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The problem with your mitral valve is that it looks, on paper, a lot like somebody else's mitral valve. Both of you have severe regurgitation. Both of you have echocardiograms filled with numbers that cross the same clinical thresholds. Both of you sit in the same risk category according to guidelines published by the American College of Cardiology and the European Society of Cardiology. And yet one of you will thrive after surgery, while the other might have been better off waiting. The guidelines cannot tell you which is which. That is not a minor oversight. It is, increasingly, the central unsolved problem in the management of primary mitral regurgitation.

Mitral regurgitation is the most common valvular heart abnormality in the world, affecting more than two per cent of the global population. Degenerative mitral valve disease alone accounts for an estimated 24 million people worldwide, according to a 2021 review in Nature Reviews Cardiology. A 2024 analysis using Global Burden of Disease data, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, reported an estimated 13.3 million cases of non-rheumatic valvular disease globally in 2021, with the absolute burden continuing to rise as populations age. The condition occurs when the mitral valve, that crucial flap of tissue separating the left atrium from the left ventricle, fails to close properly, allowing blood to leak backwards with every heartbeat. In primary mitral regurgitation, the valve itself is the culprit, typically due to myxomatous degeneration or prolapse. Left untreated, severe cases can lead to heart failure, atrial fibrillation, and death.

The standard clinical approach relies on a set of echocardiographic measurements and symptomatic triggers. Operate when the left ventricular ejection fraction drops below 60 per cent. Operate when the left ventricular end-systolic dimension exceeds 40 millimetres. Operate when symptoms appear. These thresholds have guided cardiac surgeons and cardiologists for decades, and they are not wrong, exactly. They are simply insufficient. Roughly 20 per cent of patients who undergo mitral valve surgery with a pre-operative ejection fraction above 60 per cent still develop post-operative left ventricular dysfunction. The numbers that were supposed to guarantee a good outcome did not deliver.

Now a series of studies is suggesting that artificial intelligence, applied to the same echocardiographic data that clinicians already collect, can identify hidden patient subpopulations whose surgical trajectories diverge in ways that traditional risk stratification completely misses. The implications are striking, not because AI is replacing the cardiologist, but because it is revealing that the disease we call primary mitral regurgitation is actually several diseases masquerading as one.

When Twenty-Four Numbers Tell a Story That Guidelines Cannot

The study that brought this idea into sharp focus was published in JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging in 2023 by Julien Bernard, Naveena Yanamala, and colleagues. The work was supported by the National Science Foundation, the National Institute of General Medical Sciences at the National Institutes of Health, and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. Their approach was deceptively simple in concept, though computationally sophisticated in execution. They took 24 standard echocardiographic parameters from 400 patients with primary mitral regurgitation across two cohorts, one from France with 243 patients followed for a median of 3.2 years, and one from Canada with 157 patients followed for a median of 6.8 years. These were not exotic measurements requiring specialised equipment. They were the routine numbers that any competent echocardiography laboratory produces during a standard examination: chamber volumes, valve gradients, Doppler velocities, wall thicknesses, strain measurements.

The team then applied unsupervised machine learning, specifically hierarchical clustering, to let the data organise itself into groups without any preconceived notions about what those groups should look like. No clinician told the algorithm what “severe” means. No guideline threshold was imposed. The algorithm simply looked at all 24 measurements simultaneously, something no human clinician can do with equal rigour, and sorted patients into phenogroups based on the mathematical relationships between those parameters.

What emerged were two distinct phenogroups: a high-severity cluster and a low-severity cluster. The French development cohort split into 117 high-severity and 126 low-severity patients; the Canadian validation cohort divided into 87 and 70, respectively. So far, that might sound unremarkable. But the remarkable part came when the researchers examined what happened to patients in each group who did and did not undergo mitral valve surgery.

In the high-severity phenogroup, surgical patients had significantly improved event-free survival compared to non-surgical patients, in both the French cohort (P = 0.047) and the Canadian validation cohort (P = 0.020). Surgery clearly helped these patients. The model suggested that assignment to the high-severity phenogroup predicted a reduction in risk of all-cause mortality following mitral valve surgery.

In the low-severity phenogroup, however, there was no statistically significant difference between surgical and non-surgical patients in either cohort (P = 0.70 and P = 0.50, respectively). The algorithm had identified a population in whom surgery conferred no measurable survival benefit, a finding invisible to conventional risk stratification.

The critical insight is this: many of the patients in the low-severity phenogroup would have been classified as having severe or moderate-to-severe mitral regurgitation by traditional guideline criteria. They crossed the same thresholds. They appeared, by every conventional measure, to need surgery. But the machine learning model, by integrating all 24 parameters simultaneously rather than applying sequential threshold cutoffs, recognised a pattern that human interpretation had missed. These patients shared a combination of chamber dimensions, flow characteristics, and myocardial properties that, taken together, indicated a fundamentally different disease trajectory from their guideline-matched counterparts in the high-severity group.

The Black Box Opens Up

One of the persistent criticisms of machine learning in medicine is the black box problem. If an algorithm says a patient belongs to one group rather than another, but nobody can explain why, clinicians have every right to be sceptical. The stakes in cardiac surgery are too high for blind trust in opaque computational processes. Bernard and colleagues anticipated this concern by employing SHapley Additive exPlanations, or SHAP, an explainable AI technique rooted in cooperative game theory that quantifies the contribution of each individual feature to a given prediction.

SHAP values, derived from a framework originally developed to fairly distribute payouts in cooperative games, assign each input variable a numerical importance score for each individual prediction. This means a clinician can interrogate not just which variables matter in general, but which variables mattered for this specific patient. The technique has become one of the most widely adopted explainability methods in clinical AI, precisely because it bridges the gap between computational complexity and human interpretability.

The SHAP analysis revealed that left ventricular end-diastolic volume, the Doppler E/e-prime ratio (a marker of diastolic filling pressure), mitral regurgitation regurgitant volume, and interventricular septal thickness were the most important parameters driving the phenogroup classification. These are not obscure research variables. They are measurements that echocardiographers record routinely. The difference is that the algorithm weighted and combined them in ways that current guidelines do not. Where guidelines apply binary thresholds to individual parameters, the machine learning model captured continuous, nonlinear interactions between all 24 variables simultaneously, recognising patterns of co-occurrence that sequential threshold-checking inherently misses.

This matters enormously for clinical adoption. A cardiologist looking at a SHAP plot can see exactly which measurements pushed a particular patient into the high-severity or low-severity phenogroup, and by how much. The model is not asking clinicians to trust a mysterious oracle. It is showing them, in quantitative terms, what the data actually say when all the measurements are considered together rather than in isolation. A 2024 review of explainable AI evaluation approaches in cardiology, published in BMC Medical Informatics, noted that SHAP remains the most frequently applied interpretability technique in cardiovascular AI research, though it cautioned that only a minority of studies have involved cardiologists in evaluating the clinical relevance of the explanations produced.

The Bernard study also demonstrated incremental prognostic value over conventional approaches. When the researchers looked specifically at patients who were classified as having severe or moderate-to-severe mitral regurgitation by traditional methods, the phenogrouping approach improved the categorical net reclassification index significantly (P = 0.002). In practical terms, this means the algorithm correctly reclassified patients whose outcomes had been mischaracterised by guideline-based stratification.

Why Ejection Fraction Lies

To understand why machine learning phenogrouping works where guidelines falter, it helps to understand exactly why left ventricular ejection fraction, the cornerstone of current surgical decision-making, is such a flawed metric in the context of mitral regurgitation.

Ejection fraction measures the percentage of blood ejected from the left ventricle with each heartbeat. In a healthy heart, that number typically sits above 55 per cent. Both the ACC/AHA and the ESC/EACTS guidelines recommend surgery when it drops below 60 per cent, reasoning that declining pump function signals irreversible myocardial damage. The problem is that ejection fraction, in a leaking valve, is a fundamentally misleading measurement.

In mitral regurgitation, the left ventricle ejects blood through two outlets simultaneously: forward into the aorta, where it belongs, and backwards through the leaking valve into the left atrium, where it does not. The ejection fraction calculation captures both directions of flow without distinguishing between them. A patient can have a seemingly normal or even elevated ejection fraction while their actual forward output, the blood reaching the rest of their body, is dangerously low. The metric is flattering a failing heart. As a 2024 review in Clinical Cardiology by Neveu and colleagues observed, clinical guidelines remain anchored to ejection fraction despite its well-recognised limitations, including its lack of a consistent pathophysiological basis and its dependency on haemodynamic loading conditions.

This is not a new observation. Research published in the Journal of the American Heart Association by Gaasch and Meyer has shown that forward left ventricular ejection fraction, a calculation that accounts only for antegrade flow, is superior to total ejection fraction in predicting outcomes in primary mitral regurgitation. Patients with a forward ejection fraction below 50 per cent face significantly higher risk of adverse events. A pre-operative forward ejection fraction below 40 per cent was associated with increased risk of post-surgical left ventricular systolic dysfunction. Some researchers have argued that the occurrence of post-operative left ventricular dysfunction was 9 per cent when ejection fraction was 64 per cent or above and left ventricular end-systolic dimension was below 37 millimetres, but jumped to 33 per cent when ejection fraction fell below 64 per cent and end-systolic dimension exceeded 37 millimetres. These data suggest that the current guideline threshold of 60 per cent may itself be set too low.

Similarly, a 2024 study in Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine demonstrated that among asymptomatic patients with primary mitral regurgitation and preserved ejection fraction above 60 per cent, machine learning models using ejection fraction, mid-left ventricular circumferential strain rate, left ventricular end-systolic dimension, and left ventricular sphericity predicted that 30 per cent of those patients would develop ejection fraction below 50 per cent after surgery. Nearly a third. These patients looked fine by guideline criteria. They were not fine. The subclinical dysfunction was there, but the conventional measurements were not sensitive enough to detect it.

The machine learning phenogrouping approach sidesteps this problem not by replacing ejection fraction with a better single metric, but by refusing to rely on any single metric at all. By integrating dozens of parameters simultaneously, it captures the complex, nonlinear interactions between chamber volumes, filling pressures, valve haemodynamics, and myocardial function that no individual measurement can represent.

Five Faces of a Single Disease

The Bernard study identified two phenogroups, but the broader body of evidence suggests that primary mitral regurgitation fractures into even more distinct subpopulations when examined through a machine learning lens.

A 2023 study published in Heart by Sungho Kwak and colleagues at three tertiary hospitals in South Korea used latent class analysis on 2,321 patients with severe primary mitral regurgitation who underwent valve surgery, with a separate validation cohort of 692 patients. The analysis incorporated 15 variables spanning demographics, laboratory values, surgical factors, and echocardiographic measurements. Five distinct phenogroups emerged, each with dramatically different long-term outcomes over a median follow-up of 6.0 years, during which 149 patients (9.1 per cent) in the derivation cohort died.

Group 1 consisted of younger patients with the fewest comorbidities, and their five-year survival after surgery was 98.5 per cent. Group 2 comprised predominantly men with left ventricular enlargement, surviving at 96.0 per cent. Group 3, mostly women with rheumatic mitral regurgitation, had a five-year survival of 91.7 per cent. Group 4 were low-risk older patients at 95.6 per cent. And Group 5, high-risk older patients, survived at just 83.4 per cent (P less than 0.001 across all groups). In univariable Cox analysis, age, female sex, atrial fibrillation, left ventricular end-systolic dimensions and volumes, ejection fraction, left atrial dimension, and tricuspid regurgitation peak velocity were all significant predictors of mortality following surgery.

The phenogroups performed comparably to the Mitral Regurgitation International Database score, a validated risk prediction tool, achieving a three-year concordance index of 0.763 versus 0.750 (P = 0.602). But crucially, the phenogroups identified these risk strata through an entirely data-driven process, without relying on the predetermined assumptions baked into existing scoring systems. Patients in Group 3, for example, comprised a subpopulation whose specific risk profile, predominantly female with rheumatic aetiology, might be inadequately weighted by conventional tools designed primarily around degenerative valve disease in Western populations. The findings were reproduced in the validation cohort, lending credibility to the phenogroup structure.

Fibrosis, Strain, and the Hidden Damage

Perhaps the most clinically provocative work in this space comes from Olivier Huttin and colleagues, whose 2023 study in JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging used machine learning phenogrouping in 429 patients with mitral valve prolapse (mean age 54 plus or minus 15 years) to identify profiles associated with myocardial fibrosis and cardiovascular events. Mitral regurgitation was severe in 195 patients, or 45 per cent of the cohort.

Their unsupervised clustering analysis identified four distinct groups. Cluster 1 showed minimal cardiac remodelling with mainly mild regurgitation. Cluster 2 was a transitional group with moderate regurgitation and left atrial enlargement. Clusters 3 and 4 both featured significant left ventricular and left atrial remodelling with severe regurgitation, but they diverged in a critical way: Cluster 4 showed a drop in left ventricular systolic strain, a marker of impaired myocardial contractility, while Cluster 3 did not.

When the researchers correlated these clusters with cardiac magnetic resonance imaging data, Clusters 3 and 4 showed significantly more myocardial fibrosis than Clusters 1 and 2 (P less than 0.0001). Patients in these higher-risk clusters also experienced higher rates of cardiovascular events. The fibrosis finding is particularly important because myocardial fibrosis is largely irreversible. A patient who has already developed significant fibrosis may still benefit from valve repair, but the window for achieving optimal outcomes is narrower. Traditional echocardiographic parameters cannot reliably detect fibrosis, yet the machine learning phenogroups, derived entirely from echocardiographic data, identified patients whose myocardial tissue was silently scarring.

This is where the mechanism underlying improved event-free survival becomes clearer. The phenogrouping algorithm does not merely predict who is at higher risk. It identifies a specific physiological pattern, combining valve haemodynamics, chamber geometry, and myocardial mechanics, that corresponds to a particular stage and trajectory of disease. Patients in the high-severity phenogroup of the Bernard study, or in the fibrosis-associated clusters of the Huttin study, are experiencing a specific constellation of adaptations that makes surgical correction both timely and effective. The surgery works because the underlying tissue has not yet passed the point of irreversible damage, or because the haemodynamic burden is severe enough that its relief produces measurable benefit. In the low-severity phenogroup, by contrast, the disease trajectory is more benign, the tissue damage less advanced, and the natural history more favourable even without intervention.

Huttin's team then translated their complex clustering results into a strikingly simple clinical algorithm based on just three variables: severity of mitral regurgitation, indexed left atrial volume, and left ventricular systolic contractility assessed by strain. This decision-tree classification, validated in an external replication cohort, predicted cardiovascular events better than conventional regression models. An accompanying editorial by Nozomi Kagiyama in the same issue of JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging praised the translation from complex machine learning to a three-variable bedside tool, demonstrating that AI-derived insights do not need to remain trapped inside computational infrastructure. They can reshape clinical practice directly.

Beyond the Valve Itself

The scope of machine learning phenotyping extends beyond primary mitral regurgitation into the broader landscape of mitral valve disease. Teresa Trenkwalder and Mark Lachmann, working from the German Heart Center Munich and the German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK), published a study in European Heart Journal: Cardiovascular Imaging in 2023 that applied unsupervised agglomerative clustering to 609 patients undergoing transcatheter edge-to-edge repair for mitral regurgitation, with external validation in 817 patients from two additional institutions.

Their analysis, based on eight echocardiographic variables, identified four clusters characterised not by the valve lesion itself, but by the pattern of extra-mitral cardiac damage. Cluster 1 showed isolated mitral valve disease with preserved left ventricular function (ejection fraction 56.5 plus or minus 7.79 per cent) and the best five-year survival at 60.9 per cent. Cluster 2 presented with preserved ventricular function (ejection fraction 55.7 plus or minus 7.82 per cent) but the largest regurgitant orifice area (0.623 plus or minus 0.360 square centimetres) and the highest systolic pulmonary artery pressures (68.4 plus or minus 16.2 millimetres of mercury), surviving at 43.7 per cent. Cluster 3 featured impaired ventricular function (ejection fraction 31.0 plus or minus 10.4 per cent) and enlarged end-systolic dimensions, with five-year survival of 38.3 per cent. Cluster 4, characterised by biatrial dilatation (left atrial volume 312 plus or minus 113 millilitres), had the worst prognosis at 23.8 per cent despite only slightly reduced ventricular function (ejection fraction 51.5 plus or minus 11.0 per cent).

The transcatheter repair significantly reduced pulmonary artery pressure and improved survival in Cluster 1 but did not improve outcomes in Cluster 4, where significant diastolic dysfunction rendered the intervention insufficient. This finding mirrors the surgical pattern observed by Bernard: certain patient subpopulations derive clear benefit from intervention, while others do not, and the distinction is invisible to conventional classification.

What makes the Trenkwalder study particularly illuminating is its demonstration that cardiac damage in mitral regurgitation does not follow a neat, sequential progression. A clinician might assume that patients move from mild disease to moderate remodelling to severe dysfunction in an orderly fashion, but the clustering analysis showed that biatrial dilatation (Cluster 4) could occur even with relatively preserved ventricular function, and that pulmonary hypertension (Cluster 2) could develop independently of ventricular impairment. The machine learning model captured a multidimensional reality that linear clinical reasoning tends to oversimplify.

A Proof of Concept With Precedent

The phenogrouping approach in mitral regurgitation does not exist in a vacuum. It draws on a methodology that has already demonstrated its value in other areas of cardiovascular medicine. A landmark 2019 study by Maja Cikes and colleagues, published in the European Journal of Heart Failure, used unsupervised machine learning to phenogroup 1,106 heart failure patients from the MADIT-CRT trial and identify those most likely to respond to cardiac resynchronisation therapy. Their analysis identified four phenogroups with significantly different baseline characteristics, biomarker values, and treatment responses. Two phenogroups were associated with substantially better treatment effects from CRT (hazard ratios of 0.35 and 0.36, P = 0.0005 and P = 0.001, respectively), while the others showed no significant benefit.

The CRT study established that unsupervised clustering of clinical and imaging data could meaningfully stratify patients for therapeutic response in ways that conventional selection criteria could not. The mitral regurgitation studies extend this principle to surgical and transcatheter valve interventions, applying the same logic: not all patients who meet guideline criteria for treatment will benefit equally, and the differences between responders and non-responders are encoded in patterns that only multidimensional analysis can detect.

Automating the Front Door

While phenogrouping addresses the question of who benefits from intervention, a parallel stream of AI research is tackling an equally important upstream problem: making the initial echocardiographic assessment more accurate, more reproducible, and vastly more scalable.

In 2024, Amey Vrudhula, David Ouyang, and colleagues at Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre published a study in Circulation describing EchoNet-MR, a fully automated, open-source deep learning pipeline for detecting clinically significant mitral regurgitation from transthoracic echocardiograms. The system was trained on 58,614 studies comprising 2,587,538 individual videos and required no manual input, processing raw echocardiographic studies from start to finish. Internally, it achieved an area under the curve of 0.916 for detecting moderate or greater regurgitation and 0.934 for severe regurgitation. When tested externally at Stanford Healthcare on 915 studies comprising 46,890 videos, performance actually improved, with an area under the curve of 0.951 for moderate or greater regurgitation and 0.969 for severe regurgitation.

Building on this, Anita Sadeghpour and colleagues published a study in JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging in January 2025 describing an automated machine learning workflow for grading mitral regurgitation severity using 16 American Society of Echocardiography-recommended parameters. The preferred model used nine parameters, was feasible in 99.3 per cent of cases, completed analysis in approximately 80 seconds per case, and achieved accuracy of 0.97 for distinguishing significant from non-significant regurgitation, with sensitivity of 0.96 and specificity of 0.98. Patients graded as having severe regurgitation by the model had significantly higher one-year mortality (adjusted hazard ratio 5.20, 95 per cent confidence interval 1.24 to 21.9, P = 0.025 compared with mild).

The convergence of these two streams, automated detection and severity grading on one hand, and phenogrouping for surgical decision support on the other, points towards a future in which the entire pathway from echocardiographic acquisition to treatment recommendation could be substantially augmented by artificial intelligence. Bo Xu and Alejandro Sanchez-Nadales, writing in a 2025 editorial in JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, described this as a “paradigm shift” in how cardiac imaging is performed, interpreted, and applied in patient care.

The Reclassification Problem

The most disquieting implication of these studies is not that AI can predict outcomes. It is that AI reveals how many patients were being misclassified all along.

The Bernard study's categorical net reclassification improvement of P = 0.002 in conventionally severe or moderate-to-severe patients means that a meaningful number of patients were being placed in the wrong prognostic category by existing methods. Some patients classified as needing urgent surgery may not have derived benefit from it. Others who appeared to be safely managed with watchful waiting may have been silently accumulating the kind of cardiac damage, ventricular remodelling, atrial dilatation, myocardial fibrosis, that narrows the window for successful intervention.

The Huttin study compounds this concern. Patients in Cluster 4, those with severe regurgitation and impaired systolic strain, had significantly more myocardial fibrosis. Yet by conventional echocardiographic criteria, many of these patients might not have appeared markedly different from Cluster 3, which shared similar regurgitation severity and remodelling but without the strain impairment. The fibrosis, undetectable by standard measurements alone, was the distinguishing feature, and it was the machine learning algorithm that flagged it.

This reclassification problem is not academic. Mitral valve surgery, whether repair or replacement, carries real operative risk. The debate between early surgery and watchful waiting in asymptomatic patients is one of the most contentious in cardiology precisely because the consequences of getting it wrong run in both directions. Operate too early, and you expose a patient to surgical risk for a condition that might have been safely monitored. Operate too late, and irreversible myocardial damage may have already occurred, diminishing the benefit of intervention. Guidelines from the ACC/AHA and the ESC/EACTS do not fully agree on the thresholds for surgery in asymptomatic patients, a disagreement that itself reflects the inadequacy of current risk stratification. The American guidelines consider mitral valve repair reasonable when the likelihood of a successful repair exceeds 95 per cent with expected mortality below one per cent, whereas the European guidelines consider watchful waiting a safe strategy except in the presence of atrial fibrillation or pulmonary hypertension exceeding 50 millimetres of mercury.

