The weapons of the future are data, and the Western-led world order must accept this new reality or make room for a new world order.
Arbitror sees the world neither as a monolithic “big picture” nor as disparate parts, but instead as an ever-changing network of ideas, actors, and transnational forces.
Witness with us.
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The weapons of the future are data, and the Western-led world order must accept this new reality or make room for a new world order.
There are deep structural issues that have been unaddressed since the previous crash, and the usual suspects of the last crash are back.
As much as it would be nice to have a messiah to sacrifice their political life to save us all, we do not live in a world where such people exist.
Memes have evolved. The rise of modern memes and the ‘edgy’ internet culture built around them reflects the culmination of the post-modern, irony-centric society in which we live.
In Rogue One, one is confronted with the troubling reality that the Rebels are the bad guys.
For a segment of America, globalism and globalization have spelled doom for their lives.
“If we have them, why can’t we use them?” asked an incredulous Donald Trump recently on the subject of nuclear weapons. As if on cue, his statement was rightfully denounced and derided, as has become tradition in the American news cycle. But he inadvertently brought up something surprisingly salient: why exactly not?