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Martin Geddes Channel

Martin Geddes Channel

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I mostly reshare interesting content here… find me back on Twitter at https://twitter.com/martingeddes

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Martin Geddes Channel (@geddes) Ingliz til segmentidagi kanali faol ishtirokchi. Hozirda hamjamiyat 14 856 obunachidan iborat bo'lib, Siyosat toifasida 3 753-o'rinni va AQSH mintaqasida 2 577-o'rinni egallagan.

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невідомо sanasidan buyon loyiha tez o‘sib, 14 856 obunachiga ega bo‘ldi.

10 Iyun, 2026 dagi oxirgi ma’lumotlarga ko‘ra kanal barqaror faollikka ega. Oxirgi 30 kunda obunachilar soni -238 ga, so‘nggi 24 soatda esa -11 ga o‘zgardi va umumiy qamrov yuqori darajada qolmoqda.

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I mostly reshare interesting content here… find me back on Twitter at https://twitter.com/martingeddes

Yuqori yangilanish chastotasi (oxirgi ma’lumot 11 Iyun, 2026 da olingan) sababli kanal doimo dolzarb va katta qamrovli bo‘lib qoladi. Analitika auditoriya kontent bilan faol hamkorlik qilishini, uni Siyosat toifasidagi muhim ta’sir nuqtasiga aylantirishini ko‘rsatadi.

14 856
Obunachilar
-1124 soatlar
-497 kunlar
-23830 kunlar
Postlar arxiv
What happens if a constitutional injury cannot be fully undone? My latest essay explores a bizarre child-custody case that evolved into a stress test of constitutional rights, institutional legitimacy, and the meaning of restoration itself. The deeper question is not who won the case. It is whether lawful continuity can be built upon unlawful discontinuity. And if not, what does genuine recovery require? https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/the-constitutional-injury-recovery

As I stare out of my window, the storm clouds gather. Not just over County Durham, but over finance, governance, media, law, and the stories we tell ourselves about reality. A field report from the invisible battlefield of information and financial resources. Nothing happens, until everything happens. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/as-i-stare-out-of-my-window

I asked a simple question: Which court convicted me? After two years, two judicial reviews, dozens of FOI requests, and a conviction carrying six points and a £1,500 fine, I still couldn’t get a straightforward answer. The story turned out not to be about corruption, but something stranger. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/yes-but-exactly-which-court-convicted

Books have front matter. Forewords. Prefaces. Prologues. Yet philosophy, science, law, theology, economics, and governance are usually treated as though they have none. What if every symbolic discipline depends upon a quieter, older territory concerned with whether its symbols remain attached to reality in the first place? I call this neglected territory the General Prolegomena. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/the-general-prolegomena

Published: Not the American Declaration of Independence What if constitutions and governance systems are not just political artefacts, but engineering objects — with drift, failure modes, observability requirements, and maintenance burdens? https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/not-the-american-declaration-of-independence

Republics do not primarily fail because citizens stop caring. They fail when the reconstruction burden required to compare declared authority with operational reality exceeds ordinary human capacity. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/the-real-subject-was-never-minnesota

On Friday 5 June I’ll be giving a rare public talk in London: “Corruption — Or Just Continuity?” Using my own “ghost court” litigation as a starting point, I’ll explore why modern institutions increasingly feel unreal, why people end up talking past one another, and how many things we interpret as corruption may actually be symptoms of a deeper structural problem. Not a legal talk. Not a conspiracy talk. More a journey from outrage to diagnosis. Details here: https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/london-talk-on-friday-5th-june-corruption

Oak Grove, Minnesota is a tiny municipality. Yet its dispute over voter rosters is now before the Minnesota Supreme Court. The interesting question isn’t paper versus electronic. It’s: Who gets to decide who decides? Using the Vigilance Automator, I show how a local election dispute becomes a live test of authority, accountability, corrigibility, and constitutional self-correction. Sometimes the smallest places reveal the biggest governance questions. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/oak-grove-mn-so-very-small-yet-so

Minnesota poll pads are not just an election story. They are a case study in whether citizens can still inspect, challenge, and repair the systems that govern them. Military is for rupture. Maintenance is for republics. Civilisation repair is mostly janitorial. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/minnesota-poll-pads-and-the-vigilance

