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Browse all 66 articles across governance, urban systems, ecologies, and latitudes.

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governance

Blueprints and Blockades: Latin America's Planning Wins—and the Times They Were Stopped

Latin America did not lack planners or plans. It lacked uninterrupted time. Over the last century, the region produced sophisticated projects in transport, health, energy, and social protection. Many took root and quietly improved daily life. Others were intercepted—often by U.S. power, sometimes by U.S.-based firms—before they could mature.

Dec 4, 202524 min
governance

The Client Is the People: On Lawyers Who Mistake a President for a Republic

In the labyrinth of American law, the first wrong turn is often grammatical. Swap a singular for a plural—the President for the People—and a whole architecture shifts by degrees until courthouses feel like vestibules to a single man's will. What opens as error hardens into habit; what begins as advocacy calcifies into allegiance.

Nov 28, 202528 min
governance

What DOGE Actually Did: Ten Months of Fake Savings and Real Damage

What looks like subtraction is often scorched ground; what looks like reform is frequently a breach of law. Ten months in, DOGE's balance sheet is legible—and the arithmetic of claims versus facts reveals a permanent contest between institutions designed to be slow and appetites designed to perform.

Nov 23, 202535 min
urban systems

Zoning as Destiny: How Regulation Shapes American Cities

America's housing crisis, racial segregation, and climate challenges share a common origin: zoning laws written a century ago to exclude and divide.

Nov 21, 202514 min
governance

Fear, Trump, and the Edit: When One Splice Weaponizes an Entire Newsroom

A miscut speech, a $5 billion threat, and two resignations: how the BBC crisis reveals the asymmetric warfare against independent media. When power hunts for seams in newsroom armor, every error becomes a hostage situation—and even UK Labour ministers declare the BBC "must change."

Nov 15, 202527 min
governance

The Art of Witness: How Experts, Archives, and Doctrine Restored Indian Country

In American Indian law, the most transformative victories seldom arrive with parades. They arrive as sentences: "Congress has not said otherwise." Those sentences depend on an architecture—expert affidavits, maps, ledgers, and a disciplined order of proof—that turns memory into law.

Nov 14, 202512 min
ecologies

Urban Heat Islands: The Climate Crisis in Concrete

Cities are becoming furnaces. This essay traces how design, policy, and inequality create urban heat islands and proposes pragmatic, equity‑first interventions—shade, water, surface albedo, zoning reform, and community stewardship—to cool the most vulnerable neighborhoods.

Nov 14, 202515 min
governance

App-Store States: Platforms as Quasi-Governments

In the museum of code there is a wing where the labels feel like laws. Merchants line up with packages and petitions, and somewhere deep inside the glass, an algorithm arranges who may be seen, which is a form of sovereignty.

Nov 7, 202527 min
governance

The Care Grid: Treating Childcare and Eldercare as Infrastructure

Every city has a network you can't point to on a map. It runs under the hours of the day, not the streets. Treat care as a grid—with uptime targets, dispatch rules, and capacity planning—not as weather.

Nov 7, 202528 min
latitudes

Why Hispaniola Kept Changing Flags: Spain, France, and the Road to Haiti

The island we now call Haiti and the Dominican Republic did not change hands because monarchs were whimsical. It moved with the tides of European war, sugar profits, and administrative exhaustion. This essay untangles the geography, the names, and the power ledger behind Hispaniola's shifting flags.

Nov 7, 202516 min
urban systems

Stranded: Who Gets to Move

Public transportation is social infrastructure. How we design and fund it determines who can access jobs, education, and opportunity.

Nov 6, 202511 min
latitudes

The Spanish Echo in the Non-Spanish Caribbean

Spanish heritage did not disappear from the English-, French-, and Dutch-speaking Caribbean; it migrated into other rooms of the house. This essay maps the living echo through Trinidad's parang, Jamaica's Spanish Town, Belize's bilingual markets, and the ABC islands' Papiamento—arguing that these traces are not antiquarian curiosities but working infrastructures of cooperation.

Nov 5, 202525 min
latitudes

Ten Interventions That Bent a Hemisphere

Across the 20th century, U.S. covert and overt actions in Latin America traded short-term "stability" for long-term democratic fragility. From Guatemala's 1954 coup to Plan Colombia, the pattern is visible in declassified files: regime change at the top, mass graves at the bottom.

