Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Safeguarding Justice: Lessons from a Hypothetical Collapse

Continuing the discussion on the story of the clan and how corruption impacts society, those impacts can be economic or social in nature, but they are often a mixture of both because the two phenomena are deeply connected. This is why challenging corruption leads to social development and economic enhancements. When corruption is used to promote in-group wealth while simultaneously suppressing social participation, it creates a compounding harm that naturally affects the broader society. Time will answer that question....

(Illustrative)
Corruption can actually be traced
and successfully challenged
with knowledge. Having
better management of complaints that
can give information for improvement
 and protecting whistleblowers
 is important. Those that
don't have a reason they don't.
In the story of the clan—which is a hypothetical, philosophical thought experiment illustrating a near total failure of justice—a corrupted judge works alongside corrupted officials and a pseudo-group of bigots (not a full definition because most might be descent people but cultic clans are often run by a few personalities) to deliberately target people. While the story highlights racial and religious differences as key motivators, political differences can also serve as triggers for similar abuses in the future. These tight, insular social networks allowed manipulation of the system and fostered a sense of entitlement over institutional outcomes, as well as over what they defined as “local.”

However, their definition of “local” had nothing to do with people who had lived there for generations, nor with genuine community belonging. Instead, it was rooted in deeply embedded perceptions of superiority over others. Racial, religious, political and social perceptions determined "local". This mindset enabled exclusion, domination, and abuse under the guise of authority. It was going on for years and victims, whistleblowers, concerned officials were simply forced silent and there was nothing anyone could do about it.

Eventually, the clan court was exposed because the evidence against them became overwhelming. They placed witnesses on target lists, ran through moral red lights, and neglected the fundamental societal protections earned over generations of struggles. They fabricated intentional stories against the victims, permitted people including clan officers to become aggressive and potentionally violent. They issued threats. They endangered children. They manipulated the elderly. They mistreated good people. They operated without any meaningful checks or balances within the system. None of this happened by accident—it was systematic and deliberate.

At the same time, if we are willing to recognize what is wrong, we must also recognize what is right. The vast majority—80%, 90%, even 99%—of officers and officials do the right thing. They act with honor and nobility. They are our heros who helped to start the process of reversing the wrongdoing (In our story it will be reversed and corrected as the obligation to protect future victims is more than the obligation to protect hate networks or corruption.) We want to recruit more diverse people into these roles and see them succeed, because most of them are fundamentally good people committed to public service.

However, the problem arises when the bad actors are allowed to continue their behavior without correction. Religious freedom, freedom of speech, illegal serach and seisure, and lots of other fundamental rights were thrown away. When misconduct goes unaddressed, it creates a fundamental breakdown. These actions violate human and civil rights and misuse taxpayer resources for grotesque and criminal purposes. There is a difference between the purpose of law and how it is applied by highly socialized practitioners. Thus, philosophy can help you find the true north.

Such behavior rarely exists in isolation. In this story, corruption was also found in other areas, and some of the same actors faced consequences elsewhere—often receiving sweetheart deals when caught. Other victims have expressed their concern only to be ignored and witnesss and whistleblowers silenced through coordinated harm thereby allowing the network to continue. This tells us that the patterns are known and that similar forms of corruption have been challenged by others within and outside those networks.

As we become aware in this thought experiment of a court defaulting on justice, we also become aware of the risks involved. These situations often begin with small initial failures that, if left uncorrected, evolve into larger and more entrenched defaults. History shows that once systems reach this stage, meaningful correction becomes far more difficult. This is why multiple opportunities to correct were often ignored because it is easiest to put it on the victims (by intent). It creates much broader long term risks that could have been avoided if leadership had a higher moral conscious.

The good news is that the vast majority of people still believe in doing what is right. Many are willing to think critically about these issues. Most importantly, this story is meant as a learning tool. You do not have to agree with it. You can discard it, change its elements, or reinterpret it entirely. If it saves just one more victim, or helps the next targets overcome neglect of duty, then it has done its job. Maybe its in this example or maybe it is somewhere else. 

The sole purpose of the story is to encourage thoughtful reflection on institutional integrity—on what it takes to preserve rights, protect future generations, honor past sacrifices, and continue the cause of freedom. It is not meant to provide a definitive conclusion, but rather to prompt you to reach your own. Honor that which is doing well and correct that which is dysfunctional. Be knowledgeable of the current trust levels in the polls and elect people who have a commitment beyond party and to the success of the nation. Be kind and peaceful and share your expectations of what you think would be most helpful for society.

