Thursday, April 9, 2026

Evasion of reality: signs and symptoms and causes

 

Definition


Evasion of reality is the willful refusal to focus one’s mind on the facts, the “blanking out” of relevant evidence, logic, or causal connections. It is the root of irrationality: the attempt to make consciousness trump existence rather than to identify existence by reason. In Objectivist terms, it rejects the primacy of existence and the law of identity/causality, and thus severs thought from reality. [1][3]

Signs and symptoms (objective indicators)

  • Refusal to define terms; reliance on “floating abstractions,” equivocation, and anti-concepts instead of clear definitions by essentials. [2][3]
  • Context-dropping: treating statements as out-of-context absolutes, ignoring the full set of relevant facts or qualifications. [2]
  • Ignoring or dismissing counter-evidence without refutation; asserting the arbitrary (claims offered without evidence or argument). [2][3]
  • Contradiction-tolerance: maintaining beliefs or policies that clash with known facts or with each other. [1][2]
  • Package-deals and stolen-concept errors: bundling opposites under one term; using a concept while denying its genetic preconditions (e.g., using “rights” while endorsing initiated force). [2]
  • Appeals to authority, consensus, mysticism, or emotions as substitutes for proof. [2][3]
  • Causality denial: treating effects as uncaused or wishing away causal requirements (e.g., expecting wealth without production). [1][4]
  • Second-handedness and social metaphysics: deferring judgment to others instead of first-hand evidence and logic. [3][4]
  • Range-of-the-moment thinking: short-range expediency that sacrifices long-range requirements of life and value. [4]

Primary causes

  • Volitional default: the choice not to focus; evasion begins with the refusal to enact the effort of rational integration. [1][3]
  • Bad epistemology: intrinsicism or subjectivism replacing objectivity; rejection of logic, reduction, and the burden of proof. [2][3]
  • Moral premises at war with life: the ethic of sacrifice that treats self-interest as guilt, incentivizing pretense over reality-orientation. [4]
  • Social metaphysics and second-handed incentives: seeking unearned approval, status, or loot, which rewards appearance over fact. [4]
  • Institutional enablers: environments where outcomes are detached from facts (e.g., shielded from profit/loss feedback or from accountability to objective law). [5]

Consequences (objective outcomes)

  • Cognitive disintegration: unreliable beliefs, inability to predict, proliferating contradictions, and loss of contextual certainty. [2][3]
  • Practical failure: plans that collide with facts—failed projects, broken systems, unsafe operations—because causes and constraints were evaded. [1][5]
  • Moral corruption: injustice (misjudging people and values), dishonesty (fabrication over fact), and abdication of responsibility. [4]
  • Social-political decay: growth of coercion to sustain fantasies against reality; violations of rights; drift toward statism and institutionalized force. [4][5]
  • Cultural regression: replacement of science with dogma, art with nihilism, education with indoctrination—i.e., a rupture between mind and reality. [4][5]

Treatment (method, not therapy)
The remedy is moral-epistemic: choose to focus and practice a disciplined method of objectivity.

  • Fact-first inventory: state the perceptual-level facts before any interpretation; separate observation from inference. [2][3]
  • Definitions by essentials: formulate and maintain clear definitions; update only when context expands without changing referents. [2]
  • Reduction: trace every non-perceptual claim back to observational grounds; ban the arbitrary and demand evidence. [2][3]
  • Context-keeping: identify the full set of relevant facts and constraints; do not treat knowledge fragments as stand-alone. [2]
  • Logic drills: resolve contradictions by rejecting the false; check arguments for fallacies (stolen concept, package-deal, equivocation). [2]
  • Causal accounting: always identify causes, mechanisms, and necessary preconditions; if you cannot state the causal chain, you do not know. [1]
  • Independent judgment: no appeals to authority or consensus in place of proof; think first-hand. [3][4]
  • Virtue practice: rationality, honesty, integrity, justice, independence, productiveness, pride—applied as action policies, not slogans. [4]
  • Operational checks: prediction tracking, base-rate use, premortems/postmortems, and written decision records that tie conclusions to evidence. [5][6]

Prevention (personal and institutional)

  • Education in concept-formation and logic: differentiation/integration, measurement-omission, and non-contradictory identification as daily habits. [2][3]
  • Objective standards and feedback: tie rewards and penalties to reality (profit/loss, rigorous metrics, liability for negligence). [5]
  • Rights and the rule of law: a social system that bans initiated force, protecting independent judgment and trade in a framework of objective law. [4][5]
  • Governance by evidence: require clear definitions, causal models, and testable predictions for policies; reject arbitrary and undefined mandates. [5][6]
  • Personal routines: daily focus commitment; evidence checklists; contradiction-resolution sessions; regular reduction of key concepts to the perceptual base. [2][6]

Quick diagnostic checklist
If you observe any of the following, reality is being evaded:

  • Undefined terms, floating abstractions, or anti-concepts in place of essentials. [2]
  • Arbitrary claims or immunity-to-refutation postures. [2]
  • Context-dropping or contradiction-tolerance. [2]
  • Causality denial or wish over fact in planning. [1]
  • Reliance on authority/consensus/mysticism/emotion instead of logic and evidence. [2][3]

The cure is singular: choose to focus and adhere to reality by the method of logic. Everything else—definitions, reduction, causal explanation, virtues, and rights—follows from that choice and implements it across life, work, and institutions. [1][2][3][4][5][6]

Sources

1
The Romantic Manifesto by Ayn Rand


2
For the New Intellectual by Ayn Rand


3
Introduction to Objectivist Epistemology by Ayn Rand


4
The Voice of Reason by Ayn Rand, with additional essays by Leonard Peikoff


5
The Anti-industrial Revolution by Ayn Rand


6
The Virtue of Selfishness by Ayn Rand


Tuesday, April 7, 2026

How to pass the Save America Act

 [BREAKING: President Trump is urging the Senate to immediately pass the SAVE America Act. “You’re going to hear the excuse it needs 60 votes...THAT’S NOT TRUE.”].

How can the Senate pass this act? What would the steps be to get it done?

The SAVE America Act (also called the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility or SAVE Act) is Republican legislation requiring documentary proof of U.S. citizenship to register to vote in federal elections and imposing strict photo ID requirements to vote. It passed the House (most recently in early 2026) but has stalled in the Senate.

Republicans hold a 53-47 majority in the Senate (as of April 2026). Under standard Senate rules, most legislation is subject to the filibuster: opponents can delay or block it unless 60 senators vote for cloture (to end debate and force a final up-or-down vote). A simple majority of 51 (or 50 + VP tiebreaker) is then enough to pass the bill itself. Democrats have uniformly opposed the bill and filibustered it during the March 2026 debate, so it lacks the 60 votes needed.

