from Marshall Review

The octave belongs to nature. The guitar fretboard belongs to culture. The space between them is where the story of music unfolds.

I’ve walked into many a pub session in Ireland, cathedral choir rehearsals in England and Germany, and bluegrass and country-blues gatherings in Kentucky. And whilst I’ve never yet managed a conservatoire in Paris – I’m still waiting for the invitation – I can guarantee that they are all very different musical worlds.

Different instruments. Different customs. Different ideas about what makes a performance good. Different ways of learning. Different musical languages.

Yet beneath all that variety lies a curious fact. Whether the music comes from a sean-nós singer in Connemara, a Bach chorale in Leipzig, or a mandolin player on a Kentucky porch, everyone is listening with the same pair of ears.

And that simple observation has been the thread running quietly through my column on The Story of Music.

When I began the series, I thought I was writing about the theory behind music. Looking back over those ten articles, I realise I was really writing about something older and deeper: the conversation between nature and culture. The octave belongs to nature. The guitar fretboard belongs to culture. The space between them is where the story of music unfolds.

I began with something so ordinary that most of us never think about it: the octave. One note vibrating at exactly twice the frequency of another. Two sounds that are unmistakably different, yet somehow recognisably the same.

The octave appears in every musical culture not because musicians agreed to adopt it, but because it is written into the physics of sound itself. A vibrating string, a column of air, the human voice – all reveal the same relationship. Long before there were music schools, examination boards, manuscripts, orchestras, guitars or YouTube, there was the octave.

That discovery led humans to an even larger question. If the octave provides the frame, what happens inside it?

And here we encountered one of the great surprises in musical history. Nature gives us the boundary, but she does not provide the map. The space between one octave and the next contains no convenient grid, no easy markers. Human beings had to invent one.

Centuries of experimentation, much like you noodling on the fretboard or tinking at a piano. Singers found intervals that felt beautiful. Instrument makers found ways to reproduce them. Theorists searched for numerical relationships that explained them. Every culture developed solutions, and Western Europe developed several. Some favoured purity, others flexibility. Some worked beautifully in a handful of keys, while others made wider musical travel possible. Yet every solution carried the seed of a new problem.

The twelve-step chromatic scale emerged from that long negotiation. It was not inevitable. It was ingenious. By dividing the octave into twelve equal intervals, Western music acquired a shared framework. The wolf intervals that haunted earlier systems could be tamed. Musicians could move between keys without the entire structure collapsing. Instrument makers could build fretted and keyboard instruments capable of speaking a common language.

But it seems to me something curious happened. The new twelve-note framework did not erase the older musical world. Instead it settled over it like a transparent sheet laid upon an older map. The ancient seven note names survived. The old modal melodies survived. Even the strange symbols we call sharps and flats turned out to be fossils from an earlier age when names remained constant and pitches were nudged to suit circumstances.

Again and again we encountered the same pattern. New ideas rarely replaced old ones. They were layered upon them. The modes provided another example. Modern textbooks often present them as theoretical constructions, but history suggests the opposite. People were singing Dorian and Mixolydian long before anyone gave them Greek names. The patterns emerged first. The theory arrived later. Human beings discovered recurring ways of moving through sound and only afterwards developed the language to describe what they had already been doing.

Harmony followed a similar path. A vibrating string contains relationships within itself. The octave, the fifth and the third are already present as natural consequences of vibration. Musicians did not invent these relationships. They discovered them. When they began combining notes into chords they were, in a sense, making audible, possibilities already hiding within the sound.

Here the story became complicated. For all our talk of notes, scales and chords, nobody has yet produced a single explanation of why music moves us. The acoustician points to the harmonic series. The theorist points to the behaviour of chords within a key. The psychologist points to expectation, memory and emotion. All three are probably right, and all three deserve more attention than I could give them in a single article. Part Eight was less a conclusion than the opening of a door I expect to revisit more than once.

From there the journey became increasingly human. The seven degrees of the diatonic scale ceased to be mere positions and became behaviours. Some felt like home. Some invited movement. Some created brightness. Others carried shadow, tension or longing. What began as acoustics became psychology. We were no longer asking what sound is, but what it feels like to be a listener.

And finally we arrived at pitch itself. Modern musicians assume that A is 440 Hz because that is simply what A is. History suggests otherwise. For most of Western music’s existence there was no universal pitch standard. Notes wandered from city to city and generation to generation. Only through an extraordinary process of standardisation did we arrive at the world inhabited by modern guitars, pianos, orchestras and electronic tuners.

Even then, compromise remained. Equal temperament is a compromise. A440 is a compromise. The tuner in your pocket is enforcing a policy decision rather than revealing an eternal truth. Which brings us back to the question that has quietly accompanied every article in the series.

What exactly is music?

I wrote those first ten parts to suggest a simple answer. Music is neither arbitrary nor purely cultural.

It is not arbitrary because it emerges from physical realities that exist whether we recognise them or not: vibration, frequency, resonance, the octave, the harmonic relationships hidden inside sound itself.

Nor is it purely natural. The chromatic scale, note names, accidentals, modes, harmony, notation, pitch standards and instruments are all human attempts to organise, standardise and communicate those physical relationships. Every time I sweet-tune my guitar, I am participating in that long conversation between physics, culture and human judgement.

Nature provides the raw materials. Culture provides the architecture. The story of music is the story of the conversation between the two. The octave asked the question. The rest of music is our attempt to answer it.

Further Reading This essay reflects on the first ten articles in The Story of Music. Readers who would like to explore the journey can begin here:

Part 1: The Octave – Enigma https://go.dm.ie/the-octave Full Index: https://go.dm.ie/the-story-of-music

 
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from Ernest Ortiz Writes Now

An excerpt from The Package (Novelette 1)

Another pack of instant ramen noodles with imitation eggs and sausages for lunch today. Need someone to install ransomware on a criminal’s holocomp? Bypass a Top Secret Station Security access? Divert gold coin mail transactions from Sol Mafia? I’m your guy, Malcolm Diego. However, business is slow despite being an awesome cyberjacker, and my savings are dwindling.

Unity Station Security cracks down big time on its War on Hacking. I take a couple days off when security arrests the majority of the cyberjacker network. The mediocre skilled are in jail and the best are floating outside the station without a spacesuit or turn into protein packs.

The good news, I’m still alive and have a month of savings. The bad news, Station Security is eyeing my every move. It’s only a matter of time before Chief Mascow comes up with some dumb excuse to arrest me. I guess I can find a corporate job until the heat dies. Nothing wrong trying to be legit.

I activate my armcomp to update my resume and search for any job openings. With some embellishments, I put in enough experience to wow the HR departments, despite my criminal history. Maybe I can also add “Bypassed security encryption to obtain $250,000 from the Bank of Unity.” Or, “Collected and analyzed AIFutCom President and CEO’s sexual history” in my Accomplishments section.

LunaStar might be hiring, but Moon Police are still looking for me as a person of interest in a price-gouging scheme after a colony accident. Apparently, trading oxygen and food one cent higher than the “fair price” is illegal. How about MarsSAM? No, wait. The CFO’s daughter thinks I impregnated her. I didn’t even talk to much less touch her, I swear. Maybe one of the Asteroid Belt colonies? They always need a good holocomp tech.

However, a trip to the Belt is about four to six months, including turnover, and no one has invented faster-than-light travel yet. I worked as a holocomp maintenance tech on a Luna-Mars-Luna transport a few times. But you’re packed in those tiny living quarters like sardines and there’s only so much you can do to pass the time before you start acting like an asylum patient. But I need the moolah, so I’ll take any job available.

The Spacers Guild currently has plenty of ships heading for the Belt. I cross-check ship and colony job listings. The transport ship Hella Awesome needs a part-time holocomm/holocomp tech and offers the standard pay and benefits. Typhod Station desperately needs holocomp techs, and the pay is five times the current market rate.

Typhod Holo Services gives me the job after eighteen minutes of radio sending/receiving. Hella Awesome accepts my application after seven minutes, and it departs at 1800 at Terminal Nineteen. I slurp my last ramen noodle. Time to pack.

My duffle bag includes an EVA skinsuit and helmet, two spares of civvies, work jumpsuit, and a toothbrush. I transfer all my Bank of Unity savings to my CryptoCoin wallet stored in my brain implant. Goodbye Unity. Now the hard part is leaving without being hassled by Station Security or bad guys with a grudge. I program the station’s computer to close my housing and utilities accounts the second Hella Awesome departs.

Station time is 1213. Plenty of people to hide behind during lunch break traffic. I’m hoping the baseball cap obscures me from the facial recognition surveillance software. I walk behind the big and tall (which is most people), slip past shoulders, and don’t make any eye contact. Employees from a clothing store and ramen restaurant curse at me while I’m exiting through their back doors.

But that isn’t enough. My shirt tightens and my lungs restrict. A bear-like figure spins me around. He towers over me and a growl rumbles from his diaphragm.

“Shut up and don’t move.”

I comply, and the familiar assailant puts himself between me and my escape to Central Docking Bay and Terminal Nineteen. In my most polite voice, I greet the man with the security badge.

“Hello, Chief Mascow.”

Chief Warrant Officer Emery Mascow snorts.

“You didn’t think you could leave this station without me knowing, did you?”

I smile, knowing Mascow can throw my ass in jail for any reason.

“No, of course not. Nothing gets by you, Chief.”

Passersby ignore us and keep on walking while Chief Mascow shoves me against the wall. He pokes his cigar-shaped finger at my chest.

“For years, I’ve wanted nothing more than to see you rot in prison or spaced towards Earth’s atmosphere. But I guess I’ll have to settle with you leaving this station forever. I don’t care where you’re going. Actually, I do. So I can warn the poor sucker that has to watch you. You better not come back or else. You hear me?”

My chest hurts but a few words escape from my lungs.

“Crystal clear, Chief.”

Chief Mascow spins me and hurls me back into the crowd. I walk and don’t look back. Going to miss that big lug.

Get The Package, with both EPUB and PDF, on Gumroad for $3. Foul Run and Sovereign are also available.

#adventure #gumroad #epub #novelette #PDF #sciencefiction #scifi

 
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from EpicMind

Abel de Pujol: La clémence de César

Die meisten Menschen wünschen sich ein glückliches Leben. Doch worin besteht Glück eigentlich? Für die einen bedeutet es Gesundheit, für andere beruflichen Erfolg, finanzielle Sicherheit oder erfüllte Beziehungen. Die moderne Ratgeberliteratur empfiehlt Achtsamkeit, Dankbarkeit oder positive Gewohnheiten. Hinter all diesen Ansätzen steht mehrheitlich dieselbe Annahme: Glück sei ein Zustand, den wir erreichen oder bewahren können.

Marcus Tullius Cicero hätte dieser Vorstellung vermutlich widersprochen. Nicht weil er Glück für unwichtig hielt, sondern weil er glaubte, dass wir es an der falschen Stelle suchen. Wer sein Leben darauf ausrichtet, glücklich zu werden, läuft Gefahr, den Blick auf das Wesentliche zu verlieren. Entscheidend sei nicht, wie wir uns fühlen, sondern wer wir sind. Glück entsteht nicht dadurch, dass wir ihm nachjagen, sondern als Folge eines tugendhaften Lebens. Bezeichnend dafür: Ciceros bekanntestes philosophisches Werk trägt nicht den Titel Über das glückliche Leben, sondern De officiisVon den Pflichten. Verantwortung, Gerechtigkeit, Gemeinsinn, moralisches Handeln – das klingt eher nach einem Handbuch für Staatsmänner als nach einer Anleitung zu einem erfüllten Leben.

Und doch, liest man das Werk heute mit etwas Abstand zu seinem historischen Entstehungskontext, tritt darin eine Botschaft hervor, die genau diesen Anschein widerlegt: Ein gutes Leben beginnt nicht mit der Frage, was uns glücklich macht. Es beginnt mit der Frage, was einen guten Menschen auszeichnet.

Ein Philosoph in einer Zeit des Umbruchs

Cicero verfasste De officiis im Herbst des Jahres 44 v. Chr., als sich die Römische Republik in ihrer schwersten Krise befand. Caesar war ermordet worden, die politischen Machtkämpfe eskalierten erneut. Auch Cicero selbst sollte ihnen zum Opfer fallen: Nur wenige Wochen nach Abschluss des Werkes wurde er auf Befehl des zweiten Triumvirats ermordet.

