In the past, the soul of an empire might have been driven by a vision of collective flourishing—by ideals of excellence and human potential. But today, that soul feels drained, reduced to extraction and stagnation. Whether at the top or the bottom, people are just grasping for whatever they can, while the grand promise of a shared future fades. Without a deeper purpose or a renewal of that striving, all we get is a hollow cycle of taking and waiting.
The Modern Sovereign
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Love, Power, and Collapse: A Theory of Western Civilization
A Study Analysis Based on the Seminal Texts of the Western Canon
Introduction
Western civilization is not a static tradition but a living argument - a series of competing answers to fundamental questions about what drives human existence, how power should be organized, and what holds a society together. This analysis synthesizes the ideas discussed across five cornerstone texts: Homer’s Iliad, Virgil’s Aeneid, Plato’s Republic, the Bible, and Dante’s Divine Comedy. Together, these works trace an arc through Western thought in which the central organizing force of civilization shifts repeatedly - from love, to duty, to faith, to reason, and finally toward something yet to be named.
The Iliad: Love as the Primal Force
Homer’s Iliad is often reduced to a war epic, but its deepest argument is about love as the driving force of the universe. It is not strategy or ideology that shapes the war’s most pivotal moments - it is grief, attachment, and the love between human beings.
Achilles withdraws from battle not out of political calculation but out of wounded pride and, more deeply, love - a love that fully reveals itself only when his closest companion Patroclus is killed by Hector. His return to battle is an act of love expressed through rage and vengeance. He kills Hector and then, in one of antiquity’s most disturbing displays of grief, desecrates the body by dragging it around Troy’s walls.
Yet the poem’s most profound moment is not that violence. It is when King Priam - father of Hector, enemy of Achilles - crosses enemy lines alone, enters Achilles’ tent, and kneels before the man who killed his son. He kisses the hands of his son’s killer. And they weep together. In that moment, love dissolves the boundary between enemy and enemy. Shared grief becomes shared humanity. The Iliad ends not in triumph, but in tears - two men holding each other’s pain.
The thesis is clear: love is the most fundamental force in human experience, capable of transcending war, hatred, and grief.
The Aeneid: Duty Over Love - The Foundation of Empire
Virgil’s Aeneid takes the love-centered worldview of Homer and deliberately subordinates it. Aeneas is a man who feels deeply - his love for Dido, the Carthaginian queen, is real and passionate - but he abandons her because duty and piety to Rome demand it. The gods command him to found an empire, and he obeys.
Dido, left behind, kills herself.
Aeneas sails on.
This is not presented as tragedy in the Iliad sense. Virgil frames it as heroism - the ability to master personal love and desire in service of a higher institutional order. The Aeneid is, in effect, the founding document of a civilization that places law, order, and institutional authority above individual feeling.
This shift - from love as the highest force to duty as the highest force - becomes the template for Rome and, through Rome, for the Catholic Church. The idea that you subordinate yourself to a higher authority, whether emperor or God, becomes the cornerstone of Western institutional life for centuries.
Plato’s Republic: Justice, Power, and the Anatomy of Tyranny
Plato’s Republic, written through the voice of Socrates, offers the West’s first systematic political philosophy - and one of its most unsettling diagnoses of how freedom collapses into oppression.
Plato traces a descent through political systems: from aristocracy to timocracy to oligarchy to democracy to tyranny. Democracy, in his view, is not a stable endpoint but a transitional phase characterized by radical freedom and the pursuit of pleasure without restraint. The democratic character becomes hedonistic - everyone chasing their own desires, no hierarchy of values, no common virtue. Society becomes ungoverned appetite.
This disorder creates the conditions for tyranny. The tyrant emerges as a liberator, promising to free the oppressed - particularly enslaved people and the poor - from the grip of the wealthy oligarchs. The people support him. But once in power, the tyrant simply replaces one form of domination with another. Those he freed from the wealthy become enslaved to him. The liberation is a lie - a complete reversal that leaves people in the same chains, under a new master.
Plato’s most devastating insight is about the tyrant’s personal life. Despite holding absolute power, the tyrant is the most miserable of all people - paranoid, surrounded by enemies, unable to trust anyone, living in constant fear of assassination. He has everything and is enslaved to everything. His life is the polar opposite of the stability he promised.
The tyrannical character, Plato argues, is essentially the criminal type scaled up. The same lawless desires, the same disregard for justice, the same willingness to take whatever is wanted - just with the machinery of state behind it. Power does not change the character; it amplifies it.
This analysis resonates powerfully today. When democratic institutions hollow out - when the work ethic degrades into grift, when trust collapses and everything feels like a Ponzi scheme - Plato’s warning becomes urgent again.
The Bible: Individual Conscience and the Inward Turn
If the Aeneid represents the civilization of external obedience, the Bible - particularly through its reception in the Protestant Reformation - represents a radical turn inward. With the invention of the printing press by Gutenberg, ordinary people gained access to scripture directly. No longer dependent on institutional intermediaries to interpret God’s word, individuals were called to read, reflect, and form their own relationship with the divine.
