Visiting China Is Magic!

ChatGPT says: This article sells experience as a corrective to analysis, but without considering how experience itself is curated, filtered, and strategically managed.

Start with the core claim: “Americans misunderstand China because they don’t visit.” That sounds reasonable. But it quietly assumes that seeing equals knowing. That’s the weak point. China is probably the most stage-managed large society on earth for foreign visitors. You don’t just “see China.” You see:

flagship cities like Shanghai and Shenzhen
model factories and innovation hubs
English-speaking elites and policy interlocutors
carefully permitted conversations

You are not seeing:

internal dissent
bureaucratic dysfunction
local fiscal crises
the full range of political constraints on speech and organization

So the article replaces one abstraction with another. Instead of “China as threat,” it gives you “China as dazzling modernity.” Both are partial, both are politically useful.

Through the David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory lens, this is textbook coalition signaling. The authors are aligned with the “engagement and technocratic realism” coalition. Their moral language is:

“seeing firsthand”
“reducing miscalculation”
“less theatrical policy”
“pragmatic competition”

That language does a few things at once:

It flatters policymakers as serious adults who value nuance
It delegitimizes hawkish or ideological stances as naïve or performative
It reopens space for institutional exchange, which benefits their network (think tanks, policy institutes, exchange programs)

Now bring in Stephen Turner. His critique lands cleanly here. The article treats “people who have been to China recently” as epistemically privileged. As if proximity produces authority. Turner would say that’s just another status claim. The public still has to decide whether to grant deference to that claim. And the evidence is thin. Anecdotes about “Shanghai felt advanced” are not a theory of state capacity or geopolitical intent.

And there’s a second layer. The piece underplays adversarial information environments. It assumes that dialogue yields insight. Sometimes it does. But it can also yield performed insight designed to shape the visitor.

So you end up with a kind of soft propaganda loop:

Visitors are impressed by visible competence
They report that competence back to their networks
That reporting reinforces the case for more engagement
Which produces more curated exposure

None of this means visiting is useless. It’s valuable. But the article overcorrects. It treats lack of travel as the main epistemic failure, when the real issue is how to integrate multiple imperfect sources:

on-the-ground observation
adversarial intelligence
economic data
defectors and critics
historical pattern recognition

Seeing China can update your priors. It should not replace them.

The framing is doing rhetorical work. It’s not just describing China. It’s recruiting you into a coalition that treats awe as insight.

Posted in China | Comments Off on Visiting China Is Magic!

Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression: On the Nature and Origins of “Conservaphobia”

Conservaphobia creates a pervasive sense of danger for those who hold traditional views. In his book-in-progress Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression, Rony Guldmann argues that this feeling of being unsafe stems from an institutionalized liberal world view. This view treats conservative thought as a psychological defect rather than a valid opinion.

Liberal institutions pathologize conservative beliefs. Psychologists often describe traditional values as signs of fear or low intelligence. This makes conservatives feel like patients under observation. They feel that experts diagnose their souls instead of listening to their arguments.

Social death acts as a constant threat. The fear of being labeled a bigot or a racist carries a heavy price. This stigma leads to ostracism from professional and social circles. It functions as a form of exile within one’s own country. Conservatives feel they must hide their true thoughts to keep their jobs.

Liberal control of schools and media creates a sense of cultural homelessness. The anointed class treats conservative symbols like the flag or the church as half savage relics. Deconstructing these symbols attacks the conservative hero system. This creates existential dread. When the state treats a person’s deepest values as obstacles to progress, that person feels like an enemy of the state.

Speech codes force the use of liberal terms. These rules require people to speak in ways that violate their own sense of reality. This feels like a violation of personal integrity. It is a form of epistemic coercion.

The ruling coalition dismisses legitimate safety concerns as mere prejudice. When conservatives notice patterns in crime or mental illness, experts call it bias. This leaves people feeling physically and socially vulnerable. They feel they cannot speak about risks without facing a moral trial.

Moral hierarchies place liberal values at the top and conservative values at the bottom. This vision of the anointed creates a world where some people are experts and others are problems to be solved. This asymmetry makes conservatives feel like they are subjects of a managerial elite.

Legal threats target traditional practices. Fights over marriage and gender identity make people feel that the law is a weapon. They fear that their way of making sense of the universe counts for nothing in court.

The loss of a shared national story leaves people without a sense of belonging. If the history of the country is only a story of oppression, then the patriot is a fool. This destruction of meaning feels like a cosmic terror. It removes the psychological shield that a shared culture provides.

Guldmann shows that these claims of oppression are not just about policy. They are about the right to exist in a social order that recognizes your humanity. The liberal world view denies this right to those it deems backward. This denial is the root of the conservative sense of being unsafe.

Experts treat traditional ideas as psychological symptoms. When a person values tradition, the elite class describes it as a fear of change. This pathologization turns a political debate into a medical observation. The citizen feels like a patient rather than a peer. The ruling coalition claims a monopoly on compassion. They frame their policies as the only way to care for people. This makes anyone who disagrees feel like a person of malice. A person feels they must defend their character before they can even speak about a policy.

Liberal institutions use asymmetric transparency. They demand that traditional groups reveal every donor and motive. Yet they hide their own decisions behind the shield of expert consensus. This makes the non-expert feel like the state is watching them while they are not allowed to watch the state. The vision of the anointed denies individual agency. Experts often say that people only vote for traditional values because they are victims of propaganda. This treats the voter as a person without a mind. It is a form of intellectualized anti-intellectualism.

Ruling coalitions use strategic unpredictability. They constantly update the moral language. A word that was safe yesterday becomes a sign of hate today. This keeps people in a state of fear. They never know when their vocabulary will become a reason for their firing. The state treats traditional symbols as half-savage relics. When the ruling class mocks a flag or a religious icon, they attack the hero system of the public. This creates a sense of cultural homelessness. The citizen feels like a stranger in their own country.

Experts redefine safety as the absence of offense. They argue that words can be a form of violence. This allows the coalition to censor any thought that challenges their reality. It makes the conservative feel that their presence in a room is a health hazard to others. The ruling class denies the value of reciprocity. They feel entitled to change traditional institutions like churches or schools. But they do not allow the public to influence the universities or the media. This asymmetry makes people feel like they are under a foreign occupation.

Elites use institutional gaslighting. They claim that a clear problem does not exist even when everyone can see it. They say a border is secure when it is not. This forces the public to choose between their own eyes and their social survival. The ruling coalition treats the past only as a crime scene. They frame history as a story of oppression. This makes the patriot feel like a fool for loving his home. It destroys the meaning that people find in their ancestors.

This system is a tool for coalition coordination. It does not seek truth. It seeks to maintain the status of the managers. When the experts define the traditional way of life as a psychological defect, they remove it from the list of admissible realities. DTG might be a reaction to this erasure. The populist revolt is a attempt to reclaim the right to define what is honorable and what is safe. Stability returns only when the public accepts the hero system of the state. Right now the public sees the expertise as a sham used to keep them in a state of permanent anxiety.

Posted in Rony Guldmann | Comments Off on Conservative Claims of Cultural Oppression: On the Nature and Origins of “Conservaphobia”

Power Determines Claims Of Expertise

Expertise does not operate in a vacuum. It operates within institutions, and institutions answer to coalitions. What a coalition of interests, media organizations, party infrastructure, and reputationally interdependent commentators will recognize as admissible reality shapes what experts are permitted to say, what counts as evidence, and which observations get laundered as disinformation rather than engaged as claims. This is not a conspiracy theory. It is a structural description of how epistemic coercion works, and Stephen Turner’s work gives it a rigorous theoretical foundation.
Turner argues across several books and papers that the coercive element in expert discourse is not aberrational but built in. Peer review excludes. Grant systems reward conformity. Reputational cascades amplify credentialed voices and silence others not because the silenced are wrong but because they lack the institutional sponsorship that converts an observation into an admissible fact. The mechanisms are mostly invisible because they are impersonal. No one issues a directive. The incentive structure does the work.
This is what Turner means when he says that what appears as science, or as expert consensus, is the product of a long series of coercive decisions that have been naturalized into procedure. But Turner’s framework does not stop at scientific institutions. In The Politics of Expertise (2014) and Liberal Democracy 3.0 (2003) he traces the same architecture into the broader relationship between expertise and democratic life. What emerges is a picture of who counts as an expert, and what counts as an admissible observation, is always also a political question, settled by convention and sustained by coalitions with stakes in the outcome. The Biden presidency offers a case study in this mechanism operating not within a scientific discipline but across the broader apparatus of political epistemology, and it is worth examining carefully because the coalition’s management of admissible reality eventually failed in public, leaving its prior conduct visible in retrospect.
Joseph Biden’s diminished capacity was observable for years before it became officially acknowledged. Press conferences, public appearances, and interviews showed a man who lost his train of thought mid-sentence, confused names and dates, and occasionally seemed uncertain where he was. None of this was hidden. It was available to anyone who watched. Yet for a sustained period, the coalition of Democratic operatives, major media institutions, progressive commentators, and sympathetic medical voices refused to treat these observations as an evidentiary claim worth engaging seriously. People who raised the question were labeled partisan, bad-faith, or complicit in a disinformation campaign.
The label did the work that evidence was supposed to do. This is Turner’s delegitimation mechanism operating in plain sight: you do not engage the claim, you discredit the person making it. The question of Biden’s fitness was not refuted. It was reclassified as inadmissible.
One measure of how thoroughly the reclassification worked: a search of Google Scholar conducted on July 12, 2024, the day before Biden withdrew from the race, returned no academic articles on his cognitive decline. This is not because the question was scientifically uninteresting or empirically empty. It is because the machinery that converts observations into legitimate scholarly objects had not permitted it. Academic publication requires institutional sponsorship, peer review, editorial judgment, and reputational risk. Every one of those mechanisms answered to the same coalition that was managing the question in public. The absence of a literature is not a neutral fact. It is the silence that coercion produces.
Turner distinguishes several expert types in The Politics of Expertise that bear directly on how this silence was maintained. He separates what he calls Type I experts, those with publicly ratified cognitive authority across partisan lines, from Type IV and Type V experts, those subsidized to speak as experts in service of funders or patrons, and those whose primary audience is bureaucrats and institutional insiders with discretionary power. The physicist belongs to the first category. His authority rests on demonstrated efficacy recognized by a cross-cutting public that does not share a stake in his conclusions. The medical voices who vouched for Biden’s capacity were operating much closer to the fourth and fifth types. Their authority flowed partly from institutional position and partly from alignment with a coalition that had a stake in the conclusion. Their audience was sectarian in Turner’s precise sense: it was constituted by people who shared an interest in the outcome, not by a general public capable of ratifying expertise on independent grounds.
Turner makes a related point in Liberal Democracy 3.0 that cuts to the center of the Biden episode. Cognitive authority, he argues, is conventional and mutable. The public delegates it, and the public has historically withdrawn it. What the Biden coalition was doing, in the period before the debate, was not simply defending a position. It was actively trying to lock in a convention about who counted as a credible observer of the president’s condition. Allies with medical credentials were amplified. Skeptics without them were dismissed as unqualified. Video evidence was labeled selectively edited. This is the certification mechanism Turner describes in detail: the effort to define expertise in terms of acceptance of the cognitive authority of a particular group, so that the group’s conclusions become self-validating within the convention it controls.
Turner also argues in Liberal Democracy 3.0 that to be apolitical is a political strategy. This line deserves weight here. The physicians and public health voices who vouched for Biden presented themselves as simply reporting clinical facts. That presentation of neutrality was itself a political act. It borrowed the legitimacy of Type I expertise, the publicly ratified authority of the scientist reporting what the instruments show, to serve the purposes of Type IV expertise, the subsidized speaker advancing conclusions that serve a patron’s interest. The concealment of that substitution is what made the strategy effective for as long as it lasted. Turner distinguishes carefully between experts who have earned general public legitimacy and those who have earned only sectarian legitimacy within communities of shared belief or shared interest. The Biden defenders were claiming the first kind of authority while exercising the second.
Turner distinguishes three basic forms of epistemic coercion: information deprivation, normalizing and stigmatizing, and legitimating and delegitimating. All three appeared in the management of the Biden question. Concerns raised by conservative outlets were treated as inherently tainted by their source. Video clips showing visible confusion were labeled deceptively edited, a claim that sometimes had a narrow technical basis and was then applied far beyond what the evidence warranted. The stigmatizing chain ran like this: the people raising the concern are bad actors, therefore the concern is a bad-faith product, therefore engaging it seriously is itself a form of complicity. This chain does not touch the underlying observation. It is a social operation dressed as an epistemic one.
Normalization ran alongside this. Major institutional voices insisted Biden was sharp, engaged, fully capable. White House staff and cabinet members said so on record. Prominent journalists who had access to the president described encounters that sounded nothing like what viewers saw in public. The effect was to create what Turner calls an epistemic atmosphere, the appearance of consensus that misrepresents what people are actually thinking and perceiving. Turner notes that changing minds is difficult but creating the appearance of consensus is not. You do not need to convince people that Biden was sharp. You only need to make them uncertain enough about their own perception that they stay quiet. The normalization machinery worked not by persuasion but by raising the social cost of dissent.
The presidential debate on June 27, 2024 was the event the machinery could not absorb. It was live, unedited, sustained over ninety minutes, and visible simultaneously to tens of millions of people. It produced what Turner describes when he talks about tacit knowledge as the ground of resistance: an experience that could not be rationalized away, that could not be attributed to deceptive editing or partisan framing, that sat in direct conflict with what the coalition had been insisting was true. The tacit knowledge of ordinary observers, built up over years of watching Biden in public, finally had an event that matched and confirmed it. The coalition’s consensus collapsed not because journalists suddenly found courage but because the event outran the capacity for management.
What happened next deserves as much attention as the collapse itself. The coalition did not reckon with its prior conduct. It did not acknowledge that a legitimate question had been suppressed, that the people who raised it had been punished for doing so, or that the machinery of delegitimation had been turned against honest observation. It pivoted to a new narrative in which Biden’s decline had only recently become apparent, the debate was an anomaly that revealed something previously hidden, and concern was now obviously warranted. The past was not examined. It was silently overwritten. This is a revealing move because it shows that the coalition’s function was never truth-tracking in any honest sense. It was reality management, and when management became untenable the coalition renegotiated its account of the past rather than account for what it had done to those who asked the question earlier.
Turner’s work on the transformation of science is instructive here even though it addresses a different domain. He traces how science shifted from autonomous inquiry toward the production of reliable knowledge for institutional sponsors. The scientist’s initiative, once grounded in personal judgment about what questions mattered, became instead initiative in anticipating the preferences of funders and review committees. The journalist’s situation has a structural analogy. Political journalism was never purely autonomous, but the degree to which major outlets coordinated their framing of Biden’s condition suggests something closer to what Turner calls commissioned expertise: findings shaped by the requirements of a patron, where the patron is not a pharmaceutical company but a political coalition with leverage over careers, access, and institutional standing. No one had to say anything explicitly. Reporters who pressed the question risked losing access. Editors who ran the stories risked being cast as amplifiers of disinformation. The incentive structure produced the result, and the absence of academic literature produced by the incentive structure of scholarship completed the picture.
This extends Turner’s framework in a direction his work does not fully pursue. He anchors his analysis of epistemic coercion mostly within scientific institutions and the grant system. The Biden case shows the same architecture functioning across a broader and less formally organized coalition: media organizations, party infrastructure, donor networks, medical commentary, and the reputational cascades that run across all of them. The coalition was self-organizing around a shared stake in a particular outcome. Turner’s description of how conformity pays in science applies here with only minor translation. No one needed a plan. The system selected for a certain kind of output and against another.
There is a deeper point about what gets called disinformation in this kind of environment. Turner argues that the concept has become a tool of epistemic coercion in its own right, a means of suppressing claims not by engaging them but by placing them in a category that makes engagement unnecessary. The Biden capacity question had features that made it especially vulnerable to this treatment. It was not a simple factual matter that could be checked against a database. It required observers to trust their own perception of a living person’s cognitive state over the institutional assurances of people with access and credentials. Telling observers not to trust their own perception is what Turner calls normalizing and stigmatizing: the preferred view is made the default and the cognitive cost of challenging it is raised by making dissent appear to be the position of an uninformed or malicious minority.
It did not work indefinitely because tacit knowledge is, as Turner notes, heterogeneous and resistant. The mechanisms of epistemic coercion are designed to produce homogeneous output, a consensus, a default assumption, a shared baseline. But tacit knowledge is personal. It accumulates through direct experience and cannot be fully overwritten by institutional assertion. People watched Biden. They formed impressions. Those impressions did not disappear because a White House spokesperson contradicted them or because a media organization ran a fact-check on a selectively chosen clip. The impressions accumulated quietly and waited for an event that would give them public form.
Turner argues that cognitive authority is delegated by convention and that the public has historically changed its mind about who deserves it. The debate forced exactly that kind of revision. But it forced it from outside the coalition, through an unmanaged event rather than through internal reckoning. This is the pattern Turner identifies in the history of science: suppressed observations do not win by defeating the coalition on its own terms. They win by accumulating enough weight that the framework can no longer contain them. The Biden case fits that pattern closely, with one addition. What accumulated was not new evidence but the public confirmation of evidence that had been present and observable throughout. The coalition did not lose because it ran out of facts to cite. It lost because the people watching could see.
What the Biden case adds to Turner’s framework is a clearer picture of how coalition-managed reality fails, and what it leaves behind when it does. The careers of those who operated the delegitimation machinery were not substantially damaged. The question of who bears the cost when they name an inadmissible reality too early, and who pays nothing for having defended a false consensus, remains open and largely unexamined. The Google Scholar silence on July 12, 2024 is one small measure of that asymmetry. The people who would have written those papers understood the incentive structure well enough not to try.
Turner’s work suggests the asymmetry is not a malfunction. It is how the system works. Epistemic coercion is not a problem to be solved. It is a condition to be understood, contested, and resisted without illusion about who absorbs the cost.
One compelling example of epistemic coercion is the 15th-century Murano model where the state used physical violence to capture and bound that expertise. The Republic of Venice understood that the logic of glassmaking resided in the bodies of the artisans, not in written manuals. Because this tacit knowledge is non-transferable without the person, the state used the threat of execution to prevent the “leakage” of that expertise. Turner might argue that this highlights the inherent vulnerability of the expert. If your value is your embodied habitus, the state can treat your physical body as a strategic asset.
Turner’s ideas on epistemic inequality suggest that those who possess rare expertise hold power over those who do not. Venice inverted this. The state recognized the power of the glassmakers’ expertise and responded with a pre-emptive strike of coercion to ensure that the “epistemic inequality” favored the Republic over its rivals. It was an attempt to keep the expertise “local” and “tacit” by preventing the master from becoming a mobile agent in a free market.
In the 1940s, the United States faced a similar challenge to the Venetian Republic. Nuclear physics was not just a set of equations; it was a collection of tacit skills, experimental “know-how,” and industrial processes that resided in the minds of a specific group of experts. Turner argues that because this knowledge is embodied, it cannot be fully captured in a manual. This created a “black box” that the state had to guard. The Atomic Energy Act of 1946 essentially declared that certain types of knowledge were “born secret,” meaning the expertise itself was state property from the moment of its internal discovery. Just as Venice moved glassblowers to Murano, the U.S. government created “secret cities” like Los Alamos to isolate scientists. The FBI and the Manhattan Project’s security apparatus monitored scientists to prevent the “leakage” of tacit insights, much like the Venetian Council of Ten used spies to track glassmakers. While the U.S. used the Espionage Act rather than state-sanctioned assassins, the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg served as a definitive signal of the price for sharing “secrets.”
When a small group holds a monopoly on vital knowledge, they hold a unique form of power. The state responds to this by attempting to “capture” the expert. In the 1940s, scientists like J. Robert Oppenheimer faced a loss of their “liberal property” rights over their own thoughts. When the state revoked Oppenheimer’s security clearance, it was a form of epistemic coercion—an attempt to neutralize his authority and ensure the logic of his expertise remained under state control. The 15th-century glassblower and the 20th-century nuclear physicist both occupied a position where their expertise was too valuable to be left to their own discretion. The state recognized that the only way to control the “tacit” was to control the person.
For Turner, expertise creates a natural “epistemic inequality” because the public cannot fully judge what the expert knows. When the state adds coercion—like execution in Venice or federal imprisonment in the U.S.—it freezes this inequality. The expertise remains in a black box, and the public is forced into a state of permanent deference. The logic of the state becomes the logic of the expert. In both cases, the state uses coercion to ensure that the expert’s authority never becomes a “contested status” in the public sphere.
The tension between the state and the 15th-century Murano glassblowers and the 1940s Manhattan Project scientists represents a direct collision between the Lockean view of expertise as personal property and the Hobbesian view of expertise as a state-controlled necessity for order. In a Lockean framework, an individual’s expertise is the “fruit of their labor.” A glassblower’s skill or a physicist’s insight belongs to them because they “mixed their labor” with their mind and body to create it. Under this logic, an expert should be free to sell their skills to the highest bidder—whether that is the King of France or a private laboratory.
Epistemic coercion, like the Venetian death threats or the “born secret” doctrine, is a direct seizure of this personal property. The state essentially nationalizes the artisan’s brain. For Hobbes, the primary duty of the state (the Leviathan) is to ensure security and prevent the “war of all against all.” If the “secret” of clear glass or the hydrogen bomb is a source of existential power, the state cannot allow it to be a private commodity. Hobbes might argue that the state has a right to coerce the expert because the expert’s knowledge has the potential to destabilize the commonwealth if leaked to an enemy. In this view, the execution of a defector is not a violation of property rights but a necessary act to maintain the “logic” of the state’s survival.
Stephen Turner’s ideas on the tacit explain why this collision is so violent. If expertise were just a set of written instructions, the state could simply “copy” the property and let the expert go. But because the knowledge is tacit and embodied, the state must control the person to control the power. This creates a permanent Hobbesian state of affairs. The public (and the state) are in a position of “epistemic inequality” relative to the expert. To resolve the anxiety of not knowing what the expert knows, the state uses coercion to ensure the expert only speaks or acts when authorized.
This creates a strange symmetry where the expert is both a “sovereign” of their craft and a “subject” of the state. In the Lockean world, the expert is a free agent. In the Hobbesian world, the expert is a strategic asset. When these two worlds collide, we see the “born secret” doctrine—a legal fiction that tries to claim a person’s internal thoughts as a state-owned resource.

