Skip to main content

Posts

The Incurable Deficit of a Triangle

       
Recent posts

The Pragmatism of Love

They also learn, slowly and imperfectly, to value whatever helps them flourish together in a shared world.… In the autumn of 2032, the city sanitation department of Osaka faced an unexpected crisis. It was not a flood, nor a pandemic, nor a power outage. It was a labor shortage. Japan’s aging population had continued to shrink the workforce despite advances in automation. Delivery robots crossed sidewalks, AI systems optimized logistics, and self-driving garbage trucks handled much of the city’s waste collection. Yet one problem remained stubbornly unsolved: sorting organic waste before it spoiled. The solution arrived from an unlikely source. Cockroaches. Not ordinary cockroaches, but a genetically engineered strain developed by researchers studying insect intelligence and collective behavior. The insects had been modified to preferentially consume specific categories of food waste while avoiding household belongings....

The Convergence of the Unknown

"The Secretary needs to know that the sky isn't our biggest problem anymore. It's the server room."… The rain over Arlington had the thick, heavy quality of midsummer, slicking the glass facade of the Pentagon and blurring the Washington Monument across the Potomac. Inside Room 3E1048, Dr. Aris Thorne did not look at the view. His eyes were locked on a split-screen terminal showing two entirely different kinds of anomalies. To the left was a data stream from the Department of War’s PURSUE (Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters) database—specifically a file from the third declassified tranche released just weeks ago on June 12, 2026. To the right was the operational telemetry of an experimental autonomous defense grid code-named Aegis-9 . “The historical parallel is exact,” Aris murmured, rubbing his temples. “We’re repeating the 16th century, just with better hardware.” Sitting across fr...

The Forty-Eighth Minute

that many could become one.… The year was 2026. The Soccer World Cup had expanded once again, bringing more nations, more matches, and more spectators than any previous tournament. Researchers estimated that billions of viewers would watch at least part of the competition through conventional broadcasts, streaming platforms, immersive virtual reality feeds, and AI-generated multilingual commentary systems. Entire cities had become temporary laboratories for crowd management, behavioral science, and digital communication. In the host city’s central plaza, a journalist interviewed a supporter wrapped in a national flag. The supporter smiled and spoke carefully. “We cheer for our national team partly because of our passionate love for soccer, and partly because we feel pride in seeing our national flag displayed so prominently. Yet, the greatest motivation is that we—each of us as individuals—can transform into a single, unified...