Machine learning phenogrouping offers a potential resolution by replacing the binary question of whether regurgitation meets a severity threshold with the more nuanced question of which pattern of cardiac adaptation a particular patient exhibits. It reframes surgical candidacy from a one-dimensional threshold problem into a multidimensional pattern recognition exercise, one in which the data-driven phenotype carries prognostic information that the individual measurements, taken in isolation, do not.

What Stands Between Here and the Clinic

For all its promise, AI-driven phenogrouping in mitral regurgitation remains in its early stages. The Bernard study, while validated in two independent cohorts, involved a total of only 400 patients. The Kwak study was larger at 2,321 patients, but it was retrospective and limited to three South Korean hospitals. The Huttin study comprised 429 patients. None of these represents the kind of large-scale, prospective, multi-ethnic randomised trial that would be needed to change clinical guidelines.

A 2025 scoping review published in npj Cardiovascular Health examined the landscape of unsupervised machine learning applied to valvular heart disease and concluded that while these approaches consistently provided more detailed insights than traditional guideline-based severity classifications, significant barriers remain. Feature selection varies widely between studies. Validation cohorts are often small and geographically limited. The relationship between computationally derived phenogroups and the biological mechanisms underlying disease progression requires further elucidation.

There is also the question of integration. Even if a phenogrouping model proves robust in large trials, it needs to be embedded in clinical workflow software, connected to echocardiography machines, and made accessible to the cardiologists and cardiac surgeons who make treatment decisions. The automated severity grading systems being developed by groups such as Us2.ai and the Cedars-Sinai team suggest that the infrastructure for AI-augmented echocardiography is taking shape, but the pathway from research algorithm to routine clinical deployment is neither short nor straightforward.

Perhaps the most profound barrier is cultural. Cardiology, like all of medicine, operates on a framework of evidence-based guidelines developed through decades of clinical trials, consensus conferences, and expert deliberation. Machine learning phenogrouping does not simply add a new variable to existing risk scores. It fundamentally challenges the paradigm of threshold-based decision-making that underpins current practice. Asking a clinician to trust a clustering algorithm over guidelines they have trained with for their entire career is asking them to accept a different epistemology of disease, one in which diagnosis is not a categorical label but a position within a multidimensional space of continuous variables.

Yet the data are increasingly hard to ignore. When a machine learning model identifies a patient subpopulation in whom surgery confers no survival benefit, and that finding replicates in an independent cohort on a different continent, and the explanatory AI reveals exactly which echocardiographic parameters drove the classification, the question ceases to be whether this technology has value. The question becomes how quickly clinical practice can adapt to the reality that mitral regurgitation is not one disease, and never was.

References and Sources

  1. Bernard, J., Yanamala, N., Shah, R., et al. “Integrating Echocardiography Parameters With Explainable Artificial Intelligence for Data-Driven Clustering of Primary Mitral Regurgitation Phenotypes.” JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, 16(10), 1253-1267 (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2023.02.016.

  2. Kwak, S., Lee, S.A., Lim, J., et al. “Long-term outcomes in distinct phenogroups of patients with primary mitral regurgitation undergoing valve surgery.” Heart, 109(4), 305-313 (2023). DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2022-321305.

  3. Huttin, O., Girerd, N., Jobbe-Duval, A., et al. “Machine Learning-Based Phenogrouping in Mitral Valve Prolapse Identifies Profiles Associated With Myocardial Fibrosis and Cardiovascular Events.” JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, 16(10), 1271-1284 (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2023.03.009.

  4. Trenkwalder, T., Lachmann, M., et al. “Machine learning identifies pathophysiologically and prognostically informative phenotypes among patients with mitral regurgitation undergoing transcatheter edge-to-edge repair.” European Heart Journal: Cardiovascular Imaging, 2023. DOI: 10.1093/ehjci/jead013.

  5. Vrudhula, A., Duffy, G., Vukadinovic, M., et al. “High-Throughput Deep Learning Detection of Mitral Regurgitation.” Circulation, 150(12), 923-933 (2024). DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.124.069047.

  6. Sadeghpour, A., Jiang, Z., Hummel, Y.M., et al. “An Automated Machine Learning-Based Quantitative Multiparametric Approach for Mitral Regurgitation Severity Grading.” JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, 18(1), 1-12 (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2024.06.011.

  7. Xu, B., Sanchez-Nadales, A. “Artificial Intelligence in Echocardiographic Evaluation of Mitral Regurgitation: Envisioning the Future.” JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, 18(1), 13-15 (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2024.05.026.

  8. Coffey, S., Cairns, B.J., Iung, B. “The global epidemiology of valvular heart disease.” Nature Reviews Cardiology, 18, 853-864 (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41569-021-00570-z.

  9. ACC/AHA. “2020 Guideline for the Management of Patients With Valvular Heart Disease.” Circulation, 143(5), e72-e227 (2021). DOI: 10.1161/CIR.0000000000000923.

  10. Baumgartner, H., et al. “2021 ESC/EACTS Guidelines for the management of valvular heart disease.” European Heart Journal, 43(7), 561-632 (2022). DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehab395.

  11. Neveu, D., et al. “Primary mitral regurgitation: Toward a better quantification on left ventricular consequences.” Clinical Cardiology, 2024. DOI: 10.1002/clc.24190.

  12. Gaasch, W.H., Meyer, T.E. “Forward Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction: A Simple Risk Marker in Patients With Primary Mitral Regurgitation.” Journal of the American Heart Association, 6(11), e006309 (2017). DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.117.006309.

  13. “Phenotyping valvular heart diseases using the lens of unsupervised machine learning: a scoping review.” npj Cardiovascular Health, 2025. DOI: 10.1038/s44325-025-00077-3.

  14. Li, Z., et al. “Global, Regional, and National Burden of Valvular Heart Disease, 1990 to 2021.” Journal of the American Heart Association, 2024. DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.124.037991.

  15. Cikes, M., et al. “Machine learning-based phenogrouping in heart failure to identify responders to cardiac resynchronization therapy.” European Journal of Heart Failure, 21, 74-85 (2019). DOI: 10.1002/ejhf.1333.

  16. Kagiyama, N. “Translating Complex Machine-Learning Phenogrouping Into Simple Algorithm: Atrium, Ventricle, and Fibrosis in Mitral Valve Prolapse.” JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging, 16(10), 1285-1287 (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2023.07.010.


Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.

His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.

ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk

 
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Thaw

“Are you a technician?” The old man didn’t move. “You have a license?”

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“Fuck,” I said. “Fuck you. Fuck this store.”

He shrugged. He didn't care. Why should he?

A week’s food. Gone.

My wife thaws. The rot spreads. The stench. The neighbors. The police.

 
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Saul Steinberg

Weapons, not food, not homes, not shoes Not need, just feed the war cannibal animal I walk the corner to the rubble that used to be a library Line up to the mind cemetery now What we don't know keeps the contracts alive and movin' They don't gotta burn the books, they just remove 'em While arms warehouses fill as quick as the cells Rally 'round the family, pocket full of shells RATM – Bulls On Parade

 
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from folgepaula

The simplicity of complex things.

A dear friend invited me for a coffee as she wanted to get my take on the fact she was not following her excitement on her professional life anymore. And little she noticed she wasn’t then following her excitement on other points of her life, and as funny as it seems, she couldn’t immediately see the connection on it. So now she was on a crossroads moment asked to choose between options and wondering which path should she take. I asked her if the reason behind her question was the case she could not recognize the difference between what excites her or not. She said she could. So I very quickly asked her back where was then the difficulty? So I told her I’d ask her again, to which she kept leading me into the direction of “well but there’s a lot of things”. At this point, all I could reply was that nononono, there aren’t. I know and no offense, but there aren’t.

And what I told her just came to me as something I was elaborating and processing at the same time. Forgive my chaos.

Cause see, we tend to create a lot of reasons, a lot of seeming things we believe we need to consider but the truth is… no, we don’t.

Because once you understand what excitement is you realize why you don’t have to always dissect every single little detail in order to know what to do. Acting towards your joy should be at any given moment on anything, it does not even has to be a career thing, although it’s all connected.

So if right now, out of all the options you have available to you of things you could choose to do, either if it is taking a walk or drawing something or calling a friend, the thing that brings you joy, that’s the thing to do. Just because.

You don’t need a reason why. It’s the excitement itself that tells you that’s the thing you should do. And to be honest, the excitement on simple things inform you of bigger things that excite you.

By following the excitement you recalculate your route to the shortest, fastest, straightest path. And then you should do it just once more. And again. As soon as you are done with the most exciting thing, choose the next exciting thing, even if they might not seem connected, because joy will prove them to be connected.

And once you get into that pattern, something funny happens: you sensitize yourself to the idea of joy, and you naturally become a better sensor of what truly excites you and what does not. And soon you will not create so many things to consider before you get willing to take action. Because it’s self contained, it’s a drive engine. Because those experiences alone contain all the things you actually need to consider. And whatever does not come with it, it’s not part of the trajectory and has no business taking time in one’s life.

While we all want to experience life with passion, with synchronicity, feeling the vibration of our true, natural self the way we were actually created. But how many of us are willing to move towards it? Because that would mean moving towards ourselves.

BIG BUT: if those things don’t come up, you do not have to deny them, but to recognize they are there for a reason, so you can understand what they bring you to process, they will tell you more about who you are and you can continue to act more and more on your joy.

/mar26

 
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from The Catechetic Converter

Today is the Feast of the Annunciation, a pretty substantial observance in the Christian world related to the Blessed Virgin Mary.

It is observed on March 25 because it is nine months away from Christmas, which underscores its traditional importance: the Feast of the Annunciation is associated with the Incarnation.

One of my acquaintances from seminary once posted on social media that Christmas is not the “Feast of the Incarnation,” rather the Annunciation is. Because, according to tradition, this is the day that Our Lady, Saint Mary, conceived Jesus—the day that He first took on human flesh, incarnate as God in the womb.

I like this reminder for a variety of reasons (not least my own particular “pro-life” leanings that I seldom talk about; the New Wave Feminists are probably the closest articulation to my convictions on this subject, if you must know). What a powerful notion, that God dwelt in the womb of a woman for nine months and some change. This is even more theologically rich when we consider the traditional Jewish belief that a fetus is not its own life while still in the womb, meaning that Mary herself (for a time) actively participated in the Incarnation of God.

However, I have a bit of a nit to pick with all of this: I’m not convinced that the Annunciation is when the Incarnation happened.

The Church has long observed two key feast days related to Our Lady’s pregnancy: the Annunciation and the Feast of the Visitation. The former recounts the time the Archangel Gabriel announced to Mary that she would be the mother of God; the latter is the story of when Mary visited her cousin, Saint Elizabeth (who herself was already pregnant with Saint John the Baptist), and both recognized Mary as the mother of God and the incarnation of God taking place in her womb.

Both stories are recorded in Saint Luke’s gospel. Now, Luke is a very detailed evangelist (that is, gospel writer). Of all the known gospels, his has the most historical detail. The tradition is that he traveled around and interviewed the surviving disciples of Jesus, while also reviewing other written materials (like, perhaps, Saint Mark’s gospel), in order to give a fuller account of the life of Jesus. As a result, Luke’s gospel is the only one that contains an actual birth narrative for Jesus; it’s also the only one that gives us any real details of Saint Mary. Saint Matthew’s gospel focuses a bit on Saint Joseph (Mary’s husband), but the actual birth of Jesus is merely referenced, not told.

This is all to say that Luke has an eye for detail and tries to give us as much detail as he can. All the major events of the life of Jesus have an actual story in Luke’s gospel. If the Annunciation is meant to be the story of Jesus’ conception, it’s an odd way of telling it because it seems to happen “off camera.”

Take a look:

God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a city in Galilee, to a virgin who was engaged to a man named Joseph, a descendant of David’s house. The virgin’s name was Mary. When the angel came to her, he said, “Rejoice, favored one! The Lord is with you!” She was confused by these words and wondered what kind of greeting this might be. The angel said, “Don’t be afraid, Mary. God is honoring you. Look! You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you will name him Jesus. He will be great and he will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give him the throne of David his father. He will rule over Jacob’s house forever, and there will be no end to his kingdom.”

Then Mary said to the angel, “How will this happen since I haven’t had sexual relations with a man?”

The angel replied, “The Holy Spirit will come over you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore, the one who is to be born will be holy. He will be called God’s Son. Look, even in her old age, your relative Elizabeth has conceived a son. This woman who was labeled ‘unable to conceive’ is now six months pregnant. Nothing is impossible for God.”

Then Mary said, “I am the Lord’s servant. Let it be with me just as you have said.” Then the angel left her. (Luke 1:26-38, Common English Bible)

Notice that the language is all in the future-tense. It’s the language of expectation. So, right off the bat we can see that, based solely on the text of the Bible itself, the Annunciation does not capture the when of Jesus’ conception.

The next thing to happen in the story is that Mary up and leaves to see Elizabeth, where Elizabeth notes that her baby (the fetal Saint John) “leaps” in her womb at the sound of Mary’s voice. Modern English translations tend to phrase Elizabeth’s greeting to Mary like this: “God has blessed you above all women, and he has blessed the child you carry.” (Luke 1:42, Common English Bible) So, if we follow the tenses of the language we’ve been given, we are led to believe that somewhere between Saint Gabriel’s announcing and Saint Elizabeth’s greeting is when Mary became pregnant. Again, the Annunciation is not the place where the conception of Jesus takes place.

Now, Elizabeth’s greeting is elsewhere enshrined in one of the most beloved prayers in Christianity, the “Hail Mary:”

Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death. (emphasis mine)

This is actually the literal translation of the Greek words. Why English translations don’t like using figurative language anymore is a topic for another time, but this phrasing does not necessarily imply that Mary is currently pregnant since “fruit of the womb” is not necessarily tied to time the way “the child you carry” is.

So here’s my assertion: it is during the Visitation that Mary conceives Jesus. I base this entirely on the language of the gospel text and what we know of Saint Luke. As already noted, it would seem out of character for Luke to include such foreshadowing language from Gabriel and not give us the pay-off. But I do believe he gives us the pay-off.

Look back to what Gabriel says to Mary when she asks “How will this happen?”

The Holy Spirit will come over you and the power of the Most High will overshadow you.

Luke uses similar language in the first chapter of Acts. In the midst of the risen Jesus giving instructions to His disciples as He is preparing to ascend into Heaven, he tells them:

You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you. (Acts 1:8 Common English Bible)

In the very next chapter this is fulfilled when tongues of flame alight on the heads of the disciples and they begin to speak in different language, filled with spiritual ecstasy.

So, let’s look again at Mary’s story. She’s been told that she will become a virgin mother, the Mother of God; the sign for this will be when the Holy Spirit comes over her and she is overshadowed by the power of the Most High—language quite evocative of what Luke says about Pentecost in Acts.

Now, consider what happens after Elizabeth’s greeting. We’re told the Holy Spirit has filled Elizabeth, herself uttering an ecstatic proclamation, recalled in that first half of the Hail Mary prayer. So the Spirit is present and what does Mary do? She has an ecstatic Spirit-filled proclamation herself.

We call it the Magnificat.

It is my conviction that the Magnificat is intended by Saint Luke to evoke the moment that Mary conceives Jesus. I also think that it is no coincidence that he has this happen at a moment where there are only two women present, perhaps underscoring the miraculous nature of this. There’s no man to be found, or even suggested (as some like the heretical bishop, the late John Shelby Spong might, with his assertion that Mary was raped, perhaps by a man named Gabriel, and that this is the church’s way of trying to turn tragedy into triumph). Rather, God enters our world in the presence of two women, both enraptured by the Holy Spirit.

So, if this is the case, what are we celebrating today? Why bother with the Annunciation?

Because the Annunciation is still good news. It’s the good news that our sins have not left us abandoned. God still chooses to be born among us, even knowing our wickedness. It is the good news that God has chosen a poor young woman to be the one from which God will take on our flesh. Not a person of wealth and power and influence. But someone of meager means, marginal and innocent.

Today we hear the good news that God refuses to be separate from us.

I think of this old tweet every year on this day. Credit to OP

***

The Rev. Charles Browning II is the rector of Saint Mary’s Episcopal Church in Honolulu, Hawai’i. He is a husband, father, surfer, and frequent over-thinker. Follow him on Mastodon and Pixelfed.

#Jesus #Church #Anglican #Episcopalian #Catholic #Christian #Bible #Mary

 
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from Roscoe's Story

In Summary: * Two changes, probably noticeable only to me, but significant enough that I'll make note of them here: firstly, over the last week or so, I've added the Office of Vespers to my nightly prayers, so now I'm praying both night Offices, Vespers and Compline, and both according to the Traditional Pre-Vatican II 1960 Breviarium Romanum.

The extra time spent at night prayer means that I'll cut back on the time spent following sports in the evening, which brings me to the second change mentioned above, I'm going to return to my old pattern of following basketball and baseball games in the evening. In order to properly finish the prayers and still get to bed in time for plenty of quality sleep, I'll switch off prime time basketball games at halftime, and baseball games after four and a half innings. Starting tonight.

Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.

Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.

Health Metrics: * bw= 230.71 lbs. * bp= 156/92 (64)

Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups

Diet: * 06:10 – 1 banana, 1 McDonald's double cheeseburger * 08:15 – 1 cheese sandwich * 11:40 – pizzza, fish and veggie patties * 17:00 – 1 fresh apple

Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listen to local news talk radio * 05:50 – bank accounts activity monitored * 06:10 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap, * 12:00 – print map for Sylvia * 12:15 to 14:15 – eat lunch at home and and watch old game shows with Sylvia * 14:30 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials * 18:00 – tuning into 1200 WOAI, the proud flagship of the San Antonio Spurs, to catch the pregame coverage as well as the radio play by play of my Spurs vs. the Memphis Grizzlies.

Chess: * 16:40 – moved in all pending CC games

 
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from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede

Rondom de Invoering van de Zintaks (gelieve dit cultuur verschijnsel niet te verwarren met 't gelijk klinkende syntax) in Smægmå.

Opgediept ingezonde stukje uit de erkers en de krochten daarin van het roemruchte VVA stukjes archief

De zintaks er was weer eens verdomd weinig over te doen. Zoals zo vaak bij maatregelen die rondom ophef over hele andere onzin stiekem worden geïntroduceerd in uw huishoudboekje onder het kopje vaste lasten. Het is niettemin een aanzienlijk toename in uw uitgaven die niet zal worden gecompenseerd met oplopend inkomen zoals wel gebeurt bij inflatie, een ander type uit economische overwegingen cultureel opgefokte onzin. Deze komt gewoon op en zal overal worden afgetrokken en niet worden gecompenseerd met verhoogd inkomen elders. Het is daar niet voor ontwikkeld door het Smægmååns staatskas belasting ontwikkel team, het is ontwikkeld voor meer er in en zeker niet minder uit, ten bate van de baten en niks minder dan dat.

Welk effect heeft dit op u? Deze invoering van de zin taks, wat merkt u ervan, waar zal het te zien zijn op het prijskaartje? Dat soort vragen wil ik graag voor u beantwoorden hier op dit zelden tot nooit gelezen weblog over geïmplementeerde overheidsmaatregelen en de gevolgen daarvan op iedereen die er wel maar zeker op allen die er niet op verdacht zijn. Dat is feitelijk 99,9 procent van de betalende bevolking en zelfs nog negenennegentig % van de stelende 1 percent. Zin wat is het en waarvoor heeft u het nodig, bij wie komen ze, komt het, op en wie moet er de kost mee dienen, onder andere de baas van dit weblog meneer Van Voorbijgaande Aard en zijn duizenden denkbeeldige werknemers wel of niet flexwerkend bij de omroep op de vloeren voor uitzenden, het fundament van omroepen, de boodschap en de verzending ervan. Aard zal aanzienlijk meer moeten betalen voor het produceren van zinnen, alle zinnen, niet alleen de in correct Hollandsch geschreven zinnen, ook de krakkemikkige, de ongelukken op papier. Vanaf de invoering jongstleden 13 januari 2020 zit op iedere zin, zowel de ware zin als de zin in iets 15 procent meer belasting, het is dus inmiddels 29 procent op zin. Iedere zin aangemaakt door Aard en de zijnen, de denker schrijvers, journalisten, rechtopstaande grappenmakers, predikers, praters, reclame makers, taal producers om het even waarover betalen flink voor alle uitingen van hun genoegen en of ongenoegen.

Het is niet anders, het is nou eenmaal zo, wat doe je er aan nu het er eenmaal is. Helemaal niks als je niet weet dat het er is. Het is er dus al even, inmiddels 2 en een half jaar geldig. Nog altijd zijn er geen kamer vragen over gesteld, staat het niet in de krant, worden er geen reportages over uitgezonden bij de staatsomroepen, dat is eigenlijk een beetje jammer want het zou de staat der dingen en dergelijke aardig wat opleveren. Zin in het algemeen dus, staat u op met goesting dan hop volgt er meteen een reactie van de belastingdienst, die maakt er gewag van en heft er meteen op los. Ze weten inmiddels dankzij de wilde wereld van de IT in combinatie met zin en zinnen, zingeving dus, de zindustrie alles van ons leven in de sporen die u achter laat in uw eigen technologische werk en transportvoertuigen. U heeft zin dan zal dat ook tot iets lijden en dat iets zal belastbaar zijn, altijd en overal, niks is niet een last en dus een reden voor afdragen aan de economie ter instandhouding van die economie, in de eeuwige circulaire, let wel eeuwige, niet oneindige want er komt een dag dat zelfs de door economen gereguleerde economie ten einde zal komen en vervangen door iets anders, hopelijk iets beters. Misschien iets dat wel werkt en niet alleen werk veroorzaakt, beetje meer als de natuur en stukken minder van de cultuur der mensen, het scheppen van een werkzaam heden.

Dus een heffing, verhoging van de belasting op teksten, gesprekken, emoties, scripts, verbeelding, kortom op menselijke religie op de uitingen van de geest en de gevolgen daarvan op het lichaam. Je zou denken dat dit zou zorgen voor wilde protesten, brandende steden, herintredende kruistochten, helletochten naar de belastingdienst, brandende kantoren, ingeslagen ramen, geblokkeerde wegen maar niks van dat al, er was gewoon iets dat belangrijker leek, waarvoor je thuis zat te zappen en te koekeloeren naar sport met juichbanden op de achtergrond, deze wedstrijd was uitgezonden in een grote grasstudio met live afwezig publiek maar niettemin daar. O en we voeren de zintaks in.

