Most people sense something is wrong.
They may not have language for it. They may not be able to explain it. But beneath the distractions, beneath the noise, beneath the endless scrolling and entertainment, there is a quiet unease — a feeling that something foundational has slipped.
We were told we were building the most advanced civilization in history. Scientific. Rational. Enlightened. Smarter than every generation that came before us.
So why does it feel so fragile?
For years, I believed the solution was better arguments. If something was wrong, it could be explained. If people misunderstood reality, clearer reasoning would fix it. If the culture drifted into confusion, the answer was more clarity.
I grew up believing in the power of direct language and linear logic. Declarative sentences. Cause and effect. If something was true, you could prove it.
But somewhere along the way, I began to notice that proof didn’t change much.

My father’s death was proof that unhappiness quickly kills a man
If you want to win a chess match, you have to play chess, not lecture the other players
Global warming or a new ice age? Anyone who claims to know is lying
One college senior explains financial facts to the Wall Street protesters
That huge fed debt increase? They’ve already used 60 percent of it
Pinning big hopes on Mitt Romney? He’s a hypocrite on ObamaCare
In the middle of world’s madness, happiness makes me think of her
To become a ‘runaway slave,’ you have to free your own thoughts
Loss of majestic tree in my yard feels like death of an old friend