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The Art of War

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Sun Tzu’s The Art of War: Strategy as the Highest Form of Intelligence Sun Tzu’s The Art of War is often misunderstood because it has been quoted too frequently and read too shallowly. It appears on corporate PowerPoint slides, leadership seminars, and motivational posters—usually reduced to clichés about “knowing your enemy” or “choosing battles wisely.” But The Art of War is not a book about aggression. It is a book about restraint, perception, and the invisible mechanics of power. At its core, it is a philosophy that treats war as a tragic failure of politics, to be concluded swiftly, intelligently, and with minimal bloodshed. Unlike later Western military theorists such as Clausewitz, who framed war as the continuation of politics by other means, Sun Tzu frames war as something to be avoided if possible, and ended before it begins if unavoidable. Victory, for Sun Tzu, is not measured by conquest but by control without destruction. This inversion is what makes The Art of...

The 50th Law

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The 50th Law: Fearlessness as Power in a World Built on Anxiety Robert Greene’s The 50th Law, co-authored with Curtis “50 Cent” Jackson, stands apart from Greene’s other works not because it abandons strategy, but because it strips strategy down to its rawest psychological core: fear. Where The 48 Laws of Power teaches manipulation, misdirection, and control, The 50th Law asks a more unsettling question—what happens when fear disappears entirely? The answer, Greene suggests, is not recklessness, but sovereignty. This book is not a motivational manifesto, nor is it a gangster memoir disguised as philosophy. It is a meditation on power from the perspective of those who begin with nothing—no safety net, no institutional protection, no illusions about fairness. By pairing Greene’s historical analysis with 50 Cent’s lived experience of poverty, violence, betrayal, and reinvention, The 50th Law becomes a study in fearlessness as an existential stance, not a personality trait. At ...

Cold genealogy of Power: The Prince & The 48 Laws of Power

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From Florence to the Boardroom: Machiavelli’s The Prince and Robert Greene’s The 48 Laws of Power Power does not announce itself as evil. It arrives disguised as necessity. Niccolò Machiavelli understood this in sixteenth-century Florence; Robert Greene understands it in corporate offices, political arenas, and social hierarchies centuries later. The Prince and The 48 Laws of Power are separated by time, language, and cultural surface, but they belong to the same bloodline. Greene’s book is not a reinvention of Machiavelli—it is his translation into a world that still pretends to be moral. Together, these texts form a single philosophy: power is amoral, relational, and governed by perception rather than truth. What Machiavelli articulated with brutal minimalism, Greene expands into a manual for psychological warfare in modern life. The Break with Innocence Machiavelli’s great rupture was his refusal to speak of power as it should be. He rejected saints, philosophers, and th...

Marabi

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Marabi At the Market Theatre for the opening of "Marabi". Piano, Kasi, Stocko, Doornfontein! A full house, everyone in full attendance. The energy palpable, everyone is just excited! It's the first show of the year! Marabi is a South African musical theatre classic adapted from Modikwe Dikobe’s novel The Marabi Dance and originally developed through Junction Avenue Theatre Company workshops. It’s set in the Doornfontein slumpyards, rusted corrugated sheets is the feeling and tone, 1930s - the show tells a powerful story of family, music and change.  The play opens with the Mabongo family, first-generation Black migrants who have come to Johannesburg in search of opportunity but instead face the harsh realities of urban poverty and crowded township life. The central figure, July Mabongo, carries the burden of ancestral expectations, traditional values, and the tension between holding on to the past and surviving in a fast-changing city. ...

The Prince

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Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince: Power Without Illusions Niccolò Machiavelli’s The Prince is not a book that asks to be loved. It asks to be understood. Written in the early sixteenth century amid the political disintegration of Renaissance Italy, the text reads less like a moral treatise and more like a survival manual for a world governed by betrayal, chance, and force. What makes The Prince endure is not merely its cynicism, but its brutal clarity. Machiavelli tears away the comforting illusions of virtue and exposes power as it actually operates—unadorned, unstable, and merciless. In antakalipa style, The Prince is a confession whispered behind palace walls, a chant for rulers who understand that innocence is a liability and appearances are weapons. It is not an argument for evil, but an autopsy of politics after morality has failed. A World After God Machiavelli writes in a world where the medieval synthesis—God, monarchy, virtue, and order—has fractured. Italy is div...