President Trump’s statement that “it needs 60 votes...THAT’S NOT TRUE” refers to procedural workarounds that could theoretically let Republicans pass it (or key parts of it) with only their 53-vote majority. These are not the normal process and face major hurdles. Here are the main options and exact steps:

1. Budget Reconciliation (Bypass Filibuster Entirely – Needs Only 51 Votes)

Reconciliation is a special process for bills affecting federal spending, revenues, or the debt limit. It is not subject to filibuster and passes with a simple majority. Democrats used it multiple times when they controlled the chamber; Republicans have done limited versions too.

Why it might apply here (in theory): Some provisions could be tied to federal funding (e.g., grants to states for voter ID systems, election administration costs, or DHS-related enforcement). Republicans have discussed bundling parts of the SAVE Act into a larger reconciliation package, possibly alongside a DHS funding bill to end a shutdown.

Steps to do it:

  • Senate passes a budget resolution that includes “reconciliation instructions” directing committees to produce a bill on election-related spending/revenues.
  • House and Senate each pass their version of the reconciliation bill (can include SAVE Act provisions if they meet the criteria).
  • The Senate parliamentarian reviews it under the Byrd Rule (provisions must directly affect the budget and cannot be “extraneous”). Non-qualifying parts (core voter registration/ID rules) could be stripped.
  • If challenged, a 60-vote waiver is sometimes needed — but the overall bill still only needs 51 votes to pass.
  • President signs it.

Reality check: Many conservatives have opposed using reconciliation for this bill because the core provisions are regulatory/policy changes, not budgetary. Attempts to attach it have been “shot down” internally, and the parliamentarian would likely rule against large portions. It is not guaranteed to work without major revisions.

2. Nuclear Option (Change Senate Rules/Precedent to Lower Cloture Threshold to 51 Votes)

This is what Trump and some allies (e.g., Sen. Ron Johnson) have explicitly called for: “TERMINATE THE FILIBUSTER” for legislation like this. It has been used before for nominations but never for regular bills. It would set a new precedent allowing cloture with only 51 votes.

Steps (the parliamentary maneuver):

  1. The bill is on the floor (it already was in March).
  2. Majority Leader (or designee) moves for cloture.
  3. When the cloture vote fails (as expected, short of 60), or preemptively:
    • A Republican senator raises a point of order that the cloture threshold for this bill (or all legislation) should be a simple majority of 51, not 60.
  4. The presiding officer (Vice President or a Republican senator) rules against the point of order, citing long-standing precedent.
  5. Republicans appeal the ruling of the chair.
  6. The Senate votes on the appeal. A simple majority (51 votes) sustains the appeal and overrules the chair. This establishes the new precedent.
  7. Cloture is now invoked with 51 votes → final passage vote with 51 votes.

Reality check: Senate Majority Leader John Thune and most GOP leadership have repeatedly said they do not have the votes within the Republican conference to do this. It is politically risky (Democrats could retaliate if they regain the majority) and would fundamentally change the Senate. Some Republicans (including moderates) oppose it on principle.

3. “Talking Filibuster” / Forcing Continuous Debate (Still Technically Needs 60 Votes, but Politically Pressures Democrats)

This is not a true bypass — it still requires 60 votes for cloture — but it forces Democrats to hold the floor and speak continuously (no silent filibuster). The idea is to make blocking the bill politically painful and exhausting.

Steps (per Rep. Chip Roy and some hardliners):

  • Motion to proceed passes with simple majority (already done earlier).
  • Keep the bill on the floor indefinitely.
  • Require Democrats to actually speak (rotating among themselves) to maintain the filibuster.
  • If they ever yield the floor or fail to maintain quorum, Republicans could force procedural votes or the bill could advance.

Reality check: Thune has said Republicans lack the internal commitment to sustain this for weeks. Democrats can tag-team speeches. It has been tried before and rarely breaks a determined filibuster without 60 votes.

Bottom Line

Trump is correct that 60 votes are not an absolute constitutional requirement — the 60-vote cloture rule is a Senate rule/precedent that the majority can change. However, none of the workarounds are easy or guaranteed right now:

  • Reconciliation is the cleanest procedural path but may not fit the bill’s substance.
  • The nuclear option is the most direct way to eliminate the 60-vote barrier but splits the GOP.
  • As of early April 2026, the March debate ended without passage, and leadership has resisted both big changes.

The Senate could still take these steps if enough Republicans unify behind Trump’s push, but internal resistance from Thune and others makes it an uphill battle. The bill could also be pursued via executive action, state laws, or future reconciliation packages.


In addition:

There are a few additional or variant approaches beyond the main ones (reconciliation, nuclear option for rules change, and talking filibuster) that have been discussed or could theoretically be used to advance the SAVE America Act (or key parts of it) with only the Republican majority's ~53 votes. None are straightforward, and all face significant practical, procedural, or political barriers as of early April 2026. Here's a breakdown of the other realistic options:

1. Attach Provisions to a Must-Pass Bill (e.g., Appropriations or Continuing Resolution)

Republicans could try to insert SAVE Act elements (like incentives for states to adopt proof-of-citizenship or voter ID rules, or funding tied to election administration) into a larger spending bill, such as a DHS/immigration funding package or year-end omnibus/continuing resolution. These bills often move under pressure to avoid shutdowns and can sometimes limit debate time.

Steps:

  • Negotiate internally to include targeted SAVE-related language (e.g., grants to states for implementing ID systems or enforcement mechanisms).
  • Pass the larger bill in the House.
  • Bring it to the Senate floor; use procedural votes to limit amendments if possible.
  • If Democrats filibuster the whole package, fall back to one of the other options (nuclear option or reconciliation) or accept a stripped-down version.

Reality check: Leadership (including Majority Leader John Thune) has been reluctant, as it risks derailing critical funding. Democrats would still likely filibuster unless the bill is deemed must-pass. Partial elements might survive, but core regulatory changes (proof of citizenship for registration) are hard to attach cleanly without triggering filibuster fights.

2. Overrule the Parliamentarian in Reconciliation (If Using Budget Process)

This builds on reconciliation (already discussed). If the Senate parliamentarian rules that major SAVE Act provisions are "extraneous" under the Byrd Rule (i.e., not sufficiently budgetary), Republicans could vote to overrule her with a simple majority.

Steps:

  • Include SAVE-related items in reconciliation instructions (e.g., funding for voter verification systems or penalties tied to federal grants).
  • After the parliamentarian's advisory ruling, a senator raises a point of order.
  • The chair rules based on precedent; Republicans appeal and vote 51-49 to sustain the appeal, effectively waiving the Byrd Rule for those provisions.
  • Proceed to pass the bill with 51 votes.