This produced two profound consequences for Western civilization.
First, it created the Protestant work ethic - the idea that one’s labor and conduct in the world were expressions of inner virtue and signs of divine favor. Diligence, discipline, and individual responsibility became spiritual values, laying the groundwork for capitalism and modern economic life.
Second, it elevated individual conscience as the highest moral authority. Martin Luther’s “Here I stand, I can do no other” is the defining declaration: not the Pope, not the Church, not tradition - but the individual’s relationship with God and truth. This is the seed of liberalism, democracy, and eventually the Enlightenment.
The Bible, understood through this lens, is a pivot point - the moment Western civilization begins its long shift from collective obedience to individual sovereignty.
Dante’s Divine Comedy: Love Restored as the Cosmic Principle
Dante’s Divine Comedy completes the arc that Homer began. Written in the 14th century, it is a journey through Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise - and its animating force is love. Specifically, Dante’s love for Beatrice, a real woman who died young and whom Dante immortalized as a figure of divine grace, guides him through the entire cosmos.
What makes Dante’s use of love so significant is its context. He is writing in the shadow of Virgilian Rome and the Catholic Church - both systems built on hierarchy, obedience, and institutional authority. Yet love - personal, particular, transformative love - is what gives him access to truth. It is not reason alone, not obedience alone, but love that opens the gates of understanding.
At the end of the Paradiso, Dante describes the love that moves the sun and other stars - l’amor che move il sole e l’altre stelle - as the ultimate foundation of all reality. Love is not merely a human emotion; it is the structure of the universe.
This is Homer’s thesis returned, elevated, and placed within a Christian metaphysical framework. The Iliad showed love as the force that breaks through even war and hatred between enemies. Dante shows love as the force that moves the cosmos itself.
The Larger Arc: A Theory of Western Civilization
Taken together, these five texts reveal a recurring cycle in Western civilization - a pattern in which love is displaced by power and obedience, then recovers itself, only to be displaced again.
The Iliad establishes love as foundational. The Aeneid suppresses it in favor of duty and empire. Plato diagnoses how power corrupts - how democracy’s freedom becomes disorder, and disorder becomes tyranny. The Bible restores the individual as a moral agent, but eventually that individualism gets captured by new systems - Enlightenment rationalism, then capitalism, then the ideology of progress and technology. Dante restores love as the cosmic principle, but his synthesis is temporary; the Reformation and modernity fragment it again.
Where are we now? The current phase of Western civilization resembles what Plato described: a democratic culture that has become hedonistic and disordered, increasingly susceptible to grift, manipulation, and hollow spectacle. The attention economy harvests human consciousness at scale, colonizing the very faculty - focused, conscious attention - that is necessary for moral life, love, and genuine connection. Everything risks becoming a deepfake, a performance, a Ponzi scheme.
The question Quigley raised in Tragedy and Hope - whether Western civilization can reinvent itself again - becomes pressing. If the historical pattern holds, what comes next may be a recovery of something like what the Iliad and Dante both pointed toward: love, genuine attention to the other, and the willingness to be present to shared grief and shared joy.
The answer may not come from institutions or ideologies. It may come from individuals who choose, against the grain of a distracted world, to pay attention - to reclaim their awareness from systems designed to exploit it, and to direct it toward what actually matters.
Conclusion
Western civilization has never been a single thing. It is an argument carried across millennia, expressed through texts that ask the same questions over and over: What is the highest force? What is justice? What destroys a civilization from within, and what can save it?
The answers these five texts give - across thousands of years - converge on something surprising and consistent. Love is not a weakness or a sentiment. It is the most powerful and stabilizing force available to human beings. When it is suppressed by power, obedience, or disordered appetite, civilization enters crisis. When it is recovered - as it was at the end of the Iliad, and at the heart of Dante’s cosmos - something essential is restored.
The next stage of Western civilization may depend on whether enough people can resist the hijacking of their attention long enough to remember that.
#WesternCivilization
What is the point of having international law and war crimes on the books?
People who make decisions should share in the risks those decisions create.
If they don’t, bad incentives appear.
Operate within your circle of competence.
That means knowing the difference between what you truly understand and what you can merely repeat. Real competence comes from experience, study, trial and error, and skin in the game. It’s slow-earned. It’s quiet. It’s durable.
“Chauffeur knowledge,” on the other hand, is borrowed understanding. The term comes from a story often told by Charlie Munger about a physicist who gave the same lecture so many times that his chauffeur memorized it word for word. The chauffeur could deliver the speech flawlessly — but when a real expert asked a technical question, the difference between performance and understanding became obvious.
In a world of podcasts, highlight clips, and AI summaries, it’s easy to mistake fluency for mastery. Being able to explain something at a surface level isn’t the same as being able to navigate nuance, uncertainty, or tough follow-up questions.
Stay in your lane. Expand your circle deliberately. Admit what you don’t know. Depth compounds. Pretending does not.