Das Buch entstand also nicht in einer Phase philosophischer Musse, sondern unter dem Eindruck eines Staates, dessen moralische Grundlagen zu zerbrechen drohten. Es ist ein Brief an seinen Sohn Marcus, der damals in Athen studierte. Cicero wollte ihm keine theoretische Philosophie vermitteln, sondern Orientierung für ein verantwortungsvolles Leben. Er greift dabei zahlreiche Gedanken der griechischen Stoa auf, entwickelt sie aber eigenständig weiter und verbindet sie mit seiner Erfahrung als Politiker, Redner und Staatsmann. Im Mittelpunkt steht nicht der Weise, der sich aus der Welt zurückzieht, sondern der Mensch, der mitten im gesellschaftlichen Leben Verantwortung übernimmt.

Der Irrtum unserer Zeit

Wer heute nach Ratschlägen für ein glückliches Leben sucht, findet unzählige Bücher, Podcasts und Videos. Viele davon versprechen mehr Gelassenheit, höhere Produktivität oder grössere Zufriedenheit. Dagegen ist grundsätzlich nichts einzuwenden. Problematisch wird es erst, wenn Glück selbst zum eigentlichen Ziel wird.

Cicero würde diesen Gedanken umkehren. Nicht das Glück sollte unser Ziel sein, sondern die Tugend. Glück ist kein Besitz, den man erwerben kann, sondern die natürliche Folge eines gut geführten Lebens. Schon zu Beginn des Werkes erklärt er, dass alles sittlich richtige Handeln letztlich aus vier Grundtugenden hervorgeht: Klugheit, Gerechtigkeit, Tapferkeit und Mässigung. Es sind keine vier voneinander getrennten Eigenschaften, sondern verschiedene Ausdrucksformen eines guten Charakters. Seine Definition der Klugheit fällt dabei aus dem Rahmen dessen, was man erwarten würde: Sie besteht nicht in Cleverness oder strategischem Geschick, sondern in der ernsthaften Suche nach Wahrheit. Cicero schreibt: [1]

„Alle Begierde nach Erkenntniß und Wissenschaft ist der menschlichen Natur eigenthümlich.“ (I. 4, 13)

Wissen besitzt für ihn keinen Selbstzweck. Erkenntnis soll dazu dienen, besser zu handeln; wer nur um des Wissens willen lernt, verfehlt dessen eigentlichen Zweck. Philosophie ist deshalb keine Flucht aus dem Alltag, sondern eine Vorbereitung auf verantwortliches Handeln.

Charakter entsteht durch Handeln

Der wichtigste Gedanke des ganzen Werkes lautet: Charakter ist nicht angeboren. Er entsteht durch das, was wir täglich tun. Deshalb interessiert sich Cicero weit weniger für grosse moralische Heldentaten als für die kleinen Entscheidungen des Alltags. Halte ich mein Wort? Begegne ich anderen gerecht? Handle ich aus Überzeugung oder bloss aus Eigennutz? Solche Fragen wirken unscheinbar. Sie formen langfristig den Menschen, den wir werden.

Besonders deutlich zeigt sich das in seiner Beschreibung der Gerechtigkeit. Ihr erster Grundsatz ist einfach:

„Der erste Grundsatz der Gerechtigkeit ist, dass Niemand einem Anderen Schaden zufüge.“ (I. 7, 20)

Der zweite besteht darin, gemeinschaftliche Güter zum Nutzen aller und persönliches Eigentum rechtmässig zu verwenden. Gerechtigkeit bedeutet für Cicero also weit mehr als die Einhaltung von Gesetzen. Sie beschreibt eine innere Haltung gegenüber den Mitmenschen. Ebenso scharf verurteilt er die Gleichgültigkeit gegenüber Unrecht. Nicht nur, wer selbst Schaden anrichtet, handelt ungerecht; auch wer Unrecht geschehen lässt, obwohl er es verhindern könnte, verletzt seine Pflicht gegenüber der Gemeinschaft. Verantwortung heisst also nicht nur, selbst korrekt zu handeln, sondern auch, dort einzuschreiten, wo offensichtliches Unrecht geschieht.

Glück folgt der Tugend

Cicero spricht kaum über Glück, weil sich die Frage für ihn in erster Linie gar nicht stellt. Ein Mensch kann äusserlich erfolgreich sein und dennoch kein gutes Leben führen. Er kann reich sein, angesehen oder mächtig und dabei seinen Charakter verlieren. Umgekehrt kann jemand Schwierigkeiten erleben und dennoch seine Würde bewahren, weil er sich nicht von seinen Grundsätzen entfernt. Glück wird dadurch zu einer Folge des Charakters, nicht zu dessen Voraussetzung.

Das widerspricht einer weit verbreiteten Annahme unserer Zeit, wonach wir zuerst erfolgreich, unabhängig oder zufrieden werden müssten, um anschliessend moralisch handeln zu können. Cicero dreht diese Reihenfolge um. Zuerst steht der Charakter. Alles andere folgt daraus, wenn auch nicht immer in Form äusseren Erfolgs. Ein erfülltes Leben hängt weniger davon ab, was wir besitzen oder erreichen, als davon, welche Art Mensch wir Tag für Tag werden.

Der scheinbare Gegensatz zwischen Moral und Nutzen

Wer sich im Alltag ehrlich verhält, erlebt gelegentlich, dass andere schneller ans Ziel kommen. Wer Rücksicht nimmt, verliert mitunter Zeit. Wer sich an Regeln hält, verzichtet vielleicht auf kurzfristige Vorteile. Es liegt nahe, daraus zu schliessen, Moral und persönlicher Nutzen stünden oft im Widerspruch. Genau dieser Frage widmet Cicero das zweite und dritte Buch von De officiis. Seine Antwort fällt eindeutig aus: Der Widerspruch ist nur scheinbar. Was wirklich nützlich ist, kann niemals unsittlich sein. Er schreibt:

„Nichts, was unsittlich ist, kann nützlich sein; und nichts, was sittlich ist, kann unnütz sein.“ (III. 17, 77)

Damit widerspricht Cicero einer Denkweise, die bis heute verbreitet ist. Allzu oft unterscheiden wir zwischen dem moralisch Richtigen und dem praktisch Sinnvollen, sprechen von „faulen Kompromissen“, „kleinen Notlügen“ oder davon, dass man im Berufsleben manchmal „eben realistisch“ sein müsse. Für Cicero ist das eine gefährliche Selbsttäuschung. Wer kurzfristigen Gewinn über seine Grundsätze stellt, erzielt vielleicht einen äusseren Vorteil. Er beschädigt aber zugleich das Wertvollste, was er besitzt: seinen eigenen Charakter. So erklärt sich auch, weshalb Cicero List und Täuschung so entschieden ablehnt. Ein Erfolg, der auf Unehrlichkeit beruht, ist in seinen Augen kein wirklicher Erfolg, denn jeder Gewinn, der den eigenen Charakter untergräbt, bedeutet letztlich einen Verlust.

Der Mensch lebt nicht für sich allein

Der Mensch sei von Natur aus kein Einzelgänger, schreibt Cicero. Wir entwickeln uns erst im Zusammenleben mit anderen. Bereits im ersten Buch heisst es:

„Nicht für uns allein sind wir geboren; unser Vaterland fordert einen Theil unseres Daseins, unsere Freunde einen andern.“ (I. 7, 22)

Dieser Satz gehört zu den bekanntesten Gedanken des ganzen Werkes, und das zu Recht: Er erinnert daran, dass ein gelungenes Leben immer auch Beziehungen umfasst. Familie, Freundschaften, Kolleginnen und Kollegen, das Gemeinwesen – all das sind keine Hindernisse persönlicher Freiheit, sondern Voraussetzungen dafür. Viele Vorstellungen vom Glück kreisen fast ausschliesslich um das eigene Wohlbefinden. Cicero verschiebt den Blickwinkel: Ein Mensch wird nicht glücklicher, indem er sich immer stärker um sich selbst dreht, sondern indem er Teil einer grösseren Gemeinschaft wird und Verantwortung übernimmt. Auch seine Auffassung von Wohltätigkeit passt in dieses Bild. Grosszügigkeit ist für ihn keine Gefühlsregung, sondern eine Tugend; allerdings eine, die weder wahllos noch zur Selbstdarstellung erfolgen soll, sondern mit Vernunft, Augenmass und echtem Nutzen für andere.

Erfolg ist vergänglich, Charakter bleibt

Wer De officiis liest, bemerkt schnell, dass Cicero Erfolg keineswegs gering schätzt. Als Staatsmann wusste er, wie wichtig Ansehen, Einfluss und Leistungsfähigkeit sein können. Er war kein weltfremder Asket. Aber er unterscheidet sorgfältig zwischen dem, was wir besitzen, und dem, was wir sind. Äusserer Erfolg hängt oft von Umständen ab, die wir nur begrenzt beeinflussen können. Gesundheit, Vermögen, gesellschaftliche Anerkennung – all das kann verloren gehen. Der eigene Charakter dagegen begleitet uns in jeder Lebenslage.

Darum überzeugen Ciceros Gedanken auch nach über zweitausend Jahren noch. Sie versprechen kein dauerhaftes Glücksgefühl und keine einfache Lebensformel. Sie richten den Blick auf etwas Beständigeres: die tägliche Arbeit am eigenen Charakter. Wir müssen nicht ständig fragen, ob wir gerade glücklich sind. Vielleicht genügt eine einfachere Frage: „Handle ich heute so, dass ich auch morgen noch mit mir selbst im Reinen sein kann?“ Auch die psychologische Forschung kommt zu ähnlichen Schlüssen. Menschen erleben langfristige Zufriedenheit häufig dort, wo sie Sinn erfahren, Verantwortung übernehmen und ihre Werte tatsächlich leben. Cicero hätte das vermutlich nicht überrascht. Für ihn war Glück nie das Ziel eines guten Lebens, sondern dessen natürliche Folge.

Drei Fragen zum Weiterdenken

Zum Schluss bleiben drei einfache Fragen, die Ciceros Überlegungen in den eigenen Alltag übertragen können:

  1. Welche meiner täglichen Entscheidungen stärken meinen Charakter – und welche schwächen ihn?
  2. Wo verwechsle ich kurzfristigen Vorteil mit langfristigem Nutzen?
  3. Würde ich dieselbe Entscheidung treffen, wenn ausschliesslich mein Gewissen darüber urteilen müsste?

Cicero schrieb De officiis in einer Zeit politischer Krisen und persönlicher Unsicherheit. Umso mehr überrascht die Gelassenheit seines Werkes. Statt Rezepte für Erfolg, Wohlstand oder Glück zu versprechen, richtet er den Blick auf etwas Dauerhafteres: den Charakter. Darin unterscheidet er sich grundlegend von vielen modernen Ratgebern zur Selbstoptimierung. Diese fragen meist, wie wir erfolgreicher, produktiver oder zufriedener werden. Cicero stellt eine andere Frage: Wie werden wir ein guter Mensch? Wer versucht, klug, gerecht, mutig und massvoll zu handeln, wird Rückschläge nicht vermeiden können. Aber er gewinnt etwas, das äussere Erfolge allein niemals schenken können: die Gewissheit, sich selbst treu geblieben zu sein.

Vielleicht ist genau das der Gedanke, den ein Mann kurz vor seinem eigenen Tod noch festhalten wollte. Glück lässt sich nicht erzwingen, nicht planen und nicht dauerhaft festhalten. Wer es unmittelbar sucht, läuft Gefahr, ihm ständig hinterherzulaufen. Wer dagegen seinen Charakter bildet und das Richtige tut, entdeckt oft, dass Glück kein Ziel ist, das erreicht werden muss, sondern eine Folge eines gut gelebten Lebens.


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Anmerkung [1] Alle Zitate werden in der Übersetzung von Raphael Kühner, 1873, Cicero's drei Bücher von den Pflichten, zweite verbesserte Auflage, Hoffmann'sche Verlags-Buchhandlung, Stuttgart, unverändert wiedergegeben: https://projekt-gutenberg.org/authors/marcus-tullius-cicero/books/ciceros-drei-buecher-von-den-pflichten/

Bildquelle Alexandre Abel de Pujol (1785–1861): La clémence de César (Cicero verteidigt Q. Ligarius vor Caesar), Musée des Beaux-Arts, Valenciennes, Public Domain.

Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet.

Topic #Philosophie | #ProductivityPorn

 
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from Ennui Vagaries

Photo by [Millenary Watches](https://unsplash.com/@millenarywatches) on [Unsplash](https://unsplash.com/photos/a-close-up-of-a-person-wearing-a-watch-WSKuvpbnN0E) Photo by Millenary Watches on Unsplash

In Rejecting the Luxury of Hobbies I talked about the “investor” types of people. The people that seem to feel that participating in a hobby based around collecting should not affect their bottom line. Well, here we are, just a couple of days later, and one of these “collectors” just showed up in my YouTube with his latest video: Affordable Watches Lose You Money. Here's Why.