Nobody Told Me

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Nobody Told Me  On the square to watch a Masterpiece "Nobody Told Me" , very early on and you are looking at a Production of the Year contender. A Poignant, reflective, wrenching and deeply compassionate play exploring life in the Warsaw Ghetto, Poland for Jewish residents under German occupation. Nazi's the instigaters - Swastikas, German efficiency, in uniform, Poland, WWII, heil Hitler.  Nobody Told Me is a contemporary stage play written by Luc Albinski. It’s a dramatic theatrical work inspired by true family history and the experiences of a Jewish doctor in World War II Warsaw. It follows the emotional journey of Wanda, now in her 80s, and her son Luc (the playwright), as they explore long-buried family secrets about Wanda’s mother — Dr Halina Rotstein, a Jewish physician who worked in the Warsaw Ghetto’s Czyste Hospital during the Holocaust. The story shifts between present-day conversations and flashbacks to the 1930s–40s in Warsaw, showing ...

The Kybalion

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The Kybalion: The Hidden Architecture of Reality “The lips of wisdom are closed, except to the ears of Understanding.” Published anonymously in 1908 by the so-called Three Initiates, The Kybalion presents itself not as an original work, but as a distillation of ancient Hermetic wisdom attributed to Hermes Trismegistus—the mythical synthesis of the Egyptian god Thoth and the Greek Hermes. Whether historical or symbolic, Hermes functions as an archetype: the messenger between worlds, the translator of divine order into human understanding. Unlike philosophical systems that seek truth through argument, The Kybalion assumes truth already exists—eternal, immovable—and that human suffering arises from ignorance of its laws. The book does not plead its case. It instructs. It whispers. It challenges the reader to rise to its level rather than stoop to explain itself. At its core are the Seven Hermetic Principles, not as beliefs to adopt, but as laws to be recognized. To know them i...

The Alchemist

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The Alchemist: Destiny, Desire, and the Language of the Soul Paulo Coelho’s The Alchemist is often dismissed as a spiritual fairy tale—too simple, too optimistic, too eager to reassure. Yet its endurance across cultures and generations suggests that it touches something older and deeper than literary fashion. Beneath its parable-like prose lies a mythic structure that speaks directly to the human confrontation with desire, fear, and meaning. The Alchemist is not a novel of complexity but of clarity, and its power lies precisely in its refusal to intellectualize what it believes must be lived. At its core, the novel asks an ancient question: What does it mean to live in alignment with one’s destiny? Santiago and the Call to Adventure Santiago, the Andalusian shepherd, is an archetypal figure. He is not remarkable by worldly standards—he owns sheep, sleeps outdoors, reads the same book repeatedly. Yet he is restless. His recurring dream of treasure near the Egyptian pyramids ...

Think and Grow Rich

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Think and Grow Rich: Desire, Faith, and the Architecture of Inner Power When Think and Grow Rich was published in 1937, Napoleon Hill did something audacious: he claimed that wealth is not primarily a material problem, but a psychological one. Money, he argued, is not attracted through luck, intelligence, or even labor alone—but through the disciplined alignment of desire, belief, imagination, and persistence. Despite its occasionally mystical tone and old-fashioned optimism, Think and Grow Rich remains enduring because it addresses a timeless question: Why do some individuals transform intention into reality while others remain trapped in longing? Hill’s answer is radical in its simplicity: the mind is the starting point of all achievement. The Genesis of Desire: Wanting as a Creative Force Hill begins not with money, but with desire—and not vague wishing, but obsession-level clarity. He distinguishes sharply between wanting and burning desire. The latter is the engine of ...

Power vs. Force

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Power vs. Force: The Invisible Architecture of Human Motivation David R. Hawkins’ Power vs. Force begins with a radical claim: that human behavior, social systems, and historical movements can be understood not merely through psychology or politics, but through levels of consciousness. These levels, Hawkins argues, are not metaphorical—they are measurable, energetic states that determine whether individuals and institutions uplift life or parasitize it. At its core, the book draws a sharp distinction between force—coercive, reactive, fear-driven—and power—effortless, life-affirming, aligned with truth. This distinction may sound abstract or even mystical, but Hawkins’ insight is unsettling precisely because it maps cleanly onto history, leadership, religion, propaganda, and personal psychology. What follows is not merely a self-help framework, but a diagnosis of civilization itself. Force: The Language of Fear and Control Force operates through pressure. It compels rather t...