De zin als melkkoe van de staatskas ten bate van de wapenindustrie, veeteelt, voor de plastic wikkels en de benzine diesel tanks, de batterijen waar mee gewerkt moet worden, en vermaakt, voor de drukinkt productie en het vervoer van de papieren waarheden, voor de luidsprekers en benodigde stroom, de zin als een zware last met hoge baten voor lieden die nog nooit een zin op papier hebben gezet en iedere dag zonder zin opstaan, zinloos. Dan op het werk aangekomen of beter thuis lange uren turen naar schermen met daarop de registratie van twee dingen gepubliceerde zin, gedachte zin en opgekomen zinnen, lusten, onze onrust, de wil om iets te doen met het lijf of met de geest liefst beide dan levert het ook nog wat op en daarnaast op het tweede, derde tot en met honderdste scherm de lijnen en cijfers die duiden hoeveel deze zinnen bijdragen aan de inkomsten van de staat waarmee ze dan weer kunnen investeren in sloten, hekwerken, bruggen, erkers, lokalen, zalen, defensie materiaal, drones, computers, netwerken, lijnen, grens bewaking, camera, chips en isolatiemateriaal, hier en daar wat kunst voor aan de muur van een groot huis of in een subsidie huis, een museum. Iets anders waar dit geld dan weer voor nodig is om iedereen met alle zin en onzin vooral dat bezig te houden rondom hun eigen venster scholen en virtuele venster wereld.

Het effect van de zintaks is allesomvattend, er is zo goed als niks in de mens, rondom ons, dat niet bestaat uit zinnen, er zeker is door ontstaan, van huis tot straat, van beeld tot uitzicht alles is eerst eens beschreven en getekend, ontwikkeld door zinnen en daarna uitgevoerd. Het enigste dat zich niet houdt aan deze enorme zin structuur is de natuur, de wildgroei, de barsten in het asfalt, de hangende takken, de duizenden blaadjes op ons spoor, de ontwortelden en meer van die ellende. Gelukkig dat dit altijd zorgt voor de nodige menselijke interactie, interventie, internationale conferentie, inter weet ik veel wat en al die dingen gaan gepaard met duizenden zinnen, regels, papieren aanloopjes, raadplegen van de boeken, kaarten, overleg en handelingen en elk van die handelingen is altijd overal belastbaar. Dit systeem houdt zich dus staande dankzij dit soort regels, deze ingevoerde teksten rondom teksten om ze in te zetten voor meer rendement, een hogere productie, kortere lijnen, mits ze op die korte lijnen veel overleggen anders worden ze zo weer lang, efficiëntie moet wel rendabel zijn anders is het alleen maar snel klaar en dat is allesbehalve winstgevend, dan zou een opgekomen zin niet eindeloos gerekt kunnen worden tot een net zo lang en treurnis opwekkend, verveling veroorzakend verhaal.

Dit ingezonde stuk van de naamloze gebleven klokkenluider (die alleen maar bij het touw is gaan staan) ging nog een poos zo door, waarschijnlijk omdat deze ingezonde stukjes ambtenaar op deze schrijfwijze aardig kon verdienen aan de nieuwe regelgeving. Het was, is en blijft een goed punt om te maken maar ja er is ook nu nog zoveel meer om over te praten en denken dan over die zintaks, er zijn Aard verschuivingen, Aard bevingen, andere Aardse zaken, er is zelfs sprake van ontAarde enzovoorts teveel afleiding van alles om alles heen om je hier en nu druk te maken over echt ingrijpende veranderingen van een hele poos terug, uit de tijd dat we nog handen schuddend leefden en daar niks van vonden, de elleboog alleen daar zat voor de handigheid en voor uitdelen, op de fiets, in het bad, in het pak of op het veld. Er zijn zoveel dingen die er van oudsher zijn en ronduit slecht voor ons waar we ons nog altijd niet echt druk over maken waarom hierover dan wel. Het is erg genoeg dat Henk de Jong Cambuur net na de promotie in de steek laat, en Rijsdijk Almere ook al, al is dat omdat ze daar een andere koers willen varen namelijk eentje zonder hem, een luxe cruise waar Rijsdijk niet leuk op staat, ligt, klotst en borrelend en al mee ten onder mag gaan, en Molano is ook nog gevallen, hij riep razend en tierend There Was a Guy on the Road, Ja, die guy was een stuk zinvoller bezig dan Molano zelve, het hele peleton en alle kijkers, inclusief ik dus, maar goed, en eh trouwens, zijn kopman viel tijdens een eerdere wedstrijd ook op het asfalt, niet op het gras, en die gozer reed terug naar voren en won, waarom jij dan niet!

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

Second Timothy 2 is one of those chapters that feels like it was written for people who have already discovered that life with God is deeper than slogans and harder than appearances. It does not read like a chapter written for spectators. It reads like a chapter written for people in the middle of a real fight. It speaks to the person who wants to remain faithful when the world is noisy, when the mind is tired, when the heart is discouraged, when the flesh is restless, and when the pressure to drift has become more than theoretical. It speaks with gravity, but it does not speak without hope. It does not flatter weakness, and it does not shame the person who feels weak. Instead, it reaches into the hidden interior place where a believer is trying to hold on to what is true and teaches that believer where real strength is actually found.

That matters because many people spend a long time misunderstanding what strength really is. They think strength is the ability to remain emotionally untouched. They think strength is the power to never feel the drag of discouragement or the ache of delay. They think strength is a personality trait, something that belongs only to naturally forceful people who move through the world with visible certainty. But Scripture keeps correcting that false idea. The strength God builds in a person is not usually the kind that makes them feel impressive. It is the kind that keeps them true. It is the kind that lets them stay soft before God without collapsing under hardship. It is the kind that teaches them how to endure without letting pain turn them bitter, proud, numb, or false. Second Timothy 2 is one of the clearest pictures of that kind of strength anywhere in the New Testament.

Paul opens the chapter by telling Timothy, “You therefore, my son, be strong in the grace that is in Christ Jesus.” That sentence is much more powerful than it first appears. Paul does not tell Timothy to be strong in his intelligence. He does not tell him to be strong in his charisma, his emotional stamina, or his natural courage. He tells him to be strong in grace. That changes everything because it means the strength Timothy needs will not come from trying harder to be enough in himself. It will come from the grace that is in Christ Jesus. That is one of the deepest corrections the gospel brings into a human life. It teaches us that real spiritual strength is not found in independence from God. It is found in deeper dependence on Him.

Human pride resists that lesson almost from the beginning. Pride wants to be the source of its own stability. It wants to be able to say, I held myself together. I overcame this by force of will. I created my own peace. I mastered my own inner life. Even when people use spiritual language, they often still carry that hidden instinct. They want God to assist the version of themselves that still plans to remain self-sufficient. But grace refuses to play that game. Grace does not come to decorate self-reliance. Grace comes to replace it. Grace says your life was never meant to be held together by your own limited strength. Grace says you were never designed to be your own savior. Grace says the deepest power in the Christian life comes when a person stops hiding their need and begins bringing that need honestly into union with Christ.

That is why this opening verse is not weak. It is actually one of the strongest calls in the chapter. Be strong in grace does not mean drift lazily and assume everything will somehow work out. It means anchor yourself in the living supply of Christ so thoroughly that when pressure rises, you are not drawing mainly from pride, fear, adrenaline, performance, or emotional momentum. You are drawing from Him. That kind of strength is quieter than the world’s version, but it lasts longer. It does not depend on being in the mood. It does not depend on receiving praise. It does not depend on circumstances staying favorable. It has roots below the weather of the moment.

Paul then moves immediately into discipleship and transmission. He tells Timothy that the things he has heard from Paul among many witnesses, he should commit to faithful men who will be able to teach others also. That line reveals something vital about the Christian life. Truth is not meant to terminate in private inspiration. It is meant to be carried, guarded, embodied, and handed forward. God does not pour truth into a person merely so that person can feel privately moved. He pours truth into people so it can live in them and then continue moving through them. The gospel is not static information. It is living truth meant to travel from heart to heart, from life to life, and from generation to generation.

This means faithfulness matters more than people often realize. Many believers look at their lives and assume that because they are not standing in front of a crowd, their consistency has little reach. But Scripture continually reveals that spiritual influence is often formed through quiet transmission. One person receives truth honestly. Another sees it lived out. Another is strengthened by it. Another carries it onward. That is how legacies of faithfulness are formed. They are not always loud in the moment. Sometimes they look like a parent praying through tears. Sometimes they look like a believer staying grounded in truth through suffering. Sometimes they look like a person refusing to lie, refusing to harden, refusing to walk away, refusing to let compromise become normal. Heaven understands the multiplying power of a faithful life long before the world ever notices it.

After that, Paul gives Timothy three pictures that have remained unforgettable because they are so human and so grounded in reality. He speaks of the soldier, the athlete, and the farmer. Each one reveals a different aspect of what Christian endurance looks like. The soldier shows focus and loyalty. The athlete shows discipline and lawful striving. The farmer shows patience, labor, and trust in unseen growth. Together, these images give a fuller picture of the shape of spiritual maturity. The believer is not meant to be random, reactive, and spiritually unformed. The believer is being shaped into someone whose life carries focus, training, and patient endurance.

The soldier image is especially striking because it reminds us that the Christian life includes conflict. Not petty conflict driven by ego, but real conflict at the level of spiritual allegiance. A person who belongs to Christ is no longer drifting in neutral territory. The flesh pulls against obedience. The world constantly invites distraction, fear, and compromise. The enemy works in darkness. Temptation whispers in intimate tones. Weariness clouds judgment. Pain makes shortcuts look reasonable. Resentment tries to offer itself as protection. The believer is not living inside a harmless environment. That is why Paul says to endure hardship as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. He is telling Timothy that hardship is not an interruption of faithful living. It is often part of the environment in which faithful living must take shape.

Then Paul says that no one engaged in warfare entangles himself with the affairs of this life, that he may please the one who enlisted him as a soldier. This is not a call to abandon ordinary responsibilities. It is a warning against entanglement. That word matters because entanglement is more than activity. It is inward knotting. It is what happens when a person becomes so wrapped up in lesser concerns that their soul loses single-hearted devotion. Two people can carry similar outward responsibilities while having very different inner conditions. One can remain centered in God. The other can become completely swallowed by distraction, anxiety, ambition, comparison, approval-seeking, financial fear, social noise, or endless mental clutter. The issue is not whether a person is active. The issue is whether their interior life has become tied up in what cannot give life.

That warning feels especially important in a world where distraction has become almost normal enough to look harmless. Many people no longer even notice how fragmented they are. Their thoughts are constantly interrupted. Their attention is scattered into pieces. Their emotional life is shaped by the next alert, the next opinion, the next crisis, the next visible demand, the next thing to worry about, the next way to compare themselves to somebody else. In that condition, a person can still talk about God while their inner life is becoming too crowded to hear Him clearly. The soldier image comes like mercy into that noise. It says remember who enlisted you. Remember that your life belongs to Someone. Remember that pleasing Christ is deeper than surviving the latest wave of earthly pressure. Remember that single devotion is not a luxury. It is part of how the soul stays alive.

The athlete image adds another dimension. Paul says that if anyone competes in athletics, he is not crowned unless he competes according to the rules. That image speaks to the necessity of discipline, integrity, and submission to the path God has actually given. Many people want spiritual fruit without spiritual formation. They want the crown without the training. They want impact without hidden obedience. They want to be used by God in visible ways while resisting the slow shaping that makes a person fit to carry anything holy without distorting it. But the athlete reminds us that there is a way of living that corresponds to the crown. There is preparation. There is restraint. There is lawful striving. There is surrender to the process.

This matters because modern culture trains people to trust desire almost automatically. If you want something intensely enough, you are often told that wanting it is proof of its rightness. But the Christian life does not work that way. Not every desire is trustworthy. Not every strong impulse is holy. Not every emotional intensity should be obeyed. The athlete is not crowned simply because he is passionate. He must compete according to the rules. In the same way, the believer cannot expect the deep life of God while rejecting the shape of obedience. Grace is not opposed to effort. Grace is opposed to earning. Those are not the same thing. The Christian does not strive in order to make God love them. The Christian strives because grace has brought them into a life that must now be trained into faithfulness.

There is a painful but necessary truth in that. Some people have built a version of spirituality that wants comfort without correction. They want reassurance without reordering. They want to feel close to God while resisting anything that would require discipline, surrender, or self-denial. But Christ never invited people into a vague emotional attachment. He called them to follow Him. Following implies movement. It implies structure. It implies a path that will not always flatter the old self. The athlete image reminds us that maturity is not automatic. It is formed through repeated obedience, and repeated obedience often feels unimpressive in the moment. Yet the seemingly ordinary repetition of faithfulness is exactly how character is strengthened.

Then Paul speaks of the hardworking farmer, who must be first to partake of the crops. This may be the tenderest image of the three because the farmer understands what it means to work without instant visible reward. He sows into ground that does not immediately answer him. He labors while much of the process remains hidden beneath the surface. He knows seasons. He knows waiting. He knows that life is forming in silence before it appears in visibility. That is deeply relevant to the Christian life because one of the hardest parts of discipleship is doing the right thing when the results are delayed.

There are many believers who can obey for a little while if encouragement comes quickly. But what happens when prayer seems quiet. What happens when the situation has not changed. What happens when the person you keep loving is still difficult. What happens when you remain faithful and still feel hidden. What happens when you keep sowing in tears and the field looks bare. That is where discouragement begins to whisper. It tells the soul that nothing is happening, that the labor is wasted, that the seed is dead, that the waiting proves absence. But the farmer image resists that lie. It reminds us that hidden growth is still growth. Silence is not always emptiness. The soil can look motionless while life is beginning to form below the surface.

That is such an important truth because God often works in ways that offend our demand for immediacy. He deepens roots before He reveals fruit. He forms substance before He permits visibility. He purifies motives before He widens influence. He teaches dependence before He grants certain kinds of increase. Yet people who are trained to measure only what they can see will often misinterpret those hidden seasons. They will call them wasted when heaven may be calling them foundational. The hardworking farmer helps correct that panic. He says keep laboring honestly. Keep trusting in the dark. Keep sowing in the field God has given you. Not because you can force the harvest, but because faithfulness itself is never wasted in the kingdom of God.

Paul then says, “Consider what I say, and may the Lord give you understanding in all things.” That line shows that spiritual truth is not always meant to be skimmed. Some things must be considered. Some truths need to be sat with. They need to be turned over inwardly until they begin to sink beneath the level of quick reading and start becoming part of the actual structure of a person. Paul is not merely handing Timothy information. He is inviting him into reflection. At the same time, he also says the Lord will give understanding. That balance matters. Human attentiveness matters, and divine illumination matters. We are called to think, and we are called to rely on God to make His truth living and clear in us.

That protects us from two opposite errors. One error is laziness, the assumption that understanding will somehow fall into a life that refuses reflection. The other error is self-sufficiency, the assumption that enough intellect can grasp spiritual reality without the Lord’s help. Paul rejects both. Consider what I say. The Lord will give understanding. That means mature spiritual life includes honest meditation joined to humble dependence. It means truth is not mastered the way a machine masters data. It is received, wrestled with, prayed through, and opened by God in the interior life.

Then Paul brings Timothy back to the center of everything with a command that changes the atmosphere of the chapter. “Remember that Jesus Christ, of the seed of David, was raised from the dead according to my gospel.” In the middle of hardship, training, labor, and endurance, Paul does not leave Timothy with principles alone. He brings him back to a Person. Christianity is not sustained by structure apart from Christ. It is not sustained by discipline detached from love. It is not sustained by duty without remembrance. The center of endurance is Jesus Christ Himself. The believer must remember Him. Not merely as a fact from the past, but as the living risen Lord whose identity defines the entire meaning of the struggle.

Raised from the dead is one of the most powerful phrases in all of Scripture because it means that death did not have the final word. It means the darkest chapter was not the last chapter. It means the place of apparent defeat was not the place of ultimate reality. That matters because every believer eventually faces forms of death before physical death ever arrives. There are broken dreams, exhausted prayers, silent seasons, buried hopes, relationships that seem beyond repair, doors that close, strength that runs out, and moments when the soul feels like it has reached the edge of what it knows how to carry. Into all of that comes the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Not as a decorative doctrine, but as the declaration that God is not bound by what looks final to human eyes.

Paul also says Jesus is of the seed of David. That grounds Christ in the long faithfulness of God through history. Jesus is not disconnected from promise. He is the fulfillment of promise. He is the One toward whom the story was always moving. God had not forgotten what He had spoken. Time had not canceled His purpose. Delay had not weakened His commitment. In Christ, the ancient promises stand embodied and fulfilled. That matters because many believers quietly fear that delay means abandonment. They interpret the slowness of certain seasons as evidence that God has forgotten them. But the mention of David reminds us that God can carry promise through long stretches of history without losing a single thread of what He intends to do.

Paul then speaks of his own suffering, saying that for this gospel he suffers trouble as an evildoer, even to the point of chains, but the word of God is not chained. There is enormous power in that contrast. Paul is chained, but the word is not. The messenger is bound, but the message is not. Human systems may restrict his body, but they cannot imprison the gospel. This is one of the clearest declarations in the chapter that visible limitation does not mean God’s purposes have been defeated. People can oppose. They can punish. They can slander. They can confine. But they cannot lock up the living word of God.

That truth reaches far beyond Paul’s prison. It speaks to every believer who feels hemmed in by circumstances they would never have chosen. It speaks to the person who feels limited by sickness, grief, obscurity, rejection, exhaustion, family strain, age, finances, unanswered questions, or seasons that seem smaller than they once imagined life would be. It is easy in such times to start believing that because you feel trapped, God’s work must also be trapped. But Paul’s words push against that fear. Your limitations are real, but they are not ultimate. What restricts you does not restrict God in the same way. Your chains are not His chains. The word of God is not chained.

This does not minimize pain. Paul does not pretend the chains are pleasant. He does not romanticize suffering. He tells the truth about it. But he refuses to let suffering define the whole reality. That is what Christian hope does. It does not deny the wound. It denies the wound the right to become the final interpreter of everything. Yes, there are chains. Yes, hardship is real. Yes, trouble hurts. But no, the word of God has not been stopped. No, God’s purposes have not collapsed. No, visible restriction is not proof of invisible defeat. That kind of hope is not fragile optimism. It is strength born from seeing beyond immediate conditions.

Paul then says he endures all things for the sake of the elect, that they also may obtain the salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory. Those words reveal something beautiful about the shape of love. Paul’s suffering is not meaningless to him because it is connected to the good of others. He is not enduring simply because he is stubborn. He is enduring because salvation matters. He is enduring because people matter. He is enduring because eternal glory matters more than temporary relief. That transforms the inner meaning of suffering. Pain does not stop being pain, but purpose gives it a place to stand.

That truth reaches straight into ordinary Christian life because not everyone is called to suffer exactly as Paul suffered, but every serious disciple will eventually have to endure something for the sake of love. Sometimes it is the daily cost of raising children with patience when you are already tired. Sometimes it is remaining gentle when somebody else is sharp with you. Sometimes it is continuing to pray for a person who keeps wandering. Sometimes it is telling the truth when a lie would protect your reputation. Sometimes it is serving faithfully in places that feel hidden. Sometimes it is refusing to become bitter after disappointment. Sometimes it is staying clean in private when compromise would offer quick relief. In all these ways and more, love asks something of us. It stretches us. It costs us. Yet that cost is not empty when it is joined to Christ and offered for the good of others.

Then Paul gives one of the faithful sayings in the chapter. “If we died with Him, we shall also live with Him. If we endure, we shall also reign with Him. If we deny Him, He also will deny us. If we are faithless, He remains faithful. He cannot deny Himself.” These lines are beautiful and severe at the same time. They do not allow us to reduce discipleship to sentiment. They tell the truth about union with Christ, endurance, denial, and divine faithfulness. They remind us that following Jesus is not decorative language. It is a life-and-death allegiance. To die with Him means the old life has been judged in Him. To live with Him means real life is now bound up in His risen life. To endure means perseverance matters. To deny Him means what we do with Jesus is not trivial.

That warning should not be softened until it disappears. Scripture is not careless with the Lordship of Christ. A person cannot treat Jesus as optional and still assume nothing of eternal significance is at stake. Yet this faithful saying also gives tremendous stability in the final line. “If we are faithless, He remains faithful. He cannot deny Himself.” That line has comfort in it that goes deeper than emotion because it reveals the unchanging nature of Christ. Human beings are unstable. Our feelings rise and fall. Our courage wavers. Our understanding can blur. Our hearts can feel frighteningly inconsistent. But Christ does not become false because we are unstable. He remains Himself. He remains true. He remains faithful because His own nature does not shift.

That does not make sin safe or denial unimportant. It does something different. It roots hope in the character of Christ rather than in the illusion of our own flawless emotional consistency. There are seasons when believers become painfully aware of how weak they are. They see their fear, their slowness, their mixed motives, their tiredness, their struggle to trust steadily. If they look only at themselves, they can become undone. But then Scripture reminds them that the deepest anchor of the Christian life is not the perfect steadiness of the believer. It is the unwavering faithfulness of Christ. He cannot deny Himself. He does not change because our emotions changed. He does not become less true because we feel less strong. He remains who He is, and that is why the believer can keep coming back to Him.

Paul then tells Timothy to remind people of these things and to charge them before the Lord not to strive about words to no profit, to the ruin of the hearers. That is a deeply needed word because not all religious argument is useful. Some debates create more smoke than light. Some verbal battles are driven not by a love of truth but by the ego’s hunger to dominate, impress, or win. The person engaged in them may feel energized, but the hearers are often damaged. They leave more confused, more cynical, more weary, or more divided than before. Paul sees that danger and speaks directly against it. Words matter too much to be used carelessly. They are capable of building people up or tearing them apart.

This is especially important because spiritual language can easily be used as a cover for vanity. A person can sound intense about truth while secretly being attached to self-exaltation. They may love the thrill of being the one who exposes error. They may enjoy making others look foolish. They may be more excited by conflict than by clarity. In that condition, even right words can become tools of destruction. Paul wants Timothy to reject that whole atmosphere. He wants him to see that truth handled wrongly can still injure people. Not every dispute is worth entering. Not every verbal challenge deserves a response. Wisdom knows the difference between necessary correction and ruinous striving.

