The Horror of a Communist Workforce
Real insight is never theoretical. It is earned.
When I speak about the realities of working inside a communist labor environment, or when I explain concepts like nutritional determinism, it is not because I read about it.
It is because I lived it.
I had my own well-being on the line.
I had skin in the game.
And when your well-being is tied to your decisions, you do not have the luxury of fantasy or wishful thinking.
You observe what is, not what you wish were true.
Empirical data becomes unavoidable.
That’s the part most people miss.
Just because someone else does not see the data does not mean it doesn’t exist.
It simply means they have never been exposed to the environments where such truths become undeniable. Or had enough skin in the game to force themselves to see the truth.
Insight is not granted—it is extracted from reality.
Slowly, painfully, and often alone.
But something interesting happens once skin is in the game:
If you’re clever, if you pay attention,
if you observe instead of react—you begin to absorb the world as it actually functions, not as we’re told it functions - only with a clean nervous system.
You start recognizing cause and effect.
You see human behavior for what it is—not what ideology paints it to be.
You recognize how nutrition shapes temperament.
How incentives shape nations. How systems shape outcomes. And how people reveal themselves most clearly when survival—not theory—is at stake.
This is why my perspective is what it is: it wasn’t adopted, it was earned.
And for those who follow closely, who test what I write against their own lived experience, something interesting happens.
Over time, they begin to see it too. Because reality rewards attention.
Skin in the game is not just risk.
It is clarity.
It is data.
It is revelation.
And once you have seen the world clearly, you cannot go back.
Only then do people begin to understand who I am—and why I speak the way I do.


