The Justice Threshold: Epstein Scandal as Humanity’s Point of No Return

The seed is planted—now we watch humanity choose its timeline. The last several years have served as a prelude, a global dress rehearsal for a moment of decision that is far more definitive than any public health mandate. If the “pandemic” was the initial test of our cognitive liberty and our willingness to submit to the “official lie,” then the unveiling of the Jeffrey Epstein scandal and the release of […] Read more »

The Elephant in the Sanctuary: Logos Unites What Ethos Divides

Churches as sovereign nations: bound by truth, free in custom. The historical and theological lineage of the western church, particularly the Catholic church, offers a fascinating case study in the relationship between truth and tradition. Theoretically, Rome stands as a unique extension of Athens in the mythology and philosophy of the West, absorbing the Greek understanding of the Logos while holding a direct historical link to the apostles and their […] Read more »

Worldly Ethos and the Reversal of the Burden of Proof

By seeking judgment from the world, you consent to its jurisdiction. Here’s how to withdraw that consent forever. *Note: It may be helpful to read my previous article first, Logos vs Worldly Ethos, Christ vs Anti-Christ, prior to reading this one, although it is not necessary. As rhetorical devices from Greek philosophy, ethos establishes credibility through authority and character, pathos persuades through emotional resonance, and logos convinces through an appeal to reason and objective truth. While a society […] Read more »

Logos vs the World’s Ethos, Christ vs Anti-Christ

A Logocentric call to arms. The ancient Greeks identified three modes of persuasion: ethos, the appeal to the character or credibility of the speaker; pathos, the appeal to the emotions of the audience; and logos, the appeal to reason and the argument itself. In a sane and ordered civilization, these three exist in a hierarchy with logos at the summit. Reason, which is the reflection of the divine order, must govern emotion and […] Read more »