Then comes one of the most quoted verses in this chapter. “Be diligent to present yourself approved to God, a worker who does not need to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” That verse is full of dignity because it frames the believer not as a performer, but as a worker. It calls Timothy not to chase human applause, but to seek approval from God. There is tremendous freedom in that. Human approval is unstable. Crowds can cheer one thing today and forget it tomorrow. People can praise what is shallow because it is easy, emotional, or fashionable. They can reject what is true because it makes them uncomfortable. If a person builds their inner life on those reactions, they will never have rest. But approved to God is different. That is a steadier ambition. It pulls the soul away from the exhausting addiction to being validated by people who cannot even see clearly into the heart.

A worker who does not need to be ashamed implies integrity before God. It means the person is not shrinking back because they know they have handled holy things carelessly. It means they are not inwardly divided by the knowledge that they have twisted truth for their own purposes. Rightly dividing the word of truth means handling Scripture straight, carefully, faithfully, and reverently. The word of God is not clay to be molded by our preferences. It is not a prop for our image. It is not raw material for spiritual branding. It is holy truth. To handle it rightly, a person must first allow themselves to be corrected by it, searched by it, and humbled by it. Otherwise they will eventually start bending it around themselves.

This is why diligence matters here. Paul is not calling Timothy to become flashy or impressive. He is calling him to become careful. Carefulness with the word is an act of love. It protects the hearer. It honors God. It keeps truth from being turned into spectacle. There are few things more dangerous than someone who enjoys using Scripture while no longer trembling before it. Such a person may sound persuasive, but they will slowly distort what should have remained straight. A worker approved to God is different. He labors beneath the gaze of the One who cannot be manipulated. He does not want to be admired more than he wants to be faithful. That is a far cleaner ambition.

Paul then warns against profane and idle babblings, saying they increase to more ungodliness and that their message spreads like cancer or gangrene. This is strong language because the danger is real. Empty or corrupt speech is never truly empty in its effects. It shapes atmosphere. It lowers sensitivity. It dulls seriousness about God. What sounds casual or clever in one moment can slowly deform the inner life if it is left unchecked. People often assume corruption must arrive dramatically, but that is not always how it works. Sometimes it comes through repeated exposure to words that make the holy seem ordinary, the false seem harmless, and the impure seem normal. That kind of speech spreads because it appeals to the flesh while pretending to be inconsequential.

Paul names Hymenaeus and Philetus as examples of those who had swerved from the truth, saying that the resurrection had already happened and that they were overthrowing the faith of some. That detail reminds us that false teaching is not merely an academic issue. It affects real people. It unsettles faith. It shakes confidence. It distorts hope. When truth is bent, souls are not left untouched. That is why doctrine matters. Not because Christians are called to become coldly argumentative, but because people need truth strong enough to carry them through suffering, temptation, and death. Shallow error might sound liberating at first, but it will not hold when life becomes severe.

Yet in the middle of that warning, Paul gives one of the most stabilizing lines in the whole chapter. “Nevertheless the firm foundation of God stands, having this seal: ‘The Lord knows those who are His,’ and, ‘Let everyone who names the name of Christ depart from iniquity.’” There is something deeply strengthening about that. Error exists. Some will swerve. Some will damage others. Some voices will create confusion. Nevertheless the firm foundation of God stands. The truth of God is not hanging by a thread dependent on human perfection for its survival. God has built on something unshakable. His foundation stands even when people fail. That means the believer does not need to live in panic.

The first part of that seal is full of comfort. “The Lord knows those who are His.” There is so much peace in that sentence when it enters the heart deeply enough. The Lord knows. Not guesses. Not suspects. Knows. He knows His people with perfect clarity. He knows the real condition of the heart beneath the public surface. He knows the longing that still lives under exhaustion. He knows the tears nobody saw. He knows the battles that left no visible marks. He knows what grace has begun in a person even when that person feels weak, confused, or misunderstood. That knowledge is not distant and clinical. It is the knowledge of covenant, of relationship, of belonging.

This matters because one of the deepest human aches is the fear of being unseen or misread. People move through the world carrying realities that others do not fully understand. They can be judged by their worst moment, reduced to a label, or misunderstood by people who never took the time to look beneath the surface. That hurts because humans were not made for total isolation of the soul. Yet in the middle of that ache, Scripture says the Lord knows those who are His. When nobody else sees the sincerity beneath your struggle, He sees it. When your obedience is hidden, He sees it. When your grief has made you quiet, He sees it. When your spiritual fight has been invisible to others, He sees it. That truth can hold a person together in very dark seasons.

But the second part of the seal keeps that comfort from turning sentimental. “Let everyone who names the name of Christ depart from iniquity.” Belonging to Christ is not permission to make peace with darkness. It is a call to leave it. That departure is not always instant in every practical detail, and it is never without battle, but it is real. A believer cannot rightly name Christ while cherishing what poisons intimacy with Him. Grace is not a hiding place for rebellion. Grace is the power by which rebellion begins to lose its hold. That is why Scripture keeps comfort and holiness together. The Lord knows those who are His, and those who are His are called away from sin.

This is where many hearts resist. They want reassurance without surrender. They want divine closeness while defending what keeps the soul divided. But God does not bless that illusion. Sin always promises life more easily than obedience does, but it cannot give what it advertises. It stains perception. It hardens the interior life. It steals confidence in prayer. It leaves the soul heavier than it found it. God’s call to depart from iniquity is not the shrinking of life. It is rescue from what is already shrinking life. Holiness is not the enemy of joy. It is the clearing away of what makes joy impossible to sustain.

Paul then gives the image of a great house with vessels of gold and silver, but also of wood and clay, some for honor and some for dishonor. He says that if anyone cleanses himself from what is dishonorable, he will be a vessel for honor, sanctified and useful for the Master, prepared for every good work. This picture is searching because it reveals that usefulness to God is tied to consecration. Many people want to be used by God in visible ways, but they do not want the hidden cleansing that makes a person fit for holy use. They want influence without purification. They want impact without inward surrender. They want calling without consecration. But the path of Scripture does not allow those things to be separated.

The issue is not whether God is strong enough to use anyone in some broad sense. The issue is what kind of vessel a person is becoming. A vessel may exist in the house and still not be fit for honorable use. That is sobering. It means outward activity is not enough. Public visibility is not enough. Even gifting is not enough. The condition of the vessel matters. Is the life being cleansed from what is dishonorable. Is the interior being made holy. Is the person becoming useful to the Master, not merely busy in religious activity. These are harder questions, but they are the right questions.

Cleansing is costly because it requires honesty. It means facing what we often protect. Sometimes what is dishonorable is obvious. Lust. deceit. addiction. manipulation. resentment. Sometimes it is subtler and therefore more hidden behind spiritual language. Pride. vanity. secret contempt. the addiction to approval. ambition that has learned to talk like ministry while still centering the self. The Spirit does not expose these things to humiliate the believer. He exposes them because He loves too deeply to leave a person bound by what is making them unfit for deeper use. Conviction is mercy when it leads to cleansing.

“Useful for the Master” is such a beautiful phrase because it makes holiness relational. The believer is not being cleaned up for abstract moral performance. The believer is being prepared for the Master. This is about belonging. It is about becoming the kind of person whose inner life is increasingly available to the purposes of Christ. That availability does not come only through inspiration. It comes through consecration. It comes through the removal of what contaminates perception, divides allegiance, and clouds spiritual sensitivity. Preparedness is rarely glamorous. Much of it happens in secret. But it is in those hidden places that God is often making a life ready for every good work.

Then Paul says, “Flee also youthful lusts, but pursue righteousness, faith, love, peace with those who call on the Lord out of a pure heart.” There is movement in this verse. Flee and pursue. Leave and seek. Turn away and turn toward. The Christian life is never only about what is abandoned. It is also about what is actively desired and followed. If a person only tries to suppress sin without pursuing what is good, their inner life becomes fragile. It stays fixated on the thing being resisted. Paul gives a fuller vision. Flee what will corrupt you, and pursue what will make you whole.

Youthful lusts are not limited to a specific age. They include the kind of immature impulses that make a person reactive, restless, eager to prove themselves, quick to fight, driven by appetite, hungry for recognition, and easily inflamed by emotion or ego. These passions feel powerful because they offer immediacy. They promise quick relief, quick validation, quick power, quick expression. But they damage the soul. That is why Paul does not say to negotiate with them. He says flee. There are some things you do not manage safely by standing close to them. You create distance. You stop pretending that curiosity near temptation is harmless. You stop flattering yourself with the idea that you can linger where you repeatedly fall and still stay strong.

But again, Paul does not leave the believer in a negative posture. He says pursue righteousness, faith, love, and peace. These are not vague religious words. They are directions for life. Righteousness means learning to love what is straight before God. Faith means active reliance on Him when sight is not enough. Love means being drawn out of self-centeredness into a life shaped by the good of others. Peace means the settled order that comes as a life is brought under the reign of Christ. These things must be pursued because maturity does not drift into existence. It is formed through repeated turning toward what is good.

Paul also says this happens with those who call on the Lord out of a pure heart. That line matters because the Christian life was never meant to be lived in total isolation. We need the company of others whose hearts are honestly turned toward God. Not merely religious people. Not merely loud people. People of sincere devotion. People whose pursuit of the Lord is not theater. The right kind of fellowship steadies the soul. It keeps the heart warm. It corrects distortions that grow in loneliness. It reminds us that the race is shared. Even if some seasons feel lonely, the principle still stands. God often strengthens people through others who are also calling on Him.

Paul then returns again to the matter of disputes, telling Timothy to avoid foolish and ignorant controversies because they generate strife. He is pressing the point because the temptation is persistent. Some people are drawn to argument the way others are drawn to applause. It energizes them. It gives them a feeling of sharpness, superiority, or importance. But these disputes breed quarrels. They often reveal that a person is more attached to conflict than to healing. Paul does not want Timothy to build his life around that kind of energy.

Instead, he gives one of the clearest descriptions of spiritual posture in the whole chapter. “And a servant of the Lord must not quarrel but be gentle to all, able to teach, patient, in humility correcting those who are in opposition.” This is not weakness. It is maturity. Gentleness is what strength looks like when it has been surrendered to Christ. Patience is what conviction looks like when it has learned to bear with the slow pace of human change. Humility is what truth looks like when it no longer needs to make much of the self. The servant of the Lord is not forbidden from correcting. Correction is still present. But the spirit in which it is offered matters enormously.

This is challenging because the flesh would often rather defeat opponents than restore them. It wants the satisfaction of being right in public. It wants to expose. It wants to dominate. But Paul gives a different picture. Gentle. Able to teach. Patient. Humble. These qualities are not lesser virtues. They are signs that truth has gone deep enough into a person to begin shaping the manner as well as the message. A harsh person may still be correct about some things, but if they leave others scorched rather than helped, something is wrong. The servant of the Lord is trying to serve truth in a way that leaves room for repentance.

Then Paul says that God may perhaps grant repentance so that those in opposition may know the truth, come to their senses, and escape the snare of the devil, having been held captive by him to do his will. These closing lines reveal the deeper battlefield behind human opposition. This is not merely intellectual disagreement. There is deception involved. There is bondage involved. There is a snare. The devil is not a symbol here. He is a real enemy who entangles people in lies, pride, confusion, and hostility. That means the servant of the Lord must never treat error casually. The stakes are real.

But the chapter does not end in despair. It ends with hope rooted in the possibility of repentance. God may grant it. That means the hardest person is not outside His reach. The most deceived person is not beyond what grace can do. The one most trapped in pride, confusion, or hostility is not unreachable for the Lord. That truth changes how believers see people. It keeps them from surrendering others too quickly to hopelessness. It reminds them that no argument alone can save a person, but God can awaken a conscience. God can break a snare. God can bring someone back to their senses.

“To come to their senses” is such a profound phrase because deception is a form of inner disorder. A person can sound certain while moving deeper into unreality. They can be confident and still be blind. Repentance is the mercy of waking up. It is the gift of being brought back into reality as God defines it. That is why humility matters so much in correction. If God has brought you to your senses, then you know you stand where you stand by grace, not superiority. That awareness keeps truth from becoming a weapon of self-exaltation.

When you step back and look at all of 2 Timothy 2 together, it becomes clear that this chapter is teaching more than endurance. It is teaching a whole way of being. It teaches strength that kneels under grace. It teaches discipline that does not forget love. It teaches holiness without self-righteousness. It teaches truth without quarrelsome ego. It teaches patience in hidden labor. It teaches cleansing as preparation for usefulness. It teaches hope in the middle of chains. It teaches remembrance of the risen Christ as the center of faithfulness. It teaches that the Lord knows those who are His. It teaches that naming Christ must include departure from sin. It teaches that even those trapped in deception may yet be awakened by God.

That is why this chapter speaks so powerfully to weary believers. There are many people who are not outwardly falling apart, but inwardly they are carrying strain. They are trying to remain clear in a confused world. They are trying to keep their soul clean in a culture that trains impurity into normal life. They are trying to stay gentle while being surrounded by harshness. They are trying to keep believing when fruit is delayed. They are trying to walk with God while their own weakness has become increasingly obvious to them. Second Timothy 2 does not ignore that reality. It meets it with gravity and with hope.

If you feel distracted, this chapter calls you back to focus. If you feel weak, this chapter calls you to strength in grace. If you feel impatient with how slowly growth is happening, this chapter calls you to the farmer’s patient labor. If you feel tempted to treat Scripture carelessly, this chapter calls you to handle the word rightly. If compromise has become too familiar, this chapter calls you to depart from iniquity. If harshness has started masquerading as conviction, this chapter calls you back to gentleness. If you feel unseen, it tells you the Lord knows those who are His. If circumstances make you feel trapped, it reminds you that the word of God is not chained.

And at the center of all of it remains the command to remember Jesus Christ. That is the fire in the middle of the chapter. Remember Him when the road feels long. Remember Him when obedience feels costly. Remember Him when the soil looks quiet. Remember Him when your own strength is clearly insufficient. Remember Him risen from the dead. Remember that death did not get the final word over Him, and therefore darkness does not get the final word over those who belong to Him. Remember that the God who fulfilled His promise in Christ has not suddenly become careless with your story.

Second Timothy 2 is not a chapter for spectators. It is for the believer in the hidden places of endurance. It is for the soul that must learn how to stand without hardening. It is for the heart that must learn how to be strong without becoming proud. It is for the servant who must learn how to speak truth without becoming cruel. It is for the vessel that must be cleansed for honorable use. It is for the laborer who must keep sowing while the harvest remains out of sight. It is for the person who needs to know that grace is not weakness and that remembrance of Christ is not a small thing. It is the center from which all faithful endurance lives.

So let this chapter search you. Let it strengthen you. Let it call you out of entanglement. Let it expose what needs cleansing. Let it steady you where you have become scattered. Let it humble you where you have become sharp. Let it comfort you where you feel unseen. Let it remind you that hidden faithfulness matters and that usefulness to the Master is worth more than all the applause this world can offer. Let it bring you back again to Jesus Christ, raised from the dead, because that remembrance changes the whole atmosphere of the struggle.

In the end, the deepest strength is not the kind that makes a person look most impressive. It is the kind that keeps them faithful. It is the kind that does not let suffering make them false. It is the kind that does not let delay make them quit. It is the kind that does not let truth turn harsh in their hands. It is the kind that kneels under grace, rises in obedience, cleanses itself from what is dishonorable, handles Scripture with reverence, and keeps remembering the risen Christ. That is the quiet fire of 2 Timothy 2. And that kind of fire can carry a wounded soul all the way through.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from Versão Legendada

Fazer “resumão” das minhas notas, que deveriam ser diárias, virou uma constante, porque tenho estado tão focada nos estudos offline que atropelei tudo: nos últimos dias meus estudos estão direcionados à prática de pronúncia, sobretudo nos idiomas mais desafiadores, como sueco, cantonês e galês.

Além disso, estou tentando finalizar a organização dos decks do Anki, assim como a versão física dos mesmos. Também tenho praticado a escrita de ideogramas simplificados e tradicionais.

#notas

 
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from The happy place

When I sat by the computer today, I left the window slightly ajar, so that I felt the chill spring wind on my back, and next to me I had my dog.

The orange dog, she spends the day mostly sleeping while I work. When she does, her eyes resemble two em dashes — — , and on her face is the faintest little smile which makes her look so serene. (Like this: —◡— )

The cats, on the other hand, now sit next to each other by the opened window, miaowing miserably; trapped as they are, inside this little apartment.

On the computer, there was a lot of heated discussions back and forth. Some people even expressed various forms of disappointments (I’m being vague on purpose), but I have learned that managing other people’s feelings is out of scope; managing my own is more than enough for me.


I later went to the office (because now it’s next day, I never published yesterday).

I was walking in the heavy rain which made the world feel smaller and softer. For all the coldness there was something cozy about the whole thing.

On my way to the office building, I might’ve let a drug addict in, but it could also have been a fronted developer.

Or a combination

Now having completed yet another Umamusume: Pretty Derby A+ run and eaten a soggy cold McDonalds apple pie, lying on the bed next to the little dog, I feel this weird sense of contentment.

 
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from Douglas Vandergraph

There are seasons in life when what wears you down is not the amount of work in front of you, not the pressure of the moment, and not even the ordinary pain that comes with being alive in a broken world. What wears you down is the atmosphere. It is the way your soul has to keep adjusting to a place where honor is no longer steady. It is the way you begin to feel yourself tighten before certain conversations. It is the way you start thinking about tone before words even arrive. It is the way your inner life gets trained to expect coldness, dismissal, irritation, or a quiet kind of contempt that rarely announces itself loudly enough for other people to understand. That is why a person can endure incredible hardship for a long time and still eventually reach a point where they know they cannot remain where they are. The issue was never that life got difficult. The issue was that respect started dying while they were still trying to call the whole thing normal. A hard road can still be holy. A painful chapter can still carry purpose. But an atmosphere of disrespect does something else. It does not only test your strength. It starts eating at your peace. It starts asking your spirit to survive on scraps of honor and call that enough.

Many people do not notice when that shift first begins because they were raised to think almost entirely in terms of endurance. They learned how to stay when things were heavy. They learned how to keep going when the road was lonely. They learned how to absorb disappointment without falling apart. They learned how to love through hard things, pray through hard things, work through hard things, and suffer through hard things. There is something beautiful in that kind of steadiness. Scripture does not celebrate people who run from every challenge. Deep faith produces endurance. Mature love produces endurance. Real character produces endurance. But endurance without discernment can become a slow form of self-betrayal. A person can become so committed to staying that they forget to ask what staying is costing them. They can become so determined not to quit that they stop noticing when the thing they are enduring is no longer simply difficult. It has become dishonoring. It has become a place where their humanity is being handled without care. That is where confusion begins, because the same strength that once made them admirable now becomes the very thing keeping them somewhere too long.

It is one thing to be tired because a season is demanding. It is another thing to be tired because your soul has been living in a climate where it never really gets to unclench. Those two forms of tiredness are not the same. One may leave you worn out, but it does not necessarily make you feel smaller. The other leaves a different mark. It makes you question whether your needs are too much. It makes you wonder whether speaking honestly will only create more tension. It makes you feel as though your presence is appreciated mainly when it is convenient or useful. It can leave you doing all the same outward things you have always done while inwardly feeling like some part of you is slowly disappearing. That is why this subject matters so much. So many people are not exhausted only because they are working hard. They are exhausted because they are living where peace has to keep negotiating with disrespect just to survive another day.

Disrespect rarely enters in a way that makes everything obvious at once. Most of the time it starts in smaller ways that are easy to excuse when taken one by one. It shows up in the tone that turns cold when you need care most. It shows up in the repeated interruptions that seem minor until you realize how often your voice gets cut short. It shows up in the way your pain somehow keeps becoming an inconvenience instead of a reality worthy of tenderness. It shows up in conversations that leave you unsettled even when nothing explosive happened. It shows up in the strange pattern where you keep leaving interactions feeling like you need to recover your own sense of what is true. Because these moments are often subtle, people talk themselves out of them. They say everyone is stressed. They say life is hard for all of us. They say nobody is perfect. They say they should not be so sensitive. They say maybe they are reading too much into it. Those thoughts can sound humble, but sometimes they are simply ways of postponing the truth. Sometimes a person is not being overly sensitive. Sometimes they are slowly becoming honest about what the atmosphere has been doing to them for a very long time.

That honesty can be difficult because once you admit that the issue is not only hardship but dishonor, the whole question changes. Then the issue is not how much longer can I stay. The issue becomes what is this teaching my soul if I keep calling it normal. That question reaches deeper than many people expect. A person can endure many painful things without losing themselves. Human beings were made with remarkable resilience. But repeated disrespect trains the inner life in a different direction. It teaches you to become cautious with your own honesty. It teaches you to downplay your wounds. It teaches you to expect less from love. It teaches you that being handled gently is unusual and that being spoken to with care is almost a luxury. If those lessons stay long enough, they start reshaping the way you move through life. You begin apologizing before you need to. You begin editing yourself before anyone asks. You begin trying to make your presence as easy as possible so that maybe the atmosphere will stay calm. That is not the fruit of a healthy place. That is the fruit of learning how to adapt to too little honor.

God did not create the human soul to flourish there. He can sustain a person through almost anything, but His sustaining power should never be confused with His approval of the environment. This is where many people get stuck. They think that because God is giving them strength to endure, He must be asking them to remain exactly where they are forever. But sometimes His strength is not an endorsement of the place. Sometimes it is simply mercy while your eyes are still opening. Sometimes He keeps you alive inside something long enough for the truth to ripen. Sometimes His grace is carrying you because He knows you have not yet named clearly what your soul has already been feeling. He is patient in that way. He does not always force instant clarity. He often leads people gently until the thing they kept trying to minimize becomes impossible to ignore.

