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Absolute Proof There is a God
Absolute Proof There is a God
By James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
The whole thing started with a simple, non‑religious question directed at scientists: If something cannot be created from nothing, how do you explain that anything exists at all? It’s the most basic question a person can ask. And the truth is, science has no answer. Scientists aren’t even looking for one. They study what exists, but they don’t explain why anything exists in the first place.
Real World Facts About AI
Real World Facts About AI
By James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Much of the current discussion about artificial intelligence assumes it will remake employment, culture, and daily life in decisive ways. The record so far suggests otherwise. The displacement that has occurred has been concentrated inside the technology sector itself—the very industry that produces these systems. Broader unemployment figures reflect a longer-running economic contraction, one that official statistics have been adjusted to obscure. Policymakers have treated the management of public expectations as a necessary tool of economic management. When citizens believe conditions are stable, they continue to spend. When they do not, they conserve. The preservation of spending has therefore taken precedence over transparent measurement.
SOCIAL MEDIA OUTGREW ITSELF
–SOCIAL MEDIA OUTGREW ITSELF
How Social Media and AI Entered a Self‑Inflicted Collapse of Architecture, Metrics, and Meaning
By James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Social media and AI systems are collapsing for structural reasons. The architecture they were built on no longer matches the environment they operate in. The incentives that drive them no longer match the architecture. The reporting that describes them no longer matches the reality underneath. These systems continue to function because large systems decay slowly, but the internal structure is failing in ways that cannot be reversed.
The collapse began when content volume exceeded the system’s design limits. The platforms were built for scarcity and now operate under conditions of infinite supply. Classification accuracy falls as volume rises. Ranking systems degrade. The system saturates and stays saturated. Nothing in the original design anticipated a world where machines could generate more content in a day than humans produced in a decade. The platforms are now drowning in their own input.
Recommendation engines were built to read human signals. They now read machine noise. The signal‑to‑noise ratio collapses. The algorithm thrashes because it has no stable target. It oscillates between incompatible priorities and never settles. Synthetic output contaminates the training data. Each iteration is worse than the last. The decline is baked in because the system is now training on its own exhaust.
Engagement metrics no longer describe anything real. Bots inflate impressions. Crawlers inflate views. Synthetic retention distorts the numbers. Platforms treat machine activity as market activity and bill advertisers for engagement that has no economic meaning. The reporting layer detaches from the operating layer. The numbers continue upward while the system underneath weakens. The illusion of growth is maintained by counting activity that does not exist in any meaningful sense.
Revenue becomes circular. AI startups buy compute from cloud providers. Cloud providers report revenue growth. Cloud providers fund AI labs. AI labs buy more compute. No external demand is required. The loop creates the appearance of growth. The earnings are circular and self‑referential. The sector becomes a closed financial ecosystem where money moves but value does not.
Cloud divisions count internal workloads as revenue. AI divisions consume compute without market validation. Internal usage is reported as external demand. This inflates earnings and hides stagnation. The accounting layer diverges from economic reality. The divergence grows each quarter. The system looks healthy on paper because it is billing itself for its own consumption.
Platforms begin generating their own content. They produce summaries, clips, and derivatives. Creators are displaced. The platform consumes itself. Native content declines. Synthetic content increases. The system becomes a closed loop where the platform feeds itself its own output. Discovery collapses. Redundancy increases. Quality falls. The platform becomes a machine that recycles its own material until nothing original remains.
Ad markets distort in the same way. Platforms buy ads from each other. This creates artificial demand. Advertisers are billed for synthetic impressions. The ad market becomes circular. The numbers remain high. The underlying activity weakens. The system reports strength while losing substance. The economic signals are no longer connected to economic reality.
Algorithms shift from discovery to containment. External links are suppressed. Outbound traffic declines. Independent sites lose visibility. The open web contracts. Search quality declines. Recommendation quality declines. Navigation collapses. The platforms become closed systems that no longer serve the purpose they were built for. They trap users inside shrinking loops of recycled content because sending traffic outward no longer aligns with internal incentives.
