The Great Repatriation
The Confessional Booth Has a Backdoor
European health ministries have traded data sovereignty for operational capacity, signing contracts with intelligence-linked analytics firms that GDPR cannot constrain. The legal architecture was designed for a threat that no longer exists.
The Invisible Colleague: Second-Order Consequences of AI Agents in the Workforce
As AI agents move from augmenting human work to replacing it, the visible efficiency gains obscure deeper structural shifts: fractured career pipelines, gamified hiring systems, new forms of political dependency, and the quiet collapse of institutional knowledge transfer.
Daily Brief: 14 December 2025
Southeast Asia bleeds over ancient temples while the Himalayas melt away the very borders India and China fight to defend.
The Fence That Feeds the Fire
Donald Trump has inherited the most ambitious technology containment regime since the Cold War and vowed to make it stronger. The controls are working—just not in the ways Washington intended. As export restrictions multiply, they are reshaping the US-China competition in ways that may...
The Geography of Fear
America's military infrastructure is migrating eastward and fragmenting as it goes. The redistribution of bases and decentralization of command reveal what doctrine papers obscure: the United States has accepted that its dominance can no longer be assumed, only contested.
The Arsenal Paradox
The next global conflict will be decided not by battlefield technology but by industrial architecture—the ability to produce weapons at scale while economies continue functioning. The United States is losing this race before the shooting starts.
The Temple and the Trap
A leaked phone call, a disputed cliff-top temple, and two nations' domestic politics collided in 2025 to produce Southeast Asia's bloodiest conflict in decades. The Thailand-Cambodia crisis reveals how ancient grievances become modern catastrophes—and why neither side can afford to stop fighting.
The Lights in the Sky Are Not What You Think
For seventy-seven years, governments have investigated unidentified aerial phenomena with billions of dollars and thousands of personnel. The findings point not toward alien visitors but toward something more unsettling: the systematic limits of human perception, institutional knowledge, and our...
The Pipeline and the Sword
Russia's weaponisation of energy exports has transformed NATO's strategic calculus more profoundly than any military build-up since 1991. The alliance now faces a contest where molecules matter as much as missiles—and where Europe's thirty-year bet on interdependence has become its most...
The Glacier's Verdict
At 4,500 metres in the Depsang Plains, sovereignty dissolves with the permafrost. Chinese and Indian soldiers patrol terrain that is literally disappearing beneath their boots—glaciers retreating, watersheds shifting, the physical geography that once defined borders melting into cartographic...