Daily Archives: January 19, 2026

White Paper: Protocol Misalignment and Reciprocal Signaling Failure: Why London Policing Breaks Down When Geneva Logic Is Applied to Domestic Diaspora Conflict

Executive Summary Recent conflicts surrounding Persian-diaspora protests in London reveal a systemic failure rooted not in police capacity, intent, or professionalism, but in category error. The Metropolitan Police have attempted to manage diaspora protest behavior as though it were governed … Continue reading

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White Paper: Open Doors and Quiet Signals: The Role of Openness Cues in Reducing Awkwardness and Friction in Shared Spaces

Abstract Shared spaces rely on informal signaling systems to regulate access, privacy, and coordination without constant verbal negotiation. When these signals are absent, ambiguous, or suppressed, individuals are forced into unnecessary decision-making under uncertainty, often resulting in social awkwardness, hesitation, … Continue reading

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White Paper: Consequences On Iranian IT Staff For Security Breaches

When a high-profile security breach occurs within the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), the internal fallout for the IT and technical staff is often severe. Because the state views its broadcast signal as a critical tool for national security … Continue reading

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Attention as Moral Stewardship

Attention is often treated as neutral—a passive faculty that simply follows interest. In reality, attention is neither passive nor neutral. It is a moral act, exercised under constraint, and shaped by what we believe matters. To attend is to confer … Continue reading

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