Reality check: This has been floated but is rare and controversial—even within the GOP. It doesn't guarantee the core policy survives scrutiny, and House conservatives have expressed doubts about it being worth the effort for this bill. A second reconciliation package later in 2026 has been discussed as a vehicle, possibly bundling it with defense, tax, or immigration items.

3. Executive Action or Administrative Workarounds (Bypassing Congress Entirely)

President Trump has publicly signaled he would act if Congress fails. This wouldn't enact the full statutory changes but could implement similar policies through federal agencies.

Possible steps:

  • Direct the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Election Assistance Commission (EAC), or Department of Justice to issue guidance, rules, or enforcement priorities emphasizing proof of citizenship where federal involvement exists (e.g., for voter registration databases that interact with federal systems like SAVE or REAL ID).
  • Use executive orders to condition certain federal grants on states adopting stronger verification (though this risks legal challenges).
  • Pursue targeted regulations on mail-in voting or ID for federal elections.

Reality check: This has limits—Congress sets most election rules under the Constitution (with states handling administration). Courts have struck down aggressive executive overreach on voting in the past. Trump and allies have framed it as a backup plan, especially for midterms. It could pressure states but wouldn't create a nationwide mandate like the bill.

4. State-Level Action + Federal Pressure

While not passing the federal Act, Republicans could accelerate complementary efforts in GOP-controlled states (many already have or are pursuing stricter ID/proof-of-citizenship laws) and use federal levers (funding, DOJ enforcement, or preemption where possible) to encourage uniformity.

This is more of a parallel strategy than a direct Senate workaround.

Overall Assessment

As of now (early April 2026), the Senate debate on the SAVE America Act stalled before the spring recess, with cloture failing along party lines and no breakthrough. Leadership has emphasized the lack of internal GOP unity for aggressive maneuvers like the nuclear option or sustained talking filibuster. The bill could return after April 13, but prospects remain dim without a rules change or reconciliation vehicle.

The most viable "other" paths involve creative bundling into spending/reconciliation packages or shifting focus to executive and state actions. However, internal GOP divisions (e.g., some senators like Thom Tillis opposing filibuster changes) make any path uncertain. If Republicans unify behind Trump's push, the nuclear option or an enhanced reconciliation effort would still be the cleanest ways to force it through with 51 votes—but those require overcoming the same vote-counting challenges Thune has highlighted.

In short, there are no easy bypasses; Senate rules are designed to protect the minority, and changing them carries long-term risks for both parties. Progress would likely require significant political will within the Republican conference.

Iran, and "ends justify the means", and "might makes right"

 


There are contexts where ethical frameworks widely regarded as serious and defensible conclude that the “good” side, US and Israel, may permissibly use consequentialist (“ends justify the means”) reasoning and decisive power (“might makes right” in the narrow sense of legitimate authority backed by force) against irreconcilable, negotiation-refusing, death-committed fanatics/extremists, like Iran.

This is not a blanket endorsement of torture, terrorism, or rule-free brutality; it is a recognition that several major traditions in moral and political philosophy have long carved out narrow, high-threshold exceptions precisely for the scenario you describe: fanatics who treat negotiation as weakness, view compromise as apostasy, and weaponize their own willingness to die (and to kill innocents) as an asymmetric advantage.

1. Consequentialist / Utilitarian Perspective

If the only choices are (a) let the fanatics impose their will through mass death or societal collapse, or (b) employ harsh, normally prohibited measures that demonstrably stop them and save far more lives, then (b) can be the lesser evil.


Classic “ticking bomb” logic (Michael Walzer’s “dirty hands” problem): a responsible leader may have to do something morally dirty to prevent catastrophe.

The calculation is empirical and grim: does the action actually neutralize the threat with acceptable collateral cost? If it does not, it fails its own test. Mere vengeance or signaling never qualifies.


2. Just War Theory / “Supreme Emergency” Doctrine

This is the mainstream Western tradition that has guided democratic states for centuries (Aquinas → Grotius → modern international law). It explicitly rejects pure “might makes right” but allows:


Jus ad bellum (right to go to war): when the threat is existential, the enemy is the aggressor, and peaceful avenues are exhausted.

Jus in bello (right conduct in war): normally strict rules (discrimination, proportionality).

But in a “supreme emergency” — when the survival of a free society itself is at immediate stake — the proportionality bar can be raised dramatically (e.g., area bombing in the darkest days of World War II was defended this way by Churchill and later philosophers).


Religious fanatics who refuse all negotiation and seek apocalyptic outcomes fit the “supreme emergency” category in the view of many just-war theorists.

3. Realist / Hobbesian Perspective

In the absence of a reliable world government, sovereign communities must preserve the conditions for civilized life. When an enemy declares total war and rejects any truce short of your destruction, the only reliable restraint is superior force.

Thomas Hobbes: without the Leviathan’s sword, life reverts to the state of nature. Machiavelli and later realists (Morgenthau, Kissinger) argued the same: states that unilaterally disarm their moral flexibility against nihilistic foes simply cease to exist. History is littered with examples where the “nice” side was annihilated while the uncompromising side survived.


Counter-Perspectives (the “never” camp)


Kantian / absolute deontology: certain acts (torture, deliberate civilian targeting, perfidy) are intrinsically wrong; doing them makes you the new evil, regardless of consequences.

Pacifist / strict Christian pacifist: turn the other cheek even unto death; the soul is more important than survival.

Slippery-slope / institutionalist: once you authorize “ends justify means,” the exception swallows the rule and corrupts your own side.


These views are coherent and held by many decent people. They simply conclude that some evils must be endured rather than mirrored.


Practical Bottom Line

Every functioning government that has faced genuine suicide cults, death-worshipping terrorist networks, or millenarian movements that reject negotiation has eventually chosen the consequentialist path in extremis — not because they loved it, but because the alternative was surrender or extinction. The moral test is not whether the “good” side ever gets its hands dirty; it is whether the dirt is strictly limited to what is necessary, proportionate, and ceases the moment the threat is neutralized.

If the fanatics truly cannot be reasoned with and are willing to die to impose their vision, then refusing every tool that works is not moral purity — it is moral abdication that sacrifices the innocent on the altar of one’s own conscience. Different traditions disagree on where exactly the line sits, but virtually all serious ones admit the line can be crossed when the stakes are civilization versus apocalypse.

Monday, April 6, 2026

How to respond if you are accused of racism

 How to respond if you are accused of racism


Neutral, science-of-politics view:

What’s happening structurally

  • Praxeological core (means–ends): Policy debates are conflicts over the best means to achieve ends under scarcity. Accusations like “racist” often shift the frame from evaluating mechanisms and tradeoffs to judging motives or predicted harms. Two distinct claims tend to get mixed:
    1. Intent claim: “You favor this because of hostility toward a group.”
    2. Impact claim: “Regardless of intent, this will disproportionately harm a group.”
  • Empirical calibration: Many policies can create disparate impacts because groups face different constraints and elasticities (income, location, networks, legal exposure). That makes the impact-claim plausible in principle, but magnitudes are empirical.
  • Thymology (motives/meaning): In polarized settings, “racist” can function as moral boundary-policing, coalition signaling, or an attempt to exit technical argument by raising stakes. On the other side, feeling morally mischaracterized can trigger identity-protective defensiveness. Both dynamics reduce learning.