Nov 5, 202510 min
governance

The Harm in the Middle: How 'Both-Sideism' Is Strangling Independent, Critical Media

Both-sideism is not neutrality; it is a production method that assigns equal weight to unequal claims, awards airtime as if truth were a parity contract, and punishes outlets that test reality before publishing. In today's asymmetric politics, this method doesn't balance coverage—it subsidizes bad faith and bankrupts independent, critical media.

Nov 4, 202522 min
governance

Guardianship as Extraction: How Courts Dispossessed Native Wealth

In the American West, conquest moved indoors—into county probate courts. For Native families, the guardianship complex from 1890s-1950s didn't protect wealth; it redirected it through "approved" sales and fees that left wards with little more than a file.

Nov 3, 202512 min
latitudes

The Long Reverberation: How the Spanish Civil War and the Franco Years Shaped Latin America

The Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) did not end on the Jarama or the Ebro; it spilled across the Atlantic and took up residence in classrooms, publishing houses, barracks, parishes, ports, and party headquarters from Tijuana to Tierra del Fuego. The Franco regime that followed became, at once, a source of exiles who rebuilt Latin American culture and a distant mirror admired by certain strongmen. Out of that contradiction—a defeated republic fertilizing democratic life abroad, and a surviving dictatorship flattering authoritarian imaginations—Latin America inherited institutions, habits, and cautions that still matter. What follows is a map of those legacies: intellectual, diplomatic, cultural, migratory, and political.

Nov 2, 202526 min
latitudes

The Accidental Foundry: How Napoleon Broke Spanish America and Forged Latin America

Napoleon did not set out to invent Latin America. He wanted Europe, and the way to Europe ran through Madrid. Yet in toppling the Spanish monarchy, seizing Louisiana and flipping it to the United States, wrecking Spain's fleet, and turning sovereignty into a traveling mask with no face behind it, he shattered the imperial grammar that had ordered the New World for three centuries. From the shards came juntas, constitutions, caudillos, republics—an atlas of new futures. If Spain's empire died under French boots, Latin America learned to walk in the noise.

Nov 1, 202524 min
governance

After Ten Months: What We've Learned About Power, Policing, and the Word We Hesitate to Use

Ten months into Trump's second term, we have enough evidence to test the term "fascist" in practice. Not by tallying tweets, but by looking at state power: who it targets, how it moves, and what it leaves behind. Three arenas tell the story: immigration enforcement, elections, and deployments as leverage.

Oct 31, 202518 min
governance

Administrative Censorship: How Chilling Effects Spread

Censorship today arrives not in jackboots but in memos, forms, and pauses 'pending review.' This essay maps how administrative routines—procurement rules, complaint pathways, ambiguous guidance—convert discomfort into policy and policy into habit.

Oct 28, 202518 min
governance

Upstairs Subsidies: Bailouts, Class, and the American Idea of Capitalism

In U.S. crises, public money moves fastest through pipes that already exist for capital. Banks receive oxygen in hours; households receive forms. The result is a recovery that tilts upward. This essay maps the architecture of those upstairs subsidies, the class and political consequences, and a rescue design that stabilizes markets by stabilizing people.

Oct 26, 202522 min
governance

When Utilities Choose Governors

How physical systems—pipelines, grids, cables—shape political realities in American cities and define the geography of governance.

Oct 25, 20253 min
latitudes

The Labyrinth of Three Clocks: Venezuela 1998–2025

María Corina Machado's Nobel Peace Prize arrives as Venezuela navigates 27 years measured by three clocks: output, distribution, and rights. A data-driven narrative tracking boom, crash, and the quietest clock—democracy—that decides repair.

Oct 25, 202515 min
governance

The Textbook Wars

Texas HB 900 was struck down, but the machinery it set in motion—vendor pre-screening, procurement pressure, and quiet book removal—did not stop. This essay maps how procurement has become a side door for censorship and offers a counter-architecture to defend pedagogical choice.

Oct 24, 202520 min
latitudes

Medellín''s Miracle? Urban Design, Politics, and the Limits of Transformation

Once suffering extraordinarily high violence rates, Medellín remade itself through transit, public libraries, and public-space investments. This essay traces the politics, innovations, ambivalences, and lessons for U.S. cities seeking equitable urban transformation.

Oct 13, 202510 min
governance

After the Guns, the Gravity: Where Gaza Talks Stand—and How Trump Rewrote the Leverage

As of October 14, 2025, an American-brokered ceasefire is in effect. Phase 1 is happening; final status is not. The ceasefire is a door ajar, not a house built. This analysis examines what Trump delivered, what he left out, and what a reality-based settlement must do next.