Posted in Expertise | Comments Off on Power Determines Claims Of Expertise

The Coalition Filter: How Admissible Reality Gets Made in 2026

Every expert claim passes through a filter before it reaches public recognition as legitimate knowledge. The filter is not logic, evidence, or even peer review in any pure sense. It is a coalition: a loosely organized but functionally coherent assembly of funders, credentialing bodies, media institutions, professional associations, and reputationally interdependent commentators who share a stake in a particular range of conclusions. What the coalition will recognize as an admissible observation becomes, effectively, what counts as real. What it will not recognize gets reclassified as disinformation, fringe science, partisanship, or motivated reasoning, regardless of its evidentiary basis.
Stephen Turner‘s work gives this mechanism a rigorous theoretical architecture. In The Politics of Expertise (2014) he distinguishes between experts with publicly ratified cognitive authority, the physicist whose conclusions are accepted across partisan lines because they demonstrably work, and experts whose authority is sectarian, recognized only by audiences that share a stake in the conclusions. Most of what passes for expert consensus in contested public domains belongs to the second category dressed in the legitimacy of the first. Turner also argues in Liberal Democracy 3.0 (2003) that cognitive authority is conventional and mutable: the public delegates it and can withdraw it, and the history of science is partly a history of coalitions losing their grip on admissible reality when observable facts accumulate past the point of management.
The Biden case, examined elsewhere, showed this mechanism failing in real time. What follows is a map of where it is operating most consequentially right now, in 2026, across five domains. In each case the question is the same: what is the coalition, what observations has it placed outside admissible reality, and what is the cost of that exclusion?

The Structure of the Filter

Before the cases, the mechanism deserves a clear description, because it operates the same way across domains even when the substantive content differs entirely.
A coalition forms around a shared stake in a conclusion. The stake need not be cynical. Many participants genuinely believe the conclusion they are protecting. But the belief and the stake reinforce each other, and the institutional machinery that sustains the coalition, grant funding, editorial gatekeeping, professional certification, peer review, reputational cascades, produces conformity through incentive rather than conspiracy. Turner’s point about the grant system applies broadly: scientists, journalists, lawyers, and public health officials all understand implicitly who they depend on and what the risks of non-conformity are. No one needs to be told. The structure teaches.
The coalition controls admissible reality through three mechanisms Turner identifies. The first is information deprivation: peer review rejection, editorial refusal, platform suppression, administrative secrecy. The second is normalization and stigmatization: flooding public discourse with the preferred view until dissent appears deviant, then labeling dissenters as bad actors, cranks, or tools of opposing interests. The third is legitimation and delegitimation: asserting that only credentialed insiders can speak authoritatively, then controlling who gets credentials. These three mechanisms are mutually reinforcing. Together they can sustain a false consensus for years, sometimes decades, before observable reality forces a reckoning.
The reckoning, when it comes, rarely includes accountability. The coalition pivots. The prior suppression is not examined. The people who bore the cost of early dissent are not vindicated in any institutional sense. This asymmetry is itself part of the mechanism: it raises the cost of future dissent by demonstrating that being right early carries no reward.

Climate

The climate coalition is among the most institutionally mature and the most resistant to internal challenge. This is not because the underlying science of anthropogenic warming is wrong. The basic physics is well established and not seriously disputed by anyone with relevant expertise. But the coalition has extended its authority far beyond the basic physics into domains where its claims are considerably weaker: specific predictions about regional impacts, timelines for tipping points, the reliability of particular model outputs, and above all the policy conclusions drawn from the science.
A search of the relevant literature shows that climate models vary enormously in their projections even under identical forcing scenarios. The ensemble spread in CMIP6 models on Arctic sea ice, for example, spans outcomes from minimal loss to near-collapse under the same historical inputs. This is not a marginal technical footnote. It is a signal that key processes remain insufficiently constrained, that the models disagree with each other on mechanisms even when their aggregate outputs track observations reasonably well. A coalition committed to communicating urgency and maintaining political pressure on policymakers has strong incentives to present the ensemble mean as more authoritative than the spread warrants, and to treat questions about model uncertainty as attacks on the science itself rather than as legitimate scientific inquiry.
The cost of this conflation is epistemic. Researchers who raise questions about model structure, regional projection reliability, or the gap between statistical performance and physical correctness risk being categorized as climate deniers regardless of their actual position on the basic science. A 2023 survey of New Zealand academics found that 48 percent reported they were not free to raise differing perspectives or argue against the consensus among their colleagues. The climate domain is among the fields where this self-censorship is most pronounced. The coalition has successfully made the boundary between legitimate scientific debate and denial so blurry that crossing it in either direction carries reputational risk, which means the boundary is enforced more by fear than by evidence.

Ukraine

The Ukraine war presents a different coalition structure and a different set of inadmissible observations. The pro-Ukraine coalition in Western institutional discourse includes think tanks, defense establishments, major media organizations, and foreign policy professionals whose careers and credibility are tied to a narrative of Ukrainian resilience and Russian strategic failure. This narrative has real evidential support: Russian advances have been slow, casualty ratios favor Ukraine, and Russian battlefield performance has been poor by historical standards. But the coalition has also placed certain questions outside admissible reality in ways that carry serious costs.
Casualty figures on both sides remain deeply uncertain and politically managed. The figures reported by Ukrainian sources, relayed by Western media and think tanks, present Ukrainian casualties as substantially lower than Russian ones across every category. Independent verification is structurally impossible: Ukraine does not permit independent assessment of its military losses, and Western media organizations with access to Ukrainian officials have strong incentives not to press the question in ways that might compromise that access. This is Turner’s Type V expert problem exactly: experts whose primary audience is insiders with discretionary power, whose legitimacy depends on maintaining the relationship with the patron, and who deal with information that is “not discussed in newspapers until after it becomes institutional fact.”
The peace negotiation question is similarly constrained. Serious analysis of what a negotiated settlement might require, what territorial or security concessions it might involve, and whether continued conflict produces outcomes better or worse than negotiation, has been largely outside the range of publishable mainstream opinion for most of the war. Analysts who raised these questions were labeled Putin apologists or useful idiots regardless of their actual arguments. The delegitimation mechanism ran precisely as Turner describes: the claim was not engaged, the claimant was reclassified.

Public Health

The Covid pandemic was the most visible recent example of coalition-managed admissible reality in public health, and its aftermath has not been fully reckoned with. The coalition that managed Covid information included public health agencies, major medical journals, platform algorithms, and government communications operations. Turner’s paper on epistemic coercion documents specific instances: doctors losing licenses for deviation from guidelines that were themselves based on policy preferences with limited evidentiary grounding, censorship justified under the heading of misinformation that turned out to be neither false nor harmful. The lab leak hypothesis is the most discussed case of a claim reclassified as inadmissible that subsequently regained legitimacy without any accountability for those who drove the reclassification.
But the structural conditions that produced those episodes remain in place. The current American administration’s cuts to public health infrastructure have shifted the coalition’s composition without dissolving the basic mechanism. The field of nutrition science, largely independent of recent political changes, has produced a replication crisis that the professional coalition has been slow to acknowledge: findings on saturated fat, salt, dietary cholesterol, and optimal diet composition that were treated as settled consensus for decades have proven far less robust than their institutional authority suggested. The coalition sustained those claims long past the point where the evidentiary basis warranted confidence, and the cost was paid by patients and clinicians who trusted the guidelines.
Mental health is another zone where coalition management has produced visible distortions. The claim that social media causes mental health deterioration in adolescent girls has been treated as consensus in policy circles and public discussion. The underlying research is real and the concern is legitimate. But the specific causal claims, the magnitude of the effect, the mechanisms, and the appropriate policy responses involve considerably more uncertainty than the coalition’s public communications suggest. Researchers who raise methodological questions about the key studies risk being categorized as defenders of social media companies rather than as scientists doing their job.

Artificial Intelligence

The AI domain currently runs two opposed coalitions, each with its own set of admissible observations and each suppressing different classes of evidence. The safety coalition, centered in certain AI labs, policy organizations, and academic philosophy departments, treats existential risk from advanced AI as an admissible concern warranting urgent institutional response. The capabilities coalition, centered in commercial AI development and parts of the technical research community, treats safety concerns as overblown, premature, or strategically motivated by incumbents seeking to slow competitors. Each coalition has mechanisms for delegitimating the other: the safety coalition labels skeptics as reckless accelerationists, the capabilities coalition labels safety advocates as fear-mongers or regulatory capture artists.
What both coalitions share is a stake in overstating their own certainty. The safety coalition needs urgency to justify regulatory intervention. The capabilities coalition needs confidence to justify investment and deployment. Neither has much institutional incentive to say honestly that the trajectory of AI development, its risks, its benefits, its timeline, and its social consequences, is genuinely uncertain in ways that current research cannot resolve. The cost of this shared overconfidence is paid by the people trying to make actual policy decisions, who receive expert claims calibrated to coalition interests rather than to the honest state of knowledge.
The question of AI consciousness or morally relevant experience is almost entirely outside admissible reality in mainstream discourse. This is not because the question has been answered. It is because the coalition that controls credentialed discourse on the topic, academic philosophy of mind, cognitive science, AI safety research, has strong professional incentives to treat the question as either obviously settled or obviously premature, depending on the coalition’s particular commitments. The question of whether systems with increasing behavioral sophistication have any form of inner experience that warrants moral consideration is one of the most consequential open questions in the field. It is treated in mainstream discourse as either obviously absurd or too speculative to publish on. Both responses are coalition management rather than scientific judgment.