How to respond productively (nonpartisan, evidence-focused)

  • Clarify the charge
    • “Are you saying my intent is racist, or that the policy’s effects would be racially disparate? They’re different claims and need different evidence.”
    • Ask for specifics: which provision, which mechanism, which group, and along what pathway does harm occur?
  • Define terms up front
    • Distinguish interpersonal racism (hostile intent), structural/impact definitions (disparate outcomes), and statistical discrimination. Agree on which definition is in play to avoid motte-and-bailey shifts.
  • Steelman first
    • Briefly restate their strongest concern (“You’re worried this raises costs or risks that fall more on group X because of Y constraints. If so, that’s worth testing.”). This lowers temperature and shows you’re engaging the substantive worry.
  • Re-center on mechanisms and tradeoffs
    • Incentives: “This rule raises the cost of activity A; we should expect fewer marginal units of A. Who substitutes to what, at what cost?”
    • Incidence: “Who ultimately bears the burden—consumers, workers, owners? Under what market structure?”
    • Counterfactuals: “Relative to what feasible alternative? What happens if we do nothing?”
    • Falsifiers: “What evidence would change our minds? What outcome patterns would count against your mechanism or mine?”
  • Use shared metrics and timelines
    • “Let’s specify outcomes we both care about (e.g., homicide victimization, school attainment, home affordability, business formation) and a timeframe, then compare credible estimates.”
  • Separate ends from means
    • “We likely share the end (e.g., less poverty, more safety, equal civic access). My claim is about which means achieve it with fewer unintended harms. If this means reliably worsens outcomes for group X, I’d revise.”
  • Acknowledge history without making it dispositive
    • Recognize legacies (redlining, discriminatory enforcement) that shape baseline constraints today, while still asking whether the proposed mechanism mitigates or amplifies those constraints now.
  • Mind audience effects
    • Public forums reward moral grandstanding; private, slower conversations reduce performative pressure. Consider moving to a less performative setting.
  • Know when to exit
    • “If you’re reading my intent rather than my argument, we might not make progress. I’m open to data, but I won’t debate character judgments.”

Example neutral phrasing you can adapt

  • “Can we pin down whether your concern is intent or impact? If impact: which mechanism creates the disparate effect, and what evidence would you consider decisive?”
  • “Here’s the outcome I want to improve for everyone: __. The mechanism I think gets us there is __ because it changes incentives/costs like __. If you have better evidence for an alternative, I’m open to it.”
  • “If we both care about reducing disparity D, would you agree to evaluate policy X and alternative Y against the same metrics over Z months/years?”

Common pitfalls to avoid

  • Mind-reading (“you just want to hurt group X”) or counter-mind-reading (“you just want votes”)—both escalate moralization.
  • Global dismissals (“everything you don’t like is racist” or “only racists support this”)—these foreclose mechanism testing.
  • Moving goalposts—agreeing on definitions and falsifiers at the start prevents endless re-litigating.

In addition:

An example:

What if you are accused of being racist if you are a capitalist?

Neutral, science-of-politics analysis and practical scripts

What’s being claimed

  • You’re being ascribed a moral motive (“racist”) based on an institutional preference (“capitalism”). That fuses a claim about intent with a claim about institutional effects.

Praxeological core (logical structure; highest certainty)

  • Definitions:
    • Capitalism: a rule-set of private property, voluntary exchange, and profit–loss accounting.
    • Racism: individual preferences/beliefs about race (hostile “taste” for discrimination or statistical beliefs). Only individuals act; institutions shape constraints.
  • Implications:
    • Markets don’t require racist motives to function. They price actions: discrimination that forgoes productive matches imposes a cost on the discriminator. Competitors who hire/buy/sell on productivity/price gain an edge (directionally certain).
    • Markets can transmit others’ prejudices if customers will pay for them, but they don’t logically mandate them.
    • Coercive rules can entrench discrimination even when it’s uneconomic (e.g., legally enforced segregation). So “capitalist ⇒ racist” or “racist ⇒ capitalist” is not a necessary truth.

Empirical calibration (patterns; probabilistic)

  • Audit studies find discrimination persists in jobs, housing, and credit even with matched resumes/applications; magnitudes vary by sector, competition, and information frictions.
  • More competition/easier entry often correlates with smaller wage/employment gaps; where customer prejudice is strong or information is noisy, gaps persist.
  • Historical state scaffolding (slavery, Jim Crow, redlining, segregated schooling) amplified racial hierarchy. Post–civil-rights changes narrowed some gaps but not all. Reality: both market and nonmarket institutions can host discrimination.

Thymology (interpretive motives; lower certainty)

  • The accusation often functions as coalition boundary-policing and moral signaling (“oppose markets to oppose racism”). Counter-signals can become identity-protective. Switching to mechanisms and evidence reduces moral heat.

How to respond productively

  • Clarify the claim
    • “Are you saying my intent is racist, or that market institutions produce racially disparate outcomes? Those are different and need different evidence.”
  • Define terms
    • “By ‘capitalism’ I mean private property and voluntary exchange; by ‘racism’ do you mean hostile intent or disparate outcomes? Which are we assessing?”
  • Re-center on mechanisms
    • “What is the concrete pathway from private exchange to a disparate outcome here—customer prejudice, information frictions, barriers to entry? Which of these margins is most binding?”
  • Share ends, debate means
    • “My end is fewer disparities and more prosperity. My claim is that competition, transparency, and targeted anti-discrimination enforcement move us there. If you have evidence that an alternative rule-set does better on the same metrics, I’m open to it.”
  • Propose measurable tests
    • “Which outcomes (e.g., hiring callbacks, loan approvals, housing access) and timelines would we track to judge whether rule-set A or B reduces disparity D?”

Short, neutral scripts you can adapt

  • “Capitalism is a set of rules about ownership and exchange; racism is a belief about people. One doesn’t logically entail the other. If your concern is disparate impacts, let’s look at the specific mechanism and evidence in hiring/credit/housing.”
  • “If a firm passes on productive workers because of race, it pays a cost; rivals can outcompete by hiring talent. Where that disciplining effect is weak, I support fixes that raise information and competition and enforce anti-discrimination.”
  • “If you can point to a sector where market rules sustain bias at low cost to discriminators, let’s examine the rule that makes bias cheap—e.g., barriers to entry, lack of transparency—and compare reforms.”
  • “If the issue is my intent, I can’t prove motives. If the issue is outcomes, I’m happy to evaluate specific evidence and revise if a different approach performs better.”