If you believe these failures do not exist, that is acceptable. If you believe they do exist and that institutional trust erodes when they are ignored, that is also acceptable. What matters is being purposeful in your thinking. And if you see room for improvement, then the responsibility lies in electing and placing people in positions who can strengthen these systems—not undermine them, not weaken them, but improve them—so that it becomes easier to hold bad actors accountable while protecting the rights of those who do the right thing. 

Since this story is for learning purposes one might want to see what some of the experts say and what their studies reveal. Learning is not always agreement so make your own decisions. 

Systemic Corruption as a Meso-Level Phenomenon: Severe Abuse and Strategic Gain

Monday, January 19, 2026

Research a WWII Veteran: The National WWII Museum

Illustrative of WWII 
Trench

Veterans are an essential part of our history. Across generations, they have served to help secure the freedoms many of us experience today. We cannot fully understand our future without knowing our past and making sense of the present.

At times, it is important to look back—to our fathers and mothers, our forefathers and foremothers—to better understand the sacrifices they made. Many families have relatives who served in World War II, and some of them, sadly, never returned. Their stories are part of our collective memory and deserve to be remembered.

This database offers an opportunity to search for the names of those who served and to learn more about their lives and service—details you may not have known before. For relatives, some of this information may be available at no cost.

If you are interested in learning more about your own family history, this database is worth visiting. Thank you for taking the time to explore and remember.

National WWII Veteran-Research a Veteran

*part of a different project for vets. 

Puddles on a Rock Pacific Coast

I took this photo while walking on the beach. Is it a masterpiece? Probably not. Will it make your wall happier? Possibly.

If you’re interested, I can print it in different sizes. Prints start at $30, posters around $50, and yes—free shipping. Digital with rights to use available or you can purchase exclusive rights.

Photography is a hobby of mine, and every now and then I accidentally sell something. I think it could look pretty great in a restaurant, office, or anywhere that needs a little “I’ve been to the beach” energy.

The day I took this, the sun was out, there was a nice breeze, I had just finished training, grabbed an iced coffee, and decided walking on the beach was better than doing anything responsible.

If you’re interested, send a message to the right. If not, thanks for stopping by anyway—you’re still cool.

I guess I need a name for it so maybe "Puddles on a Rocky Pacific Coast" so send that in your message.




A Day of Remembrance and Responsibility on Human and Civil Rights (Jack Learns About Human Struggles)

Today is a day of solemn remembrance—of the struggles of the past, the struggles of the present, and the struggles yet to come. Over the centuries, we have made remarkable progress in reducing the most visible and legally sanctioned forms of hate. Yet we continue to struggle with its unwritten, informal, and often hidden forms. In some cases, these behaviors persist because the commitment to institutional purpose in some social circles has weakened.

(Illustrative)
Jack thinks about the
struggles of people and knows
that the best path forward
is truth and justice. He has
a moral obligation to foster
togetherness in people
no matter what anyone else thinks.
Better lives, stronger communities,
improvements in quality of life,
strengthening economic health,
upholding social contracts, etc.
He made oaths and
vows on freedom and certain values
a long time ago and has
tried to live by them
even if others did not understand
with their limited perception. 👆
The insights and knowledge
he gained over the years can
do much for others. He
encourages others to do thier
part as well to uphold social
contracts.
The hypthetical, philosophical  thought experiment on the Story of the Clan illustrates how systems can fail when self-interested perpetrators coordinate with compromised institutions. In this case, individuals worked in concert with Clan-aligned courts to target minorities, enrich themselves, and operate with impunity. They showed no regard for the lives of their victims, no concern for the harm they inflicted, and no respect for truth, law, or morality. Manipulation, deception, and abuse of legal authority became tools to achieve their ends.

Corrupt officers followed victims for years, while secret agreements were made behind closed doors in the courts to incentivize wrongdoing. What emerged was a form of religious—and in some cases ethnic—removal, driven by distorted worldviews and sustained through coordinated abuse of power. Such an act is deeply immoral and, by any reasonable standard, illegal. Some actors were caught in corrupted behaviors in other places and times and given sweetheart deals to keep the network protected. To see anything resembling this in modern times would be grotesque at the very least. 