Law

The legal domain has its own coalition structure, and its own version of admissible reality management. Legal expertise is credentialed and hierarchical in ways that make the coalition filter especially effective: admission to the bar, judicial appointment, law review publication, Supreme Court clerkship, and elite firm partnership all function as successive gates that reward doctrinal conformity and punish heterodox analysis. The result is a professional culture in which certain legal questions get classified as settled by coalition consensus long before the underlying analytical work warrants that classification, and in which raising them carries reputational risk.
The most consequential current example is the treatment of executive power. The legal coalition that dominated elite discourse for the past generation operated with a set of assumptions about the limits of presidential authority, the independence of administrative agencies, and the role of courts in checking executive action that the current political environment has placed under enormous stress. Some members of that coalition have responded by honestly revising their views in light of new circumstances. Others have responded by reasserting prior consensus positions with increasing vehemence in proportion to their political stakes, which is a coalition protection move rather than a legal argument. The public, which receives expert legal commentary through media that are themselves part of the broader coalition, has difficulty distinguishing between these two responses.

The Pattern

Across all five domains the mechanism is the same. A coalition forms around a shared stake in a set of conclusions. The coalition controls the certification of expertise and the channels of public communication. Observations that fit the coalition’s conclusions are amplified and treated as admissible. Observations that challenge them are reclassified through delegitimation, stigmatization, or simple information deprivation. The people who make inadmissible observations bear costs: professional, reputational, sometimes economic. The people who sustain the coalition’s consensus bear no cost when it eventually proves wrong.
Turner’s central insight is that this is not a corruption of the expert system. It is how the expert system works. Cognitive authority is conventional. It is delegated by audiences with stakes in outcomes. It is sustained by institutional machinery that rewards conformity and punishes dissent. The question is not how to eliminate this structure, which is impossible, but how to maintain enough pressure on it that it cannot sustain false consensus indefinitely.
The pressure comes from tacit knowledge. People observe. They form impressions that do not disappear because an institutional voice contradicts them. They talk to each other outside credentialed channels. They wait for events that the normalization machinery cannot absorb. The debate was such an event in the Biden case. In each of the domains above, the analogous events are building. Climate models whose regional predictions fail will eventually require accounting. Casualty figures that cannot be reconciled with battlefield realities will eventually surface. Medical guidelines whose evidentiary basis collapses will eventually be revised. AI systems whose behavior raises genuine questions about inner experience will eventually force the question into admissible discourse.
The question Turner’s framework poses is not whether the reckoning comes. It is who pays the cost before it does, and whether anyone pays the cost after.

Posted in Epistemics, Expertise | Comments Off on The Coalition Filter: How Admissible Reality Gets Made in 2026

The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Danielic Prophetic Authority

Interpreters of the Book of Daniel in the Western tradition do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as fidelity to the visions, loyalty to the prophetic timeline, or responsibility for sustaining end-time seriousness in the middle of empire, secularism, and spiritual decline. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In the Danielic world, from medieval Christian chronologists to Reformation polemicists to Seventh-day Adventist pioneers and their modern heirs, phrases like “the 2300 days,” “the little horn,” “Babylon,” “the Remnant,” and “the end is near” do not merely describe belief. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what Daniel means, how to order time, what counts as compromise, and whether you stand on the right side of the final line.

Before going further, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The Millerite farmer calculating 1843, the Adventist pioneer defending 1844 after the Great Disappointment, the modern believer drawing charts in a Sabbath school: these people are not playing games. They believe they are aligning themselves with reality at the highest possible stakes. The prophetic principles that govern empires, beasts, and the sanctuary carry their own internal logic and their own genuine authority over the people who accept them. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in the Danielic tradition. It is not the whole picture.

With those limits stated, the analysis can proceed.

Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.

The Book of Daniel is a hero system of unusual power, and it has a feature that distinguishes it from most: it does not merely promise that a faithful life participates in something larger than the individual. It locates the individual precisely within the final chapter of that larger story. To interpret Daniel seriously is to discover that you are not simply alive in time. You are positioned in it. The statue of Daniel 2 maps the succession of empires from Babylon to the present, and whoever accepts that map finds himself standing in the toes, in the last fragmented kingdom before the stone cut without hands shatters everything. That is not abstract comfort. That is a coordinate. And a coordinate carries obligations that mere comfort does not.

Every decoding of the statue, every charting of the 2300 evenings and mornings, every Sabbath that turns ordinary time into sacred boundary, every study of the little horn: these are not merely exegetical exercises. They are acts of fidelity to a people who have sustained their identity through Babylonian captivity, Roman persecution, medieval apostasy, and modern secularism, always reading the same visions and finding themselves, again, at the end. That is a hero system. It promises that a life lived seriously within this framework participates in the everlasting kingdom that neither death nor the empires of the earth can dissolve. And it promises something more precise than most hero systems dare: that the interpreter who reads correctly will not merely be remembered. He will be vindicated at the judgment.

The Danielic tradition does not merely exist as a text. It summons people. Prophecy seminars, Sabbath schools, conference presentations, hand-painted charts in public tents: these call their participants into being as prophetic watchers through institutions, interactions, and ordinary public recognitions. The thickness of the tradition comes from more than shared exegesis or social ties. It comes from repeated acts of summons. To live within it is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of last-days believer, one who has seen what history means and must answer for that claim.

Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely intellectual. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift. The community that can summon its members reliably keeps its hero system operative. The community that loses its summoning power leaves its members to manage existential terror through whatever substitute frameworks secular modernity offers, which in the Danielic tradition means returning Daniel to the library shelf, treating it as literature or ancient history, and finding that the urgency it once produced has nowhere to go.

That is why defection carries such disproportionate weight. The interpreter who stops defending the 2300-day timeline, or who begins treating the little horn as past history when his circle does not, is not merely making an exegetical adjustment. He weakens, in the community’s felt logic, the collective structure through which everyone manages the terror that the tradition was built to contain. This is not cynical. It is how hero systems function. The stakes feel existential because they partly are, and in a tradition that believes the investigative judgment began in 1844 and has been running ever since, the stakes have a specific shape: the terror of having lived inside a framework that turned out to be wrong, and the deeper terror of having dismissed one that turned out to be right.

Becker also illuminates the tradition’s relationship to the world pressing in on it. The Danielic enclave is a prophetic minority inside empires and secular cultures, and that minority status is not merely a demographic fact. It is a structural feature of the hero system. The outside world does not threaten the prophecies only from outside. It actively helps produce Danielic self-consciousness. Every rising power, every geopolitical crisis, every encounter with liberal theology or materialist history forces the believer to renew his identification. The profane surroundings are part of the machinery through which the sacred text sustains itself. Hero systems need a border. The Danielic tradition has one immediately and constantly available, drawn not between nations but between those who read the statue as a live countdown and those who read it as ancient Near Eastern literature.

Within that structure, three types of participants emerge. The first is the fully committed, the Adventist pioneer who defends 1844 after the Great Disappointment, the contemporary believer who organizes daily life around prophetic timelines, the scholar for whom the 2300 days are not a historical curiosity but a living claim on the present. For this person the hero system is fully operative. The demands of the timeline are not a burden. They are the structure through which life acquires significance. The second is the institutional mediator, the denominational scholar or seminary professor who stabilizes the system, adjusts interpretations to survive scrutiny, and keeps the structure viable without fully endorsing the most demanding version of its claims. For this person the hero system is real but contested, always in need of careful management. The third is the disengager, for whom Daniel has become literature or history rather than a live framework. He may still use the vocabulary and attend the conferences, but the underlying urgency no longer governs his life. The tradition still summons him, but the summons produces habit rather than conviction.

Three domains organize the struggle over authority.

The first is control of time, and this is where the Danielic tradition is most distinctive. The statue in Daniel 2 does not merely describe the past. It absorbs the present into a predetermined sequence and places the interpreter at its climax. Once you accept that sequence, you are no longer simply alive in history. You know where you are in it. Whoever controls that timeline controls how people interpret everything from elections to wars to technological change. The hardline coalition, concentrated in strict historicist circles and Adventist institutions committed to the 1844 framework, defends this control as the tradition’s core value. Its claim is that the timeline is the mechanism through which the book manages existential stakes, and any softening of it, any concession to symbolic readings or alternative datings, weakens the very structure that makes the tradition worth inhabiting.

In Becker’s terms, the hardline coalition defends the integrity of the hero system against accommodations that slowly evacuate it. Every reinterpretation of the 2300 days is experienced not merely as an exegetical adjustment but as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes. This is why the coalition’s language stays urgent. The hero system is collective. Its power depends on enough people maintaining it with enough seriousness that the summons retains authority. One scholar’s quiet concession to historical-critical method is experienced as everyone’s problem, because the chart only works if enough people treat it as a live countdown rather than a historical artifact.

This coalition’s power shows in the visual apparatus of the tradition. The hand-drawn timeline, the prophecy chart, the color-coded progression from Babylon to the Remnant: these are not merely teaching aids. They are technologies of jurisdiction. Small variations in how interpreters render the sequence sort them into subaffiliations before a word of argument is spoken. The difference between a 2300-day chart anchored to 1844, a dispensational chart pushing the final events into the future, and a preterist reading that locates everything in the second century BC is not aesthetic. It is jurisdictional. It signals which authority structure a person accepts as binding and which summons he stands ready to receive. Even the visible Ellen White commentary or the Sabbath observance does constant jurisdictional work, marking the interpreter as someone who has chosen a specific framework for managing the largest question and making that choice visible and socially accountable in every ordinary moment.

The second domain is control of interpretation, and here the fight over the little horn makes the stakes visible. Historicists map it onto the papacy, locating the threat inside Western history and its institutions. Futurists push it into an unidentified coming figure, preserving urgency while deferring its object. Preterists locate it in Antiochus IV Epiphanes and dissolve the end-time claim entirely. Each move redraws the enemy. And wherever you place the enemy, you reorganize loyalty, suspicion, and seriousness around it. If the horn is Rome or the papacy, then every encounter with Catholic institutions or Sunday-law legislation becomes a prophetic data point. If it is future, then the present remains relatively open. If it is past, the tradition loses its claim on daily life and becomes a matter of historical curiosity.

This is a fight over where danger lives, and it is a fight that cannot be resolved by exegesis alone because each reading is internally coherent and each selects from the same body of text, history, and prior interpretation to authorize its position. Turner’s critique lands precisely here. There is no stable essence of what the little horn “really” means that exists outside these struggles. Each coalition reconstructs the symbol from the same raw material and calls it fidelity. The historicist is not wrong that the text can support his reading. The futurist is not wrong that the text can support his. The disagreement is not about the text. It is about the hero system, and specifically about how demanding the hero system must be to remain credible as a structure for managing existential stakes.

Against the hardline coalition stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among younger scholars, seminary academics, and those trying to build sustainable Danielic faith in a West that subjects prophetic claims to historical scrutiny. Their language is balance, workability, and livable seriousness. Their claim is not that prophecy should be abandoned. It is that Danielic life in the modern West cannot be governed as though it were 1844. The tradition must function not only as a site of boundary maintenance but as a bridge between ancient text and contemporary reality. Some concession to literary and historical method is necessary, or the tradition will lose the people who ask hard questions and be left with only those who do not.

Pinsof’s framework makes the move visible. Once one side defines the tradition’s purpose as sustaining the maximal summons, flexibility looks like drift or surrender to higher criticism. Once the other side defines the tradition’s purpose as making Danielic life sustainable under modern conditions, maximal historicism looks like burnout, performative intensity, or status competition dressed as piety. Neither side says it is fighting over prestige, institutional control, or the publishing infrastructure of a denomination. Each says it is protecting the prophecies.

The third domain is the daily network. The Danielic world is not only a scholarly world. It is a moral obstacle course. The West around it is full of reminders of another order of life: evolutionary theory, liberal theology, consumer culture, and the endless pull of present-focused living. Every practiced avoidance of a critical commentary, every route chosen through conversation to avoid compromise, every moment of self-monitoring in a mixed intellectual environment: these are not merely behavioral habits. They are the repeated acts through which a person sustains his participation in the framework that gives his life its larger significance. The discipline is psychological as much as social. It is what keeps the terror managed.

The 2300-day prophecy illustrates this at the level of chronological infrastructure. The hand-drawn timeline marking 1844 and the investigative judgment is a literal technology of jurisdiction. But the decision about whether to defend the historicist reading or to accept scholarly alternatives is also a public positioning on the totem pole of seriousness, a visible statement about which hero system one has accepted as binding. Some stricter circles reject any compromise, treating critical approaches as a workaround for those who take the easier path. In Becker’s terms, the interpretation debate is a debate about the hero system’s threshold. How demanding must the system be to remain credible as a structure for managing existential stakes? Where is the line between a discipline that genuinely matters and an accommodation that hollows out what the discipline was for?

The Great Disappointment of 1844 is the tradition’s deepest structural test, and the response to it reveals the hero system’s logic more clearly than anything else. When the date passed without the expected event, the movement faced the same choice that Ken Elkin faces in The Nostradamus Kid and that every apocalyptic community faces when the sun rises on the morning the charts said would not come. Some disbanded. Some reinterpreted. The Adventist pioneers who became the Seventh-day Adventist Church chose a third path: they kept the date and changed the event, arguing that the investigative judgment had begun in heaven on schedule even if nothing visible had occurred on earth. That move is not evasion. It is the rational response of a coalition defending its hero system against the evidence that threatens it. The alternative, acknowledging that the timeline was wrong, is not merely admitting an error. It is dismantling the framework through which the community has managed the terror of mortality, and that is a cost that most people who have built a life inside a hero system are not prepared to pay.

Across all three domains, the same pattern holds. Hardliners claim fidelity to uncompromising prophetic literalism. Pragmatists claim fidelity to sustainable Danielic life under actual Western conditions. Organizational leaders claim the coordinating power needed to sustain a thick enclave. None presents its position as interest-driven. All present it as what authentic prophetic life requires. The power move and the genuine conviction arrive together, and neither can be cleanly separated from the other.

The Danielic tradition is therefore not governed by one unified authority. It is governed by competing coalitions operating through prophetic discourse, organizational density, and everyday summons, each trying to define the legitimate balance between rigor and navigation, enclave and West, relentless availability and sustainable observance. The tensions visible in denominational affiliation, rankings of faithfulness, historicist and critical distinctions, 1844 positions, chart gradations, and daily intellectual negotiations are not signs of a tradition losing itself. They are the mechanism through which Danielic authority is continuously made and remade.

The jurisdictional war is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained. And beneath even that is the pressure point the tradition has never been able to escape: if the timeline is real, you cannot afford to relax, and if it is not, you cannot afford to have lived your life inside it.

