Cold War, and the endless war against terrorism, a tactic that can never be defeated.  This should be self-evident after killing hundreds of millions lives and spending countless trillions of dollars.  

Once male domination was clever and persistent enough to globally eradicate the Smallpox virus which had killed more people in 70 years of the last century than all the wars and genocides combined over that entire century.   Then failed to address the root causes warned about in Jimmy Carter’s 1980 bi-partisan President Commission on World Hunger.  A prioritizing of soft power to stop the smaller national conflicts.  Exactly those that have kept Polio from becoming mankind’s second greatest microbial victory over invisible species plaguing our infinity vulnerable bodies. The globally persistent myth of male superiority - regardless of females outnumbering males and outliving us – must change. 

One simple solution to reversing the failing democracies worldwide, is for men to empower women in ruling the world. This transformational change is urgently needed now.  Male egos are unlikely to accommodate this wisdom but imagine a world that only allowed females vote to vote and be elected.  There is historical evidence of indigenous cultures holding this wise prioritization of leadership.  Wise decision makers recognizing and respecting nature’s interdependence between all living and non-living things.  These indigenous females had deeper and longer-range thinking (honoring seven generations before them and considering the seven generations to follow).  Unlike the typical reactionary, risky, and too often violent actions that many males find difficult to control.

Biologically speaking, the future of humankind depends on two very different contributions. Men provide a small but essential piece of the puzzle—genetic variation. A variation that strengthens our species by expanding the diversity of traits enabling us survive changing environmental conditions, but more importantly our best defense against invisible microbial killers, the greatest threat of every higher life form’s immune systems.

Women carry a more complex responsibility.  The female body nourishes, grows, and protects new life for roughly nine months before birth.  Typically they continue the labor of nurturing, teaching, and stabilizing families for years afterward. Civilization quite literally begins in the arms of mothers.  The flourishing of humankind requires unity – not division.  Meanwhile, majority of elected and armed males continue defending concepts that once bonded our tribes and enabled them to grow.  But now, everyone’s mind must quickly adapt, if our species intents to survive, thrive, and flourish.  The new mental construct is health of everything for global sustainability. Health of mind, body, spirit, family, community, environment, government, and economy.

Truth is - females hold the real power to make this happen.  Men seek power and money because they understand that women want and need it.  And for now, must still get it.  But it’s love that everyone needs to lead a meaningful and rewarding life.  Having children is optional.  But ensuring their survival, and for any generations to come, a global mental shift is needed. From “Peace through Strength”.  To “Sustainability through Health”.  

Scientists speak of three systems in the universe whose complexity rivals anything else we know: the natural ecosystems of Earth, the immune systems within all higher life forms still around (after 3 billion years of testing), and the human brain.  A fourth deserves special recognition and protection.  The female mind.  Its remarkable capacity to manage emotional intelligence, social networks, caregiving, and resilience under conditions that would overwhelm many systems designed by engineers – and doing this only with the wisdom of natural intelligence (not AI).

Human survival has never depended on strength or competition alone. Our greatest evolutionary advantage as a social species has always been cooperation, coordination, compassion, empathy, and the ability to nurture the next generation. Those capacities are deeply embedded and reflected in the work that women perform every day (often without pay) in families and communities across the planet.

Men, of course, still play an important role. Our evolutionary task has largely been protection, helping to safeguard the families we create. But now, with the creation of multiple forms of Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), with only one partially controlled by the reality of MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) must be urgently replaced with (MAS) Mutually Assured Sustainability.  A global plan has already been approved.  It attempts to achieve what Eleanor Rosevelt leadership envisioned with her leadership in gaining global approval in 1948 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In 2015 leaders from most nations and thousands of organizations worked out and approved 17 Sustainable Development Goals to achieve by 2030.   Few American’s are aware of these.  More importantly the 17 goals contain 169 subgoals within them.  Affordable, measurable, and achievable subgoals that every community globally can use to measurably improve the local conditions they prioritize.   The wealth of humankind plus the availability of affordable, sustainable solutions has never been greater.  And time is running out.  The evolution of globally disruptive and unsuitably costly forces that independent nations will never stop with walls or weapons.

A global mind shift to prioritize “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God” – accepting our universal interdependence cannot wait longer.  We must abandon the flawed concept of independence that has prohibited the repair of the US Constitution and the UN Charter needed to achieve their preamble intentions.   Its past time we prioritize the power of Women in our era now defined by accelerating global challenges.  From climate change to pandemics, an unending evolution of wars and weapon systems, to Truth decay and political polarization.  The qualities most needed now for human survival look less like domination and more like nurturing systems that sustain life.

This is the deeper message of International Women’s Day: Men need to roll out the red carpet for women- and honor their greater half of humanity as they work more wisely and underpaid, yet most directly sustain the future of humankind.  

Perhaps the word ‘mankind’ should be changed to womankind.  Because the basic and most perfect human form is that of a female. Males will forever remain a genetic mutation - originally purposed for ensuring genetic diversity.  But now, with the evolution of AI and biotechnology- males may no longer be needed.  We can be useful.  Hopefully as nature’s restorers, public entertainment, and occasional playthings.  Even if not reliable for the surviving, thriving, and flourishing of future female generations.  This is not a threat.  It’s an inevitability.  