Today, then, is a moment to reflect on the civil and human rights struggles that have shaped our history, as well as those that may still persist in certain circumstances. When courts have a moral obligation to correct wrongdoing but instead choose to enable or protect coordinated mistreatment, we face a serious and unresolved problem. In those moments, the curtain is pulled back on intent. Good thing most courts try and support justice.

This is a personal perspective, not an absolute claim. One does not have to view these matters in black-and-white terms. If someone were to say, “No, you’re wrong—it’s the opposite,” One could acknowledge that as a possible perspective (We can just assign probability). Still, consider this framing: if 85 percent of officials are genuinely good people—showing up, serving their communities, helping one another, and acting with integrity—then they are much like the rest of us. But if the remaining 15 percent are able to evade accountability due to weak or nearly nonfunctional checks and balances, the consequences can be severe for institutional trust (You have to watch the trends and think of why they are where they are-high, low, the same.).

Perhaps it is unfair to say there are no checks and balances at all, but in some places they are so limited that they fail to function meaningfully. This is deeply troubling. In the case of the Clan, victims were targeted for years, while perpetrators believed it was acceptable to make secret “good old boy” deals to impose their religious and racial views on others (Financial and social benefits present). When exposed, the pattern is often to shift blame onto the victims and construct false narratives to shield wrongdoing—sometimes until it becomes clear that deception was intentional. Corruption and hate are often tightly intertwined.

There may be no simple solution for systems corrupted by this level of coordination, but we can still peacefully insist that officials do the right thing, honor their oaths, and stand for justice. These struggles are not over. This is not a matter of right versus left—it is foundational to who we are. Every person in this country has rights, and those rights cannot be discarded simply because some people are favored over others. That is neither fair, just, nor moral. We can stop it in our hometowns but if it becomes collectivized we have big issues (Let us learn from history).

It is also important to say this clearly: there are many good people doing the right thing. There are many organizations and officials committed to justice and accountability. Most public servants act with integrity. However, where checks and balances fail, the seeds of hate can take root, grow, and sustain themselves—despite complaints, evidence, and moral arguments. Public resources should not be used for hate or corruption. 

The learning Story of the Clan also reminds us that whistleblowers were often silenced through secret lists and quiet retaliation, all in service of protecting long-standing corruption. Again, this does not reflect the majority—80, 85, even 99 percent of officials who are part of our enlightened communities. But when wrongdoing occurs and cannot be corrected, it signals something far darker. A path that we don't want to go down. There are other paths more helpful to everyone and to the long-term development of society.

So today, we remember the struggles of the past—and we remain vigilant about the struggles of today and ready the armor of our moral convictions for the challenges of the future. Vote your conscience the next time a judge, leader, politician, or official is up for election. Choose the best and brightest over the most connected, and favor those guided by integrity rather than social networks or distorted values. Honor what is good and reject what is bad. Be kind to each other and return hate with love and understanding but also with diligence. A single indivisible people.

*The Story of the Clan is a philsophical, theoretical, hypothetical thought experiment story designed to learn about hate and teach officials and people how to adapt to a higher moral conscious. 


Sunday, January 18, 2026

Celebrating The Meaning of Martin Luther King Jr. Day (One Perspective)

Martin Luther King Jr. Day is a celebration of the ongoing development of a freer society—one in which all people are treated with dignity and respect and are able to pursue happiness as they see fit. Before this progress, the nation endured eras of segregation and, before that, slavery as well as dehumanization of Native Americans, during which distorted beliefs were used to justify the mistreatment of others (There never was any justification in any religion for this so those who misuse the good for the bad engage in moral distortions and lack of moral conscious.). 

Nonviolent Resistance and Moral Progress

Dr. King taught us that nonviolent, principled resistance to wrongdoing is not only possible, but powerful. His message demonstrated that moral courage and kindness can challenge injustice without replicating it (Do not repay hate with hate.). While much progress has been made, these struggles have not entirely disappeared in today’s world. We are still in movement from a past to a future so related situations will continue to bubble up until the root is resolved (When faced with hate, you can respond with kindness and empathy for their current state of values.). Hate also exists in different places across the globe so the lessons here can be universalized.