Jesus never taught people to worship endurance for its own sake. He taught perseverance, but He never separated it from wisdom. He loved people deeply, but He did not confuse love with endless exposure to contempt. He was compassionate without being careless. He was openhearted without being naive. He moved through the world with a holy steadiness that did not depend on everyone receiving Him rightly. That matters because many people stay in dishonoring places mainly because they are still hoping to finally be understood by someone who has already shown very little interest in understanding them. They keep believing one more explanation will change everything. One more calm conversation. One more patient effort. One more chance for the other person to see what is really happening. Sometimes that hope is not wrong. Sometimes truth does break through. Sometimes repentance happens. Sometimes real healing begins. But not always. Some people and some environments do not misread you by accident. They depend on the misreading because it protects them from having to face what is broken. Staying endlessly available to that pattern is not always faithfulness. Sometimes it is only a slower way of postponing grief.

And grief is often the hidden reason people stay too long. They are not only attached to the place itself. They are attached to what they hoped it would become. They are attached to the picture they carried in their heart of how this story might end if enough truth, love, patience, and prayer were poured into it. They grieve the possibility long before they grieve the reality. That makes it hard to leave because leaving does not only mean stepping away from what is happening. It means releasing what you wanted to happen. It means admitting that the version of the story you kept trying to protect may never actually come alive. That hurts more than many people can explain. It hurts because love was real. Effort was real. Hope was real. The time you invested was real. So when clarity finally comes, it often arrives with sorrow. Not because the truth is wrong, but because the truth ends the fantasy that your faithfulness alone could turn a dishonoring atmosphere into a place of peace.

That sorrow should not be rushed. It matters. It says something beautiful about the person carrying it. It shows that they were not casual with love. It shows that they stayed because they cared. It shows that the breaking point did not come cheaply. Too often people look at the final moment when someone draws a line or walks away and assume that is the whole story. They do not see the months or years of trying, praying, accommodating, explaining, giving chances, swallowing hurt, and hoping again. They do not see how many times the person chose peace over reaction. They do not see how much internal work it took to keep showing up. So when the final decision comes, it looks sudden to those who only saw the surface. But most of the time it was not sudden at all. It was the visible end of an invisible process. It was the moment when truth finally outweighed the hope that things might somehow change without ever being honestly faced.

There is also a kind of guilt that often rides alongside this whole struggle. Tender people feel it strongly. They wonder whether they are being unfair. They wonder whether their pain is big enough to matter. They wonder whether a better Christian would just keep absorbing more. They think of the other person’s wounds, stress, history, and brokenness, and because they are compassionate, they make room again. Then they make room again. Then they make room again. Compassion is a beautiful thing, but compassion without discernment can quietly become a prison. Understanding why someone behaves the way they do does not make the impact of that behavior disappear. Knowing their pain does not mean your peace must become the payment for it. Seeing their wounds does not mean you are called to stand forever in the line of what their wounds keep producing. You can understand someone deeply and still know that the atmosphere around them is no longer safe for your soul. Those two truths can live in the same heart.

That is an important thing to say because many good people were taught to think of holiness almost entirely in terms of what they owe others. They became quick to think of everyone else’s burden and very slow to tell the truth about their own. They became skilled at seeing the pain in other people and hesitant to name the pain in themselves. They developed compassion, but often without the balance of honest self-recognition. Over time that can make a person easier to misuse. Not because they are foolish, but because they are kind. Not because they lack backbone, but because they sincerely do not want to become selfish. Yet truth does not become selfish simply because it includes your own soul. Your dignity matters too. Your peace matters too. Your humanity matters too. Loving others was never meant to require the repeated denial of what is happening inside you.

This is where so many people begin to confuse humility with disappearing. They think being godly means taking up less room. They think being mature means becoming harder to hurt. They think spiritual growth means needing less care. But that is not what maturity is. Maturity is not becoming numb enough to survive almost anything without visible reaction. Maturity is learning how to tell the truth without becoming cruel. It is learning how to love without abandoning wisdom. It is learning how to stay soft-hearted without becoming endlessly available to what diminishes you. A mature person can forgive. A mature person can endure. A mature person can work through conflict and discomfort. But a mature person can also recognize when the issue is no longer simple conflict. They can recognize when an atmosphere has become corrosive. They can recognize when peace is no longer growing there because honor has been steadily leaving the room.

One of the clearest signs that something has gone wrong is when you find yourself having to repeatedly recover your own reality after normal interactions. In a healthy place, even when there is tension or disagreement, you do not constantly have to reconstruct what happened just to reassure yourself that you are not imagining things. In a healthy place, your pain can be real without becoming an inconvenience. In a healthy place, you may have hard conversations, but those conversations do not routinely leave you feeling like your personhood was reduced in the process. In a disrespectful place, by contrast, ordinary interactions can become exhausting because of how much inner repair they require afterward. You have to remind yourself that what stung really did sting. You have to talk yourself out of self-doubt. You have to keep separating what is true from what the atmosphere keeps trying to make you believe. That work is draining. It consumes energy that should never have been required just to participate in everyday life.

God is not casual about the worth of a person. Human dignity is not a modern idea. It begins in creation itself. Scripture says human beings are made in the image of God. That means people are not valuable only because they are helpful, talented, productive, agreeable, or easy to deal with. Their worth rests in something deeper. It rests in the God who made them. So when a person lives in a climate where their dignity keeps being handled lightly, that is not a small matter. It is not just unfortunate communication. It is not just a rough edge in someone’s personality. It is a repeated failure to treat something sacred as sacred. That is why patterns matter so much. One imperfect moment is not the same as a climate. One bad day is not the same as a culture. Everyone fails. Everyone speaks poorly sometimes. Everyone has rough seasons. But repetition reveals what is normal. Repetition tells you what the environment does when no one is trying especially hard. Repetition reveals whether honor still has a home there.

That is also why strength can become such a complicated thing. Strong people are often the last ones to leave disrespectful places because they can carry so much. They can absorb more than others know. They can keep going under conditions that would break many people sooner. Yet being able to survive something does not mean it is good for you. Some of the strongest people in the world have mistaken their survival for a calling. They thought because they could keep enduring it, they were supposed to. They thought because they had enough grace to keep making room, they should. But ability and assignment are not the same thing. A person can carry a heavy load for a long time and still not be meant to live under it forever. Sometimes what looks like spiritual strength from the outside is actually a person staying beyond wisdom because they have not yet given themselves permission to tell the truth about how much this is costing them.

When truth does begin to surface, it often feels more like weakness than strength at first. You may feel tired. You may feel sad. You may feel guilty. You may feel disoriented because some part of you still wishes the story were different. That is normal. The moment of seeing clearly is rarely dramatic in the triumphant sense. Often it is quiet. Often it feels like something in you finally giving up the effort to rename this as something smaller than it is. Often it feels like sorrow more than anger. And that sorrow is holy because it means you did not stop caring. It means the line did not come from coldness. It came from truth finally becoming too plain to ignore.

This is also where forgiveness is often misunderstood. Many people think forgiveness requires continued access. They think that if they really forgive, they must remain available to the same pattern. But forgiveness and access are not the same thing. Forgiveness is about what you release before God. It is about refusing to build your identity around revenge, bitterness, or hatred. It is about handing justice over to wiser hands than your own. Access is different. Access is about trust, stewardship, and whether a person or environment can receive your life without continuing to mishandle it. You can forgive and still step back. You can forgive and still say this cannot continue. You can forgive and still walk away from what has repeatedly shown itself careless with your peace. In fact, many people do not fully begin to heal until they understand that forgiveness does not require them to stand forever in reach of the same wound.

The line between hardship and disrespect is not always obvious right away, which is why discernment matters so much. Hardship may stretch you, but it does not require the death of your dignity. A difficult season may humble you, but it does not teach you that you matter less. Real correction may sting, but it does not dehumanize you. Real love may challenge you, but it does not keep reducing you. Disrespect feels different. It carries an atmosphere in which your humanity becomes negotiable. It leaves you feeling managed rather than known. It leaves you feeling tolerated rather than cherished. It leaves you feeling like peace in this place depends on how much of yourself you are willing to shrink. Once that pattern becomes clear, continuing to call it just a hard season no longer sounds humble. It starts to sound false.

It reaches into the quiet places where many people have been trying to stay faithful while something inside them has been slowly thinning out. It reaches into the hidden weariness of those who are not afraid of pain at all, but are finally starting to realize that disrespect is a different kind of wound. And it reaches into the deeper spiritual question underneath it, which is whether God ever asks His children to keep making peace survive on scraps where honor has already started to disappear.

The answer is no. God does not ask His children to keep calling scraps enough when the soul is quietly starving for truth, honor, and peace. He does not ask them to build a life around the repeated absence of care and then praise that life as if it were the highest form of holiness. He does not ask them to remain in endless agreement with what keeps training them to live smaller than the freedom He meant for them. That does not mean life with God will always feel gentle. It will not. There will be difficult seasons. There will be long nights. There will be painful callings. There will be relationships that require deep humility, patient repair, and hard conversations. There will be moments when love costs something real. But those things are not the same as living in a climate where respect has become uncertain and your spirit has to keep surviving on whatever little bits of honor happen to fall your way. A soul can endure a lot when it is still being held with dignity. A soul begins to fracture when it is repeatedly asked to survive without it.

That is why peace matters so much here. Peace is not the same as comfort. It is not laziness. It is not avoidance. It is not the childish wish for a life with no tension. Peace is the deep inner steadiness that grows where truth and love can breathe together. It is what happens when a person does not have to split themselves in two just to keep existing in an environment. It is what happens when reality is allowed to be named instead of constantly softened, delayed, excused, or turned into something else. In a healthy place, peace may still be tested, but it is not always under attack from the climate itself. In a disrespectful place, peace is always trying to survive. It is always trying to make do with too little. It is always trying to recover after ordinary interactions. It is always trying to hold together what the atmosphere keeps pulling apart. That is why people often say they are tired when the truth is deeper than tiredness. They are worn down from having to protect inwardly what should have been safe outwardly.

Some people have lived that way so long that they barely remember what another kind of life feels like. They have grown used to the low-level ache of being diminished. They have grown used to living carefully. They have grown used to interpreting every silence, every tone, every shift in expression, every moment where something does not feel right. They have grown used to doing emotional math all day long, trying to figure out how to say something, when to say it, whether to say it at all, and how much of themselves can safely appear in the room. That is not peace. That is management. That is survival. That is the soul living on scraps and slowly forgetting that it was made for something fuller than this. No wonder so many people are exhausted. No wonder so many people feel dull inside. No wonder so many people keep wondering why simple moments feel heavy. They are not merely dealing with life. They are dealing with the cost of being in an atmosphere where their spirit has stopped feeling fully safe to live.

And because this often happens slowly, people can become deeply attached to the very thing that is hurting them. That may sound strange, but it is true. Human beings do not only attach to what is good for them. They also attach to what is familiar. They attach to routines, roles, hopes, unfinished stories, and the identities they built while trying to survive. A person may remain in a disrespectful environment not only because they still love someone, but because they do not know who they are outside the role of being the one who endures it. They know how to be patient. They know how to be understanding. They know how to be the stabilizer, the absorber, the one who keeps it from falling apart. If they step away, then they have to face the grief of what was, the truth of what is, and the uncertainty of who they are when they are no longer serving as the cushion for everyone else’s refusal to face reality. That is why change can feel terrifying even when truth has become undeniable.

But there is mercy in the fact that God does not only call people out of what is wrong. He also meets them in the emptiness that follows. He does not say, now that you have seen clearly, figure out the rest alone. He is the shepherd of the soul. He knows how disorienting it can be to stop living in constant reaction. He knows how strange it can feel to enter a quieter place after years of bracing. He knows that when chaos has been familiar, calm can initially feel uncomfortable. A person who has lived under disrespect for a long time may step away and still carry the old climate inside themselves for a while. They may still flinch. They may still over-explain. They may still expect to be misread. They may still feel guilty for resting, speaking plainly, or drawing lines. That does not mean they were wrong to tell the truth. It means healing is real work. It means the soul needs time to learn a different rhythm.

This is one of the reasons God’s restoration is so beautiful. He restores slowly enough for the heart to trust it. He does not merely remove people from painful atmospheres. He heals what those atmospheres trained inside them. He heals the instinct to apologize for existing. He heals the reflex that expects coldness. He heals the assumption that wanting care is asking too much. He heals the temptation to call silence peace. He heals the habit of treating self-erasure as virtue. Little by little, He teaches a person that honor is not an unreasonable desire. It is part of what healthy love looks like. Little by little, He teaches them that they do not need to earn tenderness by becoming invisible. Little by little, He rebuilds their ability to recognize truth earlier, to trust peace without suspicion, and to stop mistaking survival for health.

That restoration often includes a new relationship with boundaries. Boundaries are deeply misunderstood by many tender-hearted people because they fear boundaries will make them hard. They fear that if they stop allowing endless access, they will lose compassion. They fear that if they close the door on disrespect, they will become less like Christ. But the opposite is often true. Wise boundaries do not make a person cold. They protect the conditions where love can stay clean. Without boundaries, love becomes confused. It gets mixed with fear, guilt, resentment, exhaustion, and ongoing self-betrayal. Then a person is no longer loving freely. They are loving under compulsion. They are loving under pressure. They are loving while slowly vanishing. That is not what God intends. Boundaries are not the death of love. Many times they are the only thing keeping love from becoming poisoned.

This is especially important because so many people think the holiest life is the one with the least resistance. They imagine spiritual maturity as a kind of endless availability in which they absorb everything, release everything, and remain unshaken no matter how badly the atmosphere treats them. But Christ was not endlessly available in that way. He was pure in heart, but He was not without boundaries. He was full of mercy, but He was not controlled by other people’s access to Him. He gave Himself completely to the Father, not to the demands of every person who wanted something from Him. That distinction matters. Some people have given themselves so completely to unhealthy dynamics that they no longer know the difference between sacrifice and surrendering their life into the hands of disorder. God never asks for that. He asks for obedience. He asks for love. He asks for truth. He does not ask for the permanent surrender of your peace to whatever atmosphere happens to be around you.

It is also important to say that when a person reaches the point of leaving what has become disrespectful, that moment is rarely clean on the emotional level. It is often mixed. There can be relief and grief at the same time. There can be clarity and sadness at the same time. There can be peace and pain at the same time. There can even be longing for what was familiar at the same time as the knowledge that familiar was no longer healthy. This confuses many people. They think if the choice were really right, it would feel simple. But many right choices do not feel simple in the moment. Sometimes they feel heartbreaking because the truth costs something. Sometimes they feel lonely because stepping out of an unhealthy pattern often means stepping away from a role people had grown comfortable letting you play. Sometimes they feel uncertain because the old world, even with all its pain, was at least known to you. None of that makes the truth less true.

The real question is not whether leaving hurts. Of course it can hurt. The real question is whether staying requires too much falseness from your soul. Does staying require you to keep pretending the atmosphere is healthier than it is. Does staying require you to keep minimizing the cost. Does staying require you to keep translating disrespect into softer language so that everyone else can stay comfortable. Does staying require your peace to live on less and less until you barely notice what it used to need. Those are serious questions, and God is not offended by them. He is not threatened by your honesty. He is not more honored by your denial than by your truthfulness. In fact, one of the most spiritual things a person can do is bring Him the plain truth of what the climate has become without dressing it up in language that hides the damage.

Sometimes that plain truth leads to one final attempt at honest confrontation. Sometimes it leads to a season of watching to see whether there is real repentance, not merely temporary reaction. Sometimes it leads to deeper prayer and counsel. But sometimes the truth leads to a door. It leads to the recognition that what you hoped would change has not changed in any deep way. It leads to the realization that the atmosphere has taught you all it is going to teach, and what it has been teaching is no longer life-giving. It leads to the understanding that God is not asking you to keep participating in what is slowly diminishing you. When that moment comes, departure is not failure. It is not the collapse of love. It is not proof that you could not handle something hard. It may be the first fully honest act your life has taken in a very long time.

That is why the phrase matters so much. I do not leave when it gets hard. I leave when it gets disrespectful. That is not the motto of a weak person. Weak people often leave before they have even faced the real work of love, patience, and perseverance. This phrase comes from someone who knows how to endure. It comes from someone who has stayed through pressure, pain, confusion, and long seasons of trying. It comes from someone who is not afraid of hard things. That is exactly why it carries such force. The speaker is not saying I cannot handle discomfort. The speaker is saying I know the difference between a hard place that can still bear fruit and a dishonoring place that is slowly starving my peace. That distinction is wisdom. It is not pride. It is not rebellion. It is spiritual maturity learning how to separate two things that many people treat as though they were the same.

There are people who need that distinction because they have been carrying guilt for being done. They have called themselves weak because they have reached the end of what they can truthfully call healthy. They have wondered whether needing respect means they are selfish. They have worried that wanting peace means they are fragile. They have told themselves that if they were stronger, they would simply remain. But strength is not measured only by how much you can take. Sometimes strength is measured by how honestly you can see. Sometimes strength is measured by whether you are willing to stop cooperating with what is not right even when the cost of that truth is heavy. Sometimes strength is measured by the courage to let reality be seen without using your own life to keep cushioning it.

And that courage does not always look dramatic. Sometimes it is quiet. Sometimes it is a conversation. Sometimes it is a sentence you never thought you would say. Sometimes it is the refusal to keep over-explaining. Sometimes it is a step back. Sometimes it is a closed door. Sometimes it is a decision made in tears. Sometimes it is the moment when you stop using grace to conceal what truth has already uncovered. However it comes, it is still courage. It is still obedience when obedience is what is happening. A shaking voice can still tell the truth. A grieving heart can still do the right thing. God does not demand that courage feel fearless before it counts as courage.

In many cases, what follows is a long relearning. You relearn what healthy love sounds like. You relearn what respect feels like. You relearn what it is to speak without automatically bracing for contempt. You relearn that your limits are not sins. You relearn that peace is not a reward for disappearing. You relearn that you do not have to keep proving your goodness by enduring what should have been named long ago. You relearn what kind of environments nourish truth instead of draining it. All of this is part of healing. It is part of stepping out of the mindset that peace must survive on scraps. It is part of recovering the understanding that honor is not an extra. It is part of coming back into agreement with the way God sees your life.

Because at the deepest level, this is about agreement. Will you agree with the climate that has been teaching you to accept less than dignity. Or will you agree with God about the value of what He made. Will you keep calling a disrespectful atmosphere a hard season so that you do not have to face the cost of the truth. Or will you let truth name what grace can no longer honestly cover. Will you continue treating your survival as proof that you are supposed to remain. Or will you recognize that God’s sustaining power has been mercy while He brings you into clarity. These are not small questions. They shape entire lives. They shape what people teach their own souls to expect. They shape what future relationships will feel like. They shape whether a person continues living beneath a lie or begins walking again in alignment with what is true.

There is a reason the soul reacts so deeply to disrespect. It is not because it is needy. It is because something in us knows we were made for truth, love, and honor to live together. We were not made to endlessly ration peace. We were not made to live in constant negotiation with our own worth. We were not made to stand forever in places where being fully human feels dangerous. That is why repeated disrespect hurts in such a particular way. It does not merely create sadness. It disturbs the deeper order of what life should feel like. It asks the soul to settle where it should not settle. It asks peace to survive without enough oxygen. Over time, that becomes unbearable, not because the person is weak, but because the soul was never meant to live there indefinitely.

So if you are standing in that kind of tension now, this is what I want you to hear. You are not wrong for feeling the cost of an atmosphere that keeps lowering the level of honor around your life. You are not weak because you are tired of surviving where respect has become uncertain. You are not selfish because you want peace that does not have to scrape by on scraps. You are not unspiritual because you can no longer keep turning disrespect into something smaller just to preserve appearances. Be honest before God. Ask Him what this really is. Ask Him whether this is a hard season meant to deepen you or a dishonoring climate that is quietly depleting you. Ask Him for courage without bitterness and clarity without pride. Ask Him to remove both fear and fantasy so you can see cleanly.

And when you see cleanly, trust Him enough to move in truth. That movement may be staying and speaking. It may be staying and setting boundaries. It may be waiting for a season with eyes fully open. Or it may be leaving what has become disrespectful. Whatever form it takes, let it be truth. Let it be obedience. Let it be alignment with the God who does not ask His children to keep starving in places where peace can barely breathe. Hard things will come. Hard things can build you. But disrespect is different. Disrespect slowly teaches the soul to live on less than what healthy love requires. At some point, faith stops pretending that scraps are enough. At some point, wisdom says peace was never meant to survive like this. At some point, the deepest act of spiritual honesty is to say I can endure what is hard, but I will not keep calling disrespect holy while my soul dies by inches inside it.

That is not quitting. That is not failure. That is not weakness. Sometimes that is the sound of a person finally coming back into agreement with God about what their life was meant to carry and what it was never meant to keep surviving. Sometimes that is the beginning of freedom. Sometimes that is the first real breath after a long time of learning how to live on scraps. And sometimes that is exactly where peace begins to stop surviving and start living again.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

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from Holmliafolk

En mann smiler/myser med sola i ansiktet. Bak ham skimtes en reklameplakat med en dame som ler overdådig

Jeg skal bli pappa i august.

Det er mammas og pappas første barnebarn. Vi fortalte dem det første juledag. Konas foreldre var der også. Etter maten sa vi at de måtte åpne en helt spesiell gave først, en liten, myk pakke til hver: inni var det et veldig lite klesplagg til et veldig veldig lite menneske.

Siden har vi gått og handlet enda flere babyklær og babyleker og babyutstyr — jeg mest av alle.

Pappa har beroliget meg om fødselen. Det går helt fint, sier han. Selvfølgelig skal jeg være med på fødselen. Jeg er ikke engstelig. Pappa er gynekolog.

To måneder senere, i oktober, får jeg permanent oppholdstillatelse. Det vil gi meg mange flere muligheter til å ta vare på den lille familien min.

Jeg gleder meg.

 
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from Unvarnished diary of a lill Japanese mouse

JOURNAL 25 mars 2026

On est parties, vélos et capes de pluie chapeaux aussi, c’est confortable, direction l'océan par les chemins de traverse.

On va dormir dans un petit sanctuaire solitaire On est au moins à l'abri, avec les sacs de montagne on n'aura pas froid cette nuit. Par respect pour les lieux et surtout à cause des sacs pas de câlins poussés cette nuit.😅

On sent l'odeur de l'océan sous l'odeur de la terre humide et sa grande rumeur à l'est On est à côté d'un petit bois. C’est une paix profonde ici, loin des autos, loin de la fureur, toutes seules entre ciel et terre, Adam et Ève d'un genre nouveau.