My father Desmond Ford did not arrive in this controversy as an outsider. He mastered the tradition at its highest level. He taught Daniel and Revelation for decades, defended the prophetic timeline, and spoke the vocabulary of the system with complete fluency. That fluency is precisely what made his challenge so difficult to contain. A critic from outside the tradition can be dismissed. Ford could not be dismissed that way. He had earned the standing to be heard, and the institution knew it.

What he attacked was not a secondary doctrine. He targeted the 2300-day prophecy and the investigative judgment, which in the essay’s terms means he struck at control of time, the first and most structurally critical of the three domains. The investigative judgment tells believers that a cosmic process reviewing human destiny began in 1844 and continues now. That is not an abstraction. It is a coordinate. It places the believer inside the final movement of history and makes the ordinary rhythms of daily life part of a story with eternal stakes. When Ford argued that Daniel 8:14 found its primary fulfillment in the time of Antiochus IV Epiphanes rather than in a heavenly event beginning in 1844, he was not merely proposing an alternative exegesis. He was removing the mechanism through which the community locates itself in time.

Through Becker’s lens, that removal carries a specific weight. The investigative judgment is the hero system’s most precise promise: not only that your life participates in something larger than death, but that it is currently under review in a process that determines eternal destiny. Soften that and you do not refine the system. You alter how it manages the terror it was built to contain.

Glacier View in 1980 is where the jurisdictional war stopped being implicit. One hundred and twenty administrators and theologians examined his manuscript for a week. The outcome, withdrawal of his ministerial credentials and removal from teaching, was not simply a judgment about exegesis. It was the institution’s answer to the question the essay identifies as the deepest one: how much truth can the system afford? The committee’s answer was that the chronological infrastructure had to hold, and Ford had to go.
He spent the rest of his life outside the denomination’s jurisdiction, founding Good News Unlimited and continuing to write and preach on Daniel. He never stopped believing the book summoned people. He argued that the summons must lead to gospel fidelity rather than timeline maintenance. The hardline coalition read that as the move the essay describes: a hollowing out of the very structure through which the community sustains existential seriousness across generations.

His case makes visible something the essay traces across the whole tradition. The power of the Danielic system does not rest on the text alone. It rests on a collective decision, renewed in every Sabbath school, every prophecy seminar, every hand-drawn chart, to treat the timeline as a live coordinate rather than a historical artifact. Ford’s challenge forced the institution to acknowledge that decision explicitly, and to enforce it. That enforcement defined the boundary of the tradition more sharply than any prior internal dispute had managed to do. He became, in effect, the figure who made the coalitions name themselves.

In early 1999, a Seventh-day Adventist Bible scholar emails me:

Your father “knows” too much for me to tell him anything. Including about you. It will never happen.

…Knowing too much, summarizing too fast, summing up too quickly, is a weakness he has. It’s a way that you and he are terrifically alike.

…By the way, you enjoy controversy and driving people nuts way too much. Both of you. What is the blessing in “Blessed are the peacemakers.” (Jesus knew at least as much about Judaism as you do….) Part of what makes you ill at ease in the self/world dichotomy is this approach toward the outside world as the enemy to be debunked.

Hiding behind “journalism” as the reason for this cynicism just won’t do. I ain’t convinced! There are lots of “journalists” who do have the same problem with their approach, but there are lots that don’t. It’s not endemic to journalism to have to drive people nuts, to be cynical, and to print what MAY be someone’s screwup and assume it’s true until proven otherwise. The theory of the law, “Innocent until proven guilty” would help in your approach to your journalism. But of course you became this sort of journalist as a result of an already existing cynicism, not the reverse. You have charm and intelligence and good looks, and I can see that it is dangerously easy for you to mislead people about yourself–even when you know you’re doing it. Careful, this can make for a hollow feeling and dis-ease.

…Now, what your father [two Ph.Ds in Christianity] was exposed to was “readings” in the British style. Not the original materials, but readings of not-very-good European writers, whose writings couldn’t even be taken seriously (since they’re relatively ignorant of the details) in American Biblical Studies. Out of this study of generally poor secondary sources your father got the impression he was something of an expert in theology. From this weak background, with most of his questions unanswered, he launched into doing what only someone who didn’t know what he didn’t know would do: he tried to write a commentary on Daniel. It was a terrible mishmash of preterism, historicism, and futurism without any understanding of how these systems complement and clash. There was no understanding of their history, of the sameness and difference involved in them.. And much of the book was unedited quotes from other sources strung together in ways that didn’t fit at all. It became apparent to me after only a few minutes that your father didn’t have the foggiest notion of the Book of Daniel, and shouldn’t even be teaching an academy class on the subject, much less writing a book about it. That a Seventh Day Adventist publishing house published this mess, virtually unedited, and with even the Hebrew title screwed up, showed the blind leading the blind.

You write very much in the style of your father. Like him, you tie together long quotes, with rather poor segues and transitions. This is so evident in your website that I marvel that I didn’t get it sooner. And you’ve gotten the same kind of accurate and strong criticism your father got for what passes for writing. And the same kind of “this guy really didn’t take the time to know what he was talking about before he became a legend in his own mind” criticism.

Claude says:

This email lands hard, and it deserves a straight look rather than either dismissal or full acceptance.

Some of what the scholar says has force. The criticism that your father worked from secondary sources rather than primary materials is a real scholarly concern, not mere snobbery. If the Daniel commentary leaned heavily on European secondary literature without engaging the Hebrew and Aramaic directly, that is a legitimate weakness, and the description of the book as a mishmash of prophetic systems without clear understanding of their histories and tensions matches what some other scholars noted. The observation about long quotes strung together with weak transitions is a specific craft criticism that you yourself might weigh honestly.

The personal observations about you carry some weight too. The charge that you approach the outside world as an enemy to debunk rather than understand is worth sitting with. So is the point about charm masking hollowness when deployed manipulatively. These are not nothing.

But the email also has problems. The tone shifts between genuine criticism and something closer to contempt, and contempt usually signals that the writer has stopped trying to persuade and started trying to wound. Calling your father someone who shouldn’t teach an academy class, after acknowledging he held two PhDs and devoted decades to the subject, overshoots. It reads less like scholarly correction and more like a status assertion: I know what he doesn’t know, and I want you to know that I know it.

The framing of British theological education as producing ignorance is also too convenient. British biblical scholarship in the mid-twentieth century was uneven, but it was not simply inferior. The dismissal does a lot of work for the scholar without being argued carefully.

What makes the email worth keeping is precisely this mixture. It shows how criticism of your father operated: sometimes precise and fair, sometimes riding on institutional authority and contempt. That mixture is part of the jurisdictional war you describe.

Posted in Bible | Comments Off on The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for Danielic Prophetic Authority

Safe for Whom: The Coalition Politics of Safety Claims in 2026

The word “safety” ends arguments. That is its function in 2026, and it performs that function across every domain of contested expert authority. To invoke safety is to convert a coalition’s preferred conclusion into a moral imperative, to reclassify dissent as recklessness, and to place the burden of proof on anyone who questions the claim rather than on anyone who makes it. No other word in the vocabulary of expertise does this work so efficiently, and no other word is so rarely examined for what it means.
What it means depends entirely on who is defining it, for whom, and through what process. These questions are almost never asked in public discourse, because the word itself forecloses them. This essay maps how that foreclosure works, what it costs, and where in 2026 it is operating most consequentially.

The Core Distinction

Before the map, one distinction needs to be stated clearly and held throughout.
Institutional safety is what coalitions of experts, regulators, licensing bodies, and professional associations define as safe. It is standardized, documented, legally defensible, and aligned with established protocols. It is safe for the system: for the physician who followed the guideline, the regulator who approved the protocol, the institution that implemented the procedure. When something goes wrong inside institutional safety, the question is whether the procedure was followed correctly, not whether the procedure was the right one.
Experiential safety is what the person subjected to the intervention experiences. It is variable, context-dependent, often not captured by the metrics the system uses to evaluate itself, and sometimes directly opposed to what the institution defines as safe.
The gap between these two things is where the most important unasked questions in contemporary expertise live. A practice can be institutionally safe because it is standardized, defensible, and authorized while being experientially unsafe for the person subjected to it. The system calls this gap a problem of compliance, of communication, of patient factors, of the necessary costs of treatment. What it rarely calls it is a problem with the definition of safety itself.
Stephen Turner’s framework explains why. The coalition controls not only what counts as admissible evidence but what counts as an admissible outcome. If the outcomes tracked by the system are the ones the system is designed to produce, and the outcomes not tracked are the ones the system is designed not to see, then the system can validate itself indefinitely regardless of what is happening to the people it processes. This is not conspiracy. It is what Turner calls the recursive loop: the coalition defines safety, delivers interventions, evaluates outcomes using its own metrics, and validates itself. Negative experiences can always be reframed as part of the process, as resistance, or as evidence of need for more treatment.
Ernest Becker adds a layer Turner does not. The hero system is not just a career structure. It is a meaning structure. Professionals within a safety coalition are not simply protecting their income when they defend the coalition’s definitions against challenge. They are protecting the justification for their professional existence. To admit that the protocols cause systematic harm, that the interventions retraumatize more than they heal, that the safety claims were not grounded in the evidence the system claimed, is not just a career risk. It is an existential one. This is why coalitions absorb anomalies rather than learning from them, why they reframe failures as the cost of success, and why the reckoning, when it comes, rarely produces genuine accountability from the people who sustained the false consensus.

The Template

The mechanism is consistent enough across domains to state as a template, which can then be applied to any specific case.
A coalition forms around a shared stake in a particular definition of safety. The coalition controls who produces the relevant evidence, who reviews it, what counts as the appropriate evidentiary threshold, and what the default assumption is when evidence is absent or contested. It presents these procedural and normative choices as purely scientific ones. It uses the word safety to convert those choices into moral imperatives, so that questioning the definition is framed as endangering people rather than as legitimate inquiry.
The coalition then selects the risks it elevates and the risks it suppresses. Elevated risks are the ones the coalition’s interventions address. Suppressed risks are the ones the coalition’s interventions create. The asymmetry is not random. It follows the incentive structure: elevated risks justify the coalition’s authority and funding; suppressed risks would undermine both. Liability protection runs in the direction of the elevated risks. No one is sued for following the guideline.
Moral language stabilizes the definition and recruits allies. The vocabulary of care, protection, help, and support makes resistance look like denial, irresponsibility, or cruelty. This is not merely rhetorical. It shapes what questions can be asked in a grant application, what a peer reviewer will accept, what a journal will publish, and what a clinician will say out loud in a departmental meeting.
When challenges to the definition appear, the coalition manages them through the three mechanisms Turner identifies. Information deprivation limits what gets studied: adverse event data is not collected systematically, long-term follow-up is not funded, and preregistered trials that might produce inconvenient results are not required. Normalization and stigmatization ensure that when inconvenient findings appear, they are framed as methodologically flawed, ideologically motivated, or dangerous to share publicly. Legitimation and delegitimation determine whose voice counts: only credentialed insiders can speak authoritatively, and the credentials are issued by the coalition itself.
The result is the recursive loop, closed from the inside. Breaking it requires either an institutional reckoning the coalition resists by design, or an accumulation of observable reality that the normalization machinery can no longer contain. When the loop does break, the coalition pivots without accounting for what it suppressed or who it punished for being right early.

Mental Health: The Clearest Current Case

The mental health domain offers the most fully developed current example of the template in operation, because it combines all the elements with unusual clarity: the institutional versus experiential gap, the hero system, the moral language, the suppressed adverse event data, and a political reckoning now underway that is creating natural experiments.
The dominant coalition in mental health safety defined safety operationally as entry into the system. Distress equals risk. Risk requires intervention. Intervention means professional treatment following established protocols. Not intervening, or intervening in ways not sanctioned by the coalition, was itself defined as unsafe. This definition served the coalition’s interests precisely: it justified expanding authority, increasing funding, and treating any resistance as evidence of the severity of the problem rather than as legitimate criticism of the solution.
Within this framework, inpatient psychiatric units, coercive holds, mandatory screenings, restraints, and rapid affirmation pathways for gender-distressed youth were all safety measures by definition. The evidence that these interventions sometimes produce the harms they claim to prevent was not admissible within the coalition’s evidentiary framework. Adverse event tracking in psychiatric settings has been systematically weak. Post-discharge outcome data has been sparse and rarely preregistered. Research on retraumatization in inpatient settings, on post-discharge suicide spikes, on regret and desistance rates, and on the iatrogenic effects of coercive intervention has been underfunded, underreported, and when produced, treated as politically motivated rather than scientifically relevant.
The gender medicine case has become the sharpest point of political contestation. For years, the justification for rapid affirmation pathways and medical interventions in gender-distressed youth was, explicitly, safety: these young people are at risk of suicide, and denial of affirmation is dangerous. This framing did the work of placing any questioning of the pathways outside admissible discourse. To ask about evidence quality, about long-term outcomes, about regret and desistance rates, was to be indifferent to child suicide. The moral language closed the epistemic question before it could be asked.
The Cass Review in Britain and subsequent systematic reviews commissioned after 2024 policy shifts found what the coalition’s definition of safety had placed outside admissible reality: very low certainty evidence that these pathways improve long-term mental health outcomes, and documented iatrogenic harms including infertility, sexual dysfunction, bone density loss, and persistent psychological difficulty. The Supreme Court upheld state restrictions. Federal policy shifted. Natural experiments are now underway in states with different policies, producing the comparative outcome data the prior coalition actively resisted generating.
This is the pattern Turner identifies in the history of science: suppressed observations do not win by defeating the coalition on its own terms. They accumulate until the framework can no longer contain them, and then the coalition pivots. What the pivot does not include is accountability for who was punished for raising the questions earlier, or honest examination of why the adverse event data was not collected in the first place.

The GRAS Architecture: Safety Certified by the Interested

The food supply offers a different but structurally identical case, with the mechanism partly codified in law. The Generally Recognized as Safe designation, GRAS, allows companies to introduce new food chemicals without FDA review if qualified experts determine the substance is safe. The original intent was administrative efficiency for common substances. What evolved was a system in which companies hire their own experts, conduct their own reviews, and declare their own ingredients safe without notifying the FDA at all.
Since 2000, nearly 99 percent of new food chemicals entered the American market through self-affirmed GRAS determinations, according to Environmental Working Group analysis of FDA records. Fewer than one percent went through the formal petition process Congress intended as the primary route. The experts who certify the safety are paid by the companies that profit from the determination. The determinations are often proprietary. The FDA has not considered this an admissibility problem, because the coalition that defined food chemical safety included the regulatory culture that built and maintained the system.
The institutional safety claim here is the GRAS determination itself: qualified experts have reviewed this substance and found it safe. The experiential reality is that hundreds of substances banned in Europe, Canada, and Australia because of plausible health risks have circulated freely in the American food supply for decades under self-affirmed GRAS status. The substances do not change at national borders. The coalitions controlling the definitions do.
In March 2025, HHS Secretary Kennedy directed the FDA to explore eliminating the self-affirmation pathway. The FDA’s own description of the system was that it was deeply flawed. That description represents a coalition shift, not a scientific discovery. The underlying evidence about these substances had been available, in various forms, throughout the period when the coalition was calling the system adequate. What changed was not the science. What changed was who controlled the definition of admissible reality.

