attacks
Recent Posts
- 21) Race
The author reflects on their family’s self-perception of not being racist, despite underlying prejudices and racial microaggressions. They recount childhood experiences that reveal systemic racism in their upbringing. As a parent, they strive to raise antiracist children, acknowledging their own biases and the importance of confronting and understanding racism, aiming for personal and societal change. - THE THEORIST MATRIX
The theorist matrix maps influential thinkers, highlighting their insights, oversights, and roles in context frameworks like SCRRIPPTT and LENS Theory. It explores themes such as stability, coercion, and trauma while connecting their perspectives to hostage-pledge dynamics. The matrix also emphasizes the relation to episkevology and survivor literacy. - Panthenogenesis of Power – CHAPTER: BEHAVIORISM AS CONTROL
This chapter reinterprets behaviorism, traditionally seen as a simple psychological theory, as a foundational model of systemic coercion. By analyzing Pavlov and Skinner’s work, it reveals the mechanics of control that permeate various institutions and cultural narratives. Behaviorism represents a significant architecture of coercive systems, still relevant today. - Panthenogenesis of Power – LENS THEORY
LENS Theory examines how cultural narratives can become internalized scripts that enforce conformity and suppress dissent. It differentiates between emic perspectives, which can manipulate, and etic perspectives, which can provide clarity and liberation. This theory reveals the mechanisms of cultural control and offers tools for individuals to reclaim their identities and recognize coercion. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Chapter: Capitalism as Engineered Dependency
The chapter presents capitalism as a system of engineered dependency that exploits human vulnerabilities across various domains, including biological, economic, relational, and psychological. It describes capitalism as a self-replicating engine that extracts compliance and perpetuates harm. Liberation requires dismantling this dependency through food sovereignty, relational repair, and cognitive awareness. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 10 — Breaking the Cycle: Liberation Across Body, Relationship, and System
The final post highlights the interconnectedness of food sovereignty, relational repair, survivor literacy, and cycle-breaking as pillars of liberation. It argues that vulnerability, rather than being a weakness, can be a source of connection and strength. By recognizing and addressing systemic exploitation, individuals can reclaim their dignity and autonomy. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 9 — The Hostage‑Pledge System Across Body and Relationship
The Hostage-Pledge System illustrates how both food and trafficking systems exploit vulnerabilities, transforming biological and relational needs into compliance mechanisms. By weaponizing scarcity and emotional connections, these systems create dependency, resulting in obedience and silence. Ultimately, understanding this architecture reveals the pervasive nature of engineered dependency in modern power dynamics. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 8 — Shame, Blame, and the Cult of the Ego
Shame is an integral mechanism that reinforces dependency within systems, turning structural harm into self-blame. It isolates and silences individuals, making them easier to control. This creates a cycle where personal failures obscure systemic issues, enabling practices like dieting and trafficking to thrive under the guise of individual choice and responsibility. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 7 — Grooming, Coercion, and the Architecture of Relational Capture
The post explores the connections between human trafficking and food systems, highlighting how both exploit vulnerability to create dependency and extract value. Grooming tactics in trafficking mirror corporate strategies in the food industry, emphasizing emotional manipulation, coercion, and the normalization of extraction. Both systems showcase a similar relational architecture. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 6 — Food Apartheid and the Geography of Vulnerability
Food apartheid is a systemic issue where communities, particularly marginalized ones, are deliberately deprived of access to quality food, resulting in engineered scarcity and dependency. It operates through governance strategies to manage populations, concentrate poverty, and perpetuate health disparities, mirroring the dynamics seen in trafficking. These mechanisms isolate and exploit vulnerability, turning survival into compliance. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 5 — Engineered Addiction: Biochemistry as a Control Interface
Engineered addiction in the modern food system is a deliberate strategy that combines biochemical manipulation with psychological coercion, creating a cycle of compulsion and shame. Food companies utilize methods similar to tobacco addiction, targeting vulnerabilities to maintain dependency. This system profits from consumer struggles while obscuring its role in their entrapment. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 4 — Industrialization and the Panthenogenesis of Power
The Industrial Revolution transformed food from a natural relationship into a commodified product governed by mechanization, monetization, and ultra-processing. This evolution created profit-driven systems that prioritize market control over human health, fostering engineered dependency. Regulatory capture allowed corporations to shape laws, perpetuating harm and reinforcing a self-replicating power structure. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 2 — The Co‑Evolution of Humans, Food, and Dependency
This post explores the co-evolution of humans and food, highlighting the journey from ecological dependency to structural control. Initially, dependency was a shared, relational experience rooted in foraging and cooking, fostering cooperation and belonging. Over time, domestication shifted this balance, paving the way for exploitative control within food systems. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 3 — Agriculture, Sedentism, and the Birth of Structural Power
The Agricultural Revolution marked a shift from shared food resources to structural dependency, introducing hierarchy and surplus. Sedentism anchored humans to land, creating predictable needs and vulnerabilities. This led to the emergence of power dynamics, where resource control dictated social structure and survival. Ultimately, agriculture enabled conditional survival and shaped future dependencies. - Panthenogenesis of Power – Post 1 — Why Food? Why Trafficking? Why Now?
The content discusses the interconnectedness of food dependency and human trafficking, arguing they stem from a shared system of engineered vulnerability. Food creates biological dependency, while trafficking exploits relational dependency. Both phenomena manipulate power dynamics through various mechanisms, ultimately transforming vulnerability into compliance and survival into currency, revealing a unified theory of control.
Newsletter
One-Time
Monthly
Make a one-time donation
Make a monthly donation
Choose an amount
$5.00
$15.00
$100.00
$5.00
$15.00
$100.00
Or enter a custom amount
$
Your contribution is appreciated.
Your contribution is appreciated.
DonateDonate monthly
