Skip to main content

Posts

The Pendulum of the Puszta

       
Recent posts

Rooted Identity, Shared Respect

Above the city, the sky cleared. Not unified. But shared.… The rain had already stopped over Tokyo, but the air still held the residue of it—like a conversation that hadn’t fully ended. Aya stood on the pedestrian bridge above the tracks in Asagaya, watching trains slide through the city with mechanical indifference. Below her, voices overlapped—Japanese, Vietnamese, English, fragments of something Slavic. No one noticed the mixture anymore. Or perhaps they pretended not to. Her work—quiet, bureaucratic, precise—was to prevent conflicts before they became visible. Complaints. Frictions. Misunderstandings between cultures that shared space but not always meaning. That morning’s file had been simple: A dispute between a Nepali restaurant owner and a local residents’ association over festival noise. Resolved in six emails. Case closed. But Aya didn’t close it in her mind. At the office, a report blinked on her screen: “Tabunka ...

The Compound Interest of Conflict

“And the smallest debt, unpaid long enough, becomes history’s turning point.”… The night shift at the mediation center began quietly—too quietly, Aya thought. That was always the first signal. Silence meant accumulation. On her screen, a dashboard pulsed with live cases: workplace disputes, municipal complaints, cross-border supply disagreements. The system—an AI-assisted conflict monitor modeled loosely on Glasl’s Nine Stages of Conflict Escalation—assigned each case a trajectory score. Most started small. They always did. The case that caught her attention looked trivial. A logistics subcontractor in Yokohama had filed a complaint: delayed payments by 48 hours. The contractor responded: “processing backlog.” No escalation. No threats. No legal language. Stage 1, the system labeled it: hardening. Aya almost archived it. But the system hesitated—an unusual lag, as if something beneath the surface resisted classific...

Legacy and Legitimacy: A Promise for the Future

“Released into the world.”… The first thing the young curator learned at the British Museum was how to speak about the past without ever mentioning the word violence. They used softer phrases. “Acquired during the imperial period.” “Collected through expedition.” “Transferred under complex circumstances.” On her first day, she stood beneath the glass ceiling of the Great Court, watching light spill over stone that had outlived empires. Eight million objects lived here—two million years of human history compressed into labeled silence . It felt less like a museum and more like a gravity well. Her job was in Provenance Analytics. Not the romantic archaeology she had imagined at university, brushing dust from forgotten relics, but something newer—something sharper. A system built on multimodal AI models cross-referenced inscriptions, isotopic signatures, shipping manifests, colonial military logs. It didn’t just tell you what an object was. It told you how i...

The Oracle of the Outskirts

and quietly ensured that uncertainty never disappeared.… The restaurant had no name in English—only four brushed characters fading above the doorway, lacquer cracked by humidity and time. It sat beyond the last MTR stop tourists bothered to remember, where the neon thinned and logistics warehouses pressed against the hills. They met there once a month. Always the same table. Always the same order: steamed garoupa, claypot rice, chrysanthemum tea. Predictability was the point. By April 2026, the world had become obsessed with a narrow strip of water thousands of kilometers away—the Strait of Hormuz. Oil tankers idled. Insurance premiums spiked into absurdity. Satellite congestion maps showed something unnatural: absence. Nearly 25–30% of global seaborne oil and 20% of LNG had once flowed through that chokepoint. Now traffic had collapsed—at one point, almost entirely. Markets didn’t just react. They fractured. ⸻ “You’re ...