On va dormir sous la protection de deux petits jizo moussus sur le chemin et un kitsune et son bavoir défraîchi à l'entrée du sanctuaire. C’est un sanctuaire dédié à l'agriculture ni shimenawa no gohei L'endroit est quasi abandonné sans doute. Il fait nuit noire. La pluie claque sur les tuiles On a allumé des vieilles bougies jaunes trouvées dans un coin, mais le vent les éteint alors on a installé nos sacs à l’abri des courants d'air, au fond derrière l'autel. L'impression d'être dans un film. Tout à fait comme on imagine. Pourvu que ce soit pas un film d'épouvante. On a confiance dans l'hospitalité des esprits envers ces deux qui n'ont pas de mauvaises intentions. Il y a des chauves-souris déjà on les a fait fuir en s'installant. Désolées, pardon du dérangement. On va dormir

 
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from Taking Thoughts Captive

Today is the celebration of the Annunciation of the angel Gabriel to the Blessed Virgin Mary, as recorded in Luke 1.26-38:

Now in the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent by God to a city of Galilee named Nazareth, to a virgin betrothed to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David. The virgin’s name was Mary. And having come in, the angel said to her, “Rejoice, highly favored one, the Lord is with you; blessed are you among women!”
But when she saw him, she was troubled at his saying, and considered what manner of greeting this was. Then the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bring forth a Son, and shall call His name JESUS. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Highest; and the Lord God will give Him the throne of His father David. And He will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of His kingdom there will be no end.” Then Mary said to the angel, “How can this be, since I do not know a man?”
And the angel answered and said to her, ”The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Highest will overshadow you; therefore, also, that Holy One who is to be born will be called the Son of God. Now indeed, Elizabeth your relative has also conceived a son in her old age; and this is now the sixth month for her who was called barren. For with God nothing will be impossible.”
Then Mary said, “Behold the maidservant of the Lord! Let it be to me according to your word.” And the angel departed from her.

The Western Church celebrates this announcement on March 25th, nine months before we celebrate Christmas. It is a blip of celebration in the otherwise austere season of Lent.

If you're interested in the history of how this date came to be, as well as how December 25th came to be celebrated as the Nativity of Christ (hint, it's NOT because of pagan holidays), check out Pr. Peters post today. As usual, it's gold.

Here's the historic collect (prayer) of the day for today's celebration:

We beseech thee, O Lord, pour thy grace into our hearts; that, as we have known the incarnation of thy Son Jesus Christ by the message of an Angel, so by his cross and passion we may be brought unto the glory of his resurrection; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

Merry early Christmas!

#history #theology #worship

 
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from Wachstumskrise

10 Thesen zur Klimakrise

1. Das heute beanspruchte Maß an wirtschaftlicher Freiheit bedroht unsere politische Freiheit und unsere Existenzgrundlagen.

Das international vereinbarte Klimaziel ist nicht mehr zu erreichen. Alle Bemühungen, die Klimakrise noch in ihrer Frühphase einzudämmen, sind gescheitert. Auch wenn der Ausstieg aus fossilen Energieträgern in verschiedenen Weltregionen schnell vorangeht, ist der Höhepunkt der globalen Emissionen von Treibhausgasen noch immer nicht überschritten. Solange diese Emissionen aber nicht auf fast Null reduziert sind, wird die Klimaveränderung weiter angetrieben.

Schon heute sind die resultierenden Schäden sowie die Folgen für die menschliche Gesundheit enorm. Die Zahl klimabedingter Todesfälle steigt. Wir befinden uns im Übergang in eine Zeit, in der die Menschen mit einer unablässigen Folge von Notstandslagen konfrontiert sein werden. Dies lässt sich nicht mehr aufhalten. Unser Handeln kann jedoch einen großen Unterschied bewirken, wie schlimm es am Ende kommen wird. Das Überschreiten von Kipppunkten und eine wechselseitige Verstärkung der Klimafolgen drohen zu nichtlinearen, drastischen Veränderungen von Wetterbedingungen und Ökosystemen zu führen, die die Anpassungsfähigkeit der Menschen überfordern. (Eine hervorragende kurze und aktuelle Zusammenfassung des aktuellen Forschungsstands bietet: The State of the Climate Report 2025. Ausführlicher die Zusammenfassung des jüngsten IPCC-Berichts für politische Entscheidungsträger).

Bei weiter stark ansteigenden Temperaturen können zusätzlich zu den direkten Emissionen große Mengen Kohlenstoff aus natürlichen Speichern (Permafrostböden, Waldböden, Gashydraten an den Kontinentalschelfen) freigesetzt werden. Dadurch würde eine Phase weiter beschleunigter Erderhitzung ausgelöst. Wir wissen nicht genau, wann die Schwellen zu solchen Entwicklungen überschritten werden, doch bewegen uns mit großer Geschwindigkeit in den Hochrisikobereich. Schafft die Menschheit keine radikale Wende, könnte die schlimmste der Folgen sein, dass in der zweiten Hälfte dieses Jahrhundert die Nahrungsmittelproduktion in großen Weltregionen weitgehend zusammenbricht. Ein Massensterben, das die Weltbevölkerung um Milliarden reduziert, ist keineswegs auszuschließen. (Vgl. dazu etwa: W. E. Rees: The Human Ecology of Overshoot). Vielfach wird abgeraten, eine solch düstere Perspektive überhaupt ins Spiel zu bringen. Das würde nur entmutigen und Abwehrreaktionen auslösen. Doch ist es wirklich angemessen, Selbstzensur zu üben und die Realität weichgezeichnet darzustellen? Sollten wir uns nicht vielmehr als Erwachsene begegnen, die einem möglichen gesellschaftlichen Niedergang genauso ins Auge zu sehen vermögen wie dem eigenen Alter und Tod?.

Gewiss würde versucht, eine solche Entwicklung durch eine Form von Geoengineering abzuwenden, etwa das Ausbringen von Sonnenstrahlung reflektierenden Partikeln in die obere Atmosphäre. Nur ist nicht gesichert, ob eine solche Maßnahme, die mit hohem Aufwand über Jahrhunderte aufrechterhalten werden müsste, nicht ähnlich gravierende Nebenfolgen hätte wie die Emission von Treibhausgasen selbst. Versagt die Menschheit aber bei der Erhaltung der für sie günstigen Lebensbedingungen auf der Erde, ist ein Zerfall komplexer Sozialsysteme zu erwarten. Die großen sozialen Errungenschaften der modernen Zivilisation – Rechtsstaat, Demokratie und Sozialstaat – würden wohl kaum standhalten. Diese sichern die größte aller Errungenschaften: die Überwindung der Herrschaft des Menschen über den Menschen, die in den Menschenrechten und dem Schutz der Menschenwürde ihren Ausdruck findet. Das ist eine Freiheit, die bislang nur in begrenzten Teilen der Welt durchgesetzt wurde. Das ist die Freiheit, für die wir einstehen müssen!

Der Anspruch auf eine nahezu unbegrenzte Freiheit des Marktes und des Konsums ist schon heute zu ihrer größten Bedrohung geworden. Denn je offensichtlicher hemmungslose Wirtschaftsfreiheit mit dem Erhalt unseren Existenzgrundlagen in Widerspruch gerät, desto eher erfordert ihre Behauptung, von politischen Strategien der Rechtfertigung und ideologischer Beeinflussung zu solchen der Desinformation und Monopolisierung der Macht überzugehen. Und so beobachten wir heute in den USA, wie in einem ökonomistischen Größenwahn die Anerkennung der Grenzen verweigert wird, die uns die Naturbedingungen setzen. Dies geht einher mit einer Demontage der Freiheit der Wissenschaft, der Institution des Rechtsstaats und der Demokratie, während von der Regierungsspitze her politischer Haß gesellschaftsfähig gemacht wird.

2. Menschen haben Angst vor Verlusten und unkontrollierbaren Veränderungen. Daher sind politische Angebote gefragt, die eine vorgebliche Normalität wiederherzustellen versprechen.

Unter rapide sich verändernden Bedingungen ist das, was bislang erfolgversprechend war, nicht unbedingt auch ein gutes Rezept für die Zukunft. Doch Menschen ahmen Vorbilder nach, die für frühere oder aktuelle Erfolge bewundert werden. Sie identifizieren sich mit Wertvorstellungen und Weltanschauungen, die ihren Nutzen in der Vergangenheit bewiesen haben und daher hohe Wertschätzung genießen. Das Gewohnte und Bewährte ist oft mit einem Gefühl der Richtigkeit und Sicherheit verbunden. Hoffnungen auf Freiheits- oder Wohlstandsgewinne können Veränderungsbereitschaft motivieren. Befürchten Menschen jedoch materielle Einbußen, Einschränkungen ihrer Freiheit oder gar den Verlust ihrer wirtschaftlichen Existenzgrundlage, reagieren sie vielfach mit entschiedener Ablehnung oder gar Hass auf diejenigen, die ihnen Veränderungen abverlangen wollen. Zumal wenn die Bedrohung der eigenen Lebensvorstellungen und wirtschaftlichen Interessen sehr real und unmittelbar erscheint, während die Realität einer menschengemachte Klimakrise vielfach bestritten wird oder ihre Folgen heruntergespielt werden. Aufgrund der Ängste und Abwehrhaltungen der Menschen wird es für viele Politiker zum Erfolgsrezept, auf die Klimakrise mit Realitätsverweigerung zu reagieren. Mächtige wirtschaftliche Interessengruppen, die hochprofitable Geschäftsmodelle gefährdet sehen, unterstützen sie und finanzieren Desinformationskampagnen. Politische Extremisten zerstören jede rationale Debatte, die auf überprüfbaren Argumenten fußt. Unter dem Banner der Meinungsfreiheit wird mit aggressiv vorgebrachte Halbwahrheiten, Lügen und Feindbildern operiert. Die provokative Verweigerung jeder sachlichen Auseinandersetzung gilt als Stärke männlicher Kämpfer und neue Freiheit, mit großer Anziehungskraft gerade auch auf junge Menschen.

Trump oder die AfD waren allerdings auch deshalb erfolgreich, weil sie reale Probleme in den Fokus rückten, auf die ihre Gegner nicht angemessen reagiert hatten. Vor allem aber hat der hohe gesellschaftliche Veränderungsdruck durch die neoliberale Form der Globalisierung das Vertrauen der Bevölkerung in das politische Establishment untergraben, da die Vor- und Nachteile dieser Entwicklung sehr ungleich verteilt waren. Die zunehmende soziale Unsicherheit wurde durch die Finanzkrise und die Covid-Epidemie mit dem darauf folgenden Inflationsschub nur noch weiter verstärkt. Trump artikulierte eine verbreitete Wut und versprach, einen Zustand vorgeblicher Normalität wiederherstellen zu können. Auch die AfD plakatierte: „Deutschland, aber normal“. Damit wurde eine Vorstellung von Normalität beschworen, für die jene Phase des stärksten wirtschaftlichen Wachstums der Nachkriegszeit steht, die der Historiker Eric Hobsbawm als „goldenes Zeitalter“ des Westens bezeichnet hat. Das Fortschrittsversprechen der Moderne erfüllte sich damals im unablässig steigenden Wohlstand der breiten Bevölkerung, noch ohne von unerwünschten Nebenwirkungen des wirtschaftlichen Wachstums getrübt zu sein. Wer möchte nicht gerne zu einem solchen Zustand der Unschuld voller Zukunftshoffnungen zurück!

Solche unrealistischen Wunschvorstellungen lassen sich jedoch nur durch Formen ideologischer oder religiöser Glaubensgewissheit aufrechterhalten, verbunden mit einer verächtlichen Abwertung bis hin zur verschwörungstheoretischen Dämonisierung der Vertreter widersprechender Sichtweisen. Vor allem aber muss die Autorität der Wissenschaften demontiert werden. Daher wird eine internationale Verschwörung der Klimaforschung unterstellt, ist von einem „deep state“ (einer Verschwörung innerhalb des Staates) die Rede und werden die Professoren zu Feinden erklärt. Es ist keine unverständliche Verirrung, dass in den USA der chronische Lügner Trump Präsident werden konnte, der sich als eine Art Erlöser präsentiert und dessen Anhänger einen polit-religiösen Kult um ihn geschaffen haben. Trump vermag den Bedarf am heute nötigen Ausmaß der Realitätsverleugnung einfach am besten zu decken. Sein zweiter Wahlsieg mündete konsequent in einen Frontalangriff auf alle Wissenschaften, deren Ergebnisse für ihn und seine Unterstützer nicht akzeptabel sind. Gelangen die Fanatiker einer vermeintlichen Normalität an die Macht, ist ihr vordringliches Ziel, nicht nur ihre Gegner, sondern alle unabhängigen Stimmen einzuschüchtern und Widerspruch zu diskreditieren oder zum Schweigen zu bringen. Die staatlichen Institutionen werden einer politischen Säuberung mit dem Ziel ihrer Gleichschaltung unterzogen. Sachverstand, unparteiische Orientierung am Gemeinwohl und die Wahrheit sind nicht mehr gefragt. Damit werden die Grundlagen realitätsorientierter demokratischer Verständigung und Kooperation zerstört. Leider müssen heute die Wissenschaften, ja muss die Wahrheit selbst, gegen massive Angriffe verteidigt werden. Wären die dazu motivierten Kräfte bereit, auch ihre eigenen Realitätsverzerrungen klarer in den Blick zu nehmen, hätten sie weit bessere Aussichten auf Erfolg. Denn über das eigene soziale Milieu hinaus vermag nur zu überzeugen, wer durch Anerkennung zutreffender Realitätswahrnehmungen in anderen Milieus an Glaubwürdigkeit gewinnt.

3. Grünes Wachstum ist eine Illusion, die der Einsicht in die Notwendigkeit von Konsumbeschränkungen im Wege steht.

Obwohl die vorliegenden Erkenntnisse zur Klima- und Umweltkrise in vieler Hinsicht sehr eindeutig sind, neigen die Menschen dazu, sie intuitiv für ein Produkt alarmistischer Übertreibungen wenn nicht gar einer extremistischen Einstellung zu halten. Als glaubwürdig werden Argumente angesehen, die mit bisherigen Erfahrungen, einem nach wie vor stabilen Alltag und der starken Neigung des Menschen zu sozialer Konformität in Einklang zu bringen sind. Das Gewohnte erscheint als das Normale. Selbst wenn Vertrauen in die Wissenschaften besteht, führt diese Normalitätsillusion in der Regel dazu, dass von den bisherigen Erwartungen stark abweichende Erkenntnisse zur Klimakrise im Prinzip zwar anerkannt, letztlich aber nur in entschärfter Form wahrgenommen, dargestellt und akzeptiert werden. Denn das Bauchgefühl legt Skepsis nahe. Man will glauben und Politiker wollen versprechen, dass die bisherige Normalität aufrechterhalten werden kann. Und es finden sich immer auch Wissenschaftler, deren Arbeiten engspurig genug angelegt sind, um diesen Glauben gerechtfertigt erscheinen zu lassen. Durch die nur allzu menschliche Konformitätsneigung wurden selbst die Prognosen des Weltklimarats (IPCC) beeinflusst. Dieser vermochte zwar schon vor Jahrzehnten, den Verlauf der Klimaerwärmung sehr korrekt vorherzusagen, unterschätzte jedoch deren Folgen erheblich.

Das Versprechen der bislang dominierenden Kräfte der europäischen Politik, mit dem Green Deal werde grünes Wachstum zum Erreichen der Klima- und Umweltziele führen, stellt eine verharmlosende Realitätsverleugnung dar. Je offensichtlicher wird, dass es auch klare wirtschaftliche Einschränkungen und Verbote bräuchte, um den hemmungslosen Raubbau an unseren natürlichen Lebensgrundlagen durch Überkonsum und Verschwendung zu beenden, desto lauter werden die Freiheitsparolen der politischen Parteien. Den Wählern und der Wirtschaft soll versichert werden, dass an der Wirtschafts- und Konsumfreiheit nicht gerüttelt wird. Damit wird die Illusion verkauft, die Klimakrise lasse sich ohne tiefgreifende Veränderungen unserer Lebensweise bewältigen.

Zu dieser Illusion trug auch Robert Habeck in seiner Zeit als Wirtschaftsminister bei. Er verkündete, das Klimaziel für 2024 sei in Deutschland erreicht worden (dank schlechter Wirtschaftslage) und das für 2030 sei erreichbar (was bei einer von den Grünen mitbestimmten Politik denkbar gewesen wäre). Dies war zwar durchaus eine sehr positive Nachricht, da in der Zeit der Ampelkoalition tatsächlich große Fortschritte erzielt wurden, für die wir ihm und seinen Mitstreitern dankbar sein müssen. Nur trübt sich das Bild, sobald die Wälder mit einbezogen werden, die statt als Senke zu fungieren (wie bei der Definition des Klimaziels erwartet), zur Emissionsquelle geworden sind. Vor allem aber stimmen die Prognosen für die Zeit nach 2030, wenn die niedrig hängende Früchte geerntet sind, keineswegs mehr optimistisch. (Siehe dazu den Prüfbericht des Expertenrats für Klimafragen). Zudem führt die Energiewende in beträchtlichem Maße zur Verlagerung von Emissionen in Länder, wo die dafür benötigten Rohstoffe gefördert werden. Von Robert Habeck hätte man nicht nur beschönigende Erfolgsmeldungen erwartet, sondern Grundsatzreden, um der Bevölkerung zu vermittelt, vor welchem gewaltigen Problem wir stehen.

Führende Klimawissenschaftler formulieren inzwischen in aller Deutlichkeit:

„In einer Welt mit begrenzten Ressourcen ist unbegrenztes Wachstum eine gefährliche Illusion. Wir benötigen starken, transformativen Wandel: eine drastische Reduktion von Überkonsumption und Verschwendung, insbesondere durch die Wohlhabenden, eine Stabilisierung und einen allmählichen Rückgang der Weltbevölkerung, indem der Erziehung und den Rechten von Mädchen und Frauen mehr Gewicht gegeben wird, eine Reform der Nahrungsmittelproduktion, um eine stärker pflanzenbasierte Ernährung zu ermöglichen und die Schaffung ökonomischer Rahmenbedingungen, die eine gerechte und ökologisch ausgerichtete Wirtschaft ohne Wachstum ermöglichen.“

(aus: The 2024 State of the Climate Report, meine Übersetzung. An diesem Bericht haben aus Deutschland Stefan Rahmstorf und Johan Rockström mitgearbeitet.)

Gegen diese Formulierung kann zwar rein theoretisch eingewandt werden, dass im Rahmen klarer Grenzen zum Schutz unserer natürlichen Existenzbedingungen weiteres Wachstum möglich wäre, soweit dies allein auf technischem Fortschritt beruht. Mit den seit Jahrzehnten vorgebrachten Versprechungen, die Technologien, um dies zu ermöglichen, wären sehr bald schon verfügbar, können wir uns jedoch nicht länger hinhalten lassen! Bereits mit dem bisherigen Wachstum ist unsere Wirtschaft so weit über die Grenzen des ökologisch Tragbaren hinausgeschossen, dass der Stoffwechsel mit der Natur unbedingt zurückgefahren werden muss. Es geht nicht um die Frage, ob Wachstum langfristig gut oder schlecht ist, sondern darum, unsere zerstörerischen wirtschaftlichen Aktivitäten so schnell wie irgend möglich zu reduzieren und nachhaltige an ihre Stelle zu setzen. Technologische Lösungen, um die heutige Wachstumsdynamik der Wirtschaft in vollem Umfang und sehr kurzer Zeit mit dem Ziel der Nachhaltigkeit vereinbar zu machen, stehen schlichtweg nicht zur Verfügung und sind auch nicht absehbar. Daraus sind Konsequenzen für die Lebensführung insbesondere der Reichen auf diesem Planeten zu ziehen, zu denen auch etwa die Hälfte der deutschen Bevölkerung gezählt werden kann. Wie sich eine Kombination von Konsumeinschränkungen mit weit höheren Zukunftsinvestitionen auf das Wachstum auswirkt, kann dabei gleichgültig bleiben. Nur braucht es neuartige Konzepte, um die Stabilität der Wirtschaft unter Bedingungen eines Rückgangs des privaten Konsums sicherzustellen.

Solange die Politik davor zurückscheut, die vorherrschende Normalitätsillusion aufzubrechen und die Klima- und Umweltkrise zum zentralen Thema zu machen, legitimiert sie Vorstellungen von Freiheit, die mit einer Erhaltung unserer Existenzgrundlagen in Widerspruch stehen. Da hilft es auch nicht, die Menschen ständig aufzuklären und mit Appellen zu überschütten. Damit schiebt die Politik die Verantwortung auf die Individuen ab und verursacht ungute Gefühle, die dazu führen, dass viele das Thema verdrängen, resignieren oder zur Realitätsverleugnung übergehen. Tatsächliche Verhaltensänderungen dagegen bleiben begrenzt und werden oft nicht zu Unrecht als ein Verhalten wahrgenommen, sich von anderen abzuheben und damit einen moralischen Überlegenheitsanspruch zu verbinden. Mangelt es dabei auch noch an Konsequenz – etwa wenn zwar mit dem Fahrrad in den Bioladen gefahren wird, um dann aber ganz selbstverständlich mit dem Flieger alle Welt zu bereisen –, so weckt dies nur Aversionen gegen scheinheilige Moralprediger.

Die empirische Forschung zur nachhaltigen Bewirtschaftung gemeinschaftlicher Ressourcen hat gezeigt, dass individuelle Verhaltensänderungen an der sogenannten Tragödie der Gemeingüter scheitern (Vgl. insbesondere Elinor Ostrom: Die Verfassung der Allmende): Der Nutzen eines Verzichts oder einer Leistung zugunsten des Gemeinwohls ist oft gar nicht erkennbar, die damit verbundenen individuellen Nachteile dagegen sind groß. Am Gemeinwohl orientierte Anforderungen müssen daher verbindlich vereinbart, überwacht und mit Sanktionen versehen werden, sonst sind sie gegenüber der Neigung, individuelle Vorteile zu suchen, in aller Regel nicht stabil. Menschen sind viel leichter zu motivieren, aus Einsicht in die Notwendigkeit einem allgemeinen Verbot oder Gebot zuzustimmen, als sich selbst Beschränkungen aufzuerlegen, während andere sich nicht beteiligen. Einsicht in die Notwendigkeit ist allerdings die Voraussetzung. Solange den Menschen die Lage nicht klar vor Augen steht, in der wir uns heute befinden, kann es keine breite Zustimmung zu den tiefen Eingriffen in den Wirtschaftsprozess und die individuelle Lebensführung geben, die eine realistische Klima- und Umweltpolitik verlangt.