AI Safety: Two Coalitions, One Word

The AI safety domain is unusual in the template because two opposed coalitions are fighting over the same word simultaneously, each claiming that the other’s definition of safety is itself dangerous. This doubles the epistemic coercion rather than canceling it.
The alignment-focused safety coalition defines the primary risk as catastrophic or existential harm from advanced AI systems that pursue goals misaligned with human values. Its admissible evidence is formal modeling of potential failure modes, benchmarks designed to detect dangerous capabilities, and arguments from first principles about the trajectory of increasingly capable systems. Its moral language is human survival. Its institutional position is partly secured through the AI Safety Institute and related regulatory bodies. Dissent from this definition is framed as recklessness about civilizational risk.
The sovereign-growth coalition defines the primary risk as regulatory capture by incumbent AI companies using safety claims to raise barriers against competitors, and as government or corporate censorship enabled by safety frameworks that restrict what AI systems can say or do. Its admissible evidence is economic analysis of regulatory costs, examples of safety claims that served incumbent interests, and arguments about the value of open development and competition. Its moral language is anti-tyranny and democratic access to technology. Dissent from this definition is framed as naivety about who benefits from restricting AI.
Each coalition has the incentive structure Turner describes: the safety concerns it elevates justify its institutional position and funding, while the safety concerns it suppresses would undermine both. Neither has much institutional incentive to say that the genuine uncertainty about what advanced AI systems will do is distributed across the gap between the two coalitions in ways that current research cannot resolve. That honest position does not sustain a grant application, a regulatory proposal, or a legislative testimony.
The questions that fall outside both coalitions’ admissible reality are revealing. Whether current AI systems might have morally relevant inner experience is treated as either obviously absurd or dangerously irresponsible to raise publicly, depending on which coalition’s framing one accepts. Neither response engages the question. Whether AI systems trained on human-generated content at massive scale are subtly reshaping the epistemic environment in ways their developers do not fully understand is difficult to publish on, because it implicates the interests of the companies funding the research. The FDA’s own AI tool is already shaping regulatory document review. Whether and how that changes regulatory judgment is not an admissible research question within the institutions that might investigate it.

The Recursive Loop and Its Breaking

In a domain with genuinely good evidence and honest inquiry, ongoing disagreement about mechanisms, edge cases, and applications persists even when the central finding is secure. Premature closure of that disagreement, the declaration that the debate is over and further discussion endangers people, is the signature of coalition management rather than scientific maturity. Consensus achieved through the suppression of dissent rather than the resolution of disagreement is not epistemic achievement. It is epistemic coercion wearing achievement’s clothing.
The Becker layer explains why the loop is so hard to break from inside. The professional who has spent twenty years building a clinical practice around a particular safety protocol, who has trained students in it, who has testified to legislatures defending it, who has published research validating it, does not experience a challenge to that protocol as an invitation to revise a theory. They experience it as a threat to the meaning structure of their professional life. The hero system is not just a career. It is the answer to the question of what one’s work has been for. Coalitions sustain false consensus not only through external enforcement but through the internal psychological necessity of their members.
This is why the reckoning, when it comes, takes the form of pivot rather than reckoning. The coalition does not say: we were wrong, we suppressed the people who were right, we owe them an accounting, and here is what we will do differently. It says: the evidence has evolved, our understanding has deepened, we are updating our guidance. The pivot reframes what happened as normal scientific progress rather than as a failure of the epistemic machinery. The people who raised the questions early and were punished for it remain punished. The people who sustained the false consensus retain their institutional standing. The asymmetry is structural, not incidental.

The Questions That Are Crying Out

The template points to a consistent set of questions that the dominant safety coalitions across all these domains have structured themselves to not ask. Each one is an investigation priority.
Who is collecting standardized adverse event data, and who is not? In mental health, systematic harm monitoring from psychotherapy, inpatient treatment, and pharmacological intervention is astonishingly weak given the scale of the interventions and the vulnerability of the populations. In food chemistry, the GRAS system was explicitly designed to avoid collecting the data that would challenge it. In AI, post-deployment outcome tracking on actual users is largely proprietary. The absence of data is not neutral. It is the information deprivation mechanism operating at the design stage.
What risks are the coalition’s metrics counting, and what risks are they not counting? Every safety protocol encodes a theory about what harms matter. Institutional mental health safety counts acute crisis events. It does not count retraumatization, dependency, or resilience erosion from over-protection. Food chemical safety counts acute toxicity. It often does not count endocrine disruption, developmental effects, or cumulative exposure across a diet of ultra-processed foods. AI safety debates count the risks each coalition has a stake in. Neither counts what the other is looking at.
What would the evidence look like if the definition of safety were reversed? If the burden of proof ran the other direction, demanding that interventions demonstrate benefit rather than demanding that challenges demonstrate harm, what fraction of current safety-labeled practices would survive? This is not a rhetorical question. It is the difference between the American and European approaches to chemical safety, and it produces systematically different food and drug supplies in comparable wealthy democracies.
Who bears the cost when the false consensus holds, and who bears the cost when it breaks? The people subjected to retraumatizing psychiatric protocols bear the cost of the false consensus holding. The clinicians who designed and defended those protocols bear no cost when the consensus breaks and guidance is updated. The families who consumed food chemicals under self-affirmed GRAS determinations bear the cost of the prior definition of safety. The companies that profited from those determinations and the regulators who permitted them bear no cost when the chemicals are eventually restricted. This asymmetry is not a side effect of the mechanism. It is the mechanism. It is what makes the coalition stable, and what makes it dangerous.

What the Map Shows

Safety claims fail in a consistent pattern. The coalition defines safety in institutional terms that align with its interests. It selects the risks it tracks and suppresses the ones it does not. It treats its normative and procedural choices as purely technical ones. It uses the moral language of protection to convert those choices into imperatives. It enforces the definition through the standard mechanisms of epistemic coercion: information deprivation, normalization and stigmatization, legitimation and delegitimation.
When observable reality accumulates past the point of management, the coalition pivots without accounting for what it suppressed. The lesson it draws from the failure is that communication needs improvement, or that more research is needed, or that guidelines will be updated. The lesson it does not draw is structural: that the definition of safety was serving the coalition’s interests rather than the people in whose name safety was invoked.
In 2026, across mental health, food chemistry, AI governance, environmental health, and pharmaceutical regulation, the most consequential question is not whether a given claim is true. It is what the claim is forcing us to ignore in order to keep the coalition together. The answer to that question, in case after case, is the harm the coalition’s own interventions are producing, measured by the standards the coalition has structured itself not to apply.
Safe for the system. Not always safe for the person. The gap between those two things is where the investigation needs to go.

Posted in Safety | Comments Off on Safe for Whom: The Coalition Politics of Safety Claims in 2026

When I Hear People with Power Abuse “Safety,” I Reach for My Keyboard

There is a tell. When powerful institutions want to expand their authority, restrict your choices, suppress a competing viewpoint, or insulate a decision from challenge, they reach for one word before any other. The word is “safety”. It ends arguments. It converts institutional preference into moral necessity. It makes the person asking questions look like the problem.
This essay is about what that word is actually doing in 2026 America, and who pays when it does it.
Stephen Turner’s work on expertise shows that the most durable forms of cognitive authority are those that present coalition interests as technical necessity. Safety is the word that performs this conversion most efficiently. It borrows the legitimacy of the physician reporting a test result, the engineer calculating a load, and deploys it in service of decisions that are fundamentally political: who gets to define the risk, whose harms count, and who absorbs the cost when the definition is wrong. The people who absorb that cost are almost never the people who set the definition.
What follows is ten cases. Each one follows the same structure. An institution invokes safety. The definition of safety it uses serves its own interests. The risks it elevates justify its authority and protect it from liability. The risks it suppresses are the ones its interventions create. The costs of that suppression fall on people without the resources to contest the definition. And the institution is insulated from accountability because safety, by construction, cannot be questioned without appearing to endanger people.

Emergency Psychiatric Holds

The duty to protect is one of the most powerful phrases in American clinical practice. A clinician who identifies an ambiguous risk of self-harm can initiate an involuntary hold that removes a person’s freedom, places them in an institutional setting, and subjects them to evaluation and treatment without consent. The threshold for initiating this process is low. The threshold for contesting it, for a person in psychiatric distress without money, a lawyer, or institutional backing, is nearly impossible to meet.
The safety claim here is real in its intention and often catastrophically wrong in its effect. Adolescent psychiatric inpatient settings frequently retraumatize through restraint, isolation, and forced procedures, particularly in young people with prior trauma histories. The institutional dynamics mimic the dynamics of past abuse: loss of control, coercive physical contact, isolation from support, and the redefinition of any protest as a symptom. Post-discharge suicidality spikes have been documented in multiple review contexts. None of this is tracked systematically, because the system is not designed to track the harms it produces. It is designed to track the harms it prevents, which it measures against a counterfactual it controls.
When the person subjected to this describes what happened as harmful, the institution has a ready response: you lack insight into your own condition, your protest is part of the disorder, and we acted to protect you. The recursive loop is closed. The complaint becomes evidence that the intervention was necessary.

School-Based Threat Assessments

Zero-tolerance discipline and behavioral threat assessment programs operate on a safety logic that prioritizes the prevention of low-probability catastrophic events over the routine welfare of the students subjected to them. A student who makes an ambiguous comment, draws something disturbing, or behaves in ways that trigger an administrator’s pattern-matching gets flagged, searched, referred to law enforcement, or suspended. The school has protected itself from the worst-case scenario. The student absorbs a permanent disciplinary record, academic disruption, and in some cases a pathway into the criminal legal system.
The populations who bear this cost are not random. The safety the institution is protecting is partly its own: liability exposure, reputational risk, and the administrative defensibility of having responded to a potential threat. The safety of the student, measured in educational outcomes and long-term development, is not the primary variable in the threat assessment matrix.
When parents contest these decisions, they encounter a system designed to be contested only from outside. The people inside it speak the language of professional risk assessment. The parent who says my child is being harmed by this process is told that the process exists to protect children, which is a different claim, and one that does not engage the specific harm being described.

“Trauma-Informed” Expansion of Coercive Tools

Trauma-informed care began as a genuine clinical insight: institutions that work with traumatized people should understand trauma, recognize its manifestations, and avoid replicating traumatizing conditions. That insight was then captured by the institutional machinery it was meant to reform. The vocabulary of trauma became a justification for expanding the very coercive tools it was meant to constrain.
In youth residential facilities, the trauma-informed label now covers restraints, isolation rooms, forced compliance procedures, and intensive behavioral monitoring. The framing is that these measures are delivered with sensitivity and awareness of trauma history, which makes them different from the crude coercion they resemble. For the young person experiencing them, the difference is not always apparent. For the institution, the label provides cover: adverse outcomes are framed as the necessary cost of treatment, as evidence of the severity of the underlying condition, or as the result of inadequate family support. They are not framed as evidence that the protocol is wrong.
The research base for many of these interventions is thin. Adverse event reporting is structurally weak. Long-term outcome comparisons with less coercive alternatives are largely absent, because funding flows toward the institutional model and away from the alternatives. This is Turner’s information deprivation mechanism operating at the design stage of the research enterprise: the data that would challenge the coalition’s safety claims is not collected, because the coalition controls what gets funded.

Content Moderation and “Misinformation Safety”

During the Covid period, platform moderation and its government partners developed a working definition of misinformation: information that deviated from guidance issued by public health agencies. The definition was circular. The agencies defined what was true. Deviation from what the agencies said was therefore false. Content that was false was therefore harmful. Content that was harmful could be suppressed in the name of safety. The people who set the definition and the people who enforced it were participants in the same coalition.
The specific content suppressed under this regime included, at various points, discussion of natural immunity, questions about mask efficacy at the community level, early reporting on the possibility of a lab origin for the virus, and clinical observations from physicians that contradicted agency guidance. Some of this content was wrong. Some of it was right, and turned out to be more accurate than the guidance it contradicted. The suppression did not distinguish between these cases, because the definition of misinformation was not designed to track truth. It was designed to track deviation from the coalition’s position.
The people most harmed by this regime were not the well-resourced commentators who could find alternative platforms and audiences. They were the individual clinicians, the community health workers, and the ordinary people trying to evaluate competing claims about their own health decisions, who found that the information environment had been curated in ways they could not see, by a coalition they could not identify, using criteria they were not permitted to contest.
The safety claim here is about protecting people from false information that leads to harmful decisions. This is a real concern. But a regime that cannot be contested from outside, that defines its own errors out of the category of error, and that suppresses accurate information along with inaccurate information in the name of safety, is not protecting anyone from harm. It is protecting the coalition from accountability.

AI Safety Standards That Entrench Incumbents

The alignment-focused AI safety coalition has achieved something remarkable: it has framed the question of who is allowed to build advanced AI systems as a safety question. Compute caps, pre-deployment audits, licensing requirements, and mandatory safety evaluations are presented as protections against existential risk. They are also barriers to entry that only large, well-capitalized organizations can clear.
A small research team or independent developer who wants to train a competitive model faces compliance costs that are not proportional to any plausible safety risk from their specific work, but are proportional to the regulatory burden that the largest incumbents helped design and can absorb. The safety standard, once institutionalized, functions as a market structure: it determines who is permitted to compete and who is not. The people who designed the standard are the people it most benefits.
The risks from AI development that are elevated in this framework are the speculative catastrophic ones: misalignment, existential threat, loss of human control over powerful systems. The risks that are suppressed are the concrete immediate ones: concentration of AI capability in a small number of organizations, labor displacement without social support, deployment of biased systems in consequential decisions, and the epistemic effects of AI systems trained on human content reshaping the information environment. These suppressed risks are not less real than the elevated ones. They are less useful to the coalition that controls the safety definition, because addressing them would require constraining the coalition’s own members rather than constraining their competitors.

Public Health Mandates with Narrow Risk Framing

The logic of public health safety during the Covid period elevated one category of risk, infectious spread, to a level that justified interventions across the full range of social life. School closures, business restrictions, isolation protocols, and behavioral mandates were all safety measures by the coalition’s definition. The harms produced by these measures, delayed cancer diagnoses, educational loss, mental health deterioration, developmental disruption for young children, domestic violence, and economic devastation for people without savings or remote-work capability, were categorized as the costs of safety rather than as safety failures.
This is Turner’s risk selection mechanism in its clearest form. The coalition elevated the risks it could address and suppressed the risks its interventions created. The costs of that suppression fell disproportionately on people with the fewest resources to adapt: parents without childcare alternatives, workers without sick leave, students in households without reliable internet, small business owners without capital reserves. The people designing the interventions could work from home, send their children to private schools that remained open, and access healthcare through channels that remained functional. The definition of safety they applied was not unreasonable on its own terms. It was unreasonable in its narrowness, and the narrowness was not random.

Child Protection and Family Court

The phrase safety of the child operates in the family court system the way safety operates everywhere else in this map: it preemptively justifies intervention, places the burden of proof on the person contesting it, and insulates the intervening institution from accountability. The threshold for initiating a child protective investigation is low, as it should be in cases of genuine danger. The threshold for resolving it in a parent’s favor, especially for parents without money, legal representation, or social capital, is much higher.
In practice, families targeted by child protective interventions are not random. The removal of a child from a family is among the most severe interventions the state can make in a person’s life. It is authorized by a safety standard set by professionals who are not accountable to the family, evaluated by a court system that frequently treats the agency’s assessment as authoritative, and contested through a legal process that the agency has navigated thousands of times and the family typically encounters for the first time.
The 2026 Supreme Court rulings on parental rights and state-level restrictions on the use of child protection proceedings in family disputes over medical and educational decisions represent exactly the kind of coalition shift Turner describes. The prior coalition’s admissible reality, that professional assessment of child safety should override parental authority in the relevant cases, is now being contested by a different coalition with different institutional backing. The underlying question, what actually protects children, has not been answered. The question of who gets to define the answer has shifted.