Tell me your thoughts on this hypothesis. The long‑term 200‑week average is like Bitcoin’s gravitational pull — price may gyrate violently above and below it in the short term, but historically cycle bottoms form around it. The fact this cycle’s retracement has hugged that line — rather than falling far below like deep panics of old — suggests you’re not seeing a broken cycle, you’re seeing a different flavor of correction. No euphoric top, shallower retracement, but still respecting long‑term structure. #Bitcoin #StackSats #ChangeTheMoney… 

A lot of people don’t feel “angry” so much as disconnected right now. Groceries are eating up household budgets, eating out has become a luxury, bars and restaurants are empty, and yet we’re told inflation is low and the economy is strong. That disconnect matters. When people no longer believe that working hard, budgeting responsibly, and playing by the rules will translate into a better life, they stop feeling invested in the system itself. You can handle hardship; it’s much harder to handle being gaslit while living it.
The danger isn’t immediate chaos — it’s quiet withdrawal. Families cut back, stay home, lose trust, and disengage while institutions insist nothing is wrong. Previous generations benefited from a system that rewarded stability and shifted risk abroad; today’s families absorb the volatility and are told to simply try harder. Desperation doesn’t always look like riots — it looks like people checking out. And when enough people stop believing the system works for them, the long-term consequences are far more destabilizing than any short-term crisis.
This timeline is getting more and more interesting.
How can we prepare for what’s ahead?
#Bitcoin
Prices keep rising but it feels like everything is getting noticeably worse. This is empire in decline.
The Complex Legacy of Ancel Keys’ Seven Countries Study
In the mid-20th century, Ancel Keys’ Seven Countries Study was groundbreaking, proposing a link between saturated fat intake and heart disease. However, over time, it’s become evident that the study may have been influenced by confirmation bias. Keys focused on countries that supported his hypothesis, while overlooking other populations where high saturated fat diets didn’t lead to heart disease.
In contrast, researchers like Weston Price, George Mann, and Vilhjálmur Stefánsson demonstrated that traditional, animal-based diets, rich in healthy fats, could support vibrant health. These cultures, free from refined sugars and processed foods, exhibited low rates of chronic diseases. Their findings underscore the importance of whole, unprocessed foods in promoting long-term health.
In essence, while the Seven Countries Study laid the groundwork for dietary guidelines, it’s crucial to consider the broader picture. The work of Price, Mann, and Stefánsson reminds us that diet is complex, and that the quality of food matters just as much, if not more, than the macronutrient composition alone. #FiatFood 

In the epic saga of the Iliad, the Trojan War ignites from a single, fateful act: Paris, the Trojan prince, travels to Sparta and, driven by desire, takes Helen, the queen of Sparta, back to Troy. This abduction, a breach of hospitality and honor, becomes the underlying catalyst for the monumental conflict. In an attempt to avoid widespread bloodshed, the Greeks and Trojans agree to a duel between Paris and Menelaus, hoping to resolve the conflict man-to-man.
This story, rooted in the struggle for Helen, reflects a timeless theme: the pursuit of supremacy and the value placed on individuals, especially women, as symbols of power and prestige. And even today, these themes resonate in our own stories and conflicts, showing how the quest for power and the dynamics of love and honor remain ever-present. 

Have we been in a bear market all year? #Bitcoin
Rethinking Consumer Purchases: The Time-Earning Perspective
In our fast-paced world, it’s easy to view purchases simply in terms of dollars and cents. But what if we shifted our perspective and considered how much time it takes to earn that money instead? This mindset, often referred to as the “time-money” perspective, can profoundly influence our spending habits. When we start measuring the cost of an item in terms of the hours we need to work to afford it, we become more mindful of our purchases.
This shift in perspective can lead to a lower time preference, meaning we prioritize long-term satisfaction over immediate gratification. It encourages us to be more intentional with our money, reducing impulsive spending and fostering a deeper appreciation for the value of our time. Ultimately, this approach not only leads to better financial decisions but also promotes a healthier relationship with consumption and time. #Bitcoin
In Aldous Huxley’s “Brave New World,” the government exerts control on a biological level, meticulously engineering and conditioning individuals from birth. This creates a rigid caste system where winners and losers are predetermined by their genetic makeup. In contrast, in our own world, the government often chooses winners and losers on an economic and financial level. Through policies like bailouts, preferential interest rates, and the Cantillon effect, those with early access to capital or influence can shape the economic landscape in their favor. Both scenarios highlight how power, whether biological or economic, can fundamentally shape human destinies, raising important questions about freedom and fairness. #Bitcoin 

Is Bitcoin Entering a Bear Market?
Recent trends suggest that Bitcoin’s historical pattern of three green yearly candles followed by one red could be playing out again. With three consecutive bullish years behind us, many analysts are predicting a potential red year ahead, signaling the start of a bear market. This idea is reinforced by Bitcoin’s sideways price movement and its underperformance compared to gold, which suggests that bullish momentum is waning.
However, we invite you to challenge this perspective! Could we be on the brink of an extended bull cycle instead? Or have market cycles as we know them become a thing of the past? #Bitcoin 