The Enduring Legacy of Hate

The legacy of hate continues to surface from time to time toward out-groups. It reaches beyond politics and influence to the very purpose upon which this country was founded (Each party had their time when they did well and when they failed.). The country was built on the idea of freedom—an imperfect freedom at first, but one that has steadily expanded through collective effort and moral reflection. Our work is not done and those issus continue to arise if decision makers allow them a free hand and a wink and nod. This is part of the reaon why the best and brightest and not the most connected need to take on important roles in our society. It is your duty to promote the best of us so we don't repeat history. 

Freedom, Development, and Ongoing Struggles

This movement toward greater freedom has fueled economic and social development on a scale that helped make the nation a global leader. Yet many people still struggle and thus there is more room for growth economically and socially. Whether someone is African American, a religious minority, or simply viewed as outside the mainstream, similar patterns of exclusion and injustice continue to appear and it reduces capacity. It is helpful to educate and teach a higher moral conscious. Positive change and new insight are the things that help save others. It is what fosters economic thriving.

Human Capital and Shared Responsibility

Stories help highlight these ongoing challenges and remind us of the work still required to ensure fairness, justice, and inclusion (i.e. the Story of the Clan is a hypothetical philosophical story designed to teach what defaults in justice look like and the difficulties people face where hate and corruption are normalized and uncorrected. Even fostered. Keep reading the blog for this human and civil rights learning thought experiment.). This is why the concept of human capital matters. When we do not discriminate or mistreat people, we create space for individuals to contribute their skills, values, and talents. What matters most is merit—character, ability, and shared values—not identity. 

Looking Forward Together

As we reflect on this day, we should consider why this country was founded and what responsibilities we owe one another as members of the same society (Don't let segregationists separate us.). The next generation is highly diverse, and those who seek to divide us through segregation or exclusion do not strengthen us—they create unnecessary hardship. They undermine the foundations. We are all in this together. Regardless of race, religion, or politics, we must move forward in the same direction. Think about what preserves freedom for us all and how to strengthen the foundations of a free society where there are only "We".

Let us remember Dr. King as someone who reminded us of that truth and take inspiration from the enduring possibility of positive change. Be good and kind to each other. 

An interesting piece on his history, 

Martin Luther King History

Who is Corazon de Vida and What Do They Do?

Helping children is a beautiful thing. I have been there a few times and would like to go there again. I might get more involved in helping kids like them. The world needs good people. Here is my page I started a number of years ago so feel free to support. Donate to Orphans

Escanaba May Receive $750K for Water Infrastructure and $750K for Water Mains H.R. 6938 (Charles Wears an $8 Suit and Drinks $2 Cup of Coffee While Thinking about Fishing)


(Illustrative independent politician
supporting development
and the needs of the average person.)

Charles is not a a fan of politics
but feels new ideas might
help where people are
caught in cognitive loops of
partisanship. 

Charles is from the
hypothetical Feather Party which
is a philsophical thought experiment
on how an independent third party
might think about possible
legislation using a basic
agreed upon decision making 
matrix. A place for
independent minds. Such a
learning party is designed to tip
votes in the direction of
supporting the next generation
and making strategic evidence based
decisions. It caps donations
and doesn't work with 
special interests as per their
charter. It is is not an oppositional
part by nature. It is meant
for mental exploration and doesn't
at this time exist.
One could find reasons for
or against such a party so
it is just a discussion. No
right or wrong answer. Feel 
free to discard.

Let us say one thought on
fostering a new fish
hatchery in the Delta County
area. Would
it be beneficial or not? One of
the first considerations is ROI. 
If a project can pay for itself
through its own revenue (i.e. commercial
and recreational fishing licenses) as 
well as create long-term benefits
for tourism, fishing industry, 
Great Lakes health, new industries,
and other benefits it
will add to the economic
and social health. Who doesn't
want to take their kids fishing,
offer local fish cuisine, develop
an export market, clean protein,
 create tax revenue and help local 
commerical fishing industry? You
have to do your own analysis
and make your own decisions. 
I have not done one.
That is the point of this mental 
exercise to think about
how these things can happen and
how to foster knowledge
and awareness of the benefits
or detractors of legislation
from an independent viewpoint.
Economic Sustainable 
Reinvestment 


P.S. most of society doesn't 
have a lot of money
so Charles sometimes buys
his suits from Saint
Vincent de Paul

down on Ludington for
like under $8. Feel
free to donate to them and help
your community. Great
people down there. I have
been there a few times. Style
takes effort. Looks
as good as the rich people. ðŸ™ƒ 
If he can do that with $10
and had enough left over
for coffee at Eco Fuel
or Kwik Trips
what can he do with the 
national budget? 🤷


It was recently announced that $6.8 million has been secured for Michigan’s First Congressional District through the Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act. This funding is welcome news, as many communities in the district could put these resources to good use.