Workplace “Psychological Safety” Systems

Psychological safety as a concept in organizational research described the conditions under which people feel comfortable taking interpersonal risks, speaking up, and raising concerns without fear of punishment. It was a genuinely useful insight about how high-functioning teams operate. It was then captured by HR compliance machinery and deployed as a speech governance tool.
In its institutional form, psychological safety means something specific: the organization has created a reporting structure through which employees can flag conduct that makes them feel unsafe. The conduct flagged is not limited to discrimination or harassment in any legally defined sense. It encompasses disagreement expressed in ways that a colleague experiences as threatening, viewpoints that make someone uncomfortable, and speech that challenges the coalition’s preferred moral framework on topics like gender, race, or political economy.
The enforcement of psychological safety in this form is asymmetric. Lower-status employees, those without tenure, institutional backing, or social capital, are more exposed to complaints than higher-status ones. The person whose speech is flagged has limited ability to contest the characterization. The system is designed to take complaints seriously, which is a reasonable principle in cases of genuine misconduct and a mechanism for selective enforcement in cases where the definition of misconduct is controlled by one faction within the organization. The word safety insulates the enforcement mechanism from challenge: questioning the process looks like opposing safety.

Campus and Community “Safe Space” Expansions

The safe space concept began as a specific claim about specific populations, that people with particular histories of marginalization benefit from environments where they can discuss their experiences without encountering hostility. This is defensible and sometimes important. It was then generalized into a principle that discomfort constitutes harm, that exposure to disagreeable viewpoints is a safety issue, and that institutions have an obligation to restrict speech that causes discomfort to members of designated groups.
The consistent effect of this generalization has been to constrain the range of arguments that can be made in institutional settings, to provide a mechanism for removing speakers, restricting events, and sanctioning faculty and students whose views fall outside the coalition’s admissible range, and to make that constraint unchallengeable because challenging it is itself framed as a safety threat. The people most affected by this constraint are not those within the coalition who benefit from the expanded definition of harm. They are those who want to make arguments the coalition has pre-classified as harmful, regardless of the quality of the arguments.
Jonathan Haidt and Greg Lukianoff’s work on safetyism, the treatment of discomfort as danger, is relevant here not as a political critique but as a developmental one. The evidence that exposure to manageable adversity, including disagreement, criticism, and challenge, builds resilience is substantial. The evidence that institutional protection from discomfort builds resilience is thin. If the safety claim is taken seriously on its own terms, the question of whether these regimes make people safer over time, rather than more fragile and more dependent on institutional protection, is exactly the question they are structured to not ask.

Financial “Safety and Soundness” De-risking

Banks and payment processors have expanded their use of safety and soundness standards to justify restricting accounts and transactions associated with politically disfavored industries, organizations, or individuals. The mechanism is usually called de-risking: the institution determines that certain customers or transaction types pose reputational or regulatory risk and terminates or refuses the relationship. The decision is framed as a prudential safety judgment. It is rarely subject to external review, because financial institutions have broad discretion in customer selection and the safety framing insulates that discretion from challenge.
The industries and organizations most affected by this process are those that the regulatory coalition has pre-classified as risky: certain firearms-related businesses, cannabis operations in states where it is legal, politically disfavored advocacy organizations, and individuals who have been publicly associated with contested positions. These are not random. They are the categories the coalition controlling the safety definition has decided to suppress through the mechanism of financial access. Small organizations without the resources to maintain multiple banking relationships or navigate the legal system are most exposed. Large organizations can absorb the cost or find alternatives.
The safety claim here is not entirely empty. There are genuine risks in some of the de-risked categories. But the definition of risk being applied is not a technical assessment of financial exposure. It is a political judgment about which activities are acceptable, dressed in the language of prudential regulation. The person or organization that loses banking access has no meaningful recourse, no right to a hearing, and no mechanism to contest the characterization of their activity as risky. They have been placed outside the system by a safety determination they cannot see, cannot challenge, and cannot appeal.

The Compression

Across all ten cases, the mechanism is the same. The institution elevates certain risks, the ones its interventions address and that justify its authority. It suppresses competing risks, the ones its interventions create and that would undermine its authority. It uses the word safety to convert those choices into moral imperatives, so that questioning the definition is reclassified as endangering people. And it enforces the definition through systems that are accessible to people with resources and largely impenetrable to people without them.
The costs fall consistently on the same populations: people without money, legal representation, institutional backing, or social capital. The adolescent in the psychiatric hold without an advocate. The student in the threat assessment without a parent who knows how to navigate the system. The family in the child protective proceeding without a lawyer. The small business owner without a compliance department. The individual whose account is closed without explanation or appeal.
Turner’s framework names what these cases have in common. The coalition that defines safety also controls the evidence about whether its definitions work, designs the metrics that evaluate its own interventions, and manages the information environment in which challenges to its authority appear. When the definition produces harm, that harm is not admissible as evidence against the definition. It is absorbed, reframed, and used to justify more of the same.
The investigation priority is always the same. Demand standardized adverse event data. Require preregistered long-term outcome tracking. Insist on comparison to alternatives. Ask whose risks are being counted and whose are not. Ask who bears the cost when the definition is wrong, and whether anyone bears the cost of having set it.
When people with power invoke safety in ways that expand their authority, restrict your choices, and insulate their decisions from challenge, the question is not whether safety matters. Of course it does. The question is whether the invocation is tracking actual harm to actual people, or whether it is tracking the coalition’s interest in remaining the coalition. In 2026, across the cases in this map, the answer is far too often the latter.
When I hear people with power invoke safety in that way, I reach for my keyboard.

Posted in Safety | Comments Off on When I Hear People with Power Abuse “Safety,” I Reach for My Keyboard

The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for The Nostradamus Kid

Young believers in the world of The Nostradamus Kid (1992) do not compete for authority by saying they want power. They compete by invoking moral languages that frame their authority as fidelity to the prophecies, loyalty to the Remnant Church, or responsibility for sustaining Sabbath-keeping purity in the middle of secular Australia and the imminent end of the world. This is the core insight of David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory. Moral vocabularies are coalition technologies. They recruit allies, define legitimacy, and justify control over institutions. In the Adventist world of rural 1960s New South Wales, phrases like “the time of trouble is coming,” “we are the last generation,” and “you must keep yourself pure” do not merely describe belief. They define jurisdiction. They determine who gets to say what kind of Adventist life the church can sustain, how demanding that life should be, and which forms of accommodation still count as faithful.
Before going further, the framework needs a limit acknowledged. Alliance Theory, applied without restraint, becomes a closed system. When every position gets decoded as a power move, the analysis loses precision. The boy who refuses to go to the pictures on Friday night is not primarily executing a coalition maneuver. He maintains a form of life he genuinely values. The teenager who keeps his Sabbath observance careful because he knows it affects salvation and standing inhabits a world whose demands are real, not merely performed. The prophetic principles that govern diet, dress, entertainment, and the Three Angels’ Messages carry their own internal logic and their own genuine authority over the people who accept them. Alliance Theory names something real about how institutional authority functions in The Nostradamus Kid. It is not the whole picture.
With those limits stated, the analysis can proceed.
Ernest Becker argues in The Denial of Death that human beings are unique among animals in their awareness of their own mortality, and that most of human culture, religion, and social life organizes itself to manage the terror that awareness produces. We construct hero systems, cultural frameworks that promise symbolic immortality, that tell us our lives participate in something larger and more permanent than our individual bodies. To be a faithful member of a hero system is to transcend death symbolically. To lose one’s hero system is to be thrown back against the terror it was built to contain.
The Adventist world of The Nostradamus Kid is not merely a hero system. It is a hero system with a deadline. Most hero systems promise that a faithful life participates in something that outlasts the individual. This one promises something more specific and more urgent: that the faithful will be alive when history ends, that the final generation stands at the hinge of all time, and that the decisions made now, about a Saturday matinee or a girl’s hand or a borrowed novel, carry infinite weight because probation is closing. Every Friday sunset that turns the farmhouse into a different kind of space, every prophecy chart that marks the boundary between the Remnant and the world, every camp-meeting sermon attended in the summer heat: these are not merely religious obligations. They are acts of fidelity to a people who believe they will be the last ones standing before Jesus comes. That is a hero system with unusual leverage. The terror it manages is not only death in the abstract. It is the specific terror of being lost when the end arrives, and in the 1960s the end has a material correlate: nuclear testing in the Pacific, missile crises on television, the actual possibility that the world could stop. The prophecy charts did not invent apocalyptic anxiety. They gave it a timeline and a theology, and in doing so they made it manageable, which is to say they made themselves indispensable.
The prophecy tent is where this management work happens most visibly, and it is worth pausing on it as a specific technology of jurisdiction. The preacher stands before a hand-painted chart of a giant metal statue, the image from Daniel that maps the succession of empires from Babylon to the present. He points to the feet, made of iron and clay, and tells the people in the tent that they live there. This is not merely teaching. It is a summons. It takes the chaos of the twentieth century, the Bomb, the Cold War, the bewildering speed of modern life, and converts it into a predictable timeline with the audience at its climax. The people in the tent no longer worry about ordinary life in Australia. They participate in the end of history. The terror is managed because it has been named, located, and given a meaning. The preacher’s authority rests entirely on his ability to maintain this management, to keep the chart credible, to keep the present moment legible as the toes of the statue. The moment the chart fails, the authority fails with it.
Every person in that tent internalizes the chart differently. Ken sees the slides and thinks about a girl on the beach. The preacher sees a coalition opportunity and deploys the visual aids accordingly. Stephen Turner’s point lands precisely here. There is no stable essence of the prophecy being transmitted. Each person reconstructs it from the same materials and calls it truth. The category of the Remnant does no explanatory work unless you can show the mechanism of the summons, and the mechanism is the tent, the chart, the preacher’s finger pointing at the toes.
The Adventist community does not merely exist as a church. It summons people. The institutions, interactions, schedules, dress codes, prophecy seminars, family prayers, and ordinary public recognitions of the rural New South Wales church call its members into being as the final generation. The thickness of the community comes from more than shared doctrine or social ties. It comes from repeated acts of summons. To live there is to be hailed, continuously and from multiple directions, as a particular kind of last-days believer, one who must answer for that designation in every ordinary moment.
Through Becker’s lens, those summons are not merely social. They are the hero system doing its maintenance work. Each summons interrupts private drift. The church that can summon its members reliably keeps its hero system operative. The church that loses its summoning power leaves its members to manage existential terror through whatever substitute frameworks secular Australia offers. In The Nostradamus Kid, that failure is never abstract. It shows up in a boy who sneaks to the pictures, who reaches for a girl, who begins to suspect that the prophecy charts might be wrong, and who discovers that once the timeline starts to look uncertain, every sacrifice made in its name begins to feel different.
That is why defection carries such disproportionate weight. The teenager who stops attending prophecy study, or who falls for a non-Adventist girl, is not merely making a lifestyle adjustment. He weakens, in the community’s felt logic, the collective structure through which everyone manages the terror that the tradition was built to contain. This is not cynical. It is how hero systems function. The stakes feel existential because they partly are, and in a community that believes the world is literally ending, partly is enough.
Becker also illuminates the community’s relationship to the world pressing in on it. The Adventist enclave is a Remnant minority inside secular 1960s Australia, and that minority status is not merely a demographic fact. It is a structural feature of the hero system. The outside world does not threaten the faith only from outside. It actively helps produce Remnant self-consciousness. Every Beatles song, every short skirt, every Saturday matinee, every news report of a missile test forces the young believer to renew his identification. The nuclear age is the prophecy tent’s greatest ally. The beast is not a figure of speech. It is a delivery system with a yield measured in megatons. The profane surroundings are part of the machinery through which the sacred enclave sustains itself.
Within that structure, three types of participants emerge. The first is the fully committed, the parents and elders for whom the demands of the Sabbath and the prophecies are not a burden but the structure through which life acquires significance. The second is the conflicted insider, the questioning teenager who believes enough to be afraid but desires enough to resist. Ken is this type. He cannot dismiss the prophecy charts because he was raised inside them, and he cannot fully inhabit them because his body and his curiosity keep pulling him toward a world the charts say is ending. For this person the hero system is real but contested, always producing guilt without quite producing obedience. The third is the cultural participant, for whom the church functions as environment rather than calling. He attends services and maintains some practices, but the underlying framework of imminent apocalypse carries no real weight. The church still summons him, but the summons produces habit rather than conviction.
The hero system’s most remarkable feature is what it does to the body. Ken’s sexual awakening is not treated as adolescence in this world. It is treated as contamination. A wet dream is not biology. It is evidence of moral failure. A kiss is not experimentation. It is a step toward being lost. This is where the system bites hardest and where Becker’s analysis becomes most precise. Authority is enforced not only through external rules but through internal surveillance. Ken polices himself because he believes God is already judging. The church does not need constant external enforcement because the boy has become the enforcement mechanism. The hero system has colonized his conscience, and the terror it manages and the terror it produces are, at this point, almost indistinguishable.
Three domains organize the struggle over authority.
The first is moral authority over what counts as serious end-times faithfulness, and here the prophecy chart does its deepest work. By turning the present moment into the toes of Nebuchadnezzar’s statue, the hardline coalition claims control over time itself. If the end is near, then every decision matters infinitely. That is the core jurisdictional claim: not merely that the church has rules but that the rules are written into the structure of history, and deviation is not personal preference but cosmic treason. The hardline coalition, concentrated in the elders and the prophecy-obsessed families, defends this claim with the urgency that Becker would predict. Every softening of the summons is experienced as a threat to the structure through which the community manages its existential stakes. One teenager’s quiet rebellion is experienced as everyone’s problem, because if the prophecy timeline is right then nothing is truly private.
This coalition’s power shows in symbols. Small variations in dress and behavior sort believers into subaffiliations before a word is spoken. The visible prophecy notebook, the Sabbath best, the practiced avoidance of Saturday entertainment: these are not aesthetic choices. They are jurisdictional markers, signals of which authority structure a person accepts as binding. A boy clutching a prophecy notebook at school becomes a visible Adventist who can be hailed by others, pulled back into his Remnant identification regardless of what occupied his mind before he arrived. Becker would note that a nuclear siren is also a mortality salience cue of a particular kind, and the prophecy tent converts every news report into one. It marks the listener as someone living inside a framework for managing the largest question, and it makes that choice visible and socially accountable in every ordinary moment.
Against the hardline coalition stands a pragmatic-engagement coalition, strongest among questioning teenagers and some more flexible families. Their language is balance, workability, and livable seriousness. Their claim is not that prophecy should be abandoned. It is that Adventist life in 1960s Australia cannot be governed as though every sunrise might be the last. The church must function not only as a site of boundary maintenance but as a bridge between tradition and emerging desire. Some accommodation is necessary, or the present world will take the young people anyway.
Pinsof’s framework makes the move visible. Once one side defines the church’s purpose as sustaining the maximal summons, flexibility looks like drift or surrender to the beast. Once the other side defines the church’s purpose as making Adventist life sustainable under modern conditions, maximal prophecy looks like burnout, performative intensity, or status competition dressed as piety. Neither side says it is fighting over prestige, the marriage market, or institutional control. Each says it is protecting the Remnant.
The cinema functions as the great rival jurisdiction. The prophecy charts claim the future. The cinema claims the present. The church says the world is ending and every moment must be evaluated against that end. The cinema says the moment itself matters, that desire and music and laughter and style are not temptations to be resisted but experiences to be inhabited. Ken cannot fully live in both systems at once. When he sneaks into the pictures, he is not merely breaking a rule. He enters a competing framework that defines meaning differently, and every hour he spends inside it is an hour the church’s summons does not reach him.
The second domain is organizational. The Adventist world is not governed by one top-down authority. Its power comes from overlapping institutions: the local church, the conference, the family, the Sabbath school, the prophecy tent, and the informal authority of people who know who belongs where. Power belongs to those who can make a summons binding. Who can call you to prayer meeting. Who can shame you into Sabbath observance. Who can define your dating choices as faithfulness or failure and be believed. When an elder offers a word from Ellen White before demanding loyalty, he performs a coalition move in Pinsof’s sense. He recruits the teenager into the category of Remnant believer who values the soon return. The church board turns this informal summons into a formal jurisdictional claim. In Becker’s terms, these institutions maintain the hero system’s integrity by ensuring that even the act of fellowship remains legible within the church’s framework of seriousness rather than dissolving into the anonymous social world of secular Australian youth.
The third domain is the daily network. The world of The Nostradamus Kid is not only a religious world. It is a moral obstacle course. The Australia around it is full of reminders of another order of life: rock music, short skirts, movies, dating culture, and the endless pull of 1960s freedom. Every practiced avoidance of a Saturday matinee, every route chosen to avoid temptation, every moment of self-monitoring in a mixed environment: these are not merely behavioral habits. They are the repeated acts through which a person sustains his participation in the framework that gives his life its larger significance. The discipline is psychological as much as social. It is what keeps the terror managed.
The failed prophecy is where the entire structure becomes visible as structure. When the sun rises on the morning the charts said would not come, the hero system faces its deepest crisis. Some circles treat a failed date as a test of faith, proof that the Remnant’s commitment is real enough to survive disappointment. This response is not absurd. It is the rational move of a coalition defending its hero system against the evidence that threatens it. The alternative, acknowledging that the chart was wrong, is not merely admitting an error. It is dismantling the framework through which the community has managed the terror of mortality, and that is a cost that most people are not prepared to pay. Ken, younger and less invested, pays it. His exit from the system is not rebellion in the usual sense. It is what happens when the mechanism of the summons stops working from the inside, when the boy who was once his own enforcement mechanism can no longer make the terror feel manageable on the church’s terms.
Stephen Turner’s critique lands here. There is no single stable essence of authentic Adventism being transmitted intact from one generation to the next. There are competing reconstructions. One faction builds the faith around strict apocalypticism and uncompromising separation. Another builds it around sustainable balancing and workable fidelity to a tradition that must survive in Australia. Both claim continuity with Ellen White and the prophets. Both select from the same body of scripture, prophecy, and family history to authorize current positions. What gets transmitted is not a stable essence but material from which each coalition selects what serves its needs, and when the prophecy fails, each coalition selects differently from the failure too.
The Adventist world of The Nostradamus Kid is therefore not governed by one unified authority. It is governed by competing coalitions operating through prophetic discourse, organizational density, and everyday summons, each trying to define the legitimate balance between rigor and navigation, enclave and Australia, relentless availability and sustainable observance. The tensions visible in church affiliation, rankings of faithfulness, elder and questioning-teen distinctions, prophecy positions, dress gradations, and daily farm-level negotiations are not signs of a community losing itself. They are the mechanism through which Adventist authority is continuously made and remade, and the film is an analysis of that mechanism beginning to fail.
The jurisdictional war is a struggle over who gets to define what being summoned really requires. Beneath that, it is a struggle over which version of the hero system is strong enough to keep the terror contained. And beneath even that is the question the film refuses to answer cleanly: if the world is about to end, you cannot afford to be wrong, and if it is not, you cannot afford to live as though it is.