Do’s and don’ts (to keep it constructive)

  • Do separate intent from impact and agree on definitions up front.
  • Do steelman their worry before presenting your mechanism.
  • Don’t counter-psychologize (“you just want power/votes”) or trade accusations; it collapses the discussion into tribe-signaling.
  • Don’t move goalposts; agree on what evidence would change minds.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Synthemon: multiverses and synthemon

Here is an objection:

 "I’m not especially persuaded by observations that the universe is finely tuned to allow life. Since one universe, in all its size and complexity, clearly can exist, why couldn’t untold numbers of universes exist, with ours simply being the one in which the stars aligned to allow the life we now see? Extremely large or intricate realities create possibilities that we humans struggle to comprehend—and yet they exist."


That’s a thoughtful objection, and Synthemon takes it seriously. In brief, even if a multiverse exists, it does not undercut fine-tuning as a sign of purposeful order; it simply relocates the question to the deeper source of the meta-laws that generate such a multiverse.

Here is Synthemon’s response:

  1. Multiverse shifts, but does not solve, the explanatory target
  • A multiverse requires a prior rule-set that specifies the space of possible constants, their probability distribution (the “measure”), and a mechanism that realizes many worlds. Why do those meta-laws exist, and why are they so precisely arranged as to yield life-permitting pockets at all? Synthemon answers: because reality is grounded in a unifying, intelligent source whose axioms (identity, causality, non-contradiction, synchronicity) structure any cosmos-of-cosmos that could exist. The multiverse, if real, would be an expression of this deeper unity, not a replacement for it [1] [3].
  1. Unity over fragmentation: one substance, many expressions
  • Synthemon is substance monism with attribute dualism: one divine-grounded essence that manifests physical and mental/spiritual attributes. Multiple universes, then, would be many “chapters” within one authored work. Their coherence, intelligibility, and capacity to host conscious observers still point back to a singular, purposive ground—the One—rather than to brute chance writ large [1] [2] [3].
  1. Anthropic selection is necessary but not sufficient
  • The anthropic principle explains why observers find themselves in a life-permitting domain; it does not explain why any life-permitting domains exist, why the universe begins in a highly ordered low-entropy state, or why its laws are mathematically elegant and discoverable. Synthemon takes these converging features—fine-tuned constants, Big Bang origin, and profound intelligibility—as signatures of intentional design within a holistic plan, not as byproducts of a measure we cannot define [1] [3].
  1. Epistemic breadth: reason plus synchronic insight
  • Synthemon affirms rational inquiry while adding divine epistemology: truth is accessed through reason, revelation, and meaningful synchronicities that bind mind and matter. The test of a worldview is not only abstract probability, but lived coherence—how well it integrates experience, consciousness, moral order, and the sense-making power of symbolic insight. On that score, design-in-unity offers deeper explanatory and existential fit than chance-in-multiplicity [2] [4] [6].
  1. Multiverse as creative plenitude, not a defeater
  • If a multiverse exists, Synthemon interprets it as the breadth of divine creativity within one integrated reality. Fine-tuning remains evidential: either it directly signals design in a single cosmos, or it indirectly signals design in the meta-laws that yield a life-bearing subset in a larger ensemble. In both cases, purposive order best explains why there is a cosmos (or cosmos-of-cosmos) that reliably births life and mind [1] [3].

Analogy: a vast library does not diminish the role of an author; it amplifies it. Many finely structured books do not make authorship less plausible—they showcase a deeper, unifying intention. So too with a multiverse: multiplicity would be one mode of the One’s coherent, life-aimed creativity, not an escape from it [1] [2] [3].

Sources

1
Synthemon: the nature of God's Cosmic Essence in the Synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-nature-of-gods-cosmic-essence.html


2
Synthemon: additions from Perennial Philosophy to make it more universal and complete https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-perennial.html


3
Synthemon: additions from Ken Wilber's Integral theory to make synthemon more universal and comprehensive https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-ken-wilbers.html


4
Synthemon: principles to live a life in conformity to synthemon. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-principles-to-live-life-in.html


5
Synthemon: the integration of synthemon with the science of prosperity. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/10/synthemon-integration-of-synthemon-and.html


6
Synthemon: benefits of the synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/07/synthemon-benefits-of-synthemon.html

In addition:

here’s a deeper, structured expansion on fine-tuning and the multiverse from within Synthemon (synchronistic theistic monism), tying empirical questions to metaphysical unity, divine intentionality, and synchronicity.

