
Hosted by Dylan Lineger · EN

In this episode I talked about the design of the Clandestine Survival Initiative. (Thenewcsi.com) I reflect on the nature of a war room philosophy in trying to achieve a specific outcome. This episode explains the nature of why I am embarking on a war room philosophy.

This podcast talks about the recent gap between posts and the reason why this podcast went silent as well as outlined the kind of challenges that I've been experiencing trying to be a bit of an activist and take time for myself to get healthier. The Hiatus in reference is a hiatus coming to an end. I include comment on our current crisis with covid and the protests seeking to end institutional racism. Mostly I discuss how these crises have changed the nature of the advocacy I intended to do.

This episode is an expansion on last weeks episode. It looks at the base elements of the economy and the Clandestine Survival Initiative's plans for economic reforms. I talk about the precursors for each of the three tiers proposed in the economic reforms.

This episode talks about the building blocks of our social structure. It talks about the needed components for democracy as well as discussing how current events show precursors for facisim. The episode focuses on history and provides a warning against those who undermine journalism.

This episode talks about the structure of political design suggested by the Clandestine Survival Initiative. I convey the different needs of layers of government and also try to fight back a cold. gofundme.com/f/better-policies-for-a-better-world/ Enjoy.

Welcome to Season 2! This episode caps off the reasoning for the first season. It also introduces my main project, The Clandestine Survival Initiative. I talk about what it is and isn't. The episode is called Visions as I discuss using the visionary tool of literature to establish a plan in the real world. I talk about the challenges and fears of trying to engage the public but the need to do so.

This episode talks about the function of attention as a cognitive behaviour. It covers a bit of how we think about attention, what gets it and the importance of developing tools to direct our own attention.

This talk is about noise. I talk about the need to manage noise input. I begin with the auditory meaning for noise and the tools needed to manage noise. I talk about the impacts on health from noise. Then I discuss noise as a funtion of oversaturated media inputs as it relates to politics and the need for noise filters to better understand the world.

This talk covers the use of "isms". I cover the element of language and how it modifies meaning inconsistently. Using the tail end of the alphabet for examples the isms are given some definition. In the end the talk is an appeal for rationalism and realism in life and policy.

This talk focuses on the act of breathing. I talk about the physiological process and endorse learning to regulate breath. I also talk about breathing on a sociological level and the need to "take a breath" in the face of divergent or distasteful ideas and cancel culture.