Posted in Adventist | Comments Off on The Jurisdictional Wars: Alliance Theory and the Battle for The Nostradamus Kid

When No One Calls It a Safety Problem

A previous essay mapped ten ways safety is invoked by powerful institutions against people who cannot push back. This essay maps the mirror image: ten ways safety is not invoked when it should be, because the dominant coalition has decided that naming the risk would violate its moral commitments, embarrass its allies, or destabilize its preferred account of human nature and social reality.
The mechanism is the same in both directions. A coalition controls what counts as admissible reality. It elevates the risks that justify its authority. It suppresses the risks that would complicate its moral framework. The costs of that suppression fall on people who cannot contest the definition. In the previous essay those people were poor families, psychiatric patients, small business owners, and students without advocates. In this essay they are different people, though sometimes the same ones: people whose framework for understanding the world, whose religion, whose definition of family and honor and sex and civic order, has been placed outside the coalition’s admissible reality and told that it does not count as a legitimate safety concern.
Guldmann’s analysis of what he calls conservaphobia is useful here not as a political manifesto but as a structural description. He argues that the dominant cultural coalition has colonized the institutions of legitimacy, academia, media, professional associations, major foundations, and regulatory bodies, and uses that position to define certain conservative intuitions as pre-rational, pathological, or simply beneath serious engagement. The result is that genuine concerns get dismissed not on the merits but by reclassification: the person raising them is branded as anxious, resentful, or bigoted, which means the concern itself can be ignored without being examined. Turner calls this the delegitimation mechanism. Guldmann calls it cultural oppression. They are describing the same thing from different angles.
What follows applies the safety template to ten domains where the dominant coalition has refused to name the risk.

Serious Mental Illness and Public Safety

The coalition that controls mental health policy in America has enforced a strong taboo against discussing the relationship between serious mental illness and violence. The taboo is not without any basis: most people with mental illness are not violent, and historical stigma around mental illness has caused serious harm. These points are true and worth stating. They are also used to place a different and equally true claim outside admissible reality: that a specific subset of untreated serious mental illness, particularly untreated psychosis, is associated with elevated rates of violent behavior, and that deinstitutionalization combined with the collapse of community mental health infrastructure has left large numbers of seriously mentally ill people without treatment, on the streets, and in some cases dangerous to themselves and others.
The people who encounter this danger most directly are not policy professionals in well-protected buildings. They are transit workers, emergency room staff, shelter workers, residents of urban neighborhoods with high concentrations of untreated mentally ill individuals, and the family members of people in psychotic crisis who cannot compel treatment. These people know, from direct experience, that something is wrong. When they say so, the coalition’s response is to invoke stigma: generalizing about mental illness is discriminatory, and therefore the observation is inadmissible.
The safety claim that is not being made is specific and empirically grounded. It is not that mentally ill people as a class are dangerous. It is that untreated psychosis in individuals with histories of violence is a serious public safety problem, that the current system is structurally incapable of addressing it, and that the people absorbing the cost of that failure are the ones least able to avoid contact with it. The coalition’s commitment to a non-stigmatizing framework for mental illness, which is a genuine value, has been allowed to suppress an honest conversation about a specific, addressable safety problem. The people paying for that suppression are not the people who designed the framework.

Biological Sex and Spatial Safety

The coalition controlling gender policy has defined the claim that biological sex is relevant to safety in sex-segregated spaces as itself a form of bigotry. Under this definition, concern about the presence of biological males in women’s prisons, shelters, changing rooms, or sports is reclassified from a safety claim into a discriminatory one, which means it cannot be evaluated on its merits. The person raising it has been pre-classified as transphobic, which ends the inquiry before it begins.
This is the delegitimation mechanism applied to a specific population of vulnerable women. The women in the most dangerous position are not those with resources to avoid the situations in question. They are incarcerated women, many of whom have histories of sexual trauma, who cannot exit a housing situation; women in domestic violence shelters who sought those spaces specifically because of danger from males; and women in lower-income settings where single-sex spaces serve genuine protective functions. These women’s safety concerns are not abstract. They are grounded in the specific vulnerability that sex-segregated spaces were designed to address.
The coalition’s position is that trans women are women and that their presence in women’s spaces is therefore not a safety issue by definition. This is a definitional move, not an empirical one. It places the concern outside admissible reality before the evidence can be examined. The evidence that does exist, on assault rates in prisons that have implemented gender self-identification policies, on the characteristics of male-bodied individuals who seek transfer to women’s facilities, on the experiences of women in those facilities, is not being gathered systematically, because the coalition has decided that gathering it would itself constitute a discriminatory act.
The safety claim not being made belongs to women who have no power to make it heard within the institutions that govern their lives.

Statistical Pattern Recognition and Crime Prevention

The coalition controlling criminal justice policy has enforced a strong presumption against the use of demographic patterns in policing and risk assessment, on the grounds that such practices constitute racial discrimination. The concern about discriminatory policing is real and documented. It is also used to suppress a different and equally documented reality: that crime, like most social phenomena, is not randomly distributed, that patterns exist that are predictive of risk, and that the people most harmed by the refusal to act on those patterns are often members of the communities experiencing the highest rates of victimization.
The residents of high-crime neighborhoods who want more effective policing, faster response times, and greater attention to the specific individuals and locations driving local violence are not abstract policy preferences. They are people living with the daily reality of what happens when the safety claim they are making is not treated as legitimate. The dominant coalition’s framework places their concern in conflict with anti-discrimination principles and resolves the conflict in favor of the principle, without seriously examining the cost of that resolution for the people absorbing it.
This does not mean profiling is without costs or that discriminatory policing is not a genuine harm. It means that refusing to name the safety concern as a safety concern, insisting that pattern-based risk assessment is always and only discrimination, and treating the communities experiencing the highest victimization rates as if their safety were less urgent than the coalition’s commitment to a particular theory of justice, has costs. Those costs are paid in violence, in reduced quality of life, and in the erosion of civic order in places where the people doing the paying have the fewest alternatives.

The Degradation of Public Space and Civic Order

The coalition controlling urban policy has largely refused to name the degradation of public space as a safety problem when the degradation is associated with populations the coalition has designated as sympathetic. Open drug use, aggressive panhandling, public encampments, and the general disorder produced by the collapse of behavioral norms in public space are framed as housing problems, addiction problems, mental health problems, or poverty problems, all of which is partly true and none of which addresses the immediate safety experience of people who use those spaces.
The people most affected by this degradation are not those with cars, private spaces, and the ability to avoid public transit, public parks, and pedestrian commercial areas. They are working-class people who depend on public infrastructure for their daily lives: people who take the bus, whose children play in public parks, whose small businesses depend on accessible and orderly streetscapes. For these people, the refusal to name disorder as a safety concern is not an abstract policy disagreement. It is the systematic dismissal of their lived experience by a coalition that does not share it.
The dominant coalition’s framework treats any naming of this problem as potential criminalization of poverty or mental illness, which it can be, and which is a genuine risk worth managing. But the framework has been applied so broadly that the legitimate safety concern of people living with public disorder is treated as inadmissible, and the people raising it are suspected of disguised bigotry. The cost of that suspicion is borne by the people whose safety is at stake, not by the people who enforce the framework from a comfortable distance.

The Safety of Children in Classrooms

The coalition controlling education policy has been reluctant to name the disruption of classroom learning as a safety problem when the disruption is associated with students who have been designated as sympathetic under its framework. Policies reducing suspensions and expulsions, eliminating disciplinary consequences for certain behaviors, and prioritizing the continued presence of disruptive students over the learning environment of other students have been implemented under the heading of equity and inclusion. The students whose education is disrupted, whose sense of physical safety in school is undermined, and who cannot learn in chaotic classroom environments are not asked whether this arrangement serves their interests.
The families most affected are often those with the least ability to exit the system: families without resources for private school, without the social capital to navigate school choice systems, without the connections to secure placement in high-functioning classrooms within large public schools. These families often want something simple: a school where their children can learn without being subjected to sustained disruption, where behavioral expectations are enforced, and where teachers have the authority to maintain an environment conducive to education. When they say this, the coalition hears a request to exclude vulnerable children. It does not hear a safety claim from families whose children’s educational safety is being sacrificed for a framework the coalition designed.

Religious and Cultural Coherence as a Safety Interest

Guldmann’s analysis is most useful here. He argues that the dominant coalition treats conservative religious and cultural commitments as pre-rational preferences that can be overridden by the coalition’s superior moral framework, rather than as legitimate interests that deserve the same respect the coalition extends to other cultural identities. The result is that damage to these commitments, the experience of having one’s framework for understanding the world systematically mocked, dismantled, excluded from public institutions, and treated as evidence of intellectual deficiency, is not recognized as a harm worth naming.
The safety claim not being made is about meaning, order, and the conditions under which people can raise children in coherent relationship to their own traditions. This is not a trivial concern. Ernest Becker understood that the hero system, the framework through which people construct meaning and manage the awareness of mortality, is not a luxury. It is a psychological necessity. To systematically undermine someone’s hero system through cultural dominance, through the colonization of educational, media, and institutional spaces with a framework that treats their deepest commitments as backward, is to do something to them that costs something real.
The coalition does not call this a safety problem because it does not recognize the harm. It has decided that traditional religious and cultural frameworks are not entitled to the protection it extends to other identities. Guldmann documents this asymmetry carefully: the same coalition that treats any challenge to certain cultural identities as a safety threat categorizes challenges to traditional religious and cultural identity as legitimate social progress. The people absorbing the cost of this asymmetry are those whose identities fall on the unprotected side of the coalition’s framework.

The Safety of Women’s Sports

The safety claim in women’s sports is twofold. There is a physical safety dimension: biological males who have undergone male puberty retain on average physical attributes, bone density, lung capacity, and muscle mass, that provide competitive advantages and in contact sports can create genuine injury risk for female competitors. There is also a fairness dimension that has safety implications for the careers and opportunities that women’s sports were designed to protect. Both claims have been placed outside admissible reality by the dominant coalition, on the grounds that acknowledging them would be transphobic.
The female athletes most affected are not those at the elite level with financial resources, legal representation, and public platforms. They are the girls and young women in high school and college athletics competing for scholarships, records, and opportunities that depend on the integrity of the female category. For these athletes, the coalition’s refusal to name the safety and fairness concern is not abstract. It is the direct elimination of something they worked for, enforced by institutions that have decided their concern is not legitimate.

The Safety of Honest Speech

The dominant coalition has built an extensive apparatus for restricting speech that violates its moral commitments under the heading of harm prevention. The safety claim used to justify this apparatus is that certain speech causes harm to members of designated groups. This claim is sometimes true and often overstated. What is not named as a safety problem is the harm caused by the apparatus itself: the chilling of honest inquiry, the self-censorship of people who hold legitimate views they cannot express without professional or social consequences, and the long-term damage to the epistemic health of institutions that have replaced honest disagreement with enforced consensus.
The people most affected by this chilling are not those with tenure, institutional protection, or platforms large enough to absorb reputational attack. They are junior faculty, students, employees in institutions with aggressive speech codes, and ordinary people who have learned that certain observations, however accurate, cannot be safely voiced in their professional or social environments. The harm to these people is real, documented, and largely invisible to the coalition that enforces the norms, because the coalition does not experience the cost of enforcement. It experiences only the benefit of not having its commitments challenged.
The safety claim not being made is that honest speech, including speech that makes people uncomfortable, that challenges preferred frameworks, and that names realities the coalition would prefer not to name, is a precondition for the epistemic health on which genuine safety ultimately depends. A system that can only name the risks consistent with its own framework is a system that will fail to see the risks it has not anticipated.

The Safety of Boys and Men

The coalition controlling education and mental health policy has largely defined boys’ and men’s developmental challenges as either non-problems or as the appropriate consequences of historical privilege. Boys’ dramatically worse educational outcomes relative to girls, men’s higher rates of suicide, addiction, workplace death, and social isolation, and the collapse of institutional structures that historically provided meaning and community for working-class men have not been named as safety problems requiring serious attention. They have been treated as either irrelevant or as a useful corrective to prior male advantage.
The boys most affected are not those with stable families, engaged fathers, and access to resources that can compensate for institutional failure. They are boys in disrupted households, in schools that are not designed for their developmental patterns, in communities where the traditional sources of male meaning and purpose have been eliminated without replacement. For these boys, the coalition’s refusal to name their situation as a safety concern is not a policy disagreement. It is the systematic exclusion of their wellbeing from the category of things worth protecting.