It didn't take long for me to understand the premise he was going with. He starts off talking about a Citizen Tsuyosa, a Seiko 5 SRPD55, and a Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical he purchased secondhand for approximately half of the price the original owners paid for them. He goes on to claim that losing money on resale of a watch is the “cost of ownership”. (Not really, it's something different, as I'll talk about in a minute.) And he states that it happens to all classes of watches, but it “hurts more” for “affordable” watches.

Why does this happen? He claims that it's because of branding. Most brands like Seiko, Citizen and Hamilton haven't built up the “awareness” of Rolex and Omega. Add to that the challenge to Seiko, Citizen, Hamilton, etc. from micro brands that offer better products at the same price points. But the micro brands have the same issue: brand recognition.

What are the solutions? Well, the first is to always by second hand and avoid the loss. The other is to only buy what you like, and will not want to sell.

Well no sh*t Sherlock.

But, he has fundamentally misrepresented the underpinnings of how markets actually work in capitalism. In the fair market there is the concept of depreciation (borrowed from Wikipedia):

In accountancy, depreciation is an actual reduction in the fair value of an asset, such as the decrease in value of factory equipment each year as it is used and wears.

For many things we purchase the depreciation occurs the moment the item is taken out of its box and any wrapping removed. Why? Because it is no longer a new item, it is now a used item. And, once an item is deemed as used it cannot be sold as a new item, and therefore must be sold on the secondary market.

This concept of depreciation happens with nearly all the “things” we purchase: cars, computers, cell phones, bicycles, and many other items. They are seen as assets, and assets have a value that decreases over time. (The rare exception to this being realty, in which there are other market forces at play which can affect the value of the asset.)

The secondary market is typically made up of several groups of people:

  • The main portion of the market is people who are deal hunters. They are looking to take advantage of the depreciation of the items that are being sold.
  • There is a smaller portion of the secondary market that are collectors. These are people that are more interested in the items on offer for their significance. These items hold significant personal, non-monetary value, that is completely separate from the financial operation of the market.
  • The final people are the investors. They are specifically focused on attaining items that have a perceived value that overrides its depreciation. This is where Rolex, Breguet, F. P. Journe, and other luxury brands fit into the market.

Looking at any item you want to collect as an investment is tremendously stupid. While it may be apparent that you can make money by investing in a Rolex, even that is at the whim of the secondary market. The specific reference you have “invested” in may fall out of favor with the market. There are no guarantees. Looking at any item that is “collectible” as an investment is no better than putting your money in the stock market. And, with the stock market, you have a better chance at getting a return on your investment if you work with an advisor.

So, the video is correct: buy what you like and will keep. Buy on the secondary market to get a deal. Or, buy the items that hold significant, non-monetary, value to you. But most importantly: don't look at purchasing any asset as an investment. And, all collectibles are assets that depreciate over time.

This is why I get annoyed with these “influencers”. Instead of explaining the facts of how markets and depreciation work we get a song and dance about “brand recognition”. That basic marketing junk that really doesn't mean anything to the market. The market is going to do what it does, regardless of the name on the dial. If there is no other lesson to be learned from the Wall Street Bets Subreddit, it is: markets are not rational, and cannot be relied on to act consistently or rationally.


Categories: #Collecting Tags: #watches, #markets, #depreciation, #value, #assets, #new, #used, #secondary, #market, #fair License: Copyright Unattributed. Licensed under Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0.

 
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from What Inspired Me

Introduction

Percussion is used widely across folk and popular musics around the world. The kakko of Japanese gagaku, the drum ensembles of the Ewe people in West Africa, the frame drums of the Middle East, and — as we'll see later — jazz and rock. In many cultures, drums and percussive instruments have carried the very skeleton of the music.

And yet, in the Western classical tradition, percussion has remained almost entirely confined to the timpani — an instrument whose role is essentially supporting, reinforcing harmony rather than driving it. Western music, freed from the church and expected to hold paying audiences spellbound in the new venue of the public concert, never made pulse-driven rhythm its protagonist. Percussion instruments certainly did reach Europe. So why did they never sit at the center of the Western art-music canon?

Digging into this question, there's no single answer. At least four distinct historical layers, each with its own logic, are stacked on top of one another.

Layer One: Theological Suspicion of the Body

Remarkably, Europe's wariness toward pulsing, bodily rhythm was already firmly established well before any contact with the Ottoman Empire or Moorish Spain — as early as the fourth and fifth centuries, in the writings of the Church Fathers. In the Confessions, Augustine confesses his own conflicted anguish over the sheer sensory pleasure he took in hearing sacred chant. The Church Fathers dismissed instrumental music in general as a “Judaizing” concession, and Thomas Aquinas later summarized this position by stating that the Church does not use instruments in praising God, lest it appear to be falling back into “Jewish ways.”

What was being excluded here was not the instrument of any particular ethnic group. Rhythm that moves the body was tied to sensory pleasure and pagan ritual (the cult of Dionysus, for instance) and ranked below rational, spiritual music — vocal music, chant without pulse. It's no coincidence that the theoretical foundation of Western music has, since the Middle Ages, been built consistently around relationships of pitch — mode, harmony, counterpoint, tonality. Unpitched percussion was never given a place of meaning within the grammar of this compositional language to begin with.

Importantly, this hierarchy never fully suppressed European folk culture. Tarantism in southern Italy — a trance-inducing healing ritual built around frenzied, drum-driven dance — was documented well into the twentieth century, and the adufe, a type of frame drum, survived as a women's tradition in the folk music of Portugal and Galicia. So, more precisely: Europe didn't lack an ecstatic, percussion-driven culture. Rather, the institutions above it — church and court — consistently pushed it to the margins.

Layer Two: Marginalization by Class and Gender

Throughout the Middle Ages, the tabor (as in “pipe and tabor”) was the instrument of itinerant entertainers and jesters, while the frame drum, going back to temple ritual in ancient Mesopotamia, was consistently coded as “an instrument women play.” These instruments certainly persisted — but always as markers tied to a particular class, a particular gender, and were never promoted to the status of structural material for composers to work with. They reached Europe, but they were never internalized.

Layer Three: A New Layer — Orientalism

As contact with the Ottoman Empire intensified in the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries, ethnic othering was layered onto this existing hierarchy. The drums, cymbals, and triangle of the Janissary military band became fashionable in Europe as “Turkish style” (alla turca), leaving traces in Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail and Haydn's Symphony No. 100, “Military.” But this was no more than a surface-level borrowing of “exotic” signifiers — the drum was never integrated into the structural skeleton of Western music.

In other words: the foundation was a theological value judgment, which was then institutionalized as a structural norm — that pitch-centered writing was the only legitimate musical language — onto which ethnic othering was later superimposed. It makes the most sense to see “a problem of musical structure” and “a gaze of ethnocentrism” not as two separate causes, but as the same underlying hierarchy of values expressed in different forms at different moments in history.

The Turning Point: The Twentieth Century's Liberation from Within

This structure first began to crack from the inside in the early-twentieth-century avant-garde. Edgard Varèse's Ionisation (1931) was, as far as we know, the first Western concert work written for an ensemble of entirely unpitched percussion. Bartók, and then a series of percussion works by John Cage, followed.

But the real turning point came with minimalism. In 1970, Steve Reich actually traveled to Ghana, where he took daily lessons in drumming from Ewe master drummers at the University of Ghana, Legon. Drumming (1971), which grew out of that experience, transplants directly into the skeleton of Western compositional language the structural principle of Ewe drum ensembles: multiple patterns sounding simultaneously, their downbeats deliberately never coinciding. This is categorically different from eighteenth-century “Turkish style.” Where that was a surface borrowing, Reich actually acquired the technique and internalized its underlying principle.

That said, even this “learning and integration” hasn't escaped criticism — the argument that it amounts to a more sophisticated form of appropriation, in which a Western composer extracts a non-Western tradition and folds it into his own authoritative artistic language. The asymmetry by which Reich's reception in the West didn't necessarily translate into recognition or standing for the Ghanaian musicians who taught him remains a lingering shadow within this long history.

Why Did It “Internationalize” in the Twentieth Century?

Another important question arises here. Why did jazz, rock, and minimalism manage to achieve a genuinely global reach in the twentieth century, carrying percussive vocabulary with them?

One hypothesis holds that the link between percussion and ecstatic, religious trance is a near-universal phenomenon found across many of the world's cultures, and that this drove the internationalization. The classic study of the relationship between music and trance, Gilbert Rouget's Music and Trance, puts a careful check on part of this hypothesis. Having surveyed a worldwide body of ethnographic material, Rouget rejects, as pseudoscience, the popular theory that drumming rhythms directly and neurophysiologically induce religious ecstasy (trance), concluding that what trance means, and when it occurs, varies enormously by cultural system of meaning.

But this doesn't mean every response to rhythm is purely a cultural construct. Below the level of religious ecstasy, there's a more basic phenomenon: entrainment, the synchronization of brain activity and bodily movement to a steady external pulse. Research shows that the brains of eight-month-old infants already entrain to musical rhythm, and “beat induction” — the capacity to actively perceive a pulse in an auditory stimulus — is widely reported as a foundational, broadly shared feature of human music cognition. Among animals, this ability is strikingly rare, which makes it reasonable to treat it as a near-universal physiological substrate of our species.

So, to be precise: the strong claim that “drumming carries a universal power to induce religious ecstasy” is hard to support. But the weaker claim that “the human body has a basic physiological tendency to entrain to a beat” has real grounding. This distinction matters for the comparison with architecture that follows.

What has stronger empirical grounding is a far more mundane and concrete set of political and economic mechanisms.

As for jazz's own origins: its percussive core owes less to “the collective will of multiethnic America” than to the specific colonial legal quirks of Congo Square in New Orleans. Under French and Spanish colonial custom, enslaved people were granted Sundays off, and West African drumming rhythms were passed down there without being outlawed — a site of cultural resistance under oppression.

As for its international spread: there was a deliberate Cold War cultural diplomacy policy, beginning in 1956, in the form of the U.S. State Department's “Jazz Ambassadors” program — sending figures like Dizzy Gillespie and Louis Armstrong around the world to counter Soviet anti-American propaganda. Voice of America radio broadcasts underpinned the effort.

A Comparison with Architecture: A Single Style, or Fusion Through a Hub?

It's worth drawing one more line of comparison here. Another, quite different kind of “internationalization” happened in the twentieth century: modernist architecture in glass and reinforced concrete. The idiom of Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe redrew the skyline of cities from Chandigarh, India, to the new downtowns of Southeast Asia.

But this architectural internationalization can't be explained by exactly the same mechanism as music's. There's a decisive difference between the two.

In architecture, what spread across the world was a single, uniform style. Glass and concrete could be assembled the same way regardless of climate, cultural background, or whatever traditional building style already existed on a given site. The physical material itself carries no “content” to fuse with local tradition. That's precisely why modernist architecture replaced local skylines with essentially the same shape — the glass box — wherever it landed. Internationalization here meant homogenization, replacement.

Music is different. As the previous section suggested, entrainment — the basic physiological tendency to synchronize with a beat — appears to be a fairly universal human trait. But when this “universal engine” was exported from the United States, the century's great hub of international exchange, it didn't replace local traditions with a uniform shape the way architecture did. Instead, it fused with local musical traditions everywhere it went, branching into different forms in different places. Jazz crossed into France and became Django Reinhardt's gypsy swing; it fused with Cuban rhythm to become Afro-Cuban jazz; in Japan it produced the distinctive culture of the jazz kissa. Minimalism followed the same pattern — Reich absorbed the structure of Ewe drumming from Ghana, Glass drew on the cyclical rhythms of Indian tala, and the composers who followed fused the idiom further with their own local musical vocabularies. Rock's countless local variants worldwide likely reflect the same structure.

So where modernist architecture was a case of “a single form blanketing the world,” twentieth-century American music was a case of “a single universal driving force — the physiological tendency to entrain to rhythm — passing through a hub nation and fusing with local traditions into countless different shapes.” Homogenization versus diversification: this difference, I think, is exactly what separates architecture's internationalization from music's. The fact that minimalism, jazz, and rock each branched into utterly different musics in different parts of the world, while still sharing “the same engine” underneath, points to a kind of universality specific to music — one that a single spreading style, of the kind we see in architecture, simply can't account for.

Why Didn't It Spread During the Colonial Era?

A contrasting fact emerges here. European classical music, despite centuries of colonial contact, almost never took root as a local culture in the places Europe colonized. The opera houses the French built in Hanoi, Saigon, and Haiphong in French Indochina were, scholars note, met with local indifference, and ended up “making the distance separating the colony from metropolitan France even more apparent” rather than bridging it. The opera house in Manaus, Brazil, was likewise an enclave for settlers alone, built on the exploitation of Indigenous labor. Audiences were nearly always confined to a colonial elite fluent in French or versed in Western manners, and the music never made contact with local musical traditions.

