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

Category: Political Philosophy

Latest articles

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 Limits of Interior Truth

Richard Martin October 12, 2025 No Comments

Revelations of inner feelings now often overshadow shared reality. Richard Martin explores the profound implications of this shift in “The Limits of Interior Truth.” He delves into two critical areas: gender identity and sexual violence, revealing how the elevation of personal experience can clash with societal structures. As children navigate their identities and victims seek justice, the tension between emotional truth and objective reality becomes increasingly apparent. Martin argues for a necessary balance, emphasizing that compassion must not devolve into coercion, and that justice relies on more than just personal revelation. Discover the complexities of this contemporary struggle.

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No One Knows How Hard It Is to Be Me

Richard Martin October 12, 2025 No Comments

In today’s political landscape, the refrain “no one knows how hard it is to be me” has transformed public discourse from a focus on justice and collective action to a theater of personal suffering. This shift elevates pain as the new currency of authenticity, creating a moral economy where empathy is declared impossible. As we navigate a world increasingly defined by individual grievances, the challenge lies in recovering a language that fosters shared meaning rather than division. Discover how we can move from confession to communion and reclaim the essence of politics meant to unite us.

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Election of Trump is about to cause a major storm in China.

Judging Strategy Ex Ante: Vietnam, U.S. Grand Strategy, and the Lessons of Context (1955–1965)

Richard Martin August 29, 2025 No Comments

The Vietnam War is still argued over as either unnecessary or strategically successful, often using the very same outcomes as evidence. That shows why hindsight cannot settle the issue. Strategy has to be judged ex ante, by what leaders knew, feared, and believed at the time. Between 1955 and 1965, U.S. leaders saw Vietnam not in isolation but as part of a chain leading from Indochina to ASEAN, Indonesia, Japan, and ultimately the global order. My new essay sets out eight principles for analysing strategy in this way, using Vietnam as a case study with lessons that remain relevant today.

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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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The Burden of Defence: From Machiavelli to Seven Samurai to Eugene Sledge

Richard Martin August 25, 2025 No Comments

From Machiavelli’s citizen militia, to Kikuchiyo’s lesson in Seven Samurai, to Eugene Sledge’s grim testimony of Okinawa, one truth endures: a land good enough to live in is also good enough to defend. Defence cannot be outsourced. It must be owned by the people themselves.

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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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Parasovereign Protocols and the Architecture of Voluntary Constraint

Richard Martin July 15, 2025 No Comments

In an age of escalating chokepoint control and sovereign overreach, the emergence of parasovereign protocols offers a transformative approach to agency and connection. These engineered systems of voluntary constraint redefine interaction, enabling unhindered exchange and communication without reliance on traditional authority. By prioritizing clarity, integrity, and consent, parasovereign systems invert conventional power structures, fostering a new architecture of trust. This is not merely a rejection of order; it is a demand for a different kind of order—one that empowers individuals and preserves agency. Discover how these protocols can reshape our understanding of strategic action in a contested world.

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What Is Engineered Parasovereignty?

Richard Martin July 14, 2025 No Comments

We are entering an era where sovereignty is increasingly bypassed by parasovereign protocols—systems that empower individuals to operate outside institutional control. Unlike traditional platforms, these protocols enable structured autonomy, facilitating peer-to-peer communication without permission from a sovereign authority. This shift offers a new kind of freedom, allowing individuals to reject control. Explore how these systems challenge traditional power structures and understand the trade-offs of autonomy in a world where sovereignty is becoming irrelevant.

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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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