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Humans featured post, a Humans Media favorite.
(4) Unequal Enforcement
- The Requirement of Unilateral Law - Law only functions as law when it is applied unilaterally. This does not mean identically or blindly, but reciprocally and predictably. A unilateral legal system is one in which rules bind all parties regardless of status, wealth, or position, and where increased power brings increased exposure rather than exemption. When this condition holds, law operates as a shared boundary that constrains behavior and stabilizes cooperation. People may disagree with outcomes, but they can anticipate them. That predictability is what allows trust to exist even in imperfect systems.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Humans
In Search of Memory
Book Review: In Search of Memory by Eric R. Kandel In Search of Memory is a remarkable work that combines autobiography, historical insight, and scientific discovery in a way few science books manage. Nobel Laureate Eric R. Kandel tells his life story while explaining how our understanding of memory grew from scattered observations into a rigorous, modern science.
By Rosalina Janeabout a month ago in Humans
(3) Authority Without Consequence
- The Moment Authority Became Untethered - Every functioning system of governance relies on a constraint so fundamental it often goes unnoticed until it disappears: authority must be exposed to consequence. When those who make decisions experience the downstream effects of those decisions personally, power is naturally disciplined by risk. That discipline does not require virtue or foresight. It operates mechanically. Decisions that produce harm are abandoned because they injure the decision-maker, and decisions that succeed are reinforced because they reward restraint. Modern political systems did not lose this constraint through a single reform or moral collapse. They lost it gradually, through delegation, bureaucratic layering, procedural complexity, and the normalization of distance between action and outcome, until authority could be exercised without meaningful exposure to its effects.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Humans
(2) From Stake to Abstraction
- The Original Logic of Representation - For most of human political history, representation was not conceived as a mechanism for expressing individual preference or personal identity. It was understood as an extension of responsibility. Political participation flowed to those who bore the material risks of maintaining the community, because those risks imposed discipline on decision making. To have a voice in governance meant being exposed to the consequences of governance. That exposure included taxation, compulsory service, property seizure, legal punishment, and, in many cases, the obligation to physically defend the community. Representation was therefore not grounded in abstract equality, but in the practical need to align authority with liability so that decisions would remain tethered to reality rather than sentiment or impulse. The system did not assume wisdom or virtue. It assumed self-interest and constrained it by consequence.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Humans
(1) Seeing the System Clearly
- The Shared Feeling No One Can Quite Explain - Most people do not need to be convinced that something is wrong. They feel it in rising costs that never seem to stabilize, in rules that change without explanation, in institutions that demand compliance but no longer command trust, and in a political process that feels permanently hostile yet strangely ineffective. These experiences are not isolated. They are widespread, persistent, and remarkably consistent across demographics, ideologies, and personal circumstances. What differs is not the feeling, but the explanation people are given for it.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Humans
(0) Prologue: Before You Read
This series is written for readers who sense that something in the structure of modern life no longer works the way it once did, but who have found most available explanations unsatisfying. It assumes the reader is capable of sustained attention and willing to engage with complexity without demanding immediate resolution. It does not assume political alignment, ideological agreement, or shared conclusions. What it does assume is a willingness to slow down long enough for clarity to emerge.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Humans
When Enforcement Becomes Execution: ICE on Our Streets
In just two weeks, Minneapolis has seen two lives taken by federal agents .. lives that should have been protected, not treated as expendable. On January 7, Renee Good, a local resident, was fatally shot. On January 24, Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse and a U.S. citizen, was killed.
By Aarsh Malikabout a month ago in Humans
A Little Vocal Reciprocal Challenge
Introduction I think this is a good thing to try again This is just an idea I had for maybe bringing Vocal Creators closer together. I did produce this piece to add favourite creators to your profile a while back and while it got good feedback I've only seen a handful of people implement it, though I personally found it good for discovering new creators. If my friends like a creator, then the chances are I will also like their work.
By Mike Singleton đź’ś Mikeydred about a month ago in Humans
How the Golden Globes, Oscar Nominations, and Celebrity Buzz Are Owning the US & Europe Right Now
If pop culture were a stock market, this week would be a bull run. Across the United States and Europe, entertainment timelines are flooded with one irresistible cocktail: Golden Globes fashion, Oscar nominations drama, and celebrity moments that refuse to stay offline. From London to Los Angeles, from TikTok to Sky News Entertainment, the awards season isn’t just happening — it’s dominating.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukunabout a month ago in Humans
The Dangers of Not Having Your Coffee
5:30 a.m. and my husband coos at me asking if I am awake. I am now, but barely. He tells me he is off to work, checked the fire downstairs, and that is will be fine until I wake up (until 7:30 a.m.). Cool. I set my alarm for 7:30 and head back into some delicious dream, I can’t remember anymore. No I would not tell you, even if I could remember the dream)
By Alexandra Grantabout a month ago in Humans
Why So Many Women End Up “Menopause Masking” — And What It Can Cost You. AI-Generated.
Menopause is a natural stage of life, yet many women find themselves masking its symptoms rather than addressing them. This trend, known as “menopause masking,” can have hidden consequences for both physical and mental health. Here’s why it happens and why it matters.
By Ayesha Lashariabout a month ago in Humans
I Was Thrown Out of an Airbnb House
I had never felt more unwelcome in my life than I did that night. The Airbnb host had been polite enough when I arrived, but something shifted the moment I unpacked my bag. I didn’t notice at first—just a quiet tension, a tight smile, a glance that lingered too long. By the time I had put my toothbrush in the tiny bathroom cup, it was obvious: I wasn’t staying.
By John Smithabout a month ago in Humans