What this contrast reveals is that cultural transmission can't be explained by the appeal of the music alone. Colonialism as a system was designed to maintain a permanent hierarchical difference between colonizer and colonized; it had no structural will to share culture on equal terms. Jazz, by contrast, became an international common language in the twentieth century precisely because Cold War politics required newly decolonized nations to be won over as equal allies — and because, on the receiving end, people made an active choice to embrace it.

Conclusion

The history of percussion's exclusion from classical music cannot be reduced to a single cause. Theological suspicion of the body, marginalization by class and gender, and ethnic othering — several distinct logics of exclusion happened to point in the same direction, layering on top of one another to shape the norms we inherit today as “classical music.” And when that norm finally began to crack from within, it wasn't through some passing aesthetic whim, but through the concrete practice of composers who actually traveled to non-Western traditions and approached them as equal students.

Beyond that lies the twentieth century itself. A fairly universal human tendency — entrainment to a beat — genuinely exists, and when it was exported around the world by way of the United States, that century's great hub of international exchange, it didn't replace local traditions with a uniform shape the way modernist architecture did. Instead, it fused with musical traditions everywhere it landed, branching into countless different musics. The fact that jazz, rock, and minimalism each took on utterly different shapes in different parts of the world, while still sharing the same underlying drive, is itself the story of this particular kind of universality. It wasn't a single style blanketing the world — it was one universal engine opening outward into diversity, through countless encounters with local traditions.

To love Western classical music while also staying aware that it is the product of this history of exclusion — these two things are not in contradiction. The tension Tōru Takemitsu spent a lifetime working through in November Steps — the recognition that Eastern and Western musical traditions shouldn't be forced into harmony, but held side by side while preserving their differences — was, perhaps, one honest way of answering to this long history.

 
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from What Inspired Me

はじめに

打楽器の使用は、世界中の民族音楽や大衆音楽に広く見られる。日本の雅楽の鞨鼓、西アフリカのエウェの太鼓アンサンブル、中東のフレームドラム、そして後述するジャズやロック。多くの文化圏で、太鼓や打楽器的なものは音楽の骨格そのものを担ってきた。

それにもかかわらず、西洋クラシック音楽の伝統においては、打楽器はティンパニという、あくまで和声を補強する脇役的な楽器の使用にほぼ限定され続けてきた。教会音楽から解放され、公開演奏会という商業的な場で聴衆を熱狂させることを求められたはずの西洋音楽は、なぜ最後まで拍動的なリズムを主役に据えなかったのか。ヨーロッパにも打楽器は確かに伝わっていた。ではなぜ、西洋芸術音楽の「正史」の中で、それらは一度も中心に座らなかったのか。

この問いを掘り下げていくと、単一の答えには行き着かない。そこには少なくとも四つの異なる時代の、異なる論理が積み重なっている。

第一層:身体への神学的不信

驚くべきことに、ヨーロッパが楽器の拍動的なリズムを警戒する態度は、オスマン帝国やムーア人との接触よりはるか以前、4〜5世紀の教父たちの時代にすでに確立していた。アウグスティヌスは『告白録』の中で、聖歌を聴く際の感覚的な快楽そのものに強い葛藤を抱いていたことを告白している。教父たちは楽器音楽全般を「ユダヤ教的な譲歩」と見なして退け、トマス・アクィナスも後年これを要約して、教会が神の讃美に楽器を用いないのは「ユダヤ教のやり方に逆戻りしたと見られないため」だと述べた。

ここで排除の対象になっていたのは、特定の民族の楽器ではない。身体を突き動かすリズムそのものが、感覚的快楽・異教の儀礼(ディオニュソス崇拝など)と結びつけられ、理性的・霊的な音楽——声楽、非拍動的な詠唱——よりも劣ったものとして位置づけられた。西洋音楽の理論的基盤が、中世以来一貫して音高の関係性(旋法、和声、対位法、調性)によって組み立てられてきたのは、この神学的な価値序列と無関係ではない。無音高の打楽器は、この作曲言語の文法の中に、そもそも意味を持たせる場所を与えられていなかったのである。

重要なのは、この序列がヨーロッパの民衆文化を完全に制圧したわけではなかったという点だ。南イタリアのタランティズモ(トランス状態を伴う治療儀礼としての激しい太鼓の踊り)は20世紀まで記録され続けたし、フレームドラムの一種であるアドゥフェはポルトガルやガリシアの民俗音楽の中に、女性たちの伝統として生き延びた。つまり正確に言えば、ヨーロッパは「陶酔的な打楽器文化を持たなかった」のではなく、教会・宮廷という上層の制度が、それを一貫して周縁化し続けたのである。

第二層:身分とジェンダーによる周縁化

中世を通じて、タボール(パイプ・アンド・タボール)は旅の大道芸人や道化師の楽器として、フレームドラムは古代メソポタミアの神殿儀礼の時代から一貫して「女性が演奏する楽器」として位置づけられてきた。これらの楽器は確かに存在し続けたが、常に特定の身分・特定の性別に紐づけられたマーカーとして扱われ、「作曲家が構造的な素材として扱う対象」へと格上げされることは一度もなかった。伝わってはいたが、内部化はされなかったのである。

第三層:オリエンタリズムという新しい層

16〜18世紀、オスマン帝国との接触が本格化すると、この既存の序列に民族的な他者化が重なる。イェニチェリ軍楽隊の太鼓・シンバル・トライアングルは「トルコ趣味(アラ・トゥルカ)」としてヨーロッパの流行になり、モーツァルトの『後宮からの誘拐』やハイドンの交響曲第100番「軍隊」にその痕跡を残した。しかしこれはあくまで「異国情緒の記号」としての表面的な借用であり、太鼓が西洋音楽の構造的な骨格として統合されることはなかった。

つまり土台にあったのは神学的な価値判断であり、それが「音高中心の書法こそが正当な音楽言語だ」という構造的な規範として制度化され、後の時代に民族的な他者化が重ね書きされていった。「音楽的構造の問題」と「エスノセントリズムの視線」は別々の原因ではなく、同じ一つの価値序列が異なる時代に異なる形で表現されたものだと考えるのが、もっとも筋が通る。

転換点:20世紀、西洋音楽の内側からの解放

この構造が初めて内側から崩れ始めるのは、20世紀前半の前衛においてである。エドガー・ヴァレーズの『イオニザシオン』(1931年)は、西洋の演奏会用作品として初めて、無音高打楽器のみによるアンサンブルのために書かれた。バルトーク、そしてジョン・ケージの一連の打楽器作品がこれに続く。

しかし本当の意味での転換は、ミニマル・ミュージックによってもたらされた。スティーヴ・ライヒは1970年、実際にガーナに渡航し、アクラ大学でエウェ族の巨匠奏者から直接ドラミングの指導を受けた。この経験から生まれた『ドラミング』(1971年)は、「複数のパターンが同時に鳴りながら、それぞれの拍頭が一致しない」というエウェの太鼓アンサンブルの構造原理を、そのまま西洋の作曲言語の骨格として移植したものである。これは18世紀の「トルコ趣味」とは決定的に異なる。あれが表面的な借用だったのに対し、ライヒは実際に技術を習得し、その原理を内面化した。

もっとも、この「学習と統合」自体にも批判はある。西洋の作曲家が非西洋の伝統を抽出し、自らの権威ある芸術的言語に組み込む、洗練された形の専有ではないかという指摘である。ライヒの受容のされ方が、彼が学んだガーナの奏者たち自身の評価向上に必ずしもつながらなかった、という非対称性は、この長い歴史の中になお残る影である。

なぜ20世紀に「国際化」しえたのか

ここでもう一つ重要な問いが浮かぶ。なぜジャズやロック、そしてミニマル・ミュージックは、20世紀に打楽器的な語法を伴って世界的な広がりを持ちえたのか。

一つの仮説として、「打楽器と陶酔・宗教的恍惚の結びつきは、世界の多くの文化に共通する普遍的な現象であり、それがこの国際化を後押しした」という考え方がある。音楽と憑依・トランスの関係を扱った古典的研究、ジルベール・ルジェの『音楽とトランス』は、この仮説の一部に慎重な留保を突きつける。ルジェは世界中の民族誌資料を横断的に検証した上で、「太鼓のリズムが宗教的恍惚(トランス)を神経生理学的に直接引き起こす」という通俗的な理論を疑似科学として退け、トランスが何を意味し、いつ起こるかは文化的な意味体系ごとに大きく異なると結論づけている。

ただしこれは、リズムそのものへの反応がすべて文化的な構築物にすぎない、という意味ではない。トランスという宗教的恍惚のレベルとは別に、もっと基礎的なエンテインメント(拍への同調)という現象がある。一定のパルスを耳にすると、脳波や身体の動きが自然にそのパルスに同調する現象で、生後8ヶ月の乳児の脳がすでに音楽的リズムに同調することを示す研究や、聴覚刺激から拍を能動的に感じ取る「ビート・インダクション」の能力が、人間の音楽認知に広く共有された基盤的特性として報告されている。これは動物界でも極めて例外的な能力とされ、人類にほぼ普遍的な生理的基盤と言ってよいだろう。

つまり正確に言えば、「太鼓が宗教的恍惚を引き起こす普遍的な力を持つ」という強い主張は支持しにくいが、「人間の身体がビートに同調する基礎的な生理的傾向を持つ」という、もう一段階弱い主張には、かなりの根拠がある。この区別は、次の建築との比較を考える上で重要になる。

むしろ実証的な裏付けが強いのは、もっと世俗的で具体的な政治的・経済的回路である。

ジャズの起源そのものについて言えば、その打楽器的な核心は「多民族国家アメリカ全体の意志」というより、ニューオーリンズのコンゴ・スクエアという特殊な植民地法の産物だった。フランス・スペインの植民地法の慣習で奴隷に日曜の休息が与えられ、西アフリカ系の太鼓のリズムが禁じられることなく継承された、抑圧下の文化的抵抗の場である。

その国際的な拡散については、1956年から始まったアメリカ国務省の「ジャズ大使」プログラムという、明確な冷戦下の文化外交政策があった。ディジー・ガレスピーやルイ・アームストロングを世界中に派遣し、ソ連の対米プロパガンダに対抗する。ヴォイス・オブ・アメリカのラジオ放送がこれを支えた。

建築との比較:単一の様式か、拠点を経由した融合か

ここで一つ、補助線を引いておきたい。20世紀にはもう一つ、まったく別の分野で似たような「国際化」が起きている。ガラスと鉄骨コンクリートによるモダニズム建築である。ル・コルビュジエやミース・ファン・デル・ローエの様式は、インドのチャンディーガルから東南アジアの新都心まで、世界中の都市景観を塗り替えた。

しかしこの建築の国際化と、音楽の国際化を、まったく同じメカニズムとして説明することはできない。両者の間には決定的な違いがある。

建築の場合、世界中に広まったのは単一の、均質な様式だった。ガラスとコンクリートは、気候が違おうと、文化的背景が違おうと、その土地にどんな伝統的建築様式があろうと関係なく、同じ工法で組み立てられる。この物理的な素材そのものには、現地の伝統と融合すべき「内容」がない。だからこそ、モダニズム建築はどこへ行っても基本的に同じ形——ガラスの箱——として現地の景観を置き換えた。均質化・置換としての国際化である。

音楽の場合は違う。前章で見た通り、ビートへの同調(エンテインメント)という基礎的な生理的傾向は、人類にかなり普遍的に備わっていると考えられる。しかしこの「普遍的なエンジン」がアメリカという20世紀の国際交流の拠点から世界各地に輸出されたとき、それは建築のように現地の伝統を均質な形に置き換えたのではなく、各地の民族音楽的伝統と融合し、その土地ごとに異なる形へと分岐していった。ジャズはフランスに渡ってジャンゴ・ラインハルトのジプシー・スウィングになり、キューバのリズムと結びついてアフロ・キューバン・ジャズになり、日本ではジャズ喫茶という独自の受容文化を生んだ。ミニマル・ミュージックも同様で、ライヒはガーナのエウェの太鼓の構造を、グラスはインドのターラの周期リズムをそれぞれ取り込み、後続の作曲家たちはそれぞれの土地の音楽的語彙とさらに融合させていった。ロックが世界中で無数のローカルな変種を生み出したのも同じ構造だろう。

つまりモダニズム建築が「単一の形式が世界を覆った」現象だったのに対し、20世紀のアメリカ発の音楽は「一つの普遍的な駆動力(リズムへの同調という生理的傾向)が、拠点となる国家を経由しながら、各地の伝統と無数の異なる形に融合していった」現象だったと言える。均質化と多様化、この違いこそが、建築と音楽の国際化を分けている点ではないか。ミニマル・ミュージック、ジャズ、ロックがそれぞれ世界各地でまったく異なる姿の音楽へと分岐しながら、それでもなお「同じエンジン」を共有し続けていることこそ、建築のような単一様式の伝播では説明できない、音楽固有の普遍性のあり方を示しているのだと思う。