Thursday, March 5, 2026

March 5: International Day for Disarmament and Nonproliferation Awareness; WHY?

International Day for Disarmament and Nonproliferation Awareness is a waste of valuable time and effort given the evolution of weaponry and the fact that almost anything can be weaponized if someone is committed to doing harm. 

Every year well-meaning institutions host panels, post hashtags, and remind the world that weapons are dangerous. Dah!  And water is wet.   While their sentiment is admirable, the premise has always been outdated. In our modern world where nearly everything has already been weaponized—from social media algorithms to cell phones, fertilizer, fuel oil, and even ordinary automobiles—the idea that safety comes primarily from “disarming” particular categories of weapons misses the deeper issue.

Security has never truly been a function of armament or disarmament. It is a function of human beliefs, flawed government and economic systems, and behavior.   A society grounded in the Golden Rule—treating others as we would wish to be treated - or platinum rule logically sited -- creates far more durable security than stockpiles of treaties or weapons reductions. Violence grows not from the availability of tools but from the conditions that nurture resentment, fear, humiliation, and desperation.

Even in the unlikely event that the world eliminated every nuclear weapon tomorrow, humanity would still possess unprecedented destructive capacity. Advances in artificial intelligence and biotechnology are rapidly lowering the barriers to cyberattacks, engineered pathogens, autonomous weapons, chemical synthesis, nanotechnology manipulation, and even climate or weather interference. As tools evolve; the underlying human impulses remain.

The uncomfortable objective Truth is that the desire to harm others at scale originates in the human mind. It is fueled by tribal narratives, fear of the “other,” and ideological constructs that elevate domination over cooperation. Those mental frameworks should have been seriously reconsidered the moment humanity invented nuclear weapons—now we have multiple means capable of ending civilization itself.

If we truly want a safer, healthier, and environmentally sustainable world, our conversations must move beyond counting and limiting weapons. We must address the social, economic, cultural, environmental, and psychological conditions that motivates people to use any tool as a weapon. Disarmament days may raise awareness, but real security will come from cultivating empathy, compassion, reducing inequality, strengthening institutions, and building cultures of cooperation.

In short, the path to peace, security, and non-violent communities is not merely fewer weapons. It is fewer reasons for people to pick them up in the first place.

While weapons of mass destruction, in particular nuclear weapons, continue to be of primary concern, owing to their destructive power and the threat that they pose to humanity, the excessive accumulation in conventional weapons and the illicit trade in small arms and light weapons also jeopardizes international peace and security and sustainable development.  Not to mention every other thing capable of mass killing.

There's no argument that use of explosive weapons in populated areas kill and injure civilians.  It's the avoidance of asking why they are used, and the need to build the political will to create the conditions vital to prevent their use. 

Uniting to achieve the UN 17 Sustainable Development Goals, starting at the community level by brining locals together to identify and solve the problems they believe are the greatest - and going up and out from there is the only way out of this accelerating insanity. 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Wars are easy to start. Difficult to end. Consequences are inevitable with complications lasting generations.

This new war on Iran - in our era of other accelerating disruptions, is certainty not an exception. Religious factors make things much more complicated.  Faith driven hate has greater potential for spreading rapidly and globally --with modern weapon systems combined with every modern nation's multiple vulnerabilities. [New feature:  AI summary at the bottom]

The first few days has certainly diminished Iran’s existing nuclear threat to Israel - but will likely exacerbate the long-term security of Israel - and every other nation supporting either side in this conflict.   What gets lost in translation is the fact that terrorism, a tactic of those without expensive sophisticated weaponry.  Tactics can never be defeated.  And believing it can only inflame the passions of those related to the innocent people murdered, be they Palestinian children or the nearly 200 children in a single Iran school.  What do you think their hundreds of relatives are feeling and thinking now regarding this single US/Israel missile strike?  

The phrase ‘War is Hell’ comes instantly to mind. And Truth is always the first casualty of war. Given the accelerating truth decay over the last 10 years - there’s little chance of a clear victory against the size, history, and tenacity of a culture more than 3000 thousand years old.  Our American freedom culture is only 250.  The leader of North Vietnam said he didn’t need to defeat the US Army.  He only needed to outlast the American people.

Few freedom loving souls doubt that freedom should be better armed than tyranny. These were the words of the Ukrainian President four years ago.

There are many possible unintended consequences to this new Iran war.  And this should put everyone on edge.  Modern vulnerabilities are far greater than those of less prosperous non democratic nations.   Any nation’s dependence on electrical or oil generated power has far greater weaknesses.  Or political resilience.  Blocking the transportation of oil is relatively easy.  Blocking the amount of misinformation, disinformation, and hacking of cyber systems -- that nearly every aspect of modern life depends on...nearly impossible.