Institutional drift completes the process. Platforms optimize for advertisers, regulators, and internal AI divisions. Users are no longer part of the equation. Narrative maintenance replaces performance. Reporting becomes a communication strategy. Metrics become a story. The institution drifts away from its original function and does not return. The system continues to operate, but not for the reasons it was created.
The platforms remain large. The metrics remain high. The activity remains measurable. The internal integrity declines. The system becomes hollow. The structure persists while the function collapses. This is how large systems fail. Not with a crash. Not with a crisis. They fail by continuing to operate long after they have ceased to work.
How to Succeed in Life
How to Succeed in Life
By James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
.Years ago, I spent several years teaching high school math and economics. My approach was always the same: take any problem, strip it down to its simplest parts, and find the root cause. Teenagers all face the same basic obstacles, no matter who they are. If they don’t learn to overcome those obstacles, nothing else works. Over time, I boiled it down to three things any human being can do. If a person does these three things, he gives himself the best possible chance of succeeding at whatever path he chooses.
After the Ceasefire: The Gathering Storm
After the Ceasefire: The Gathering Storm
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
The formal end of the war settles nothing. It merely clears the ground for the next round of fighting to begin with almost no interval. Hatred of Israel already runs vast and deep throughout the Middle East. The conflict has raised that hatred to a pitch never recorded before. At the same time, the war has planted the seeds of open contempt for Israel in capitals and streets far beyond the region. That contempt has not yet found its full expression, but the conditions for it are now in place and will not remain dormant.
The Social Media Forest No One Sees
The Social Media Forest No One Sees
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
How social media turned a nation into resources waiting for instructions
Social media today looks like a forest where everyone stares at the trees and no one notices the forest as a whole. People see the posts, the comments, the videos, the arguments, the trends, the influencers, the ads, the noise. What they do not see is the structure that holds it all together. They do not see how the forest grew, how it changed, or how it turned from a place where people shared ideas into a place where people are shaped by ideas they never chose. The forest is the story. The trees are just the distractions.
The High Cost of Silencing People
The High Cost of Silencing People
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Censorship has always been sold as a public good, but it has never been anything more than a private benefit. The pattern is consistent across time and geography. A small group gains short‑term advantage by controlling what people can see, say, or hear, and the rest of society pays the long‑term price. The modern examples are not new. They are simply more visible because the information system is larger, faster, and more centralized than at any point in history.
The Quillian Healthcare Plan: A Return to Reality
The Quillian Healthcare Plan: A Return to Reality
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Insurance is not healthcare. It is an added layer of cost that sits between the patient and the provider. The Affordable Care Act is not healthcare either. It is life‑management legislation wrapped around skimming opportunities for the corporations and lobbying groups that helped write it. It is a corporate bonanza sold as compassion. None of this has improved outcomes. The national death rate is climbing, and it is climbing for a reason.
Executive Orders and the Quiet Drift Toward Dictatorship
Executive Orders and the Quiet Drift Toward Dictatorship
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Executive orders were never meant to steer the country. They were housekeeping tools, nothing more than internal instructions for managing the executive branch. They were never designed to replace legislation or stand in for the constitutional process. That narrow purpose has been swallowed by political convenience. The Constitution never grants a president the power to legislate by decree. Executive orders survive only on the thin claim that a president must “take care that the laws be faithfully executed.” That clause was meant to enforce law, not invent it.
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Cuba’s Reforms and the Real Forces Shaping Its Future
Cuba’s Reforms and the Real Forces Shaping Its Future
James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Allowing foreign investors to buy stakes in Cuban companies and opening the door to private banking are exactly the kinds of openings U.S. interests have pushed for. Cuba is no military threat. The issue has always been access and influence. A weakened Cuba is easier to reshape, and the end result usually looks like a command economy where a small elite captures the benefits. That’s the American model now. We call it a free market, but political power has replaced price as the mechanism that decides who gets what. A thing is what it does, not what it calls itself.