なぜ植民地時代には広まらなかったのか

ここで対照的な事実が浮かび上がる。ヨーロッパのクラシック音楽は、植民地支配という数百年に及ぶ接触の機会を持ちながら、現地の文化として根付くことはほとんどなかった。フランス領インドシナのハノイ・サイゴン・ハイフォンに建てられたオペラハウスは、現地住民の「無関心」に阻まれ、「植民地とフランス本国を隔てる距離をむしろ際立たせる」結果に終わったと研究者は指摘する。ブラジルのマナウス歌劇場も、先住民の労働搾取の上に築かれた入植者だけの飛び地だった。観客はフランス語や西洋の作法を解する植民地エリート層にほぼ限定され、現地の音楽的伝統とはついに接点を持たなかった。

この対比が示すのは、文化の伝播は音楽そのものの魅力だけでは説明できないということだ。植民地主義という制度は、支配者と被支配者の間の恒久的な階層的差異を維持することを目的としており、文化を対等に共有する意志を構造的に持っていなかった。一方、20世紀のジャズが国際的な共通言語になりえたのは、脱植民地化した新興国を対等な同盟国として獲得する必要があった冷戦下の政治状況、そして受け手側の能動的な選択が噛み合ったからである。

おわりに

クラシック音楽が打楽器を排除してきた歴史は、単一の原因に還元できない。神学的な身体嫌悪、身分とジェンダーによる周縁化、そして民族的な他者化——複数の異なる排除の論理が、たまたま同じ方向を向いて積み重なり、今日私たちが「クラシック音楽」として受け取る規範を形作った。そしてその規範が内側から崩れ始めたのも、単なる美的な気まぐれではなく、実際に非西洋の伝統に足を運び、対等な学び手として向き合った作曲家たちの、具体的な実践によってだった。

その先に、20世紀という時代がある。ビートへの同調という、人類にかなり普遍的な生理的傾向が確かに存在し、それがアメリカという国際交流の拠点国家を経由して世界中に輸出されたとき、モダニズム建築のように現地を均質な形へと置き換えるのではなく、各地の民族音楽的伝統と融合しながら、無数の異なる音楽へと分岐していった。ジャズ、ロック、ミニマル・ミュージックがそれぞれ世界各地でまったく異なる姿をとりながら、それでもなお同じ駆動力を共有し続けているという事実こそが、この普遍性のあり方を物語っている。それは単一の様式が世界を覆うのではなく、一つの普遍的なエンジンが、各地の伝統との無数の出会いを通じて、多様な形に開かれていく国際化だった。

西洋クラシックを愛好しながら、同時にそれがこうした排除の歴史の産物であることを自覚し続けること。この二つは矛盾するものではない。武満徹が生涯かけて『ノヴェンバー・ステップス』という作品の中に刻み込んだ緊張関係——東西の音楽的伝統は無理に調和させるべきではなく、違いを保持したまま並置すべきだという認識——は、この長い歴史を踏まえた上での、一つの誠実な応答の形だったのだろう。

 
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from 00692285

As a stay-at-home-dad (SAHD) I can’t help but feel that even today, even with the amount of SAHDs increasing, the world of daytime childcare just isn’t built for us. In the US, it’s still very much assumed that a child’s primary care taker is a woman. The SAHD is not uncommon, but it is still considered somewhat of an oddity. It still sometimes feels odd to me. Especially when I’m out about town. The world of day time childcare didn’t evolve to accommodate stay-at-home-dads.

The local library hosts a story time for children in the morning once a week. It’s very cute and attended mostly by mothers and their small babies. I’m usually the singular SAHD at the event. On one occasion I observed some of the moms break the ice with each other. Before long, they were trading stories about motherhood including particulars of breastfeeding and other peculiarities related to childcare. While I could relate to a lot of what they were talking about (minus the breastfeeding part), it didn’t feel right for me to join. Anyways, what is a man going to do in mother’s friend group anyway? It was an odd feeling of simultaneously feeling left out, but also having no desire to join.

On another occasion, I was sitting in the play area of the library when another baby approached me and my daughter. The baby waved hi to us and looked like she wanted to play. I waved back, and beckoned my daughter to try to wave to the other little baby (with limited success). Before long, the mother appeared. She glanced at me, gave me a brief hello, and escorted her baby to another corner of the play area. This interaction left me feeling somewhat slighted, but again I wondered what an alternate version of this interaction would be? Maybe the mother never comes for the baby and me, my daughter, and her have a cute moment of play. Maybe the mother, comes and joins us, we have a brief conversation about our respective babies and we part ways. But under no circumstances would I want or expect some kind of lasting friendship to form between me and this mother based on that interaction that would otherwise be more likely to form if I were a woman.

Interactions like these made me realize that places like the playground and the library are primarily women’s spaces. These are spaces designed for children to interact and play, but a natural byproduct of that space is an opportunity for women to meet and form friendships and communities. As a SAHD, I can participate in what these spaces offer, but only to the extent that they benefit my child. Obviously I’m not banned, or not welcome, but the spaces don’t benefit me in the way they benefit mothers. It’s similar to aerobics classes and group workouts at gyms. They’re predominantly occupied by women. Men can come and participate in the workouts, but the activity and the space is not for them strictly speaking.

As you can tell by this whole essay I’m writing about the subject, I’m not bothered by this at all but it does make me wonder what I really want? Do I really want to live in a world where playgrounds are predominantly occupied by other SAHDs? In a world of stay at home dads, are the mothers out working? Is that a good thing? That’s a separate can-of-worms I’m not qualified to answer. Would women really want their spaces dominated or encroached upon by men? Perhaps the feeling of discomfort I feel out in public as a SAHD is the system working. It’s meant to uphold a status quo—a status quo that’s telling me I should be working and my wife should be staying home to take care of the kids and if not her, then a nanny.

Then one has to wonder: If there were separate spaces for SAHDs what would that look like? Maybe it’s a playground with a bar in the corner. Or perhaps it’s a playground with an adult gym on the other side. To be sure, communities of fathers exist. They center around sports and scouting for example. For fathers of younger children, they exist as stroller-walks. However more often than not these activities exist only on the weekends. The rest of the weekday belongs to the mothers, the nannies and the daycare workers. The idea that a group of SAHDs would sit around and talk about being SAHDs while their children play is precisely what a woman would imagine we’d do. But it’s not. Male friendships aren’t generally built around relating and talking. They’re generally built around a common activity—like sports and hobbies. This tension points to masculinity and male-friendships being less suited to the type of community forming that women otherwise experience around childcare. I don’t believe there ever will be a robust community of SAHDs, at least not comparable or equal to the kind of communities formed around motherhood because of this.

Sometimes as I navigate the world of weekday, daytime childcare, I wonder if the discomfort I feel is something similar to the way women felt when they first entered the workforce—the feeling that they don’t belong there. A truly equal society would see an equal representation of men and women in the workforce and in childcare spaces like playgrounds and libraries too. We as a society place a lot of emphasis on having equal representation in the workforce and to a certain degree have achieved it. However if that’s the case, then why are these spaces still occupied by mothers? Why am I almost always the only SAHD at these places? Until someone figures out the answer to that, I'll be at story time next Monday—still the only dad there.

 
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from What Inspired Me

Look at Guillaume Dufay's surviving output by the numbers, and you run into something unexpected. Only seven complete cyclic masses survive in full. His secular chansons, by contrast, number anywhere from 59 to 87 depending on how you count. A composer whose reputation rests first on his masses was, numerically speaking, overwhelmingly a chanson composer. That fact is a small but solid thread to pull on if we want to reconsider who Dufay really was.

The Music That Shaped Dufay — English Counterpoint and Harmony

The cyclic mass — a setting of all five movements of the Mass Ordinary (Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei) unified by a single cantus firmus — was first used systematically not by a continental composer but by composers in England. On top of that, a taste for sweet consonance centered on thirds and sixths had already existed in English music for some time. This wasn't something one person suddenly invented; it was a tendency rooted in English musical culture, and the composers most closely associated with actively putting it to use were John Dunstable and Leonel Power. Their music would later become known by the name given to this style: contenance angloise, the “English manner.” In other words, two elements — the cyclic mass as a form, and sweet consonance as a sound — had already taken root in England before Dufay.

The political situation at the end of the Hundred Years' War explains how this sound crossed over to the continent. England and the Duchy of Burgundy were allies for a long stretch beginning in the 1420s, and the Duke of Bedford, who served as regent of France for the English crown, maintained his own musical chapel in Paris. Dunstable is believed to have served under Bedford, and it was through this political crossing-point of England, France, and Burgundy that English musical language spread to the continent — particularly to the Duchy of Burgundy and its dependency, Flanders. Burgundy no longer exists as a state, but its territory consisted of its home base (roughly today's eastern France, centered on Dijon) and the Low Countries it acquired under Philip the Good (Flanders, Artois, Hainaut, Brabant, Holland, Zeeland, and more — spanning today's Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg). Cambrai, where Dufay grew up as a choirboy, sits in what is now northern France near the Belgian border — squarely within Burgundian territory.

This transmission is documented in the poet Martin le Franc's Le Champion des dames, written around 1441–42 and dedicated to Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, himself. It records, as a contemporary account, that Dufay and Binchois became fine composers by absorbing Dunstable's “English manner” — a style that flourished above all at the Burgundian court under Philip the Good's reign.

Ensemble Unicorn Gives Voice to the Secular Dufay

You can hear the concrete reality of the secular songwriting that fed Dufay's own musical bloodstream on Dufay: Chansons (Naxos 8.553458, with countertenor Bernhard Landauer, conducted by Michael Posch, Ensemble Unicorn, 1996). The first thing that strikes the ear is that nearly half of the album's seventeen tracks are purely instrumental. Even on the sung tracks, the two lower voices are carried by recorder, keyed fiddle, hurdy-gurdy, oud, and harp — solo voice and instruments dissolving into one another. Fifteenth-century courtly chansons are thought to have been performed in a cantilena style, with the upper voice sung and the lower voices carried by instruments (a reading supported by the fact that the lower parts survive in the manuscripts without text — untexted). This recording renders that performance practice as concrete sound. Even the chanson version of “Se la face ay pale” itself appears here as a purely instrumental track, stripping the melody down to its bare outline.

Mon chier amy - Bernhard Landauer, Ensemble Unicorn

The Bridge — A Melody Repurposed

The most eloquent thing Dufay did here isn't a matter of intricate harmonic theory — it's a much more direct fact. The tenor (the cantus firmus) of the Missa “Se la face ay pale” carries neither a chant melody nor an existing sacred piece. It is the melody of Dufay's own love ballade, “Se la face ay pale” — note for note. This is considered one of the earliest surviving polyphonic masses built on a secular song rather than a chant. A sweet courtly love melody slides, unaltered, into the backbone of the highest sacred rite. There is no more direct evidence of the boundary between the secular and the sacred dissolving.

Munrow Offers the Sound of the Sacred Vessel

You can hear that outcome on David Munrow and the Early Music Consort of London's Dufay: Messe “Se la face ay pale” (1974, EMI, now Warner Classics). The recording opens with a standalone Gloria fragment, “Gloria ad modum tubae” (“Gloria in the manner of a trumpet”) — a separate sacred piece, distinct from the mass proper. Its two upper voices are texted and written in canon, while the two lower voices are untexted and carry only the instruction “in the manner of a trumpet” — a notation understood to call for instrumental performance (sackbuts, in this recording).

Gloria ad modum tubae - David Munrow

The mass proper that follows (Kyrie through Agnus Dei) is a vocally centered reading with two singers per part, the instrumental consort kept modest, supporting rather than competing with the voices. Critics have noted that this “two-to-a-part plus restrained instruments” setup conveys the work's structural complexity effectively — a departure for Munrow himself at the time, and one that anticipated the performance style that would become standard after 2000.

Listening to the tenor line that forms the backbone of the mass proper, it's worth remembering that this is the very melody of the love song we heard on the Ensemble Unicorn recording. The weight of those “87 chansons” mentioned at the outset wasn't a mere sideline — it had become the flesh and blood of the mass itself.

Hilliard and Munrow — Two Ways of Approaching Dufay

The Hilliard Ensemble performs the same mass with an entirely different sensibility. This group has consistently sung Dufay's music unaccompanied — not just this mass, but his motets too, including Nuper rosarum flores. Choosing to leave out instruments isn't simply a matter of stylistic austerity. There's a pleasure unique to voices alone that instrumental ensembles can't offer — the physical, collaborative act of singers listening to each other's breath, feeling out intonation together, and shaping phrases in real time. What the Hilliard Ensemble's performance offers may be less an experience of “appreciating” Dufay's melody than one of the performers themselves feeling its structure through the instrument of the voice.

