The Long Game: Civilization & Work

Episode 12: The Empire without an Address

14 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Episode 12: The Empire without an Address

Descripción

What if the next empire never plants a flag? In this solo episode, Gregory Sparzo argues that for the first time in human history, civilizational power is decoupling from geography and natural resources, migrating instead into data, networks, and what he calls Metaphysical Sovereignty, the quiet control of the narratives that tell you who you are and what's worth wanting. Drawing on his forty-year journal of systems thinking, the Cathedral Memo, and the thinkers Carroll Quigley and John Glubb, Sparzo makes the case that you cannot march on a narrative and you cannot besiege an algorithm, and that this changes everything about how power must be understood and resisted. An invitation to cathedral builders who want to engineer a more humane future before the blunt tools are the only ones left on the table

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12 episodios

Portada del episodio Episode 12: The Empire without an Address

Episode 12: The Empire without an Address

What if the next empire never plants a flag? In this solo episode, Gregory Sparzo argues that for the first time in human history, civilizational power is decoupling from geography and natural resources, migrating instead into data, networks, and what he calls Metaphysical Sovereignty, the quiet control of the narratives that tell you who you are and what's worth wanting. Drawing on his forty-year journal of systems thinking, the Cathedral Memo, and the thinkers Carroll Quigley and John Glubb, Sparzo makes the case that you cannot march on a narrative and you cannot besiege an algorithm, and that this changes everything about how power must be understood and resisted. An invitation to cathedral builders who want to engineer a more humane future before the blunt tools are the only ones left on the table

Ayer14 min
Portada del episodio The Performance of Productivity and the Bullshit Jobs Epidemic

The Performance of Productivity and the Bullshit Jobs Epidemic

Gregory Sparzo’s text explores the modern phenomenon of "bullshit jobs, roles that lack meaningful purpose and exist primarily to serve internal bureaucratic needs or create the appearance of strategic value. Through the example of a corporate manager, the author illustrates how financialized capitalism prioritizes "productivity theater" over the creation of genuine value. These positions are categorized into types like flunkies, goons, and box-tickers, each functioning as a cog in a system that values perception and self-perpetuation. Professionals in these roles often face a painful dilemma, trading their intellectual integrity and skill development for high salaries and social status. Ultimately, the source argues that this misallocation of talent stems from a systemic shift where management for its own sake replaces actual production. This disconnection from purpose results in a hollowed-out economy that rewards performative labor while eroding the individual's sense of professional worth.

11 de jun de 202630 min
Portada del episodio Pruning Barren Systems

Pruning Barren Systems

The Fig Tree Strategy: Pruning Systems for Human Flourishing  The provided text argues that modern institutions—such as healthcare, education, and politics—often resemble the biblical fig tree, which possessed lush leaves but lacked actual fruit. The author contends that these systems maintain an outward appearance of success through metrics and mission statements while failing to provide genuine human flourishing. Rather than attempting to reform these barren structures through incremental changes, the text suggests a radical "theology of pruning" that involves cutting down failing systems to make room for new growth. This process requires withdrawing legitimacy from dysfunctional organizations and building alternative structures that prioritize people over profit or bureaucracy. Ultimately, the source advocates for truth-telling and disinvestment as necessary acts of mercy to prevent a total societal collapse.

4 de jun de 202643 min
Portada del episodio Why Smart Institutional Reforms Fail.

Why Smart Institutional Reforms Fail.

Systemic Redesign: Ackoff’s Methodology and Its Human Limits  We explore the intellectual transition from harmonizing different ideas to a more rigorous method called collision, which generates insights by highlighting where frameworks disagree. While Russell Ackoff’s systems thinking provides a vital methodology for redesigning failing institutions, the text argues that his approach is limited by unresolved tensions involving power, human cognition, and civilizational decay. By forcing Ackoff’s theories to impact the hard realities described by thinkers like Quigley, Kuhn, and Glubb, a more durable form of institutional design emerges. This "collision" reveals that any successful reform must account for human irrationality and the tendency for planning bodies to become stagnant obstaclesthemselves. Ultimately, the text advocates for Power Aware Design, an approach that treats systemic friction and the inevitability of corruption as primary constraints rather than secondary problems. This methodology rejects the tidy consensus of traditional synthesis in favor of a "Particle Accelerator" model that finds truth in high-energy intellectual conflict.

28 de may de 202626 min