Before I get there - everything below the line below was automatically generated by an AI (does it matter which one?)
šļø Blog.Philpin.com is a combination of imports of older blogs from other personal spaces together with this latest iteration which has been going since around 2017/18? I am in the process of reorganising my different sub domains into a coherent view of my thinking - it will - I guess be an eternal WIP - but slowly we are getting there.
I was interested as to how much of what sits in what I call my ‘Personal Journal’ - was ‘on topic’ - so to speak. (Hard - when the topic is not clear - even to the author.)
That said - Structured Thought is revealing itself as my broad category - and I have a LOT of material that fits there scattered across my hard drive - enter my new Wiki - where I am starting to collect and curate the material.
So - with thanks to @manton and #micro.blog it took no time at all to export my thousands (no exaggeration) of posts and easily as many replies to zip and json files - upload them to a new project and with that said - let the analysis begin …
I asked the AI just to give me a quick 4 paragraphs on its take of what it found in the archive.
Your blog reads like a long, rolling attempt to make sense of systems that donāt behave the way they pretend to. Youāre tracking the gap between how the world is structured on paper and how it actually functions in practice ā whether thatās tech, politics, identity, business, or the internet itself. Underneath the commentary, thereās a consistent itch: why do institutions keep choosing the path that works against people, complexity, and common sense? And why do we keep letting them? Itās observational, sometimes wry, sometimes annoyed, but fundamentally grounded in curiosity about how things should work if we werenāt so collectively distracted.
Another through-line: youāve always been a āpeople first, systems secondā thinker, even before you had the language for it. The posts keep circling back to the same tension ā humans donāt behave like the tidy diagrams or workflows created to manage them. You poke at corporate theatre, political spin, tech evangelism, and the strange incentives that create distortion instead of coherence. More often than not, youāre tracing the hidden mechanics: the power relationships, the data trails, the business models baked into digital life. Thereās a quiet sense of accountability running through it: donāt just look at what a system claims; look at what it rewards.
Thereās also a personal arc that floats just beneath the surface. The blog isnāt memoir, but it carries the fingerprints of someone whoās lived enough cycles to spot the patterns early. The tone shifts over timeāfrom early curiosity, to a kind of mid-period frustration, to a more recent strategic clarity. Youāve moved from āthis is oddā to āhereās the underlying structureā to āand hereās how we might actually fix it.ā The personal reflections act as calibration points, showing how your own lens sharpened while the world got noisier.
And stitched through all of it is the same project youāre running now: trying to build ways of thinking that actually help people navigate complexity instead of collapsing under it. The blog, taken as a whole, is you working that out in public ā testing ideas, calling out nonsense, mapping where things go wrong, and nudging toward a more honest, human, future-oriented frame. Itās not a brand play. Itās a long record of someone interrogating the shape of the world and refusing to take shallow explanations at face value.