Kyrie and Gloria - The Hilliard Ensemble

Munrow, on the other hand, was after something else: the richness of fifteenth-century musical culture itself. Instrumental performance was widely practiced in that era, especially in secular music. His choice to include a standalone Gloria fragment — untexted, marked only “in the manner of a trumpet” — is telling. This piece was written to work equally well as voices or as instruments. Munrow seems to have heard in it the breadth of a musical world where a single melody could cross freely between media.

There's no need to decide which Dufay is the “correct” one. What the Hilliard Ensemble offers is the pleasure of voices joined together; what Munrow offers is the flexibility of an age in which a single melody was open to both voice and instrument. That the same composer's same melody can yield two such different pleasures says everything about the depth of Dufay's achievement.

Conclusion — A Synthesizer Ahead of Bach

Counterpoint itself was not Dufay's invention. It was already a highly developed technique by the time of the Notre Dame school and the Ars Nova in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and Dufay inherited centuries of accumulated practice, folding it into his own style as its great synthesizer. Harmony is a different matter. Setting the sweet consonance of thirds and sixths that came from England alongside the secular harmonic sensibility he cultivated in his own chanson writing — housing these two elements of different origin within a single composer's musical language, and leaving them behind in a notated form readable by posterity — that is Dufay's own particular achievement.

The musicologist Tatsuo Minagawa, in his book Music of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, points out that several distinct lineages coexist in Dufay's style: melodic writing descended from the French polyphonic lyric song tradition since Machaut, isorhythmic construction techniques, an English harmonic sensibility centered on thirds and sixths, an Italian approach favoring melodic primacy, and tendencies pointing toward later functional harmony and contrapuntal construction. French, English, Italian — musical languages that had grown up separately across contemporary Europe all flowed into a single style under Dufay's hand.

This isn't merely a matter of stylistic theory on paper. Over the course of his life, Dufay grew up in the choir at Cambrai, served the Malatesta family in Rimini, Italy, became a singer in the papal choir in Rome, composed for the consecration of Florence Cathedral, and served at the court of Savoy. That multiple styles could coexist within one composer owes something to the fact that he was a working musician who crossed Europe himself, absorbing each region's musical language firsthand.

Dufay's achievement, in other words, lay in doing two different kinds of work at once: synthesizing an existing inheritance of counterpoint, and recording a new harmonic sensibility. He carried the form and sound perfected in England to the continent, combined it with the secular melodic sensibility he cultivated through his enormous output of chansons, and handed the result down to those who came after him — Binchois, Ockeghem, and the Franco-Flemish school as a whole. This work of synthesis and transmission is exactly what earns Dufay a place alongside Bach — another composer who synthesized the styles that preceded him and left the result behind in a form later generations could read.

 
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from What Inspired Me

ギヨーム・デュファイの現存作品を数で見ると、意外な事実に突き当たる。完全な形で残る循環定旋律ミサはわずか7曲。対して世俗のシャンソンは、数え方にもよるが59曲から87曲にのぼる。ミサ作曲家としての名声が先に立つこの作曲家は、数の上ではむしろ圧倒的にシャンソン作曲家だったのだ。この事実は、デュファイという作曲家の実像を考え直すための、ささやかだが確かな手がかりになる。

デュファイが影響を受けた音楽——イングランドの対位法と和声

循環定旋律ミサ、すなわちミサ通常文の全5楽章(Kyrie、Gloria、Credo、Sanctus、Agnus Dei)を単一の定旋律で統一するという形式を最初に組織的に用いたのは、大陸の作曲家ではなくイングランドの作曲家たちだったとされる。加えて、3度・6度を中核とする甘美な協和音への傾向も、イングランドの音楽には以前から存在していた。これは特定の一人が突如生み出したものではなく、イングランドの音楽文化に根づいていた傾向であり、それを作曲に積極的に採り入れた代表的な存在として、ジョン・ダンスタブルとレオネル・パワーの名が挙げられる。彼らの音楽はのちに”contenance angloise(イングランド風)“と呼ばれるスタイルとして知られていく。つまりイングランドの地では、「循環ミサという形式」と「甘美な協和音という響き」という二つの要素が、デュファイ以前にすでに育っていたことになる。

この響きが大陸側に伝わった背景には、百年戦争末期の政治情勢がある。イングランドとブルゴーニュ公国は1420年代から長きにわたり同盟関係にあり、フランス摂政を務めたイングランドのベッドフォード公はパリに自らの楽団を構えていた。ダンスタブルはこのベッドフォード公に仕えた人物とされ、英仏・ブルゴーニュが交錯するこの政治的な結節点を通じて、イングランドの音楽語法が大陸側、とりわけブルゴーニュ公国とその領邦であるフランドル地方へと浸透していくことになる。ブルゴーニュ公国は現存する国家ではないが、その版図は本領(現在のフランス東部、ディジョンを中心とする地域)と、フィリップ善良公の代に大きく広げた低地地方(フランドル、アルトワ、エノー、ブラバント、ホラント、ゼーラントなど、現在のベルギー・オランダ・ルクセンブルクにまたがる地域)から成っていた。デュファイが少年聖歌隊員として育ったカンブレーは、現在のフランス北部、ベルギー国境に近い都市で、まさにこのブルゴーニュ勢力圏の只中に位置していた。

この経緯は、詩人マルタン・ル・フランが1441〜42年頃、ブルゴーニュ公フィリップ善良公その人に献呈した詩篇『貴婦人の擁護者』の中に証言として残っている。デュファイとバンショワが、ダンスタブルの「イングランド風」を取り入れて優れた作曲家になった、という同時代の記述であり、この様式はことにフィリップ善良公治世下のブルゴーニュ宮廷を主要な舞台として大いに流行したとされる。

Unicorn Ensembleが聴かせる、世俗の声

その響きを自らの血肉としたデュファイの世俗曲創作の実像を、《Dufay: Chansons》(Naxos 8.553458、Bernhard Landauer/カウンターテナー、Michael Posch指揮、Ensemble Unicorn、1996年)で聴くことができる。全17曲のうち半数近くが器楽のみのトラックとして収録されている点がまず耳を引く。歌われる曲でも、下2声はリコーダー、キーボード・フィドル、ハーディガーディ、ウード、ハープといった楽器群が担い、独唱と器楽が溶け合う響きを作り出す。15世紀の宮廷シャンソンは、上声部を歌い下声部を楽器で支えるカンティレーナ様式で演奏されたと考えられており(下声部が歌詞を持たない=untextedという写本上の特徴がその根拠とされる)、この盤はその様式を具体的な音として提示している。「Se la face ay pale」のシャンソン版そのものも、この盤では器楽のみのインストゥルメンタル・トラックとして収録されており、旋律そのものの輪郭がむき出しになって聴こえてくる。

Mon chier amy - Bernhard Landauer, Ensemble Unicorn

橋渡し——旋律そのものの転用

デュファイがここで用いた手法として何より雄弁なのは、込み入った和声理論の話ではなく、もっと直接的な事実である。《ミサ「Se la face ay pale」》のテノール(定旋律)に置かれているのは、聖歌でも既存の宗教曲でもない。デュファイ自身が書いた恋愛バラード「Se la face ay pale」、その旋律そのものである。聖歌ではなく世俗曲を定旋律に据えた、現存する最初期のポリフォニー・ミサの一つとされる。宮廷の恋を歌った甘美な世俗の調べが、一音も違えずそのまま最高聖典であるミサの背骨へと置き換わる——これ以上に直接的な「俗から聖への越境」の証拠はない。

Munrowが差し出す、聖なる器の響き

その結実を聴けるのが、デイヴィッド・マンロウ&ロンドン古楽コンソートによる《Dufay: Messe “Se la face ay pale”》(1974年、EMI/現Warner Classics)である。この録音は、まず独立したGloria断章「Gloria ad modum tubae(トランペット風のグローリア)」から始まる。これは《Se la face ay pale》のミサ本体とは別の、単体の宗教曲だ。上声2声(歌詞付き・カノン様式)に対し、下声2声は歌詞を持たず「トランペット風に」という指示だけが記されており、この記譜そのものが器楽(この録音ではサックバット)での演奏を前提としていると解釈されている。

Gloria ad modum tubae - David Munrow

続くミサ本体(Kyrie〜Agnus Dei)は、各パート2人ずつの歌手による声楽中心の解釈で、器楽コンソートは声を支える程度に控えめに配置されている。専門筋の評でも、この「2人一組+控えめな器楽」という編成がこの曲の構造的な複雑さを効果的に伝えるとされ、マンロウ自身にとっても新機軸だったこの解釈は、2000年以降主流になる演奏様式を先取りしていたとも評価されている。

このミサ本体の骨格を成すテノールの旋律を追いながら聴くとき、それが先ほどUnicorn盤で聴いた、あの恋の歌の調べだということを思い出したい。冒頭で見た「シャンソン87曲」という数の厚みは、単なる余技ではなく、ミサそのものの血肉になっていたのである。

HilliardとMunrow——二つのデュファイへの態度

同じミサを、The Hilliard Ensembleは全く異なる態度で演奏している。この団体は《Missa “Se la face ay pale”》だけでなく、Nuper rosarum floresをはじめとするデュファイのモテット群も一貫して無伴奏で歌い続けてきた。器楽を交えないという選択は、単なる様式的な潔癖さではないだろう。複数の声部を人間の声だけで重ね合わせる行為には、器楽合奏にはない固有の面白さがある——互いの息づかいを聴き合い、音程を探り合い、フレーズの呼吸を演奏者同士でリアルタイムに調整していく身体的な共同作業だ。Hilliard Ensembleの演奏が聴かせているのは、デュファイの旋律を「鑑賞する」体験というより、声という楽器を通して演奏者自身がその構造を「感じる」体験そのものなのかもしれない。

Kyrie and Gloria - The Hilliard Ensemble

一方でマンロウは、15世紀当時の音楽文化そのものの豊かさを聴かせようとした。この時代、世俗曲を中心に器楽演奏は広く実践されていた。歌詞を持たず「トランペット風に」という指示だけが記された独立のGloria断章を選んで収録したのは象徴的だ。この曲は元来、声でも器楽でも成立するように書かれている。マンロウはそこに、一つの旋律が媒体を超えて響きうるという、当時の音楽が持っていた懐の深さを聴き取ったのだろう。

どちらが「正しい」デュファイなのかを競う必要はない。Hilliard Ensembleが差し出すのは声を合わせることそのものの快楽であり、マンロウが差し出すのは一つの旋律が声にも楽器にも開かれていた時代の柔軟さである。同じ作曲家の同じ旋律が、これほど異なる二つの喜びを引き出せるという事実こそが、デュファイという作曲家の懐の深さを物語っている。

結び——バッハに先立つ統合者として

対位法そのものは、デュファイの発明ではない。12〜13世紀のノートルダム楽派やアルス・ノヴァの時代からすでに高度に発達していた技法であり、デュファイはその数世紀にわたる蓄積を受け継ぎ、自身の様式の中に統合した集大成者である。一方、和声面では話が異なる。イングランドから伝わった3度・6度中心の甘美な協和音感覚と、自らのシャンソン創作で培った世俗的な和声感覚——出自の異なるこの二つを一人の作曲家の書法の中に同居させ、後世に読める形の記譜として残したことこそが、デュファイ固有の功績である。

音楽学者・皆川達夫は『中世・ルネサンスの音楽』の中で、デュファイの様式について、マショー以来のフランス多声叙情歌曲に連なる旋律法、イソリズム的な構成技法、3度・6度を核とするイギリス風の和声感覚、旋律を優位に置くイタリア的な書法、そして後の機能和声や対位法的構成へとつながる傾向まで、複数の異なる系譜の要素が一人の作曲家の中に同居していると指摘している。フランス、イングランド、イタリア——同時代のヨーロッパ各地で別々に育った音楽語法が、デュファイという一つの様式の中に流れ込んでいたことになる。

これは机上の様式論だけの話ではない。デュファイは生涯のうちにカンブレーの聖歌隊で育ち、イタリアのリミニでマラテスタ家に仕え、ローマ教皇庁の聖歌隊員となり、フィレンツェ大聖堂の献堂式のために作曲し、サヴォワ宮廷にも出仕している。複数の様式が一人の中に同居し得たのは、彼自身がヨーロッパを股にかけて移動し、それぞれの土地の音楽語法を肌で吸収してきた実務家だったからでもある。

つまりデュファイの功績は、「対位法という既存の遺産の統合」と「和声という新しい感覚の記録」という、二つの異なる性質の仕事を同時にこなした点にある。イングランドで完成された形式と響きを大陸に持ち込み、自らの膨大なシャンソン創作で培った世俗的な旋律感覚と掛け合わせ、後世(バンショワ、オケゲム、そしてフランドル楽派全体)に手渡した——この「交通整理」の仕事によって、デュファイはバッハ——同じく先行する諸様式を統合し、後世に残る形で記譜した統合者——と並び称されるべき存在なのである。

 
もっと読む…

from What Inspired Me

I first came across Jana Horn through this programme. While digging through past episodes of BBC Radio 3's Unclassified, I found “When I Go Down Into The Night” on an episode titled “By Moonlight” — the closing track of her debut album Optimism (2022), built from spacious acoustic guitar and a hushed, almost private vocal, as if she were talking to herself in an empty room. I liked it enough on Apple Music that I ended up writing about her.