Oct 9, 202518 min
governance

The Politics of a Name: What Trump's Columbus Day Proclamation Actually Teaches

A presidential proclamation does not rename a federal holiday; it performs it. Trump's 2025 Columbus Day proclamation rejects the dual-recognition posture of 2021–2024. Let's be precise about what changed, what didn't, and what a grown-up republic should do instead.

Oct 6, 202516 min
governance

Judicial Erasure: Deleting Spanish Land Rights

In recent years, the Supreme Court has asked judges to test certain rights and regulations against 'history and tradition.' The words feel neutral, even comforting—like walking the family farm before making a will. But methods make worlds. A jurisprudence that privileges a particular.

Oct 2, 202520 min
latitudes

America''s Other Founding: The Spanish Story

The most American thing about the United States is that we keep mistaking prologue for plot. We nod at Spain and Mexico in the opening credits, then hit fast-forward to railroads and robber barons. But the decisive drama—the social inventions, the legal improvisations, the urban.

Sep 29, 202528 min
latitudes

Why the U.S. Treats Latin America Differently

Walk into any American newsroom on a slow afternoon and point to a globe. Paris elicits sighs; Prague, a study-abroad anecdote; Berlin, a memory of train schedules that ran to the minute. Say Tegucigalpa, and the room tilts. Not hostility—just air pockets of unknowing.

Sep 25, 202526 min
urban systems

Vetocracy: Why America Can't Build

Every empire tells time with its roads. Rome had milestones; we have press releases. In 2021, Congress passed the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law—a vault of money large enough to make accountants need a hammock. The numbers are real; the cranes are not imaginary.

Sep 22, 202524 min
latitudes

The Hidden Hemisphere: How Spanish America Built the United States—and Why We Forgot

Every nation is a story told about land. The United States has preferred the tidy novella: thirteen British colonies, a heroic revolution, then Manifest Destiny. But walk any city with your ears on—Los Angeles, San Antonio, Santa Fe—and the place names remind you that the harmony was written in.

Sep 18, 202522 min
governance

The Bench of Mirrors: Conservative Judicial Activism and the Roberts Court

In American law, 'activist' is the powdered sugar we throw on the bench when we want to make someone else's footprints more visible than our own. Since the 1980s, the conservative legal movement has acted with strategic purpose—first under 'New Federalism,' then through the Roberts Court's project.

Sep 15, 202520 min
latitudes

Neighbors at Arm's Length: The Anti-Woke Turn and the Architecture of Democratic Distance

From Florida's classrooms to Hungary's parliament halls, the 'anti-woke' movement reveals itself as more than culture war—it's a systematic attempt to redesign the distance between citizen and state, neighbor and neighbor, in ways that fundamentally alter democratic participation across the.

Sep 11, 202522 min
latitudes

Pan‑American Solidarity: Shared Futures Across Hemispheres

Climate, migration, trade — the Americas are entwined. This essay argues that effective responses to shared crises require institutional designs that match hemispheric interdependence: joint infrastructure, finance, and democratic cooperation.

Sep 8, 202511 min
latitudes

The Forgotten Republics of Light: Reading America Through the Ghost of New Spain

Beneath every American highway lies the dust of empires that spoke in another grammar. The Spanish colonial past offers an alternative genealogy where identity was not binary but layered—a continental experiment from Florida to California that still defines our moral noon.

Sep 4, 202518 min
governance

Inventing Tradition: Originalism as Judicial Activism

Call it the constitutionalist's promise: decide by text, history, and structure rather than by vibe or partisan appetite. In principle, that's healthy. In practice, on the current Supreme Court, the methods deliver outcomes that lean the same direction over and over—and create a new vision of the.

Sep 1, 202518 min
governance

Three-Card Constitution: The Federalism Dodge

When the Court abandoned tiered scrutiny in Bruen and demanded that gun regulations match the Nation's historical tradition, it turned constitutional litigation into an antiquarian contest. This detailed analysis examines how specific doctrinal moves reshape the balance of constitutional power.

Aug 28, 202522 min
latitudes

The Double-Standard Doctrine

How Washington treats Europe like a roommate and Latin America like a distant cousin—and what it would take to change the house rules. An empire doesn't have to call itself an empire. Sometimes it just keeps two sets of house rules. When Europe coughs, the U.S. shows up with casseroles and cash.