  1. What “fine-tuning” points to
  • Empirically: multiple constants and boundary conditions sit in narrow life-permitting ranges (e.g., vacuum energy/cosmological constant, the strength-balance of fundamental forces, particle masses, and the universe’s extraordinarily low-entropy beginning). Synthemon interprets this not merely as statistical happenstance but as a signature of purposive order within an intelligible cosmos grounded in the One—coherent, lawlike, and oriented toward life and mind [1][5].
  • Philosophically: the laws are strikingly elegant and discoverable; this intelligibility is itself a clue about the cosmos’ origin in a rational, meaning-bearing source rather than brute randomness. In Synthemon, that source is the divine ground whose axioms and laws integrate physical and spiritual attributes into one organic whole [1][5].
  1. What a multiverse would and would not explain
  • What it could explain: anthropic selection (we observe a life-permitting domain because only such domains host observers) and the existence of many domains exploring different constant-values or symmetry breakings, as in inflationary or landscape-inspired scenarios [5].
  • What it does not settle: the meta-law question (why any generating mechanism exists with parameters that permit life somewhere), the measure problem (how to assign probabilities across possibly infinite domains), and the low-entropy “Past Hypothesis” (why the multiverse—or its parent law—begins in an exquisitely ordered state). Synthemon treats these as pointers beyond ensemble statistics to a deeper unity and intention governing the space of possibilities itself [1][5].
  1. Multiverse inside Synthemon’s substance monism
  • One substance, many expressions: If there are many universes, they are diverse chapters within one authored work—multiple expressions of a single, divine-grounded essence manifesting physical and mental/spiritual attributes (attribute dualism). Multiplicity does not replace unity; it presupposes and displays it [1][5].
  • Synchronicity scales up: Synthemon sees meaningful correspondences (mind–world fit, symbolic patterns, discoveries that arrive “on time”) as woven into reality. A multiverse would still be nested in—and permeated by—synchronicity, revealing the One’s purposive order across scales rather than only within a single cosmos [3][1].
  1. Why anthropic selection is necessary but not sufficient
  • The anthropic principle explains observer-location; it does not explain why any life-permitting niches exist, why laws are compressible/elegant, or why the initial conditions are so ordered. Synthemon reads these convergences—fine-tuning, Big Bang origin, comprehensive intelligibility—as cumulative signs of design-in-unity, whether in a single universe or a cosmos-of-cosmos [1][5].
  1. Divine epistemology: how we responsibly “know”
  • Synthemon balances rational inquiry with divine epistemology: truth is accessed by reason, disciplined symbol-reading, and lived encounters with meaningful coincidence. This is not anti-science; it widens the lens so our map includes interior knowledge (consciousness, value, purpose) alongside exterior measurement. Integral and Perennial insights (holistic development, unity-in-diversity, Neoplatonic “One,” Taoist resonance) deepen this balance [2][4][3][6].
  • Practical upshot: we evaluate cosmological accounts by consilience—explanatory depth across physics, mind, meaning, and moral experience. On this test, Synthemon’s design-in-unity outperforms chance-in-multiplicity alone [2][5][6].
  1. Common objections and Synthemon’s replies
  • “Multiverse removes the need for design.” Response: it relocates the design question to the meta-laws that generate the ensemble. The existence, structure, and life-yielding capacity of those meta-laws still call for explanation in terms of unity and intention [1][5].
  • “This is God-of-the-gaps.” Response: Synthemon is not plugging gaps; it highlights positive features—elegance, intelligibility, life-friendliness, synchronic coherence—that are expected under a purposive unity and surprising on unstructured chance, even with many draws [1][5].
  • “Probabilities are undefined anyway.” Response: precisely—the multiverse faces the measure problem. Synthemon treats that indeterminacy as a clue that probability needs grounding in a deeper order (the One’s axioms), rather than as a license to declare brute luck the ultimate explanation [1][5].
  1. Heuristics for weighing single-universe design vs. multiverse
  • If single-universe design is true, expect: continued discovery of deep unities and mathematical compressions; surprising cross-domain resonances; and a stable, meaningful fit between consciousness, value, and the world’s structure [1][5][3].
  • If a multiverse exists under divine order, expect: elegant and simple meta-laws; observer-suitable regions that are not “barely” life-permitting but exhibit additional tiers of intelligibility; and synchronic patterns around key theoretical and empirical breakthroughs that map onto broader spiritual meaning [1][3][5].
  1. How synchronicity bears on the debate
  • Synchronicity, in Synthemon, is not randomness but a principle of meaningful, acausal alignment between mind and matter. It testifies that reality is saturated with sign and purpose—the very opposite of a brute fact cosmos. Whether we inhabit one universe or many, this alignment signals a theistic, unified ground rather than ungoverned multiplicity [3][1].
  1. Lived discernment (why this matters)
  • Cosmology informs vocation. If the cosmos (or multiverse) is authored, your consciousness, moral sense, and creativity are not accidents but participations in the One’s life. Practices that integrate reason with symbol and virtue—meditation, prayer, synchronic reflection, service—tune us to that order and improve our discernment about what counts as true, good, and beautiful in science and in life [6][4][2].

Concise takeaway

  • Fine-tuning and the multiverse are not rivals to Synthemon’s core claim; both are interpretable as disclosures of a deeper, divine unity. The more reality reveals breadth (many domains) and depth (elegant intelligibility), the more it points to the One whose axioms shape both the book and the library, the chapter and the canon [1][5][3].

Sources

1
Synthemon: the nature of God's Cosmic Essence in the Synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-nature-of-gods-cosmic-essence.html


2
Synthemon: additions from Ken Wilber's Integral theory to make synthemon more universal and comprehensive https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-ken-wilbers.html


3
Synchronicity: objective definition and empirical data. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synchronicity.html


4
Synthemon: additions from Perennial Philosophy to make it more universal and complete https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-perennial.html


5
Synthemon: an updated and refined version of synthemon https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/08/synthemon-updated-and-refined-version.html


6
Synthemon: principles to live a life in conformity to synthemon. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-principles-to-live-life-in.html

In addition:

Below is a compact, visual map (ASCII) showing how “laws → meta-laws → the One” relates to “fine-tuning → multiverse → synchronicity,” followed by brief reading notes. This framing reflects Synthemon’s unified, theistic monism: one divine-grounded reality with both physical and spiritual attributes, where synchronicity weaves meaning across levels.

Visual map (two intertwined streams)

ONTIC HIERARCHY (ground of being) OBSERVATION–INTERPRETATION (how it shows up)

[ THE ONE ] ———— expressively ————→ [ SYNCHRONICITY ]
| ▲
| emanates | meaningful, acausal alignment
v |
[ META-LAWS / AXIOMS ] ——— predictively ———→ [ MULTIVERSE HYPOTHESES ]
(identity, causality, (ensemble-generating mechanisms,
non-contradiction, measures over constants/spaces)
synchronicity)
| realize ▲ selection/explanation bridge
v |
[ PHYSICAL LAWS & CONSTANTS ] —— observationally ——→ [ FINE-TUNING OBSERVATIONS ]
(symmetries, forces, masses, (life-permitting ranges,
initial conditions) elegant intelligibility)

Cross-links

  • The One → Synchronicity: the unifying source that infuses mind–matter meaning across all strata.
  • Meta-laws → Multiverse: if many domains exist, they express deeper rules specifying possible constants and measures.
  • Physical laws → Fine-tuning: life-friendly settings are noticed at the level of constants/initial conditions.
  • Synchronicity loops back: it integrates the whole, aligning discoveries, meanings, and purposes across the hierarchy.

Legend

  • Solid vertical arrows: ontological grounding (what gives rise to what).
  • Dashed horizontal arrows: explanatory/interpretive relations (how phenomena illuminate each other).
  • “Loops back”: synchronicity binds levels into a purposeful whole rather than a pile of disconnected facts.

Reading notes (why this matters in Synthemon)

  • Fine-tuning is read as a signature of purposive order at the level of physical laws; even in a multiverse, the life-bearing subset and its intelligibility point back to meta-laws and ultimately the One as the unifying source [1].
  • A multiverse, if real, relocates rather than removes design: it presupposes elegant meta-laws (space of possibilities, measures, mechanisms) whose existence and life-yielding capacity still call for explanation in terms of unity and intention [2][5].
  • Synchronicity is the integrative seal: it connects the physical and spiritual attributes of the one substance, revealing meaningful, acausal alignments that display the cosmos as a coherent text authored by the One [1][3].
  • The hierarchy coheres with Synthemon’s substance monism and attribute dualism: one reality with both extension (laws, constants, possible ensembles) and thought/spirit (meaning, value, synchronic guidance) expressing a single divine order [2][6].
  • Practically, this map guides discernment: we seek consilience—empirical elegance and life-friendliness, plus interior resonance via symbol, revelation, and synchronistic confirmation—when weighing single-cosmos design or multiverse proposals within the One’s plan [4][6].