4. Die Klimakrise lässt sich nur auf Grundlage wissenschaftlicher Erkenntnisse verstehen. Daraus erwächst eine besondere Verantwortung der Politik.

Alltagserfahrungen lehren uns nichts über die Klimakrise. Daher bleibt das Interesse an dem Thema begrenzt und wird es von vielen nicht wichtig genommen. Zwar könnten die Bürger bald mit derart gravierenden Klimafolgen konfrontiert sein, dass die Aussagen der Wissenschaft auf stärkere Resonanz stoßen und sich Mehrheiten für entschiedene Maßnahmen finden. Doch angesichts der Dringlichkeit der Probleme kann die Politik darauf nicht warten. Daher sollten sich Politiker ihrer Führungsaufgabe sehr bewusst werden. Es liegt in ihrer gemeinsamen Verantwortung, nicht Ängste vor Veränderungen und Widerstände zu verstärken, um sie in Wählerstimmen ummünzen zu können, sondern die Bedrohung klar zu erkennen und den Bürgern unmissverständlich vor Augen zu führen. Dies setzt eine konsequente Orientierung an den Wissenschaften voraus.

Natürlich widersprechen sich auch Wissenschaftler häufig. Ihre Aussagen sind in der Regel mit Unsicherheiten behaftet und oft auch nicht frei von Vorurteilen, Ideologie oder finanziellen Einflüssen. Gerade deshalb aber ist es kein verantwortliches Verhalten, wenn Politiker sich selektiv nur auf Aussagen berufen, die ihren vorgefassten Meinungen entsprechen. Vielmehr sollte Politik die beste verfügbare Wissenschaft heranziehen, sich um eine umfassende Integration der vorliegenden Erkenntnisse bemühen und bei widersprüchlichen Aussagen Klärungsprozesse einfordern. Wir bewegen uns mit nie gekanntem Veränderungstempo in eine schwierige Zukunft. Mehr denn je sind wir auf eine gemeinsame Basis realistischen Orientierungswissens angewiesen, um dabei einen guten Weg bestimmen zu können und die gesellschaftliche Kooperation zu sichern. Unter solchen Bedingungen kann es nicht mehr als akzeptabler Standard politischen Verhaltens gelten, Konflikte so zu führen, dass die öffentliche Wahrnehmung der Tatsachen selbst massiv beeinträchtigt wird. Die Bürger werden sich umso eher von der Notwendigkeit tiefgreifender Veränderungen überzeugen lassen, je besser es gelingt, entscheidende Fragen einvernehmlich zu klären. Das erfordert eine Disziplin der Wahrheitsorientierung, die in scharfer Abgrenzung zu den aktuellen Entwicklungen in den USA zu einer großen Stärke Europas gemacht werden könnte. Dies soll keine Vision irgendeiner Art Einheitspolitik darstellen. Unterschiede der Interessen, der Wertvorstellungen und der konkreten Handlungsvorschläge werden vor dem Hintergrund aller verbleibenden Unsicherheiten immer Anlass für politische Konflikte bieten. Nur sollte zur Selbstverständlichkeit werden, dass die möglichst weitgehende sachliche Klärung der Tatsachen diesen Konflikten unbedingt vorausgehen muss.

5. Das Europäische Emissionshandelssystem ist ein guter, doch unzureichender Lösungsansatz. Soll es nicht eine wirtschaftliche Krise auslösen, muss es mit Konsumeinschränkungen kombiniert werden.

Große Anerkennung verdient, dass die europäischen Politik sich ihrer Verantwortung durchaus schon gestellt hat. Mit dem Green Deal wurden beeindruckend weitreichende Beschlüsse gefasst, die sich an den naturwissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen orientierten. Das Emissionshandelssystem (ETS) soll als zentraler Ordnungsrahmen ein ökonomisch effizientes Erreichen des europäischen Klimaziels sicherstellen. Ab 2027 wird es ca. 85% aller Emissionen in der EU erfassen, für die Emissionsrechte (Zertifikate) erworben werden müssen. Diese können die Wirtschaftsakteure dann untereinander handeln. Die Zahl der Emissionsrechte soll jedes Jahr um einen bestimmten Prozentsatz verringert werden, der sicherstellt, dass bis 2050 Klimaneutralität zuverlässig erreicht wird.

Für sich betrachtet ist das ETS ein hervorragendes Steuerungsinstrument. Doch der steile Pfad der Emissionsreduktionen, den es entsprechend der Klimaziele vorgeben muss, überfordert unter den bestehenden Bedingungen mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit die Leistungsfähigkeit der Wirtschaft. Engpässe bei Fachkräften, Rohstoffen und der Finanzierung drohen die ökologische Transformation auszubremsen. Denn wir sind inzwischen in einer Phase des demographischen Wandels angelangt, in der jedes Jahr (ohne Zuwanderung) etwa 500 000 mehr Arbeitskräfte aus dem Arbeitsmarkt ausscheiden als neu hinzukommen. Der Bedarf an den für die Energiewende kritischen Rohstoffen wird stark ansteigen. Bis neue Mienen in Betrieb genommen werden können, vergehen jedoch leicht 10 bis 15 Jahre. Daher ist auf Dauer mit Knappheiten und stark steigenden Preisen zu rechnen. Bisher bleibt der Beitrag erneuerbarer Energien zum gesamten Endenergieverbrauch (in Deutschland 2024: 22,4%) immer noch begrenzt, entsprechend hoch ist der Investitionsbedarf. Bei weiterem Wachstum der Konsumgüterproduktion und anhaltenden politischen Widerständen ist zu befürchten, dass die Klimaziele weit verfehlt werden. Damit aber könnten die Vorgaben des ETS die Wirtschaft in eine tiefe Krise stürzen. Denn wenn die benötigten Zertifikate zu knapp und kostspielig werden, weil bezahlbare Alternativen zum Einsatz fossiler Energien nicht ausreichend zur Verfügung stehen, dürften viele Geschäftsmodelle nicht mehr aufgehen. Die Investitionsbereitschaft würde sinken, während die Inflation aus dem Ruder läuft.

Das ETS schafft durch einen Preis für Emissionen starke Anreize für Innovationen und Investitionen in den Klimaschutz. Werden die Ziele dennoch nicht erreicht, würde es jedoch auch Produktions- und Konsumeinschränkungen erzwingen. Lässt sich aber absehen, dass eine Begrenzung des Konsums erforderlich wird, sollte vorausschauend und gezielt gehandelt werden, statt eine Wirtschaftskrise oder die politische Sprengung des Ordnungsrahmens zu provozieren. Konsumeinschränkungen über den Preis wirken sozial sehr ungleich. Es wäre gerechter und daher wohl auch politisch leichter zu vermitteln, wenn etwa bei einer notwendigen Begrenzung des besonders stark zunehmenden Flugverkehrs die Rationierung nicht in erster Linie über den Preis erfolgen würde, sondern über die Zuteilung gleicher individueller Anrechte auf private Flüge, die gehandelt werden könnten, sowie Kontingenten für besondere Bedarfe. Auch sollte eher die übermäßige Beanspruchung des knappen Emissionsbudgets durch den verschwenderischen Konsum von Wohlhabenden beschnitten werden (etwa durch Verbote von Luxusjachten und Privatflugzeugen, durch Gewichts- und Leistungsobergrenzen für private PKW usw.) als zuzulassen, dass der alltägliche Konsum der breiten Bevölkerung durch stark ansteigende Preise für Emissionsrechte belastet wird. Es könnte sich als fatal erweisen, wenn die Politik sich im Glauben an eine bequemere Marktlösung weggeduckt und die Probleme des ETS im Hinblick auf die Stabilität der Wirtschaft und die soziale Gerechtigkeit verdrängt. Stattdessen müsste es darum gehen, auf diese Probleme vorausschauend zu reagieren. Das ETS kann kurzfristig genutzt werden, um die Bevölkerung mit der Illusion zu beruhigen, wir hätten die Dinge im Griff und könne mehr oder weniger weiterzumachen wie bisher. Doch wenn diese Illusion zerplatzt, werden sich die Folgen mangelnder Anstrengungen zeigen, die Bürger mit in die Verantwortung zu nehmen und für eine entschlossene Klimapolitik zu gewinnen.

6. Die Bewältigung der enormen öffentlicher Aufgaben kann nur auf Kosten des privaten Konsums gehen. Dessen Einschränkung aber bedroht die wirtschaftliche Stabilität.

In Deutschland braucht es nicht nur weit höhere staatliche Investitionen in die ökologische Transformation. Durch lang anhaltende Sparpolitik wurde die gesamte Infrastruktur heruntergewirtschaftet, so dass heute ein enormer Erneuerungsbedarf abgearbeitet werden muss. Zudem wurde eine massive Erhöhung der Rüstungsausgaben beschlossen. Viele andere öffentliche Aufgaben sind völlig unterfinanziert. Insbesondere die Vernachlässigung von Bildung und sozialer Integration hat nichts mit seriöser Haushaltspolitik zu tun, sondern stellt ein fahrlässiges Verspielen von wirtschaftlichem und menschlichem Potential dar. Und inzwischen bringt der demographische Wandel unabweisbar massiv anwachsende Alterslasten mit sich, deren Finanzierung durch private Vorsorge längst nicht gedeckt ist. Nicht zuletzt ist auch noch mit rasch zunehmenden Schäden infolge des Klimawandels zu rechnen, die der Staat wird kompensieren müssen. Ohne dass ein erheblich höherer Anteil der Wirtschaftsleistung für öffentliche Aufgaben eingesetzt wird, ist eine zukunftsfähige Politik nicht denkbar. Selbst bei kräftig steigender Produktivität wird sich eine solche nur auf Kosten des privaten Konsums realisieren lassen.

Bis heute werden Investitionen zur Steigerung des Konsums als entscheidender Motor der Wirtschaft betrachtet. Als kluge Wirtschaftspolitik gilt daher, für gute Investitionsbedingungen zu sorgen. Inzwischen stellt sich jedoch das grundsätzliche Problem, dass der Konsum der Wohlhabenden auf diesem Planeten zur größten Bedrohung unserer Existenzgrundlagen geworden ist. Doch weiterhin wird behauptet, die Finanzierung des Staates sei von konsumgetriebenem Wachstum abhängig, das ja erst die nötigen Steuereinnahmen generiere. Wird dieser konventionelle Denkrahmen nicht verlassen, hat dies die perverse Konsequenz, dass die fortgesetzte Umweltzerstörung durch Überkonsum als Voraussetzung für die Finanzierung der Gegenmaßnahmen erscheint. Das Wechselspiel von Prestigekonkurrenz der Konsumenten und wirtschaftlicher Konkurrenz der Unternehmen treibt die Zerstörung unserer Lebensgrundlagen immer weiter an, während nachgeordnete politische Korrekturmaßnahmen regelmäßig zu kurz greifen. Technologische Effizienzgewinne werden durch Konsumsteigerungen in hohem Maße wieder aufgefressen.

Sollen aber harte Grenzen für die Nutzung der Natur gesetzt werden, ist sofort auch die Investitionsbereitschaft gefährdet. Dies wird dann zum politischen Druckmittel gemacht, um dem Staat Zugeständnisse abzupressen. Soweit die Unternehmen ihre Zukunftsaussichten bedroht sehen, ist dies zwar verständlich. Doch da sich das Umsteuern in Richtung einer nachhaltigen Wirtschaft mit dem Erhalt vieler der bestehenden Geschäftsmodelle nicht vereinbaren lässt, muss eine konsequente Umweltpolitik unvermeidlich zu einer massiven Enttäuschung unternehmerischer Erwartungen führen. Unter den bestehenden Bedingungen ist sie bei einem dadurch ausgelösten Einbruch der Investitionsbereitschaft weder ökonomisch noch politisch durchzuhalten. Politische Akteure haben keine großen Handlungsspielräume, wenn Investitionen und Steuereinnahmen zurückgehen, während die Arbeitslosigkeit und die Sozialausgaben steigen. Dies setzt sie unter starken Legitimationsdruck, alles zu tun, um die Stimmung in der Wirtschaft wieder zu heben, indem die Kosten der Unternehmen gesenkt oder ihre Einnahmen erhöht werden. Typische Maßnahmen sind dann Steuersenkungen und der Abbau kostenträchtiger Regulierungen. Oder die Staatsverschuldung wird erhöht, um durch kreditfinanzierte Staatsausgaben zusätzliche Nachfrage zu schaffen. In jedem Fall führt dies zu Engpässen bei den Staatsfinanzen. Finanzielle Restriktionen und die Angst vor negativen Reaktionen privatwirtschaftlicher Akteure erschweren eine entschlossene staatliche Führung bei der ökologischen Transformation. Solange die Investitionsbereitschaft und die Stabilität der Wirtschaft von der profitablen Fortsetzung der allermeisten der bisherigen Geschäftsmodelle abhängt, wird sich daran nichts ändern.

Der Staat kann und muss sich von der Finanzierung durch Steuereinnahmen unabhängig machen, um die ökologische Transformation konsequent vorantreiben zu können. Steuererhöhungen in einer Größenordnung, wie wir sie heute bräuchten, sind nicht realistisch und würden die Wirtschaft abwürgen. Die Lockerung der Schuldenbremse ist zwar sinnvoll, jedoch noch keine zureichende Lösung, wie die überwiegende Nutzung des für Investitionen vorgesehenen Sondervermögens zum Stopfen gähnender Haushaltslöcher überdeutlich zeigt. Eine Kombination aus mäßigen Steuererhöhungen, höherer Staatsverschuldung und der Mobilisierung privaten Kapitals für öffentliche Investitionen könnte zwar ermöglichen, die öffentlichen Investitionen ausreichend zu erhöhen. Doch wenn sich Einschränkungen der Konsumgüterproduktion als unvermeidlich erweisen, muss angesichts der Auswirkungen auf die Investitionsbereitschaft auch über den Schritt einer direkten Finanzierung des Staates durch die Zentralbank nachgedacht werden. Diese würde den Staat in die Lage versetzen, auf eine zurückgehende Investitionsbereitschaft mit ausreichend eigenen Ausgaben zu reagieren. Den Wirtschaftsakteuren könnte glaubwürdig signalisiert werden, dass sich jederzeit genügend Nachfrage generieren lässt, um neue Investitionen rentabel zu machen und Vollbeschäftigung zu sicher. So kann Vertrauen im Verlauf eines schwierigen Übergangs erhalten werden. Arbeitskräfte müssen sich darauf verlassen können, auch bei starkem Strukturwandel ohne große Probleme einen neuen, ordentlichen Arbeitsplatz zu finden, während für die Unternehmen Planungssicherheit und starke Investitionsanreize wichtig sind. Da die Möglichkeit einer Direktfinanzierung des Staates lange tabuisiert wurde, ist dieser Ansatz allerdings nicht leicht plausibel zu machen. Immerhin könnte man versuchen, selbst bei Herrn Merz Verständnis dafür zu wecken, indem man ihm die Lektüre des Beitrags einer Arbeitsgruppe von Volkswirten bei der Firma Black Rock empfiehlt, an dem auch zwei ehemalige Zentralbankchefs (der Schweiz und Israels) mitgearbeitet haben. Dabei ging es allerdings um die Frage der Bekämpfung deflationärer Tendenzen der Weltwirtschaft. Und man sah den besten Weg dafür nicht in der Finanzierung des Staates, sondern in einer direkten Verteilung von Geld an die Bürger. Dasselbe Problem, doch mit direkter Staatsfinanzierung als Lösung, behandelt das Buch von Adair Turner: Between Debt and the Devil (Princeton University Press 2016). Solche Überlegungen zu den Spielräumen der Staatsfinanzierung gehen ursprünglich auf keynesianische Ökonomen zurück, doch werden heute vor allem von Vertretern der Modern Money Theory propagiert.

Dass Geld in unserer Wirtschaft fast ausschließlich durch private Kreditaufnahme erzeugt wird, hat gut verständliche Gründe. Mißtrauen gegenüber dem Staat ist berechtigt, weshalb ihm das „Geld drucken“ verboten wurde. Es ging dabei vor allem darum, Selbstbedienung, Ineffizienz und Verschwendung einzudämmen, die regelmäßig mit den ausufernden Ansprüchen politischer Akteure und ihrer jeweiligen Klientel verbunden waren. Diese gingen zu Lasten des allgemeinen Wohlstands und drohten die Inflation anzuheizen. Der enorm gestiegene Finanzierungsbedarf für öffentliche Aufgaben kann jedoch nicht mehr mit den alten Argumenten abgewiesen werden. Die Disziplinierung des Staates bleibt unverzichtbar, darf aber nicht der Einsicht im Wege stehen, dass dieser für Aufgaben einer ganz neuen Dimension befähigt werden muss. Heute gilt es, den Staat mit seinen Investitionen und seiner Nachfrage nach Leistungen für öffentliche Aufgaben zum Motor der Wirtschaft zu machen, da das Wachstum der Konsumgüterproduktion dieser Motor nicht mehr sein darf. Die Privatwirtschaft wird zu den notwendigen Zukunftsinvestitionen nur ausreichend beitragen können, wenn der Staat vorangeht und sie unterstützt. Der finanzielle Spielraum dafür kann durch die Ermöglichung einer Verschuldung direkt bei der Zentralbank geschaffen werden. Der EZB muss keine Verzinsung geboten werden, und eine Rückzahlung von Schulden wäre nur im Maße des geldpolitisch Sinnvollen nötig (um Inflation durch eine zu hohe Geldmenge zu vermeiden). Über die langfristige Zahlungsfähigkeit des Staates könnten keine Zweifel mehr aufkommen. Dieser wäre in der Lage, durch seine Ausgaben die Profitabilität der privaten Investitionen und damit die Stabilität der Wirtschaft zu sichern. Sein Spielraum wäre dadurch begrenzt, dass übermäßige Inflation und größere Leistungsbilanzdefizite vermieden werden müssen. Dass er diesen Spielraum nicht mißbraucht und überzieht, kann dadurch sichergestellt werden, dass heute eine unabhängige, auf ihr Inflationsziel verpflichtete Zentralbank existiert, die dem „Geld drucken“ klare Grenzen setzen kann. Zudem verfügen wir inzwischen über ganz andere Möglichkeiten als früher, um staatliche Aktivitäten transparent zu machen und eine effiziente Verwendung der Mittel zu sichern. Und schließlich ist zu betonen, dass es nicht darum geht, dass der Staat in großem Umfang wirtschaftliche Aktivitäten übernehmen soll. Er muss nur öffentliche Güter ausreichend nachfragen können.

7. Einschränkungen des Konsums können nur akzeptabel werden, wenn sie mit einer Verringerung von sozialer Ungleichheit und wirtschaftlicher Unsicherheit einhergehen.

Obwohl auch viele andere Faktoren eine Rolle spielten, lässt sich ein klarer Zusammenhang des Aufstiegs populistischer Parteien mit der neoliberalen Politik seit den 1980er Jahren herstellen. Diese hatte zunehmende soziale Ungleichheit und wirtschaftliche Unsicherheit zur Folge. Eine grenzenlose Standortkonkurrenz eröffnete Chancen, dank hoher Umsätze auf globalen Märkten Effizienzgewinne zu erzielen und die Kostenvorteile anderer Standorte zu nutzen. Doch dadurch kamen die Löhne weniger spezialisierter Arbeitskräfte unter Druck, weil diese nun mit einem praktisch unbegrenzten Angebot billiger Arbeitskraft in vergleichsweise armen Ländern konkurrieren mussten. Die Globalisierungsgewinne fielen ganz überwiegend den Kapitaleignern und Beschäftigten mit gefragten Qualifikationen zu, während viele andere ihre gut bezahlten Arbeitsplätze und teilweise auch soziale Absicherungen verloren und in einen politisch bewusst geschaffenen Billiglohnsektor abgedrängt wurden. Vielfach wird von Ökonomen vor allem der technologischen Wandel für die stark zunehmende Ungleichheit verantwortlich gemacht. Technologien determinieren jedoch kein bestimmtes soziales Ergebnis, sondern ihre Auswirkung hängen entscheidend von der Verhandlungsmacht von Arbeit ab. Diese aber wurde vor allem durch die neoliberale Form der Globalisierung nachhaltig geschwächt.

Größere gesellschaftliche Ungleichheit ist mit einem höheren Maß an sozialen Problemen und Stress verbunden, die das soziale Vertrauen und die Kooperationsbereitschaft untergraben. Klaffen schöne Reden und unerfreuliche Realitäten immer weiter auseinander, werden die Vertreter des Establishments unglaubwürdig und bekommen diejenigen Zulauf, die Unzufriedenheit und Hass schüren. Eine hohe Kooperationsbereitschaft gehört zu den entscheidenden Voraussetzungen für das Gelingen der ökologischen Transformation, die ohne große Zumutungen nicht zu haben ist. Daher muss in der Bevölkerung genau verstanden werden, worum es geht und wie der Staat sicherstellen kann, dass die wirtschaftlichen und sozialen Folgen wirksam und gerecht abgefedert werden. Ohne überzeugende Antworten auf die Fragen der sozialen Ungleichheit und der wirtschaftlichen Sicherheit wird die etablierte Politik verlorenes Vertrauen nicht zurückgewinnen können. Erscheint sie angesichts unzureichender Finanzmittel aber hilflos und schwach, können diejenigen punkten, die mit radikalen Ansagen Stärke suggerieren.