Aug 25, 202521 min
latitudes

The De-Risked Hemisphere

Why Latin America's next boom is North America's best insurance policy. For two decades the world's factory pointed east by reflex. Then pandemics and geopolitics broke muscle memory. 'De-risking' entered the catechism, and procurement teams began measuring distance again—how far the ship must.

Aug 21, 202520 min
governance

The Shadow Budget: Donor-Advised Funds, Dark Money, and the Administrative Map of Power

The shadow budget is not crime; it is design—a way of cooling taxes while heating influence, upgrading donor optionality into campaign durability. From DAFs to c(4)s to administrative calendars, this is the atlas of a gradient most cities cannot see but all cities feel.

Aug 19, 202528 min
latitudes

Neighbors at Arm's Length

The double standard that warps U.S. policy toward Latin America—and how to fix it. Europe gets the Rules for Allies; Latin America gets the Rules for Neighbors. Here's a field guide to ending the whiplash.

Aug 18, 202518 min
governance

The Movement Tax: Noncompetes Cage Workers

Thirty million workers bound by noncompetes; one quarter licensed with credentials that won't cross state lines. These are not guardrails—they are tollgates. A Friction Index maps the cost of movement; a Mobility Atlas charts the reform.

Aug 17, 202525 min
latitudes

NAFTA's Second Act

A blueprint for a clean, fast, bilingual North American economy ahead of the 2026 USMCA review. Trade is a sentence written in verbs: make, certify, clear, deliver. For three decades, North America conjugated those verbs under NAFTA; in 2020 we swapped the grammar for USMCA and kept moving.

Aug 14, 202521 min
ecologies

The Water Barons: Drought as Market

Post-2026 Colorado River rules, a bilingual law of the ditch, and the cities that already know how to share. Every politics is water politics in disguise. Draw the United States by rivers and you get a biography of arguments: the Colorado's improbable slingshot through seven states and two nations;.

Aug 11, 202520 min
governance

The Landlord Leviathan: REITs, Private Equity, and the Price of Shelter

The landlord is no longer the woman downstairs with keys—it is a spreadsheet that lives in Delaware and dreams in waterfalls. When REITs and private equity own the marginal stock, rent becomes the solution to a covenant, not a neighborly bargain. A systems anatomy of financialized housing.

Aug 9, 202528 min
ecologies

Solar Sovereignty in the Mojave

Ecological development for the Sonoran century—north and south of the line. Stand on a clear night above the borderlands and you will see two kinds of

Aug 7, 202524 min
urban systems

The Shade Gap: Trees as Infrastructure

A solarpunk blueprint for America's hottest century—rights, rules, and the civic art of lowering the temperature. Here is the short version of the

Aug 4, 202520 min
governance

Shrink to Grow: The Buyback Paradox That Hollowed American Industry

Rule 10b-18 created a safe harbor for buybacks in 1982. What followed was not theft but diversion—each dollar buying back shares cannot build factories, train workers, or seed the future. A patient anatomy of the machine and the futures it withheld.

Aug 2, 202520 min
urban systems

Heat Commons

How a Spanish-American heat commons can save lives, redesign streets, and teach the republic courtesy. The map of summer is a moral document. It shows where trees stand, where pavements glare, where bus shelters exist because someone cared enough to draw a roof.

Jul 31, 202521 min
urban systems

The Rebuild: Infrastructure as Redistribution

What America's infrastructure actually looks like in 2025—three places, four programs, one honest ledger. We like to pretend infrastructure is a sequence of ribbon cuttings—the pure joy of scissors through satin. In reality, it's a ledger written in three inks: authorizations (Congress),.

Jul 28, 202519 min
governance

The Shadow Official Language: Spanish in Court

Why a bilingual republic is good law, good engineering, and the cheapest reform we haven't finished. Walk the United States with your ears open and you'll hear what the Census writes in ledgers: nearly one in five people speaks a language other than English at home—Spanish by far the most.

Jul 24, 202516 min
governance

Reclaiming the Commons: Public Space as Power

Land grants, acequias, and the quiet path to Spanish-American co-stewardship. Every country carries an official fiction about who first drew the lines. In the American Southwest, the neatest fiction says the United States arrived to find a blank ledger, then wrote order into wilderness.