Radio 3, needless to say, is Britain's foremost classical music station. It hosts the BBC Proms and calls itself “the world's most significant commissioner of new music” — the very heart of Western art music. Buried within its schedule, for one hour on Sunday nights, sits a programme that quietly introduces alternative musicians of real substance who don't fit within that classical framework: Unclassified. As the show describes itself:

Elizabeth Alker with music by an exciting new generation of unclassified composers and performers, breaking free of the constraints of practice rooms and concert halls.

That phrase — “breaking free of the constraints of practice rooms and concert halls” — amounts to a deliberate declaration of independence from the institution of classical music itself. It sits alongside Late Junction and Night Tracks as one of the station's genre-defying slots. Elizabeth Alker is the show's host and public face, but production is actually handled by Reduced Listening, an outside music-radio production company, and each episode carries its own producer credit — the “By Moonlight” synopsis quoted below, for instance, ends with “Produced by Geoff Bird / A Reduced Listening production for BBC Radio 3.” Whether the selections are Alker's alone or the result of collaboration with a producer isn't clear from public information, but crediting the curation to her ear alone would not be accurate.

The intended way to experience this show is presumably to listen quietly to the radio late at night in Britain. For me in Japan, though, the experience is different. I'm not bound by the broadcast time — digging back through old playlists becomes, instead, something closer to a morning ritual, a way of shaking off sleep. Music that arrives passively as late-night background noise, versus music you go out and actively unearth in the morning: even with the same programme, the quality of the experience is something else entirely.

The Adventurousness of the Selections — Taking “By Moonlight” as an Example

That adventurous character comes through most clearly in the episode broadcast on 28 June 2026. Its synopsis reads:

Elizabeth Alker offers up a playlist of ambient and experimental sounds inspired by the moon, including a duet from Benjamin Burke and Bear Glass recorded under the night sky in the open desert outside Joshua Tree, California. Jon Hopkins and Ólafur Arnalds, meanwhile, combine forces in a piece inspired by the writings of Erica Bernhard, creative director at NASA; and South Korean multi-instrumentalist Park Jiha makes use of traditional flutes, bells and glockenspiel to conjure an atmosphere of moonlit dreaming. Produced by Geoff Bird. A Reduced Listening production for BBC Radio 3.

Using nothing but a single poetic idea — the moon — as its thread, the episode dissolves thirteen tracks spanning more than eighty years into one continuous flow.

1. Belle Chen — “Moon-Spotting” A Taiwanese-born, London-based pianist. From her 2017 album Mademoiselle. Her style starts from classical vocabulary and dismantles it through improvisation and electronica.

2. Eve Maret — “Many Moons” From her 2018–19 album No More Running. An ambient/experimental sound artist.

3. Shape Of The Moon — “Safe & Sound” A Balearic/downtempo act released on the label Marionette.

4. Penelope Trappes — “Blood Moon” From her 2021 album Penelope Three. In her own words, the moon is “a temple, a mirror of our emotions” — the track addresses the social pressures placed on femininity. Reviewers have likened it to vintage 4AD and Kranky releases.

5. Okonski — “Dark Moon” From their 2023 debut, Magnolia. A jazz trio built around members of Durand Jones & The Indications.

6. Jon Hopkins & Ólafur Arnalds — “Forever Held” Released 2024. A full-orchestral piece inspired by letters NASA Creative Director Erica Bernhard wrote from Earth to space, composed for NASA's permanent installation Space For Earth.

7. Park Jiha — “Water Moon” The closing track of her 2025 album All Living Things. Built from traditional Korean instruments — the saenghwang and piri — plus glockenspiel, it closes out the album's overarching concept: a cycle from birth to death.

8. Florist — “Moon Begins” From their 2019 album Emily Alone. A project the band itself describes as “a friendship project” from the Catskill Mountains of New York.

9. Michiko Ogawa — “Pancake Moon” From the album of the same name, released November 2025. A meditative drone work by a Japanese clarinettist/composer based between Berlin and California, layering shō, organ, synthesiser and field recordings.

10. Jana Horn — “When I Go Down Into The Night” The closing track of her 2022 debut Optimism, recorded in Austin, Texas.

11. Dylan Moon — “Deep Time” From his 2022 album Option Explore. An LA-based producer whose track title comes from a chapter of a book by Christopher M. Bache. The fact that his surname is, literally, “Moon” says something about the playfulness of this selection.

12. Bon Iver & St. Vincent — “Roslyn” Written in 2009 for the soundtrack to The Twilight Saga: New Moon — presumably chosen for its “New Moon” connection.

13. Miles Davis — “Moon Dreams” Recorded 1950, released 1957 on Birth of the Cool. One of the defining pieces of Davis's nonet period, arranged by Gil Evans.

From Miles Davis in 1950 to Michiko Ogawa in November 2025 — genre, nationality, and generation are all set aside, and the music is held together by a single poetic idea alone. That editorial freedom is proof of an adventurous space carved out inside a station that, on the surface, looks thoroughly conservative.

The Other Side — Episodes Chosen by Guests

Unclassified also runs a segment called “Listening Chair,” in which a guest musician or composer curates the whole hour themselves. Most recently, on 14 June 2026, Belle and Sebastian's Stuart Murdoch was handed the entire hour.

  1. King Creosote — “A Prairie Tale”
  2. Boards of Canada — “You Retreat In Time And Space”
  3. Arab Strap — “Chat In Amsterdam, Winter 2003”
  4. Mogwai — “Tracy”
  5. Heather Leigh Murray — “Scorpio And Androzani”
  6. Richard Youngs — “The World Is Silence In Your Head”
  7. The Four Brothers — “Rudo Chete”
  8. Belle and Sebastian — “Everything Is Now (instrumental)”
  9. Andrew Wasylyk & Stuart Murdoch — “Private Symphony #2”
  10. James Yorkston & Jon Hopkins — “Woozy With A Cider”
  11. The Pictish Trail — “Secret Sound #2”
  12. Scatter — “National Magic”

Rather than a theme, this episode lays bare a single musician's own roots. It's a reminder of how much range the same programme can hold under an entirely different editorial logic.

A Note on Listening

Show homepage: BBC Sounds — Unclassified (presumably requires access via a UK VPN)

For what it's worth: both live streaming and catch-up listening redirect to a different page when accessed from outside the UK, making it effectively impossible to listen. Worse, even viewing a given episode's playlist is blocked the same way from outside the UK. In other words, even knowing which tracks were played — the very substance of this piece — requires routing your connection through the UK via VPN.

Closing

Since Late Junction was cut back from three nights a week to one, Radio 3's late-night schedule has effectively lost the space it once had for giving proper attention to first-rate alternative music. Unclassified is one of the few things left filling that gap. Under host Elizabeth Alker and the production team at Reduced Listening, its selections connect music across genre, era, and border — and there are surely no small number of tracks I would never have encountered without it.

Even today, digging back through old playlists, I came across a wonderful musician I hadn't known before: Dawn of Midi. Once a week isn't much, but I'm already looking forward to whatever playlist comes next.

 
もっと読む…

from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One

Jesus knelt in quiet prayer before dawn, not in a temple of marble or a church with stained glass, but in a small emergency chapel beneath the Avengers’ New York command facility, where the hum of backup generators moved through the walls like a tired breath. The room had been made for soldiers, firefighters, pilots, scientists, and frightened families who needed somewhere to sit when the world became too loud. Years later, some would search for the Jesus joins the Avengers against Doctor Doom faith-based superhero to understand how such a thing could have happened, and others would find the related article on faith, humility, and courage under impossible pressure, but in that first hour there was no legend yet, no title, no explanation large enough for what was coming. There was only the Son of Man with His hands folded, His face calm, and a silence around Him that seemed stronger than the concrete above.

Outside, New York had gone gray beneath a sky that did not belong to morning. A ring of green-black stormlight circled high above the city, moving with mathematical patience. Traffic had stopped on the avenues. Screens in Times Square flickered and failed, then came alive again with the same iron mask staring down at millions of people who had already learned to fear men who thought they were gods. Doctor Doom’s voice rolled across every device, every news feed, every tower screen, and every military channel at once, polished and cold, as if he were not threatening the world but correcting a poorly governed room.

“Humanity has been mismanaged by the frightened, the sentimental, and the weak,” Doom said. “Today, the age of begging heroes to rescue you ends. Today, you are placed under order.”

Above the atmosphere, satellites rotated against their will. In the Atlantic, aircraft carriers lost navigation and began drifting blind. In Wakanda, border shields trembled as Doom’s machines tested them with invisible pressure. In London, Cairo, Seoul, São Paulo, and Washington, armored drones unfolded from cargo containers that no one remembered approving. In Latveria, Doom’s banners rose over towers that had been fitted with sorcery and circuitry so tightly joined that even Doctor Strange, watching from a sanctum window, could not immediately tell where the spell ended and the machine began.

The Avengers were already moving before most of the world understood the first sentence of Doom’s announcement. Captain America stood in the central operations chamber with his shield on his arm and the look of a man who had heard empires talk like this before. Sam Wilson, the Falcon, swept low over Manhattan with his wings cutting through the dirty wind, guiding panicked helicopters away from the growing storm ring. War Machine climbed beside him in a hard metallic arc, weapons systems tracking objects that vanished from radar and reappeared behind him like thoughts he had not chosen. Captain Marvel came down from orbit in a blazing streak and struck one of Doom’s satellite cages with enough force to turn night into noon, but the broken pieces knit themselves back together with green fire.

In the command chamber, Tony Stark’s hands moved across holographic panels faster than most people could think. His armor stood open behind him, waiting, gold and red plates shifting as if impatient. He had not slept. No one had to ask. The evidence was in his eyes, in the stale coffee beside him, in the six overlapping models of Doom’s attack pattern, each one labeled with a different failure point. Bruce Banner watched the data with both hands braced on the table, his jaw tight from the effort of staying one man when the other was already pacing inside him. Natasha Romanoff stood nearby, quiet and unreadable, loading a compact sidearm while reading refugee movement reports. Clint Barton checked arrowheads with the strange calm of someone who had learned that fear did not get better when you stared at it too long.

“Doom has layered the systems,” Tony said, dragging one projection through another until the room filled with red warnings. “Tech grid, magical reinforcement, political hostages, autonomous weapons, public panic, orbital pressure. He built a war inside a chess problem inside a nightmare.”

Steve Rogers looked toward the city map where red clusters spread block by block. “Then we take it apart one move at a time.”

Tony laughed once, but there was no humor in it. “That is a beautiful sentence, Cap. Very museum quality. Unfortunately, the chessboard is on fire.”

Peter Parker landed against the inside of the glass with a soft thump, peeled himself off, and slipped through the opening door with his mask half raised. He looked younger than anyone wanted him to look. Dust streaked the side of his suit, and one sleeve had been cut by something hot enough to seal the fabric around the wound beneath it. “The drones are herding people,” he said, trying to catch his breath. “They’re not just attacking. They’re pushing crowds toward the bridges, but the bridges are—Mr. Stark, the bridges are wired with something. I can feel the vibration through the cables.”

Tony’s face changed. It was quick, but Steve saw it. Natasha saw it too. The whole room felt it, the shift from calculation to memory, from strategy to something much more personal. Tony touched the projection, and the bridges lit up in rings of green.

“He wants us to choose,” Natasha said.

Doctor Strange stepped through a portal that opened beside the table, his cloak snapping in a wind that had not been in the room a second earlier. Behind him came Wanda Maximoff, pale with concentration, her fingers moving around red light that would not settle, and Vision, whose face carried the solemn distance of a mind already measuring grief before it arrived. T’Challa entered from the landing pad with Okoye’s distant voice still in his ear, the Black Panther suit folding back from his face. Thor came through last, rainwater and stormlight on his armor, Stormbreaker in one hand and Mjolnir in the other, his expression darker than the clouds outside.