Local Funding for Escanaba

For the local community, the following allocations stood out:

  • $750,000 for the City of Escanaba to fund water infrastructure improvements.

  • $750,000 for the City of Escanaba to upgrade water mains and service lines, reducing the risk of breaks and service disruptions.

These investments should help strengthen essential infrastructure and improve reliability for residents.

Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act

(Comment: The information below came out of the bill I used AI to help me find what I want but I did read it through and then just seek out the highlights. Double check it yourself because AI lies sometimes and to use it means you have do a reasonable review of its information. In this case I am just having it synthesize information.)

Other Notable Funding Areas

A few additional provisions in the bill also caught my attention:

  • Grants for the National Endowment for the Arts and Humanities, supporting cultural and educational programs. It is important to support the arts and humanities to help people develop awareness of cultural values and the expressions of people over the generations. 

  • (Comment: Locally we do not get a lot of funding but it is nice to think about it Nutcrackers Impact-Forget the fitness trainer comment at the end but more on the impact of theater on health and society. Players de Noc in Escanaba is another great community entity that does everything from reading to musicals. They usually draw a big crowd. Feel free to donate at Players de Noc. I think of them from a cultural, tourist, quality of life, values, and community pride type organization. It is possible to measure some of the additional benefits but it takes time and research.)

NOAA and Fisheries Funding

The bill also provides substantial funding for NOAA operations, research, and vessels, which supports fisheries-related activities such as data collection, stock assessments, management programs, and workforce training.

(Comment: This raises an interesting broader question about long-term environmental priorities. It would be nice to see more support as the Great Lakes could arguably become one of the largest protected freshwater fishing resources in the world if more effort were placed on restoring native species and addressing invasive species challenges. As well as ensuring revenue generation in tax that first funds what is needed to develop the Great Lakes versus other purposes. Redirecting even a fraction of the vast disproportionate sums spent overseas for low return expenditures toward domestic environmental restoration could have a significant positive impact-short and long-term. Similarly, addressing issues in other places like ocean sewage pollution along the Tijuana–San Diego border could help preserve environmental and economic value on the West Coast. Perhaps finding a way to fix this leads to solutions in other places. We have some work to do. Maybe not?)

Specific Fisheries Programs Funded

 Key fisheries-related allocations include:

  • Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery: $65 million to support salmon and steelhead conservation, including habitat restoration grants to states and tribes, allocated based on scientific merit.

  • Fisheries Disaster Assistance: $300,000 to administer disaster assistance programs under the Magnuson–Stevens Act and related laws.

  • Fishermen’s Contingency Fund: Up to $349,000 from collected receipts to support industry contingency needs.

  • Fisheries Finance Program: Authority for direct loan obligations, including up to $24 million for quota loans and up to $150 million for traditional direct loans under the Merchant Marine Act.

(Comment: While the fishing industry in our area is not part of the bill, it is still important to think about these programs and if there is a way to bring a fishery and fish hatching to Delta County. Perhaps not in this bill but maybe in future legislation. It might be possible and it would help local tourism as well as foster our local commercial fishing into more regional exportation Entrepreneurial Clusters).

Read it yourself to learn about it and stay up to date. Knowledgeable citizens seek to understand before judgement. Try and create a decision making matrix where you look at these issues from a short and long-term impact that can range from economic and social impact all the way over to environment. What you put in your matrix and what lenses you use to evaluate legislation is up to you. For the most part just be informed and let your personal knowledge do the rest. It is nice to see Escanaba potentionally get a little money for its infrastructure. If you don't know about Escanaba it is an emerging hot spot that includes tourism, investment, wood products, entrepreneurs and much more. If you love the outdoors it is a great place to be! Make your own decision on the bill. This was meant to be neutral.

Passed the House, onto Senate and then President's approval. Here is some information on Current Bill Voting

H.R. 6938 – Commerce, Justice, Science; Energy and Water Development; and Interior and Environment Appropriations Act, 2026 https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/6938/text