
Why you should never fully trust a journalist (by an ex-journalist)
After crossing over into intelligence, I realized how easily journalists are played by sources, by ego, by the system itself.
After crossing over into intelligence, I realized how easily journalists are played by sources, by ego, by the system itself.
A scandal that seems grotesque at first glance but uncovers a much deeper fracture in how power, perception, and narrative now operate.
A while ago, I posted an analysis of the cognitive warfare happening between India and Pakistan. This article had some impressive reach. But weirdly, I received one message. Just one.
Personal story of the blackout in Portugal, and the protocol I built following this event.
In the world of intelligence and strategy, everything starts with a simple mission: see what others don’t. We collect data. We track weak signals. We build scenarios. And sometimes, we DARE to anticipate the unexpected.
This last days, like many in the field, I’ve been busy. And tired. Tired of watching the same cycle unfold: hot takes, reactive posts, and content flooding our feeds
Every now and then, I receive strange messages (Linkedin inbox). This ONE illustrates perfectly what happens when ideological overconfidence meets... a very poor rhetorical discipline! I received this message after
On June 6th, Polymarket (a decentralized prediction market) officially became the prediction partner of X. The announcement was brief... even casual. But for those of us who operate in the
On May 30, The New York Times published an article. Beneath its "factual" tone lies a narrative built on: selective emphasis, speculative framing, and emotional anchoring. This (long)
Language is the most powerful tool humans have ever created. It is also the most dangerous. From intelligence operations to corporate politics, from spiritual dogma to media warfare, words shape
We live with a comforting illusion: that society’s core sectors are independent worlds. This segmentation is deceptive.
When I first moved to Israel, I remember saying to myself: "I have 100 questions, I need answers to". I left Israel, with 10000 different answers to my