Archive
Browse all 5 articles across governance, urban systems, ecologies, and latitudes.
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.
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.
When Utilities Choose Governors
How physical systems—pipelines, grids, cables—shape political realities in American cities and define the geography of 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.
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.