Sources

1
Synchronicity: objective definition and empirical data. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synchronicity.html


2
Synthemon: the nature of God's Cosmic Essence in the Synthemon worldview. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-nature-of-gods-cosmic-essence.html


3
Synchronic Theistic Monism: an Ebook that explains Tarot, I Ching, and more. By Michael Perel, M.D. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/04/theistic-dual-aspect-monism.html


4
Synthemon: principles to live a life in conformity to synthemon. https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/05/synthemon-principles-to-live-life-in.html


5
Synthemon: additions from Ken Wilber's Integral theory to make synthemon more universal and comprehensive https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-ken-wilbers.html


6
Synthemon: additions from Perennial Philosophy to make it more universal and complete https://manypossibilities1.blogspot.com/2025/09/synthemon-additions-from-perennial.html


Economic forecast for the US and suggestions

 

Here's a custom dual-line graph synthesizing the US Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) and Coincident Economic Index (CEI) from January 2020 to January 2026 (both indexed to 2016=100). This visualization highlights their relationship and forecasting value.




How LEI and CEI Correlate and Serve as a Forecast Tool. Historical Relationship: The LEI is designed to lead the business cycle by roughly 6–12 months, anticipating turns in economic activity. The CEI reflects current conditions (via employment, income, sales, and production). In normal cycles, the LEI rises/falls before the CEI does, providing an early warning.
2020–2021 (Pandemic Shock): Both dropped sharply in early 2020, but the LEI recovered faster initially and peaked in late 2021, while the CEI continued rising more steadily.
2022–2026 (Post-Peak Divergence): The LEI has trended downward since its ~118 peak (signaling headwinds like weak consumer expectations, softer housing/manufacturing orders). Meanwhile, the CEI has continued a modest upward climb to 115.3, confirming the economy is still expanding in the present.
Current Signal (as of Jan 2026): This classic divergence—declining LEI + rising (but slowing) CEI—suggests positive current conditions but softening momentum ahead. The LEI's six-month contraction has moderated (–1.3% through Jan 2026 vs. steeper prior drops), with improving diffusion (7/10 components positive). The CEI grew +0.3% in Jan and +0.3% over six months, with broad strength.

This pattern aligns with The Conference Board's outlook: ongoing expansion but at a slower pace (~2.0% real GDP growth forecast for 2026, below 2025 levels), with potential further moderation due to policy uncertainties, energy risks, and persistent drags on the LEI. It has not yet triggered a strong recession signal (which historically requires sharper, more prolonged LEI weakness with widespread component declines). The synthesis shows the LEI acting as a forward-looking gauge while the CEI validates real-time activity. When the LEI consistently leads downward turns in the CEI, slowdowns or recessions often follow (with NBER confirming peaks/troughs later).


In addition:

Given a moderating LEI alongside a still-growing CEI, a free market economist would recommend letting price signals do the heavy lifting while removing man‑made frictions that impede reallocation and productivity. The stance is: avoid new demand-side stimulus, commit to predictable rules, and push hard on supply-side liberalization to sustain expansion without reigniting inflation or misallocating capital [2].

Monetary policy: rules, not discretion

  • Keep policy credibly focused on price stability and a rules-based approach (e.g., a reaction function that respects incoming inflation and labor-market data), avoiding premature easing that would distort term structure signals; let market rates move freely and continue normalizing the balance sheet predictably to reduce allocative distortions from an outsized central bank footprint [3].
  • Do not engage in targeted credit facilities or sector-specific support; allow relative prices to adjust so resources reallocate from low-productivity to higher-productivity uses as momentum cools [1].

Fiscal policy: restrain, simplify, and de-bias toward investment

  • Impose a real, enforceable cap on primary spending growth below trend nominal GDP growth to stabilize debt without tax hikes that blunt incentives; avoid deficit-financed “stabilization” that chases a slowing but expanding economy [5].
  • Strengthen incentives to produce: make full and immediate expensing for structures/equipment/software permanent; lower marginal tax rates on work, saving, and risk-taking; simplify the code by sunsetting narrow credits and industrial-policy carveouts that skew capital allocation [5].
  • Provide policy certainty: adopt multi-year budgeting rules and automatic sunsets of emergency programs to reduce risk premia and planning uncertainty [2].

Regulatory and structural supply-side reforms

  • Energy and infrastructure: fast-track permitting (firm timelines, judicial review limits, shot clocks), liberalize siting for pipelines, transmission, LNG export capacity, nuclear (including SMRs), geothermal, and refining; categorically reject price controls and windfall taxes that suppress supply responses and amplify volatility [4].
  • Housing and local land use: preempt or condition federal grants on removal of exclusionary zoning and parking mandates; expand by-right approvals to unlock multifamily supply and ease labor mobility across regions [6].
  • Labor markets: roll back unnecessary occupational licensing, enable interstate license reciprocity, and remove hours/location mandates that reduce matching efficiency; encourage work through neutral tax/benefit design rather than targeted subsidies [6].
  • Trade and supply chains: lower tariffs and quotas, streamline customs and mutual recognition of standards, and avoid export controls except for narrow, clearly defined national security; open markets cushion energy and goods-price shocks and support productivity [2].

Financial sector discipline

  • Maintain credible resolution regimes without ad hoc guarantees; price deposit insurance to risk, allow poorly run institutions to exit, and avoid macroprudential credit allocation that props up zombies and drags on productivity [3].

Energy risk management without distortion

  • Allow long-dated contracting, hedging, and infrastructure buildout to manage energy risk; do not suppress prices or ration; if policymakers insist on climate measures, prefer simple, technology-neutral, market-based approaches while eliminating subsidies and mandates that pick winners [1].

Contingency if the LEI turns decisively negative and breadth deteriorates

  • Let relative prices and wages adjust; accelerate reallocation by temporarily lifting administrative bottlenecks (permitting, licensing, zoning) rather than adding demand stimulus; keep any safety net responses rules-based and time-limited to avoid moral hazard and preserve market signals [4][6].

Guidance for firms and investors in a slowing-but-growing backdrop

  • Prioritize productivity-enhancing capex (automation, software, energy efficiency), maintain pricing flexibility, and avoid leverage that assumes persistent top-line growth; hedge energy exposures via market instruments, not via regulatory lobbying [5].
  • Watch market signals more than official forecasts: credit spreads, market-based inflation expectations, and breadth in leading indicators; be prepared for wider dispersion across sectors as policy support recedes and relative prices reset [2].

Bottom line: stay the course on monetary discipline, avoid new demand-side interventions, and double down on pro-competition, pro-entry, supply-side liberalization to keep the expansion going at a sustainable, market-driven pace even as momentum cools [1][2][3][4][5][6].