That’s the point I made in my earlier article, “The Salvation of Cuba.” The United States is defined as a republic, but it hasn’t functioned like one in a long time. Citizens get surface‑level information while anything meaningful is tucked out of sight. People trade freedom for comfort, and once comfort settles in, the appetite for reform disappears. That’s how a republic drifts into a political marketplace.
Cuba sits on the opposite end of the same problem. Its economy is failing because command systems always fail. Nothing improves until free markets appear, and free markets cannot exist without at least a few democratic principles standing guard. Democracy and free markets can be corrupted—as we see in the United States—but in Cuba they are simply absent.
The irony is that Cuba could be better off almost overnight if even a sliver of free‑market behavior were allowed. The demand is there. The supply is not. Cuba is in a perfect position to satisfy consumer needs that go unmet everywhere else. They could build basic cars designed to be repaired instead of discarded. They could build simple smartphones that aren’t loaded with corporate clutter. Linux is free. A Cuban‑built phone that does the essentials well would sell faster than they could make them.
In short, Cuba could manufacture the very items of high utility that are intentionally kept off the American market. The world is hungry for practical goods. Cuba could feed that hunger if it chose to.
But corruption is the wall they keep hitting. All governments are corrupt to some degree—power does that—but Cuba’s leadership holds nearly total power over its citizens. When power approaches 100%, corruption follows right behind it. Absolute power still behaves the
Trump’s Ego Projects and the Problem of Self‑Made Legacy
Trump’s Ego Projects and the Problem of Self‑Made Legacy
James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
People keep calling these things “ego projects,” but the comparison to earlier presidents shows why they stand out. Washington, Lincoln, and the others never built monuments to themselves. They didn’t name buildings after themselves, and they didn’t stage big personal displays. Whatever honor they received came later, from people who appreciated them after they were gone. That’s how respect usually works.
The Declining Economics of Surveillance in a Bored‑Tech World
The Declining Economics of Surveillance in a Bored‑Tech World
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Surveillance was once the economic engine of the tech industry. The model was simple: collect the data, predict the behavior, and sell the attention. For a time, it worked extraordinarily well. But the world has changed. The public is bored with tech, immune to ads, and increasingly distrustful of government. Surveillance still exists, but its economic value is collapsing, and that collapse is the real story the industry avoids discussing.
The Unseen Force Behind Power
The Unseen Force Behind Power: When Behavior at the Top Stops Making SenseThe Unseen Force Behind Power|
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
Every era leaves clues about what is really happening at the top of the system. Not the official explanations, not the press releases — the behavior. And lately, the behavior of the upper tiers of government, finance, and media has taken on a strange, contradictory quality. Leaders take positions that make no sense. Long‑standing allies turn on one another. Congress drifts into paralysis. Markets float above reality as if gravity has been suspended. Agencies behave as if they answer to no one. The public is not just uninformed — it is non‑attached, as if watching a show that no longer concerns them.
Frederick Douglass and the Discipline of Freedom
Frederick Douglass and the Discipline of Freedom
James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
I was born on Emancipation Day. Maybe that explains my interest in Black history, though the truth is simpler. It came from my father, Roy Quillian Jr. He was a brilliant engineer and a twenty‑five‑year vice president at Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. He held a security clearance and testified before congressional committees, and I knew none of this when I was young. To me, he was just Dad, the man who could fix anything. We weren’t wealthy. Engineers in those days were modestly paid. But he carried a level of competence that didn’t need to be advertised.
Why Marijuana Laws Fail
Why Marijuana Laws Fail: A Natural‑Law Look at Behavior, Enforcement, and Public Tolerance
By James Quillian,Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law
For a law to function, a large share of the population must be genuinely offended by the behavior the law is supposed to prevent. Without that, the law becomes a symbol rather than a tool. Marijuana prohibition has lived in that symbolic category for decades. Half the country already supports legalization. The half that opposes it is not actually disturbed by the behavior itself. That is the fatal weakness.