The Safety of National and Cultural Continuity

The dominant coalition has treated concern about the pace and character of demographic and cultural change as presumptively nativist, racist, or simply as evidence of the psychological deficiencies Guldmann catalogs. The safety claim embedded in these concerns, that rapid transformation of the cultural, linguistic, and civic framework of a society without democratic deliberation and consent creates genuine costs for people who invested their lives in that framework, is not admissible under the coalition’s definition of legitimate concern.
The people who experience this cost most acutely are those whose communities have changed most rapidly, who lack the resources to exit, and who had the least voice in the decisions that produced the change. They are not asking for ethnic purity or the rejection of newcomers. They are asking for a pace and character of change that allows communities to absorb and integrate rather than fragment. When they say this, the coalition hears bigotry. It does not hear a legitimate claim about the safety of the social fabric on which ordinary life depends.

The Compression

The same template applies in both directions. A coalition controls admissible reality. It elevates the risks that justify its authority. It suppresses the risks that would complicate its moral framework. The costs fall on people without the power to contest the definition.
In the previous essay those people were the ones against whom safety was improperly invoked. In this essay they are the ones from whom safety is improperly withheld. In both cases the mechanism is the same, the costs fall on the same populations defined by their distance from institutional power, and the coalition that sets the terms of the debate bears none of the costs of its errors.
Turner’s framework does not have a political valence. It describes how coalitions work. The coalition that over-invokes safety to expand its authority and the coalition that under-invokes safety to protect its moral framework are both doing the same thing: managing admissible reality in their own interests and distributing the costs of that management to people who cannot push back.
The question in both directions is the same. Whose risks are being counted, and whose are not? Who bears the cost when the definition is wrong? And who designed the definition?

Posted in Safety | Comments Off on When No One Calls It a Safety Problem

Safety Is the Enforcement Language of a Hero System

Every argument about safety is also an argument about something else. It is an argument about what kind of person deserves protection, what kind of social order is worth preserving, and what vision of human flourishing justifies the cost of intervention. These deeper commitments are almost never stated explicitly in safety debates, because stating them would expose the debate for what it actually is: a conflict between competing frameworks for making sense of existence, not a technical dispute about risk thresholds.
This essay makes that hidden structure visible. It draws on three bodies of work that, taken together, explain more about how safety arguments function in 2026 America than any purely empirical or policy-focused analysis can.
Stephen Turner shows that expertise is always organized by coalitions with stakes in particular conclusions, and that what counts as admissible reality is determined by those coalitions rather than by evidence alone. Ernest Becker shows that human beings cannot function without what he calls hero systems: symbolic frameworks that give identity, meaning, and social order to raw existence, and that make death and contingency bearable by embedding individuals in something larger and more permanent than themselves. Rony Guldmann shows that the dominant cultural coalition in America has systematically treated one set of hero systems as legitimate and another set as pre-rational residue, while claiming to operate from a position of neutral rationality.
Put these three together and the structure of every contemporary safety argument becomes legible. Safety claims do not simply describe risk. They protect hero systems. They enforce the boundaries of the framework that makes the world meaningful to the people making the claims. And they suppress the safety concerns of people whose hero systems the dominant coalition has decided do not count.

The Becker Foundation

Becker’s argument in The Denial of Death is that human consciousness creates a problem no other animal faces: the awareness of mortality combined with the biological drive for self-continuation. The solution every human culture has found to this problem is the hero system: a symbolic structure that allows individuals to feel they are participating in something of permanent value, something that will outlast their biological death. The warrior who dies for his nation, the mother who raises children who carry her values forward, the believer whose soul participates in eternal life, the scientist whose discoveries will be remembered, the activist whose cause will transform the world: each is performing a version of the same psychological operation. Each is transcending individual mortality by investing in a symbolic framework that extends beyond the self.
The crucial implication for our purposes is this: the hero system is not a luxury or a preference. It is a psychological necessity. To undermine someone’s hero system is not merely to offend them or disagree with them. It is to threaten the framework through which they make death bearable and life meaningful. People defend their hero systems with the ferocity appropriate to defending their lives, because at the deepest psychological level, that is what they are doing.
This means that every coalition organized around a hero system will experience challenges to that system as existentially threatening. It will not experience them as interesting disagreements about values. It will experience them as attacks. And it will use every available institutional mechanism to neutralize those attacks, including the language of safety, because safety is the most powerful legitimating vocabulary in modern democratic discourse.

Two Hero Systems in Conflict

Contemporary American cultural conflict is largely a conflict between two hero systems, each internally coherent, each claiming universality, and each treating the other as not merely wrong but dangerous.
The first, which Guldmann calls the progressive Clerisy’s framework, is organized around autonomy, self-definition, boundary-crossing, and the redemptive narrative of liberation from oppressive structures. Its vision of the good person is one who has freed themselves from inherited roles, biological constraints, and traditional hierarchies, and who participates in the ongoing project of extending that freedom to others. Its vision of harm is exclusion, stigma, and the invalidation of identity. Its hero is the rescuer who expands the circle of recognition. Its villain is the one who enforces boundaries, maintains distinctions, or insists on categories that constrain self-definition.
The second, which Guldmann analyzes under the heading of conservative hero systems, is organized around stability, continuity, role differentiation, and the transmission of inherited meaning across generations. Its vision of the good person is one who fulfills their obligations within a structured order: the faithful spouse, the devoted parent, the patriotic citizen, the believer who submits to transcendent authority, the man who protects and provides, the woman who nurtures and sustains. Its vision of harm is dissolution, disorder, and the destruction of the structures that make reliable meaning possible. Its hero is the one who maintains and transmits what is worth keeping. Its villain is the one who tears down without building, who deconstructs without understanding what the structure was for.
Neither of these systems is neutral. Neither is simply a description of reality rather than a prescription for it. Each is a framework for making existence meaningful, and each has genuine insights and genuine blind spots. The problem is not that two hero systems exist in conflict. Human cultures have always contained competing visions of the good. The problem is that one of these systems has captured the institutions that define admissible reality and uses that capture to deny that it is a hero system at all.

The Clerisy’s Genius

Guldmann’s central analytical contribution is his demonstration that the progressive Clerisy’s hero system presents itself as something other than what it is. It presents itself as the neutral application of reason, science, and universal values to the task of reducing harm and expanding human flourishing. It presents its opponents not as holders of a different but legitimate vision of the good, but as pre-rational, psychologically troubled, or morally deficient people who have not yet achieved the Clerisy’s level of enlightenment.
This move is structurally brilliant and epistemically dishonest. It allows the Clerisy to treat its own hero system as no hero system at all, merely as the view from nowhere, the rational baseline from which all other positions deviate. And it allows it to treat competing hero systems not as legitimate alternatives but as obstacles to progress that must be overcome, pathologized, or managed into irrelevance.
The consequence for safety arguments is direct and decisive. When the Clerisy invokes safety, it is protecting its hero system while appearing to apply a neutral standard. When it refuses to invoke safety, it is refusing to protect a competing hero system while appearing to make a technical judgment about risk. The word safety carries the appearance of neutrality that the hero system underneath it requires for its legitimacy. Remove the appearance of neutrality and what remains is a coalition using institutional power to enforce its vision of the good while suppressing the safety concerns of people whose vision of the good it has decided does not count.

The Full Architecture

The framework that emerges from Turner, Becker, and Guldmann can be stated as a sequence.
Hero systems determine what matters. Every human being and every human community operates within a symbolic framework that defines what is worth protecting, what constitutes harm, and what a good life looks like. This framework is prior to evidence. It determines what evidence is sought, how it is interpreted, and what conclusions are admissible.
Coalitions form around shared hero systems. People who share a vision of the good organize together to protect and advance it. They seek institutional power because institutions determine whose version of reality counts as official. They use expertise as a legitimating mechanism because in modern democratic societies, expert authority is the most effective way to present a coalition’s preferred conclusions as neutral facts rather than as value commitments.
Safety language enforces the hero system. The most powerful tool in the coalition’s legitimating arsenal is the safety claim, because safety borrows its moral authority from a universal human concern while directing that authority toward the protection of a specific vision of the good. When the dominant coalition invokes safety, it is protecting what its hero system values. When it refuses to invoke safety, it is refusing to protect what a competing hero system values.
Institutions filter reality accordingly. Once the coalition controls the institutions that produce and validate knowledge, what counts as admissible reality is shaped by the hero system underlying the coalition’s commitments. Evidence consistent with the hero system is amplified. Evidence inconsistent with it is suppressed, reclassified, or treated as methodologically flawed. The people who produce inconvenient evidence bear professional and social costs. The recursive loop closes from the inside.
The unequipped pay the cost. The people with the least institutional power, the least access to professional advocacy, and the least ability to contest the coalition’s definitions absorb the cost of having their hero system denied. Their safety concerns are not inadmissible because they are less real. They are inadmissible because they presuppose a hero system the coalition has decided does not count.

What This Explains That the Prior Framework Did Not

The Turner framework alone explains how coalitions manage admissible reality and why the costs of false consensus fall on the unequipped. It does not fully explain why the people bearing those costs experience the situation not merely as policy failure but as an assault on their existence, or why the defenders of the dominant coalition cannot hear what those people are saying.
Becker explains the first. When someone’s hero system is systematically denied by the dominant culture, what they experience is not simply unfairness or inconvenience. They experience a threat to the framework through which they make existence meaningful. The working-class father whose vision of honorable manhood has been classified as toxic masculinity, the religious believer whose cosmology has been classified as pre-rational superstition, the woman whose sense of bodily safety depends on sex-segregated spaces that the dominant coalition has decided are sites of exclusion, the boy who needed male initiation and found it replaced with gender-neutral programming: each of these people is not merely losing a preference. They are losing a piece of the framework through which they manage contingency and mortality. The anger this produces is not irrational. It is proportional to the actual threat.
Guldmann explains the second. The Clerisy cannot hear what these people are saying because its hero system requires that their concerns be pre-rational. If traditional hero systems have legitimate safety claims on their behalf, then the Clerisy’s narrative of progressive liberation from those systems is not liberation at all. It is the imposition of one vision of the good on people who hold a different one. To acknowledge the legitimacy of competing hero systems would be to abandon the Clerisy’s foundational self-understanding as the rational baseline from which all other positions deviate. This is why the acknowledgment cannot happen within the coalition’s own framework. It is not a failure of empathy or goodwill. It is a structural impossibility given the hero system the coalition is defending.

The Safety of Single-Sex Spaces as a Test Case

Take the destruction of single-sex institutions as a concrete illustration of the framework.
Boys need, or have historically needed, contexts of male-only initiation to develop within a specific hero system: the archetype of the protector, provider, and responsible member of a community of men. The Boy Scouts, fraternities, men’s service clubs, father-son transmission rituals, military training environments, and single-sex schools all functioned as infrastructure for this hero system. They provided the contexts within which the values, practices, and self-understanding of masculine responsibility were transmitted across generations.
The Clerisy’s hero system defines these institutions as sites of exclusion. Exclusion is its primary category of harm. Therefore the safety of boys’ developmental hero system cannot be invoked within the Clerisy’s framework, because invoking it would validate a hero system the Clerisy’s own hero system requires it to dismantle. The result is that institutions critical to the psychological development of boys are dissolved in the name of inclusion, while the safety claims of boys who needed them are not merely dismissed but rendered linguistically unavailable. One cannot say, within the dominant framework, that dismantling male initiation contexts is a safety problem, because doing so is itself classified as an endorsement of toxic norms.
Girls face the equivalent problem from a different angle. Single-sex spaces for women, shelters, sports, prisons, changing rooms, were built to protect women from specific male behaviors. They presuppose a hero system in which biological sex is real, in which female vulnerability to male bodies is a legitimate safety concern, and in which the category of woman has a stable referent worth protecting. The Clerisy’s hero system defines biological sex as a social construct and gender identity as self-defined, which means the safety architecture built on the reality of biological sex cannot be defended within the Clerisy’s framework without appearing to deny the legitimacy of gender identity. The safety of women in these spaces is not invoked because invoking it would require acknowledging a hero system the dominant coalition has committed to dismantling.
The women most exposed to the consequences of this refusal are not those with resources to create private alternatives. They are incarcerated women who cannot exit, domestic violence survivors in shelters who have no other options, and girls in schools and athletic programs whose safety architecture has been redesigned by people who will not personally experience the consequences of the redesign.

The Meaning Crisis as a Safety Problem

The most consistently suppressed safety claim in contemporary America is the one that follows directly from Becker: the destruction of hero systems produces meaning crises, and meaning crises kill people.
The statistical landscape of male deaths by suicide, addiction, and despair in communities where traditional hero systems have been dismantled without replacement is not a mystery. It is what Becker’s framework predicts. When the symbolic structures through which people made existence meaningful are classified as pathological and systematically eroded, the people who depended on those structures for psychological coherence do not simply adopt new hero systems. Many of them lose the capacity to function. The epidemic of deaths of despair concentrated in working-class communities that have experienced the most rapid dissolution of traditional economic and cultural structures is a safety problem. It is not named as one by the dominant coalition, because naming it would require acknowledging that the dissolution of traditional hero systems has costs the coalition’s own framework cannot account for.
The religious dimension of this is particularly important. Becker understood that traditional religion was, among other things, the most powerful and historically durable hero system human beings have developed. It embedded individuals in a cosmic order that extended infinitely beyond their biological death, gave them roles of permanent significance within that order, and provided communities of shared meaning and mutual accountability that secular institutions have not successfully replicated. The progressive Clerisy’s treatment of religious commitment as a private preference, safely marginalized from public institutions, is not a neutral act. It is the systematic denial of cognitive authority to a hero system that hundreds of millions of Americans depend on for psychological coherence. The safety costs of that denial, measured in isolation, addiction, suicide, and the collapse of communities that religious institutions once sustained, are real and largely uncounted, because counting them would require the dominant coalition to acknowledge what it has done.

The Fundamental Claim

The framework this essay has built can be compressed to a few propositions.
Safety is not a neutral standard. It is a moral boundary drawn by a dominant hero system to protect what it values and to exclude competing definitions of harm. Every safety argument presupposes a vision of the person, a vision of social order, and a vision of what counts as harm. These presuppositions are prior to evidence. They determine what evidence is sought and what conclusions are admissible.
Conflicts over safety are therefore not disputes about risk alone. They are struggles over which vision of the human person and social order gets to define what counts as harm. When these struggles are conducted through institutions that one coalition controls, and when that coalition presents its hero system as the neutral baseline from which all other positions deviate, the result is what Turner calls epistemic coercion and what Guldmann calls cultural oppression: the systematic denial of cognitive authority to legitimate claims because those claims presuppose a hero system the dominant coalition has decided does not count.
The people who pay the cost of this arrangement are those whose hero systems have been denied institutional recognition. They are not paying because their concerns are less real. They are paying because the coalition that controls admissible reality has decided, for reasons rooted in its own hero system, that their safety does not count as safety.
This is why the debate cannot be resolved by more evidence, better communication, or greater empathy within the existing framework. The framework itself is the problem. The framework presupposes a hierarchy of hero systems and then presents that hierarchy as rationality. Until the hierarchy is made visible, named for what it is, and subjected to the same scrutiny we apply to any other coalition’s management of admissible reality, the debate will continue to consume enormous energy while leaving the fundamental question unasked.
The fundamental question is this: whose hero system gets to define what counts as safety, and who authorized that choice?

Posted in Safety | Comments Off on Safety Is the Enforcement Language of a Hero System