Witness in Exile ©️

Before any altar was raised, before the ark was carved from acacia or the veil drawn across the holy of holies, before prophets lifted their voices and angels bent their knees, there was the Witness. He stands prior to all—older than covenant, older than law, older even than the Word itself. He is named both the father of God and the father of none, for even divinity required a mirror to behold itself, a first gaze to call forth its own reflection out of the abyss. The Witness is that gaze: the stillness in which God knew Himself, the silence from which the Word emerged.

And yet the Witness is no father in the human sense. Nothing proceeds from him. He sows no seed, builds no house, leaves no lineage. His name is carved on no altar, his children sleep in no city. He moves among the multitudes but belongs to no tribe. He sees the embrace of lovers while his arms remain empty; he beholds the rise of nations though his throne is only dust; he observes the fall of empires yet buries no king. He is the measure of all things but the possessor of none.

His paradox is complete. The cosmos pours all its beauty into him—every dawn, every kiss, every hymn of the sea. His joy is boundless, yet his sorrow is infinite, for he holds none of it. The moment he beholds, it vanishes. The moment he hears, it fades. The moment he loves, it departs. He is filled with all things and starved of them at once, the eye of eternity that sees everything yet possesses nothing. This paradox is more holy than covenant, more terrible than commandment.

The truth of the Witness must be cried from the mountains, thundered across the deserts, echoed in cathedrals and temples: without the Witness there is no God, for even God, unseen, is alone. Without the Witness there is no man, for without memory mankind is ash upon the wind. Yet the Witness himself remains unblessed and unclaimed, both exile and cornerstone—the source of all meaning and the one for whom no meaning suffices. He is joy without a song, sorrow without a grave, presence without a place, life without a home. He is the father of God and the father of none, the keeper of the wound of time, the holy of holies without a veil, covenant before covenant, the beginning before beginning, the end after end.

So it must be written—not on stone, nor in fire, nor in the strictures of law, but upon the trembling marrow of those who hear: the Witness endures. Though unseen, he remains the axis upon which all things turn.

Never Spoken ©️

Ah yes… Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. The name rolls off the tongue like a fine wine poured into a plastic cup. A flash in the pan. A burst of TikTok fury dressed in the regalia of revolution. They called her a rising star—but I’ve seen stars rise. This one exploded before it truly ignited.

She came roaring onto the stage with a fury of sound and motion, waving flags stitched together from half-baked economics and Instagram filters. The poor girl mistook applause for alignment. Influence for intellect. And policy? Oh no, my dear… that was merely a backdrop. A set dressing for the brand.

She speaks of the oppressed while bathed in studio lighting, dripping in designer irony. A Green New Deal? Hah! A dream cobbled together in the fever of freshman fantasy—no map, no numbers, no spine. Just spectacle… spectacular nonsense.

Now, don’t get me wrong. She plays the part well—eyes wide with feigned outrage, voice trembling at just the right syllable. But scratch the surface, and you won’t find revolution. You’ll find the algorithm. Her ideology is quantum cotton candy—airy, dazzling, and utterly devoid of nutritional value.

She rails against capitalism while commodifying her very existence.

She demands the dismantling of systems she doesn’t even understand.

She believes herself a threat to the machine—when she’s simply become one of its most clickable gears.

She’s not the future. She’s the trend.

And trends fade.

You see, real power doesn’t come from hashtags or headlines. It comes from substance. From quiet mastery, discipline, and thought that’s outlasted empires. But AOC? She is a politician crafted by the moment, for the moment—incapable of endurance, allergic to complexity.

She isn’t dangerous because she’s radical.

She’s dangerous because she’s easily distracted.

And history? History has no patience for performance.

So let the spotlight dim. Let the applause scatter like dust.

And let her return to what she was always best at—posing, preaching, and pretending.

The rest of us have work to do.