Konsumeinschränkungen können nur akzeptabel werden, wenn sie in weit höherem Maße die Wohlhabenden treffen. Diesen muss mit Nachdruck klar gemacht werden, dass die Sicherung ihres Wohlstands nicht auf Kosten der übrigen Menschen gelingen kann, sondern nur mit diesen zusammen. Und dass sie einen Teil dieses Wohlstands opfern müssen, um ihn nicht gänzlich im Chaos einer zerbrechenden Gesellschaft zu verlieren. Ökologische Gerechtigkeit verlangt, vor allem auch das reichste eine Prozent der Weltbevölkerung in den Blick zu nehmen, und damit Menschen, die über ein besonderes Maß an Macht und Einfluss verfügen. Allein dieses eine Prozent verursacht mit seinem luxuriösen Lebensstil etwa 15% Prozent der globalen Emissionen – fast doppelt soviel wie die gesamte ärmere Hälfte der Weltbevölkerung (nach Daten, die Oxfam zusammengestellt hat). Die Armen auf unserem Planeten tragen dagegen nicht nur sehr wenig zu den Emissionen bei, sondern sind auch am stärksten von deren Folgen betroffen.

Der Konsum der Reichen und Superreichen hat weltweite Ausstrahlung auf die Wünsche und Erwartungen der Menschen. Daher hätte es enorme kulturelle Auswirkungen, würde exzessiver Konsum wirksam eingeschränkt und würden übermäßig angewachsene Einkommen und Vermögen verstärkt zur Finanzierung der öffentlichen Aufgaben herangezogen. Wer behauptet, dies sei nicht möglich, weil eine dadurch ausgelöste Kapitalflucht der Wirtschaft schaden würde, verbreitet die Ideologie der Vermögenden. Das Kapital, auf das es wirklich ankommt, besteht nicht aus Geld oder Wertpapieren, sondern ist in Produktionsanlagen, Fachwissen und funktionierenden Sozialstrukturen verkörpert. Diese lassen sich nicht so einfach von einem Land in ein anderes verlagern. Allerdings droht Kapitalflucht zu einem Einbruch der Investitionsbereitschaft und damit in eine Krise zu führen. Doch wenn der Staat dank Direktfinanzierung für ausreichend Nachfrage und wirtschaftliche Anreize zu sorgen vermag, lässt sich auch ein hohes Niveau der Investitionen sichern. Angesichts des gemeinsamen Währungsraums wäre ein gemeinsames europäisches Vorgehen die Voraussetzung, um auf Kapitalflucht geld- und fiskalpolitisch angemessen reagieren zu können. Auch eine hohe Exit-Steuer und Formen sozialer Ächtung derer, die sich entziehen, könnten wirksame Gegenmaßnahmen sein, wenn sie auf europäischer Ebene eingeführt würden.

Die angemessene Besteuerung von Kapitalerträgen und großen Erbschaften, eine wirksame Bekämpfung der Steuerhinterziehung, eine Bürgerversicherung, bei der alle entsprechend ihrer Einkommen in ein gemeinsames Sozialsystem einbezahlen, und viele andere Maßnahmen, die für mehr soziale Gerechtigkeit sorgen könnten, wurden durch die Verbreitung der neoliberalen Ideologie und den großen Einfluss der Reichen auf Politik und Medien über Jahrzehnte verhindert. Dies hat dazu beigetragen, den sozialen Zusammenhalt und die Handlungsfähigkeit des Staates zu untergraben und gefährdet auf Dauer die Demokratie. Doch es kann auch nicht im Interesse der Reichen liegen, unsere gemeinsame Zukunft zu verspielen. Es soll hier keiner populistischen Politik gegen die Reichen das Wort geredet werden. Doch um der Stabilität des Gemeinwesens willen muss ihnen die Möglichkeiten genommen werden, sich ihrer staatsbürgerlichen Verantwortung zu entziehen.

8. Klimapolitik ist sinnvoll, selbst wenn sich längst nicht alle beteiligen.

Das Thema Gerechtigkeit wird auch mit dem Argument angesprochen, den Deutschen sei eine konsequente Klimapolitik angesichts ihres geringen Beitrags zu den globalen Emissionen nicht zuzumuten. Ihre Anstrengungen würden nichts ändern, doch der Wirtschaft schaden, während andere sich um Klimavereinbarungen nicht scheren würden. Das ist eine Sichtweise, die durch Kampagnen kurzsichtiger Interessenpolitik weite Verbreitung gefunden hat. Klimapolitik findet allerdings maßgeblich auf europäischer Ebene statt, und auch weltweit werden von vielen Ländern große Anstrengungen gemacht, die ökologische Wende voranzutreiben. Deutschland ist keineswegs ein einsames Vorreiterland. Um Wettbewerbsnachteile zu begrenzen, sieht das Emissionshandelssystem außerdem vor, dass auch Importeure künftig Zertifikate erwerben müssen. Schwierige wirtschaftliche Anpassungsprozesse sind unvermeidlich, doch gibt es keinen Grund, warum ein Prozess ökologischer Rationalisierung bei geeigneter wirtschaftlicher Steuerung in eine wirtschaftliche Krise führen müsste.

Natürlich ist richtig, dass viele Länder die globalen Vereinbarungen weitgehend ignorieren oder wie die USA ganz ausgestiegen sind. Damit sind wir wieder beim bereits skizzierte Problem des kollektiven Handelns: ein geringer Nutzen scheint den geforderten Beitrag zur gemeinsamen Aufgabe nicht zu rechtfertigen, solange die Kooperation der anderen nicht sichergestellt werden kann. Die ideale Lösung wäre ein globales Emissionshandelssystem ähnlich dem der EU, das auch Strafen vorsieht, wenn Verpflichtungen nicht erfüllt werden. Nur ist eine solche Lösung nicht in Reichweite. Leider ist in absehbarer Zeit auch nicht auf einen Zusammenschluss der großen Volkswirtschaften Chinas, Europas und der USA zu hoffen, die die Richtung vorgeben und alle anderen mitziehen könnten, indem sie Marktzugang und wirtschaftliche Unterstützung von ökologischen Reformen abhängig machen. Doch kann angesichts unzureichender weltweiter Kooperation im Ernst der Schluss gezogen werden, untätig immer weiter in die Katastrophe zu laufen? Die Natur lässt uns keine Spielräume mehr. Selbst der eher zurückhaltende IPCC mahnt inzwischen mit Nachdruck, es käme jetzt auf jedes Zehntelgrad an Erwärmung an, das verhindert werden könne. Unsere beste Chance besteht darin, alles zu tun, um zur Entwicklung der technischen, wirtschaftlichen und sozialen Lösungen für eine nachhaltige Wirtschafts- und Lebensweise beizutragen. Führen wir in Europa vor, wie die ökologische Transformation vollzogen werden kann, so wird dies weltweite Ausstrahlung haben und für andere wesentlich erleichtern, einen ähnlichen Weg zu gehen. Die Bereitschaft dazu wird mit Sicherheit bald wieder steigen, da alle Länder mit zunehmend schlimmer werdenden Klimafolgen konfrontiert sind. Gehört Deutschland zu den Vorreitern bei guten Lösungen, wird sich dies auf Dauer auch wirtschaftlich auszahlen.

9. Europa sollte sich auf die Stärken seiner Wahrheitstradition besinnen, um Desinformation und Realitätsverweigerung entgegenzutreten.

Die heutigen Denkweisen sind von der langen wirtschaftlichen Expansionsphase geprägt, die mit der industriellen Revolution einsetzte. Ideologisch hegemonial wurde ein Bündnis von marktwirtschaftlichem Unternehmertum und Wissenschaft, das sich sowohl gegen die Fortschrittsfeindlichkeit vormoderner wie die sozialrevolutionären Ziele antikapitalistischer Gemeinschaftsbildungen richtete. Da die Naturwissenschaften ständig neue wirtschaftliche Möglichkeiten der Wohlstandssteigerung eröffneten, bestand ein großes Interesse an ihrer Förderung und Verbreitung. Die Aneignung der Grundzüge des wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnisstandes und die Fähigkeit zu einem rationalen Umgang mit entsprechendem Wissen wurden zunehmend ausschlaggebend für die gesellschaftlichen Aufstiegschancen.

Seit den 1970er Jahren kam es allerdings zu Rissen im Bündnis von Wirtschaft und Wissenschaften. Unerfreuliche Erkenntnisse zu den Nebenfolgen und langfristigen Konsequenzen des wirtschaftlichen Wachstums trübten den Fortschrittsoptimismus. Die Interessen an einer möglichst freien unternehmerischen Betätigung und an möglichst unbeschränktem, billigem Konsum wurden immer stärker durch eine Fülle an wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen bedroht, die unzählige Folgeprobleme identifizieren. Vor allem in den USA, wo eine ausgeprägte Ideologie individueller Freiheit durch beeindruckende Wirtschaftserfolge auf Grundlage innovativer Technologien bestärkt wurde, entfalteten die strahlenden Größenphantasien ökonomischer Welteroberer eine kulturell weit stärkere Wirkung als die düsteren Prognosen von Wissenschaftlern, die einem immer schon verhassten Staatsinterventionismus das Wort redeten. Mächtige Wirtschaftsvertreter machten Front gegen staatliche Regulierungen und die Erkenntnisse, an denen diese orientiert waren. Das Vertrauen in seriöse Wissenschaft wurde durch die Finanzierung von Pseudowissenschaft und massive Desinformationskampagnen untergraben. Man war sogar bereit, ein Bündnis mit rückwärtsgewandten Religiösen, rechtsextremen Nationalisten und Anhängern aller erdenklichen pseudowissenschaftlichen Positionen einzugehen, um Trump an die Macht zu bringen. Der Angriff auf die Autorität der Wissenschaften, Wahrheitsfragen zu entscheiden und damit falsche Realitätsdarstellungen zu entwerten, zerstört das Vertrauen in einen verlässlichen Wissensbestand und entzieht einer realitätsgerechten öffentlichen Kommunikation die Basis. Vielleicht wäre der beste Ansatz, solchen Entwicklungen zu begegnen, sich nicht nur auf spezifische Themen zu konzentrieren, sondern die Orientierung am Wert der Wahrheit als Voraussetzung gelingender Kooperation in den Mittelpunkt zu stellen.

Viele haben Probleme mit dem Begriff der Wahrheit. Das liegt daran, dass damit Vorstellungen einer absoluten Wahrheit verbunden werden, die zurecht in Misskredit geraten sind. Hier wird von einem pragmatischen Verständnis von Wahrheit ausgegangen (inspiriert von Robert Brandom: Expressive Vernunft). Mit jeder ernst gemeinten Aussage erheben wir automatisch einen Wahrheitsanspruch. Dieser muss im Zweifel mit Gründen gerechtfertigt werden, und zwar durch den Nachweis der Vereinbarkeit mit allem relevanten verfügbaren Wissen sowie logischer Widerspruchsfreiheit. Wahrheit ist eine bloße soziale Zuschreibung, die angesichts neuer Beobachtungen oder begründeter Kritik ständig neu ausgehandelt werden muss. Allerdings eine überaus bedeutsame Zuschreibung, da sie Kooperation motivieren kann, dieser eine klare Orientierung gibt und für den praktischen Erfolg oft ausschlaggebend ist. Die Bedeutung der Wahrheit ergibt sich daraus, dass sie den Punkt darstellt, auf den hin unterschiedliche Meinungen bei unvoreingenommener Betrachtung ausreichend geklärter Tatsachen zwanglos konvergieren können. Sie bietet die beste verfügbare Orientierung in der Umwelt. Ist hier verkürzend von Wahrheiten die Rede, so sollte dies nicht verdinglichend verstanden werden. Gemeint ist damit anerkanntes Wissen, für das gut begründete Wahrheitsansprüche erhoben werden können.

Europa blickt auf eine große Wahrheitstradition zurück, ohne die es die moderne Gesellschaft mit ihrer Wissenschaft und Technik gar nicht gäbe. Ihr Erfolg beruht darauf, durch sorgfältige Klärungsprozesse falsche Annahmen systematisch auszuscheiden und tragfähige Wissenselemente zu immer kohärenteren Modellen der Wirklichkeit zu integrieren. Gerade dadurch, dass Trump demonstriert, wozu die Verachtung der Wahrheit führt, könnte das bewusste Stärken dieser Tradition an Attraktivität gewinnen und identitätsbildend wirken. Das Ziel sollte dabei sein, größere zivilisatorische Anforderungen an öffentliche Diskurse und die Politik zu etablieren. Wir sind mit einer Erosion gesellschaftlicher Kooperation konfrontiert, der Demokraten entgegentreten können, indem sie ein Beispiel geben. Ein Beispiel für die bewusste Einübung und Einforderung einer anspruchsvolleren Disziplin, verfügbares Wissen umfassend zu berücksichtigen und zu einem kohärenten Gesamtbild zu integrieren, indem Widersprüche und offene Fragen auf wissenschaftlicher Basis geklärt, aber auch die Erfahrungsperspektiven verschiedenster Bevölkerungsgruppen einbezogen werden. Eine solche Disziplin könnte dazu beitragen, das Vertrauen in die Politik zu erhöhen und die gesellschaftliche Verständigung zu verbessern. Das Bemühen um Wahrheit ist als anspruchsvolle kollektive Kulturleistung zu verstehen, auf die wir gerade in krisenhaften Zeiten in besonderem Maße angewiesen sind. Würden die Orientierung an der Wahrheit als Grundwert hervorgehoben und etwa auch in Parteiprogramme geschrieben, könnte dies ein wichtiges gesellschaftliches Signal darstellen.

Das Bemühen um Wahrheit steht der Meinungsfreiheit keineswegs entgegen. Einer Anerkennung beliebiger Meinungen als gleichwertig allerdings schon. Zutreffende wissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse ergänzen sich und bestätigen sich wechselseitig. Sie erlauben es, immer umfassendere und eindeutigere Modelle der Wirklichkeit zu konstruieren. Meinungen, die ernst genommen werden wollen, müssen mit diesem maßgebenden Wissen vereinbar sein oder aber mit starken Argumenten und Beweisen aufwarten können, um dieses durch überzeugende Argumentationen zu verändern. Wahrheitsdisziplin verlangt, die Autorität sorgfältig überprüften Wissens wie die hohen Anforderungen an seine Veränderung anzuerkennen. Die Stärke der abendländischen Wissenschaftstradition beruht auf einem langen Prozess der Kumulation überprüften Wissens. Die hohe Qualität und Kohärenz der dadurch entstandenen Wissensbestände wurde durch das konsequente Ausscheiden unwahrer Aussagen erreicht. Der Erfolg wissenschaftlicher Methoden bei der Hervorbringung neuer Erkenntnisse und der große wirtschaftliche Nutzen, der daraus erwächst, sprechen für sich. Doch inzwischen sind Kommunikationsstrategien populär geworden, wissenschaftliche Erkenntnisse einfach zu ignorieren oder rundweg zu bestreiten. Das kann als Befreiung von Zumutungen erscheinen, als emotional befriedigende Rebellion gegen Denkzwänge und Autoritäten. Da „alternative Wahrheiten“ in den sozialen Medien viel Bestätigung finden, kann es so erscheinen, als ob sie gut begründet sind und nur aufgrund eines Machtkartells des Establishments nicht die Anerkennung finden, die ihnen unter wahrhaft demokratischen Bedingungen zukommen müsste.

Bei immer krasseren Statusunterschieden wächst die Neigung zur Rebellion, insbesondere wenn auch noch ernste Krisen hinzukommen. Soziale Unzufriedenheit speist sich aus berechtigter Kritik an Missständen, der Auflehnung gegen unvermeidliche Zumutungen und einer mangelnden Akzeptanz der gesellschaftliche Hierarchien. Politische Unternehmer stehen bereit, die Unzufriedenheit mit dem Establishment immer weiter anzuheizen, um selbst Machtansprüche erheben zu können. Dabei profitieren sie von den Anreizstrukturen der sozialen Medien, die in hohem Maße darauf ausgerichtet sind, durch Emotionalisierung und Skandalisierung die Aufmerksamkeit ihrer Nutzer zu binden, um dadurch Werbeeinnahmen zu generieren. Belohnt wird nicht die Wahrheit, sondern vielmehr werden starke Motivationen erzeugt, immer extremere Falschinformationen zu produzieren. Emotional aufgeladene Falschnachrichten werden von Mediennutzern sehr viel stärker weiterverbreitet als emotional blasse, doch sachlich richtige Informationen. Ein krass polarisierendes Wir-gegen-die erzielt nun einmal weit mehr Aufmerksamkeit (und damit oft auch Werbeeinnahmen) als ein differenziert abwägendes Sowohl-als-auch. Da die häufige Wiederholung bestimmter Informationen leicht mit deren Wahrheitsgehalt verwechselt wird, stellen die sozialen Medien ein breites Einfallstor für die Manipulation von Meinungen dar. Dies wird von vielen Seiten politisch rücksichtslos ausgenutzt, um eine an wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen und sozialer Kooperation orientierte Politik zu diskreditieren. Starke gesellschaftliche Kräfte torpedieren Erkenntnisse, die insbesondere unsere Umweltsituation und Fragen der sozialen Ungleichheit betreffen. Dabei sprechen sie Freiheitsvorstellungen an, die angemessen erscheinen konnten, als die Nebenwirkungen unserer wirtschaftlichen Aktivitäten noch begrenzt waren. Doch heute hängt unsere Zukunft davon ab, wichtige politische und wirtschaftliche Entscheidungen an wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen zu orientieren und auch unangenehme politische Entscheidungen verständlich und akzeptabel zu machen. Bestimmt gezielte Desinformation immer stärker den öffentlichen Informationsfluss, wird die Funktionsfähigkeit der Demokratie untergraben, woraus dann die Rechtfertigung zu ihrer Beseitigung abgeleitet werden kann.

Die Anerkennung der Autorität der Wissenschaften, gültiges Orientierungswissen zu definieren, ist alles andere als selbstverständlich, zumal wenn unerfreuliche Botschaften zu vermitteln sind. Es braucht heute verstärkte Anstrengungen zur kulturellen Verankerung eines wissenschaftlichen Weltbildes und zur Ausgrenzung von Pseudowissenschaft und Desinformation aus der öffentlichen Kommunikation. Ohne eine Beschneidung der Finanzierung von Medien über Werbeeinnahmen und ohne eine stärkere öffentliche Finanzierung seriöser Information, also eine Belohnung von Wahrheit in der öffentlichen Kommunikation, wird dies kaum zu erreichen sein. Und auch nicht ohne dass Demokraten begreifen, wie sehr es darauf ankommt, sich nicht selbst an billiger Desinformation zu beteiligen, sondern die Disziplin sorgfältiger, an Wissenschaft orientierter Klärung der Tatsachen zu üben.

10. Es kommt auf engagierte Bürger an.

In diesem Beitrag wurde die Verantwortung der Politiker betont, gemeinsam eine wissenschaftlich fundierte, realistische Analyse der Lage zu entwickeln und diese den Bürgern zu vermitteln. Die Politik kann sich nicht mehr vornehmlich nur als Interessenvertretung der Bürger verstehen und mit verteilten Rollen deren unmittelbare wirtschaftliche und soziale Interessen artikulieren. Vielmehr ist sie gefordert, wie früher nur in Kriegs- und Katastrophenlagen, die existenziellen Herausforderungen der Zukunft in den Mittelpunkt stellen und deutlich machen, dass Privatinteressen deren Bewältigung untergeordnet werden müssen.

Leider sind die Zukunftsplanungen, die der deutschen wie der EU-Umweltpolitik zugrunde liegen, noch zu sehr von Wunschdenken bestimmt und versprechen Lösungen, die unrealistisch sind. Selbst wer eine sehr optimistische Sicht vertritt und am eingeschlagenen Kurs festhalten will, hätte angesichts grosser Ungewissheiten allen Grund, über einen Plan B nachzudenken. Doch die einzig angemessene Antwort auf die Notstandslage, in der wir uns im Grunde längst befinden, wäre, diese parteiübergreifend anzuerkennen. Und daraus die Konsequenz zu ziehen, Überkonsum einzuschränken und alle Kräfte auf die ökologische Rationalisierung der Wirtschaft zu konzentrieren. Für Politiker ist das Bekenntnis zu einer realistischen Analyse der Lage allerdings ein riskanter Schritt, der angesichts der gegenwärtigen Stimmung in der Bevölkerung als politischer Selbstmord erscheinen muss. Mit Wunschdenken kommen wir jedoch nicht weiter. Genügend Mut, um den Wahrheiten unserer Zeit ins Gesicht zu sehen, wird sich allerdings nur finden, wenn es dafür auch Rückhalt in der Bevölkerung gibt. Deshalb kommt es auf engagierte Bürger an, die für diese Wahrheiten in ihrem sozialen Umfeld eintreten, sie von der Politik einfordern und mutige Politiker unterstützen.

Fridays for Future hat der Umweltpolitik in Europa enormen Schub gegeben. Neue Anläufe ähnlicher Art wären überaus wünschenswert. Unsere bisherige Wirtschaftsweise war mehr oder weniger ein Erfolgsmodell, solange es um die Überwindung von Armut und die Schaffung eines Wohlstands für die breite Bevölkerung ging. Doch inzwischen zerstört ein Übermaß an Konsum unsere Lebensgrundlagen, ohne noch ein besseres Leben zu ermöglichen. Ja wichtige menschliche Bedürfnisse werden zunehmend schlechter erfüllt, weil öffentliche Aufgaben vernachlässigt werden und die alles überwuchernde Kommerzialisierung Gemeinschaftsbindungen geschwächt hat. Unsere Konsumkultur ist zunehmend mehr darauf ausgerichtet, menschliche Bedürfnisse zu missbrauchen, statt ihnen zu dienen. Heute sollten wir statt in eine weitere Steigerung des materiellen Konsums in die Menschen und in die Zukunft investieren, in bessere soziale Beziehungen und öffentliche Güter. Europa könnte zeigen, dass es zu einer an wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnissen und menschlichen Bedürfnissen orientierten Transformation der Wirtschaft in der Lage ist. Ein europäisches Modell würde weltweite Ausstrahlung haben und anderen einen ähnlichen Weg erheblich erleichtern. Doch die unabdingbare Voraussetzung dafür ist ein kultureller Umbruch, der nur von den an Wahrheit und Demokratie orientierten Teilen der Bevölkerung ausgehen kann, und ohne den wir unsere Zukunft immer weiter zu verspielen drohen.

 
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