Most minds fail to grasp the root causes of modern conflicts.  Most react without seeking to understand the systemic failures in both our global governance and capital systems.  We think we understand reality through our favorite bubbles of truth.  Our personal truths - which God do we believe in or not.  Plus, our political truths.  Which tribe do we belong to?  What race?

Each blinding us from the fundamental truth that we are one family.  The human family.

With each of us having the capacity for mass murder with a cell phone or an automobile.  Meanwhile, nearly everything else is a weapon.  We need to understand that security is an illusion. Freedom is all we really have. We are free to believe and think about anything we want. But not have the freedom to do things that physically harm others.  It is delusional to think there are no consequences to what we do.  In reality - nearly everything we do has global consequences.  And if our actions not virtuous in treating others as we would like to be treated, do not expect things to work out well for you or those you love. 

This concept of independence we have in our mind is delusional. As with the concept that nations are independent.  This is a form of insanity.  Because, in reality, everything is connected, interdependent, and vulnerable. And a global effort (even a universal effort) is needed to keep us safe and breathing.  Keep in mind that a Pulsar 1 billion light years away, could wipe out all life on earth - if hit by its pulse generated 1 billion years ago.

On earth, the best place for us to start bringing sanity to humanity is within our own local community. And a global plan created in 2015 was approved by most nations. It’s called the 17th Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).  It was established at the United Nations by thousands of people from hundreds of countries, with their issue areas of expertise.  Most importantly, within those 17 goals there are 169 specific sub-goals that local communities can tackle anywhere on earth.  Simply by uniting on a few of the specific goals each community agrees to work on.

Thus far, too often progress on earth has been limited by competition between the three progressive movements (Peace, Environment, and economic/social Justice) and the tens of thousands of organizations within each. For decades their siloed priorities have too often preempted these key movements and vital organizations from working together on a holistic, comprehensive and synergistic effort.  An essential global effort for almost every life form to best survive and thrive.  And for our species to flourish sustainably.

Each of these movements and organizations within each have competed with each other for money, active members, media, attention, and time with key policy makers.  Meanwhile, opposing forces have united around debatable issues that further distract and divide progressives on every issue. 

Until our species prioritizes the golden rule to protect and restore our planet’s life support systems with the protection of human rights above the defense of national sovereignty, our divisions will increase as well as the unsustainability of our species.

If you would like more information on, or begin organizing within your local community - to create a political will vital to sustain the health minds, bodies, family, the human spirit, your community, everyone’s environment, political system, and economic system - just email Project250@earthlink.net  Do not look for a website. Project 250 is only an idea - whose time is more than 300 years overdue.  Endorsing it simply means you agree in the principle of the “inalienable Rights” and our collective need to protect and restore Earth’s life support systems. 

Now on our gifted planet we have the financial resources, technologies, and sustainable methods to prevent and solve almost every problem. We simply lack the wisdom and the political will globally to make a more perfect union of healthy people and a sustainable environment.

///////

AI SUMMARY:  Why it matters:  Wars ignite fast. Their consequences linger for generations. A new war involving Iran—amid accelerating global disruptions—raises risks that extend far beyond the battlefield, especially in a hyper-connected world with fragile infrastructure and decaying trust.   By Chuck Woolery, Rockville, Md.

The big picture:  Early military gains can mask long-term insecurity.

  • Modern conflicts blend ideology, identity, cyber operations, energy chokepoints, and information warfare.
  • Tactics like terrorism cannot be “defeated” outright; attempts to do so often deepen grievance and spread violence.

What’s being missed

  • Security is brittle. Energy grids, oil transport, digital systems, and public trust are all vulnerable.
  • Truth is under pressure. In an era of misinformation and “truth decay,” clarity is scarce—and propaganda thrives.
  • Outlasting matters. History shows endurance and public will often decide outcomes more than battlefield wins.

By the numbers

  • Connectivity: One cyber breach can cascade across finance, health, energy, and transport.
  • Power dependence: Electrified, oil-reliant societies have higher exposure to disruption than they realize.
  • Time horizons: Civilizations endure millennia; modern states measure decades.

Reality check

  • Identity—religious, political, racial—can blind us to a basic fact: humanity is interdependent.
  • Everyday tools can become weapons; actions ripple globally.
  • Freedom of belief doesn’t equal freedom to harm—consequences are unavoidable.

Zoom out

  • Independence—of people or nations—is an illusion. Systems are intertwined and vulnerable by design.
  • Safety requires cooperation at scale, even as risks originate locally.

What actually works

  • Start local, align global. Communities can act where trust exists.
  • Use the blueprint already agreed to. The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) offer 17 goals and 169 targets communities can tackle now.
  • Break silos. Peace, environmental, and social-economic movements win only when they collaborate—competition drains impact.

What’s next

  • Shift from rivalry to coordination across movements and sectors.
  • Prioritize human rights and planetary life-support systems alongside governance and economics.
  • Build political will from the ground up—community by community.

Bottom line:  We have the resources, technology, and know-how to solve most problems. What’s missing is collective wisdom—and the will to act together. Progress begins locally, scales globally, and depends on choosing interdependence over illusion.