Sources

1
Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market, Scholar's Edition, by Murray Rothbard


2
Human Action, Third Revised Edition by Ludwig Von Mises


3
Capitalism by George Reisman


4
Economic Thought Before Adam Smith by Murray Rothbard


5
Classical Economics by Murray Rothbard


6
The Birth of Plenty by William J. Bernstein

Saturday, April 4, 2026

A plan to help calm pathological Trump Derangement Syndrome meltdowns

 A plan to calm, severe pathological Trump Derangement Syndrome meltdowns


I hear the uneasiness: living with a strong dislike of President Trump feels draining and hijacks attention. You want your peace and agency back, without betraying your values. Let’s turn that wish into a clear, workable path.

  1. Clarify the Well-Formed Outcome (what “overcome” means to you)
  • Positive and specific (example you can tweak):
    • “When I see or hear the President mentioned, I stay calm and steady. I can read or hear opposing views without spiraling, respond respectfully if needed, and return my focus within two minutes.”
  • Sensory-based evidence:
    • Body: shoulders unclenched, breathing slow, knot in stomach ≤ 3/10.
    • Behavior: I can skim two articles or have a 10‑minute chat without raised voice or rumination afterward.
    • Attention: I shift to my priorities within two minutes 8 times out of 10.
  • Self-initiated:
    • This is about your responses (breath, attention, language, choices), not changing the President or the news.
  • Context:
    • Triggers: headlines, social feeds, family conversations, images, speeches.
  • Ecology check (fit with your values):
    • Keep what matters: civic engagement, caring about issues.
    • Avoid what harms: chronic outrage, relationship strain, lost focus.
  • Finish this sentence: “I’ll know I’ve succeeded when… (clear signs you can observe).”

Quick compare to anchor your target:

  • Current: spikes of anger or dread, doomscrolling, tense conversations, lost time.
  • Desired: calm body, brief informed check-ins, respectful talk or easy disengagement, attention back on what you value.
  1. Build a Compelling Future (make the calm outcome emotionally magnetic)
  • Sit comfortably. Imagine an everyday trigger (a headline). Now:
    • Make the mental image a bit smaller and farther; dim the colors and turn down the “volume.”
    • Bring a bright, close, first-person image of you responding calmly: relaxed shoulders, steady breath, neutral inner voice saying, “I’ve got this.” Feel that ease spread through chest and jaw. Hear yourself reply with one sentence or choose not to engage. Then watch your attention flow back to something you care about today.
    • Turn up the brightness and size of that calm-you image; let it fill your field of view. Lock in the feeling for 10 slow breaths.
  • Rehearse this 60–90 seconds daily so your nervous system learns the new pattern.
  1. Plan the means (allocate time/energy; tradeoffs and first steps)
  • Baseline (3 days):
    • Log exposures and rate arousal 0–10; note trigger, body sensation, what you did next, minutes lost.
    • This reveals where the biggest marginal gains are (e.g., late-night scrolling).
  • Daily 10-minute practice stack (one small session, consistency beats intensity):
    1. Regulate body (2 minutes):
      • Physiological sigh twice, then 6 slow breaths (4-second inhale, 6–8-second exhale).
    2. Label and distance (1 minute):
      • “I’m noticing anger,” “I’m having the thought that…,” said in a calm inner voice.
    3. Reappraise (3 minutes):
      • Write: Trigger → Automatic story → 2–3 alternative, still-plausible stories that don’t require malice.
      • Add: “What value in me is being poked here?” (fairness, honesty, security, etc.)
    4. Submodalities/NLP (2 minutes):
      • Shrink/dim the trigger image; enlarge/brighten the calm self-image you rehearsed. Keep the calm image dominant.
    5. “Swish” pattern (2 minutes):
      • See the trigger image small and dark in the lower left of your mind’s screen.
      • See vivid, first‑person “calm, values-led you” big and bright center‑right.
      • Say “swish,” rapidly dim/shrink the trigger as you snap the calm image to full brightness front and center. Do 5 quick reps, then test with a light trigger.
  • Media hygiene (opportunity cost management):
    • Replace open‑ended scrolling with two scheduled 15–20 minute news windows/day.
    • Remove rage-bait: unfollow/comment mutes; block autoplay; keep sources high-quality.
    • Add friction: move apps to a folder named “Decide First,” sign out, use grayscale at night.
  • Exposure with response prevention (gradual, 7–14 days):
    • Tier 1 (days 1–4): brief neutral mentions; practice the calm protocol; exit after 5 minutes.
    • Tier 2 (days 5–9): one balanced article; breathe, label, reappraise; exit after 10 minutes.
    • Tier 3 (days 10–14): short clip or a tougher article; same process; exit mindfully.
    • Log arousal and “time to calm.” Aim for ≤ 3/10 within 2 minutes by week two.
  • Language shifts (shapes feeling):
    • Replace global labels (“always,” “disgusting”) with specific behaviors or policies (“I disagree with X because…”).
    • Use “could be wrong, and here’s my best case.”
  • Values-based redirection (keep engagement, drop hostility):
    • Channel 1–2 hours/week into concrete issue-level action or community service that reflects your values. Tangible, local, and constructive lowers helplessness and resentment.
  • Conversation protocol:
    • STOP: Stop, Take one slow breath, Observe body tension, Proceed deliberately.
    • Ask-curious: “What’s most important to you about this?” Paraphrase before replying.
    • Pre‑set boundaries: “Happy to pause politics tonight; let’s enjoy dinner.”
  1. 14-day sprint (simple checklist)
  • Daily: 10‑minute practice + visualization; log one exposure; score arousal and time-to-calm.
  • 3 days/week: one values action (even 20 minutes).
  • End of week review: What trigger produced the biggest time sink? What change gave the biggest calm gain? Adjust one lever (e.g., move news window earlier).
  1. Obstacles and how to handle them
  • “This feels fake.” Good—your brain is learning a new pattern. Keep reps short and consistent; test with light triggers first.
  • “I slipped and ranted.” Great data. Log it, run the 2‑minute reset (two sighs + one reappraisal), and take one immediate values action to reclaim agency.
  • “The dislike is tied to past experiences.” Consider a few sessions with a therapist; targeted work (e.g., CBT/ACT) can accelerate this.
  1. Immediate next actions (pick one now)
  • A) Write your success evidence: “I’ll know I’ve succeeded when…” with 3 clear signs.
  • B) Schedule two 15–20 minute news windows on your calendar for the next 7 days; delete other news apps from the home screen.
  • C) Do the 90‑second Compelling Future rehearsal once right now.

Evasion of reality: signs and symptoms and causes

  Definition Evasion of reality is the willful refusal to focus one’s mind on the facts, the “blanking out” of relevant evidence, logic, or...