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Insightful articles and strategies for navigating change, enhancing resilience, and driving impactful decisions.

Category: Economics

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The Burden and the Withdrawal – The American Strategic Revolution

Richard Martin December 8, 2025 No Comments

The United States is undergoing a profound strategic shift from burden-bearing superpower to burden-resisting and increasingly unbound power. Driven by resentment over uneven alliances, faith in geographic insulation, and a desire for maximum freedom of action, America is redefining its role in the world. This transformation destabilizes the global order it once sustained and forces allies, especially in Europe, to confront a new reality: the United States will no longer carry the same burdens it once willingly accepted. Understanding this shift is essential for grasping the future of alliances, global security, and American power.

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Europe’s New Strategic Frontier – The EU, the Eastern Flank, and the Rise of Poland

Richard Martin December 7, 2025 No Comments

Europe is undergoing a significant transformation, moving from a post-Cold War mindset to a new hard security reality. The eastern and northern front-line states are now playing a crucial role in defining the continent’s strategic future.

Poland’s rise, alongside the ongoing defence of Ukraine, is reshaping the balance of power within Europe. This shift highlights the evolving dynamics of security and the importance of these nations in the broader geopolitical landscape.

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The Doctrine of Friction: Power Grids and the Illusion of Optimization

Richard Martin September 30, 2025 No Comments

Modern grids now run on software as much as steel. Virtual inertia and digital controls make them efficient but also fragile. History shows what happens when systems are tuned too tightly: supply chains snap and reactors fail. The military mindset offers a clear lesson: assume friction, assume failure, and build resilience first.

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The Hidden Physics of Grid Stability: Why Inertia Still Matters

Richard Martin September 29, 2025 No Comments

Wind and solar can deliver megawatts, but not stability. What keeps the grid alive is synchronous inertia — the spinning mass of big generators that resists shocks and buys time when things go wrong. As renewables grow, inertia shrinks, and grids from Australia to the UK are paying to buy it back. The future is not 100% renewables or 100% fossil, but a hybrid grid anchored by physics and balanced by storage and renewables.

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Denmark and the Myth of 100% Renewables

Richard Martin September 28, 2025 No Comments

Denmark often makes headlines for running on 100% renewables, but the reality is more complex. Critics highlight its reliance on imported fossil and nuclear power, while advocates tout it as a model for renewable success. However, Denmark’s energy system is intricately linked to the larger European grid, making it a unique case study. This article explores how Denmark’s experience reveals the importance of integration over self-sufficiency in the renewable energy transition. Discover why the true challenge lies in maintaining stability and resilience across continental-scale grids as we embrace non-synchronous generation.

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Investment Flows vs. Energy Realities

Richard Martin September 21, 2025 No Comments

Billions are flowing into wind and solar, but dollars don’t equal delivered energy. A dollar in fossil fuels, nuclear, or hydro buys dense, reliable power. A dollar in wind or solar buys intermittent output that needs backup, storage, and land. The real metric isn’t money spent, it’s energy delivered.

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Solar Panels Don’t Smelt Steel: Why Fossil Fuels and Nuclear Endure

Richard Martin September 17, 2025 No Comments

Civilization runs on physics, not promises. Fossil fuels and uranium dominate because they’re dense, portable, and flexible. Wind and solar are diffuse, intermittent, and tied to geography. They can support the system, but they cannot replace its foundation. If decarbonization is truly needed, the answer isn’t to dismantle what works — it’s to manage carbon and boost efficiency while keeping the fuels that built the modern world.

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Sovereign and Parasovereign Orders—Hindrance as Overlay, Action as the Ground

Richard Martin August 26, 2025 No Comments

Human life is action: people speak, trade, and associate by nature. Sovereign orders overlay hindrance through taxation, censorship, and control, while parasovereign orders preserve continuity when overreach occurs. The central tension today is between action itself and the hindrance imposed upon it.

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Visually striking representation of a futuristic and dynamic landscape, embodying themes of strategic vision, proactive risk management, and the balance between uncertainty and opportunity.

Too Soon to Tell: On the Premature Concern Over LLMs and the Mind

Richard Martin July 22, 2025 No Comments

In recent weeks, concerns have surged that tools like ChatGPT may be dulling our minds and eroding critical thought. A new MIT study claims that using large language models (LLMs) correlates with reduced brain activity and impaired recall. However, these conclusions are extremely premature, based on a small sample and limited methodology. History shows us that technology often inspires anxiety, from the fears surrounding television to the written word itself. As we navigate this new landscape, it’s crucial to approach these changes with inquiry rather than alarmism. The story of LLMs and the mind is just beginning—let’s explore it together.

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Legibility and Sovereignty: The Politics of Visibility in a Parasovereign Age

Richard Martin July 17, 2025 No Comments

Sovereignty depends on legibility—the ability to make people, land, and activity visible, countable, and governable, as James C. Scott argues in Seeing Like a State. But this need to simplify and standardize produces its own resistance: parasovereign systems, both ancient and engineered, often thrive by remaining deliberately illegible. From kinship networks and mutual aid to Bitcoin and Tor, these orders do not reject rules—they redesign constraint outside the reach of centralized authority. In an age of expanding surveillance and institutional fragility, the real strategic question is no longer just who rules, but what can be seen, and by whom.

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Recent articles

  • 08 Dec 2025 Economics
    The Burden and the Withdrawal – The American Strategic Revolution
  • 07 Dec 2025 Economics
    Europe’s New Strategic Frontier – The EU, the Eastern Flank, and the Rise of Poland
  • 21 Oct 2025 Media
    My latest Strategic Leadership column in Canadian Defence Review
  • 12 Oct 2025 Philosophy
    The Limits of Interior Truth
  • 12 Oct 2025 Philosophy
    No One Knows How Hard It Is to Be Me

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Latest Articles

  • The Burden and the Withdrawal – The American Strategic Revolution
  • Europe’s New Strategic Frontier – The EU, the Eastern Flank, and the Rise of Poland
  • My latest Strategic Leadership column in Canadian Defence Review

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