Most people think they lose their home, business, child, licence, or liberty because “the law was against them”. Often the real issue is simpler: the system cannot cleanly reconstruct the attributable act that created the personal obligation in the first place. Two recent UK Council Tax cases expose the pattern clearly. Continuity first vs reconstruction first. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/how-not-to-lose-your-home-business

I’ve started revisiting some of my older COVID-era essays to see what still holds up years later. This one isn’t really about predictions — it’s about how to remain psychologically grounded and effective during periods of upheaval. Stakeholder maps. Safety vs certainty. Recovering agency under stress. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/weathering-the-storm-personal-strategies

What if trafficking is not the deepest category of harm — just one visible payload inside a much bigger pattern? A new essay on dependency–continuity corruption, continuity reversal, and why modern criminology may be thinking geometrically about fundamentally topological problems. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/its-bigger-than-just-child-trafficking

I spent the early 2000s working on telecoms network overload and performance engineering. What started as a technical problem eventually turned into something much larger. This essay traces the path from ∆Q — a mathematical approach to quality degradation under load — to a broader idea I now call ∆R: reconstructability under constraint. The core claim is simple: Civilisation itself behaves like a reconstructive system operating under load. Courts, bureaucracies, AI systems, media, institutions, and packet networks all face the same deep structural problem: how to preserve continuity when finite coordination capacity collides with unlimited demand. Along the way the essay explores: - why networks do not really “transmit data” - topology vs geometry in governance - why degradation is unavoidable - why institutions drift toward continuity-first behaviour - and why scaling civilisation may ultimately be a reconstructability problem. This is probably the deepest and most important piece I have published in years. “From ∆Q to ∆R — a science of reconstructability” https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/from-q-to-r-a-science-of-reconstructability

I’ve released the initial public version of the ΩΛ∆∑ (OLDS) Canon: an experimental AI-era governance diagnostics toolkit. It applies computer science and information security ideas to questions of attribution, procedural continuity, synthetic governance, and institutional reconstructability. Free download (donationware): https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/civilisation-repair-toolkit-free

“You need to conquer yourself before you can restore your country.” I spent my rent money travelling to London to photograph the Tommy Robinson “Unite the Kingdom” rally. What I found was not really “far-right extremism”. Nor was it heroic nationalism. It was something sadder: a people sensing decline, but struggling to respond coherently to it. Photo essay now live: https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/if-this-is-patriotism

A tiny Scottish harbour. A beautifully rebuilt wall. Missing mooring posts. Fences. Grass where working access used to be. What began as a dispute over a muddy inlet became something much larger: a story about public assets, maritime culture, enclosure, legitimacy, and what modern Britain quietly does to living infrastructure. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/a-beautiful-new-harbour-just-not

I’ve published the first serious synthesis of what I think I’ve been working on for years: “Civilisation Engineering: A Rough Blueprint” It explores a simple but profound distinction: Geometry: the court exists. Topology: justice is obtainable. The essay connects telecoms, distributed systems, governance, AI, topology, and civilisation-scale corrigibility into one emerging framework. If even 1 in 1,000 readers fully grasps it, I’ll consider that a success. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/civilisation-engineering-a-rough

What if political speeches could be debugged like software? I just published a clause-by-clause runtime analysis of Trump’s 2016 campaign ad using a new governance calculus: ΩΛ∆∑. The result: “the establishment” emerges not as mythology, but as synthetic governance under stress. https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/the-calculus-of-trumps-2016-campaign

Why did Trump’s 2016 campaign ad sound existentially dangerous to some people — and existentially truthful to others? A new essay exploring the ad through three lenses: institutional, phenomenological, and structural. At the core is a deeper question: Can civilisation-scale governance remain democratically reconstructable? https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/three-readings-of-trumps-2016-campaign

What if America didn’t become “fake” — but synthetic? A new essay on governance as a runtime system under coordination pressure: standard history, synthetic history, and finally a symbolic calculus. “Some governance problems can be solved with logic, not lobbying.” https://newsletter.martingeddes.com/p/three-histories-of-america