Jul 21, 202518 min
governance

The Price of Roots: Licensing Immobility

Thirty million Americans are bound by noncompete clauses; one in four workers faces licensing barriers. These restraints suppress wages, block entrepreneurship, and turn exit into a debt event. The fix: ban broad restraints, price the narrow ones, port credentials.

Jul 20, 202515 min
governance

The Buyback Standard: How Rule 10b-18 Turned Markets Into One-Way ATMs

A 1982 SEC safe harbor made buybacks routine. Today they move hundreds of billions quarterly, driven by EPS targets and executive comp—with thin disclosure and lopsided gains. The tool isn't the problem; the incentives and opacity are.

Jul 19, 202516 min
governance

The Shadow Constitution: Administrative Law

How Spain and France still shape American rights—if you know where to look. Every legal system keeps a diary and a dream. Ours files the diary under 'common law' and the dream under 'the Constitution.' But across the South and West there is a third ledger—stamped in Spanish and French—that still.

Jul 17, 202517 min
governance

Six Votes: The Supreme Court Revolution

The Roberts Court before and after 2020—how a jurisprudence of 'tradition' remapped power, rights, and the administrative state. Historians will draw a clean fold in the timeline of the Roberts Court. On one side (2005–2019): incrementalism with sharp elbows.

Jul 14, 202524 min
governance

Power Lines as Colonial Control

Puerto Rico's democracy, bankruptcy, and the grid that could teach the mainland how to heal. If you want to see the United States without makeup, fly to San Juan and wait for the lights to flicker. In that twitch you can read the whole civics lesson: a people who are citizens without a presidential.

Jul 10, 202520 min
governance

Brackeen: The Case Against Tribal Sovereignty

Louisiana v. Callais and the quiet attempt to end Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Some revolutions arrive as fireworks. Others arrive as docket numbers. Louisiana v. Callais is the latter—a case that began as a fight over one congressional map and swelled into a vehicle that could cripple or.

Jul 7, 202519 min
governance

The Language Penalty: Speaking Spanish Costs Power

How to run elections, permits, and emergencies in two languages—and why it makes a republic smarter. Every morning, millions of Americans begin their day in Spanish and end it in English (or vice versa). The republic is bilingual in fact, yet too many of our most consequential interactions with.

Jul 3, 202518 min
governance

The Profit-Price Channel: How Market Power Turns Shocks into Inflation

Between what we pay and what it cost to make runs a corridor of hidden doors—contracts, fees, platforms, habits—where a quiet arithmetic decides how much of a shock becomes a price and how much becomes a profit. The profit-price channel, mapped with equations and evidence.

Jul 1, 202525 min
governance

The Activist Card: Judicial Hypocrisy

Conservative judging since the 1980s—and the paradox of a movement that won by denouncing its own reflection. The term 'judicial activism' is the judiciary's favorite insult and our public square's dullest knife. Everyone uses it to describe the decisions they don't like; few define it before.

Jun 30, 202522 min
governance

The Activists Who Said They Weren't

How a conservative legal movement rewrote American law from the 1980s to today. For forty years, the conservative legal movement has sold a deceptively simple ethic: judges should interpret, not make, the law. The method was restraint; the result was revolution.

Jun 26, 202522 min
governance

The Archive: Spanish Records Prove Native Claims

Building the bilingual memory infrastructure the United States forgot it needed. A country that cannot search its past will mis-govern its future. Ours keeps half its memory in another language—acequia minutes, merced deeds, mission ledgers, notarial protocols, diseños, parish censuses—a.

Jun 23, 202523 min
urban systems

New Orleans and the Cities That Could Have Been

Cities are usually born of stubbornness or luck; New Orleans was born of geometry. A kink in the Mississippi offered a natural levee and a commanding bend—close enough to the Gulf to smell salt, far enough upriver to dodge the worst of the waves. That curve made the city a hinge between the.

Jun 19, 202532 min
latitudes

The Atlantic Speaks Two Languages

The future likes to hide in plain geography. One shore is Spain: reforming, digitizing, and growing faster than its neighbors, with a power grid now majority-renewable. The other shore is Latin America: a continent of copper and code, lithium and logistics.

Jun 16, 202526 min
latitudes

Madrid After Miami: How Spain Can Become the Hemisphere''s Other Capital

For a generation, Miami has styled itself the 'capital of Latin America'—a boast stitched from air routes, private-banking ledgers, and the glow of Spanish-language studios on the Palmetto. The proposition of this essay is not to deny that reality but to widen the map: Spain can shoulder a.

Jun 12, 202528 min