Recommended by Kanav Jain
If you're drawn to writing that unspools how systems mask control as neutrality—how machines simulate agency and drain meaning—disinfo.zone delivers. It’s not doom or hype, but a lucid, unsettling look at how tech reshapes judgment, attention, and will.
If you're drawn to writing that blends mysticism, militancy, and a refusal to separate the spiritual from the material, Cosmic Anarchy is a trip worth taking. We share a deep suspicion of imposed order—and a belief that liberation requires both ritual and rupture.
If you're drawn to writing that punctures productivity myths and honors the logic of burnout, Devon Price’s Substack is essential. It’s clear-eyed, kind without coddling, and relentless in naming the cost of performing normalcy under capitalism.
If you value rigorous, historically grounded writing on illness and resistance, Blind Archive is worth your time. Beatrice Adler-Bolton’s analysis is sharper and more orthodox than mine, but we share a refusal to individualize systemic harm—and a belief that disability is not the failure, but the proof, of a broken order.
If you're interested in how media reshapes appetite, attention, and embodiment—not just what we think but what we crave—Aditi's Casting a Wide Net is essential reading. Her writing moves fluidly between cultural critique and analytics, tracing the subtle ways content infiltrates daily life. It’s sharper on influence than most strategy blogs, and more grounded in lived experience than most media theory.