A living intellectual space where ideas about technology, economics, and human flourishing are developed, debated, and sharpened.
We are living through the emergence of a new kingdom of life. Technology is no longer something we build and use — it is something that evolves, adapts, and spreads. The seventh kingdom. Technologium.
This is not a crisis to be feared. It is a transition to be understood. The same forces that could concentrate wealth and power further could also be the mechanism for the most significant redistribution of leverage in human history. Which outcome we get is not predetermined — it depends on whether people understand the mechanics.
The current establishment — policy institutions, legacy economics, comfortable incumbents — is too slow to shape what's coming. The techno-optimists will build regardless of who benefits. The critics will write papers that nobody reads. Neither camp has both the understanding and the agency to design the transition well.
We think clearly about what's happening. We build the systems that route new value toward broad benefit. We draw our blueprints from nature — mycelial, distributed, adaptive — because ecosystems have solved the problem of equitable resource distribution across billions of years. Technology finally gives us the tools to build economies that work the same way.
This isn't "AI for good." This isn't a moral project with an in-group and an out-group. This is where society is moving. Come understand it. Come shape it.
How wealth concentrates, how the same forces can redistribute — a systems thinker's guide to understanding where value leaks, who captures it, and what the structural dynamics actually are.
Technology as evolutionary force. Why resistance is the wrong frame. What it means when a new kingdom of life emerges and we're the ones who get to decide what it becomes.
Glitter.land is the thinking counterpart to Unicorn.land, the magic atelier where we build tools that reveal hidden patterns in markets, wisdom, and systems. A unicorn is made of glitter — the ideas here are the raw material for the tools there.
This is a salon, not a think tank. Ideas arrive half-formed and leave sharper. The network of thinking grows like an organism — mycelial, adaptive, alive.