“Victor has bound fear into the engines,” Strange said. “The machines are not merely machines. They respond to panic. The more terror he creates, the stronger the outer ring becomes.”

“That is not possible,” Rhodey said from the tactical channel as his armored form appeared on the wall display.

Strange looked at the screen. “I miss when that word meant something.”

Scott Lang and Hope van Dyne appeared near a lower console, both still helmeted, both breathing hard. Ant-Man had ash on his suit, and Wasp’s wings sparked where some microscopic blade had clipped one edge. “We got inside one of the street crawlers,” Scott said. “Bad news, it had smaller crawlers inside it. Then those had smaller crawlers inside them. I’m not proud of how loudly I yelled.”

Hope removed her helmet and looked straight at Tony. “They’re nesting systems. Every time we disable one layer, another activates. Someone built them to study our habits.”

“Doom studied everything,” Vision said. “Our victories, our mistakes, our public arguments, our private losses. He has constructed a battlefield designed not only to defeat our abilities, but to exploit the wounds beneath them.”

No one answered quickly. That was the trouble with truth spoken by a being who rarely wasted words. The room was full of power, but it was also full of old fractures. Tony’s guilt wore the shape of inventions he could not stop building. Steve’s responsibility made him carry every civilian life as if it were a shield he had not lifted fast enough. Thor had buried too many homes. Bruce feared the strength that saved people only after it frightened them. Wanda knew what it meant for grief to reach for the world and bend it. Natasha and Clint carried red in their memories that no mission report had ever fully named. Peter wanted desperately to prove he could help without becoming another person the adults failed to protect. Even Carol Danvers, bright as a falling star, had the hard look of someone who had seen too many planets ask why help came late.

Doom had not simply attacked Earth. He had found the places where its defenders still hurt.

The chapel door opened without alarm, though every secure door in the building had been sealed. Jesus rose from prayer as if He had been expected, though no one in the room had expected Him. The hallway outside flashed with red emergency light, but it seemed to soften where it touched Him. He wore no armor. His robe was plain beneath a weathered outer garment, and there was dust on His sandals as if He had walked through the city rather than arrived by miracle. His face held neither surprise nor performance. He looked at the people before Him the way a physician might look at the wounded after a long night, with full knowledge of the injury and no disgust for the one who carried it.

For a moment, no one moved. Thor lowered his weapons first, not out of weakness, but recognition deeper than strategy. T’Challa bowed his head slightly. Wanda’s red light faded around her hands. Peter stared with his mouth open, then remembered himself and pulled his mask all the way off. Tony’s eyes narrowed, not in contempt but in fear of what he could not categorize.

Steve stepped forward. “Lord.”

Jesus looked at him with kindness. “Steve.”

The sound of the name in His mouth did something to the room. It made the uniform, the title, the legend, and the years of command seem suddenly less important than the man beneath them. Steve swallowed, and for the first time that morning his shield arm lowered by an inch.

Tony recovered because Tony always recovered before anyone could see too much. “Okay,” he said, pointing once between Jesus and the active threat display. “I’m not going to pretend this is on my list of normal crisis variables. Respectfully, we are in the middle of a global hostage event run by a dictator in a magic suit. If You’re here to tell us violence is bad, I need to warn You, the other guy did not get that memo.”

Jesus did not flinch at the sharpness. “I am here because the world is afraid.”

“So are we,” Bruce said quietly, surprising himself by admitting it.

Jesus turned toward him. “I know.”

Outside, the building trembled. The glass wall overlooking the city filled with shadows as one of Doom’s leviathan machines rose between the towers. It looked like a cathedral built by a tyrant, all iron ribs and green-lit joints, with smaller drones pouring from its sides like hornets. Falcon’s voice broke through the speakers, strained by wind. “We have a major construct over Midtown. Civilians trapped below. I need air support now.”

“On it,” Rhodey said.

“I am already there,” Carol answered, and the sky beyond the glass burst with light as she struck the construct from above.

The blast threw everyone’s shadow across the floor. For one breath, the monster dipped. Then Doom’s sorcery caught the impact, redirected it, and sent a shockwave rolling down the avenue. The command chamber shook hard enough to knock equipment loose. Peter sprang to the ceiling. Scott grabbed the edge of a console. A dozen casualty alerts appeared at once.

Tony turned to his armor, and the plates began closing around him. “We’re done talking.”

Jesus stepped toward the table, not blocking him, not rushing him, but moving with such steady purpose that Tony stopped without meaning to. The faceplate hovered open before his eyes.

“You believe,” Jesus said, “that if you can control enough, no one else will fall.”

Tony’s mouth tightened. “That’s a very poetic way to describe emergency planning.”

“It is also the wound Doom is using against you.”

The room went still in a different way now. Not from awe. From exposure.

Tony’s eyes flashed. “With respect, You don’t know what I’ve had to carry.”

Jesus came closer, and His voice remained gentle. “I know every name you remember when the room gets quiet.”

Tony looked away first. It was only for a second, but for him it was almost a collapse. Steve saw the anger underneath it, and beneath the anger, the exhaustion. The world outside was burning under a tyrant who believed he alone was fit to rule, and inside the room stood a man terrified that if he did not become powerful enough to manage every danger, the blood would be on his hands. The resemblance was not equal, but it was close enough to hurt.

Natasha lowered her eyes to her weapon, not because the moment was awkward, but because it was sacred and she knew better than to stare.

“We still have to fight,” T’Challa said, his voice careful.

Jesus looked at him. “Yes.”

Thor’s grip tightened around Stormbreaker. “Then stand with us.”

“I will stand with you,” Jesus said. “But I will not help you become what you hate.”

Doom’s voice returned on every speaker, interrupting with surgical timing. “How touching. The fractured champions have found a shepherd.”

The central projection flickered, and Doctor Doom appeared above the table, cloaked in green and iron, his mask bright with reflected fire. Behind him, armies of machines marched through streets under a sky cracked by sorcery. He seemed taller than the image allowed, because pride always tries to fill more space than it has been given.

“Jesus of Nazareth,” Doom said. “Even myth bends toward power eventually.”

Jesus looked at the projection with sorrow, not fear. “Victor.”

Doom paused. It was slight, almost nothing, but everyone saw it. No title. No crown. No Doctor. Just the name of a man under all the iron.

“You will address me as Doom,” he said.

“I have addressed the one I came to save.”

The mask did not move, but the room felt the fury behind it. Doom lifted one armored hand, and the city map filled with new red points. Bridges. Hospitals. Tunnels. Shelters. Places where fear gathered because the vulnerable had nowhere else to go.

“I offer the world order,” Doom said. “You offer weakness wrapped in mercy. Let us see which one humanity chooses when the screaming begins.”

The projection died. A second later, explosions flashed along the East River, not destroying the bridges, but sealing them inside green lattices of force. Thousands were trapped in place. Doom had not forced the Avengers to choose one life over another yet. He had done something crueler. He had given them too many places to be at once.

Steve turned, command returning like breath. “Carol, Thor, hit the construct and keep it off the civilians. Sam, Rhodey, evacuate from the air. Peter, bridge cables and crowd movement. T’Challa, coordinate Wakandan med-tech with city emergency response. Strange, Wanda, contain the magic lattices. Vision, find the control logic. Clint and Natasha, ground teams and civilian corridors. Scott, Hope, get small and find what Doom hid inside the bridge anchors. Bruce—”

“Hulk,” Bruce said, already stepping back from the table, voice thickening. “For the people under the rubble.”

Steve nodded once. Then he looked to Jesus, not as a commander assigning a unit, but as a man asking what kind of help heaven gives when the earth is breaking.

Jesus said, “I will go where the fear is strongest.”

Tony’s faceplate began to close again. Before it sealed, he looked at Jesus through the narrowing gap. “That’s everywhere.”

Jesus met his eyes. “Then we begin with the place you are most afraid to go.”

For once, Tony had no answer ready. Then the armor sealed, and Iron Man shot through the opening bay doors into a sky filled with Doom’s machines, with the others following in thunder, fire, wings, webs, portals, and light. Jesus walked after them into the wind without armor, without a weapon, and without haste. The storm bent around Him as He stepped onto the landing platform. Below, the city cried out beneath the weight of a man who wanted to rule it. Above, heroes flew toward war carrying powers large enough to shake the world and wounds deep enough to lose themselves in the saving of it.

Jesus lifted His eyes toward the iron storm and whispered a prayer no microphone caught. Then He moved toward the edge of the platform, where fear blew hardest, and the first battle for the soul of the Avengers began.

Chapter Two

The wind above Manhattan had teeth in it. It tore at capes, wings, smoke, loose paper, shattered glass, and the voices of people trapped on the bridges below. Iron Man punched through the cloud cover with repulsors burning white, scanning heat signatures faster than his own fear could name them. Every screen inside his helmet filled with warnings. Doom’s machines had occupied the sky in layers, small drones moving like swarms around larger walkers that clung to the sides of buildings, while the giant construct over Midtown pulled power from the panic beneath it. The more the city cried out, the brighter the green lines in its iron body became.

Tony fired across its left shoulder and watched the blast fold into a glowing sigil. The energy came back at him in a twisting beam that he dodged by inches. “Strange, please tell me the haunted math has a weak spot.”

Doctor Strange hovered near a wounded office tower, hands opening rings of orange fire as falling debris froze in midair above a street full of people. Wanda stood on the roof across from him, red light spreading from her fingers into the green lattice wrapped around the bridge cables. “It has a heart,” Strange said, voice strained. “Not a mechanical one. Doom tied the spell to collective terror.”

“So I just need everyone in New York to calm down,” Tony said. “Great. Very achievable.”

A streak of lightning split the sky before Strange could answer. Thor slammed Stormbreaker into the side of the construct, and Mjolnir followed with a sound like a bell being struck inside the clouds. The impact buckled metal ribs the size of subway cars. Captain Marvel drove straight through the gap Thor opened, blazing with cosmic force, and for a moment the machine’s green lights flickered.

Then Doom’s sorcery answered. The construct turned its broken ribs inward and trapped Carol in a cage of iron symbols. Thor roared and pulled lightning down with both arms, but the storm above him bent away from his command, dragged toward the ring Doom had placed over the city. His face changed when he felt it. Not fear exactly. Recognition. The old grief of a prince who had learned that not every storm belonged to him.

On the Queensboro Bridge, Peter moved through the trapped traffic like a red-and-blue thread weaving between terror and collapse. Cars were pressed bumper to bumper, horns still blaring though no one was moving. People climbed out with children in their arms, staring at the green force walls sealing both ends of the bridge. The cables hummed beneath Peter’s hands. He could feel the wrongness in them, tiny pulses, almost like heartbeats. Doom had buried devices deep in the anchor points, and each one responded whenever the crowd surged.

“Mr. Stark,” Peter said, trying not to sound as scared as he was, “the bridge is wired to the people. Not physically. Emotionally, I guess? I don’t know how to say that without sounding like I failed science.”

“You didn’t fail science, kid,” Tony said. “Science is currently possessed.”

Sam Wilson swept low over the bridge, his wings banking hard between suspension cables as he shouted instructions through external speakers. “Everybody stay low and move toward the center lanes. Do not rush the exits. We are getting you out.” He sounded steady because people needed him to sound steady, but his eyes kept counting children. Rhodey flew above him in War Machine armor, taking hits from drones that tried to dive into the crowd. Every time he destroyed one, two smaller units spun out of the wreckage and searched for frightened faces.

Hawkeye stood on the roof of a stopped bus, drawing arrows and releasing them with impossible calm. One arrow split into a net that caught three drones before they reached a family crouched beside a taxi. Another exploded into a pulse that cut power to a row of insect-sized machines crawling along the bridge rail. Natasha moved below him through the stalled cars, pulling people out of hiding, her voice low and firm.

“Look at me,” she told a shaking man who had locked himself in a delivery van. “Not the sky. Not the drones. Look at me. Open the door.”

“I can’t,” he said. “I can’t move.”

“Yes, you can. One hand first.”

There was no softness in her tone, but there was mercy in it. She had learned long ago that sometimes compassion sounded like command because terror needed something solid to obey. The man lifted one trembling hand and unlocked the door. Natasha pulled him into the lane just as a drone fired into the van’s roof.

Below the bridge, the East River churned with reflected green light. Scott Lang, reduced to the size of an ant, crawled through a maintenance seam inside one of the anchors, his helmet lamp passing over runes etched into steel beside impossible circuits. Hope zipped past him, wings flashing as she cut through a cluster of mechanical mites with precise blasts.

“Okay,” Scott said, breathing too loudly in his own ears, “I am inside the cursed bridge bone. That is a phrase I did not expect to say today.”

“Focus,” Hope said. “The anchor device is ahead. I can see the power node.”

“I see it too. It looks like a toaster designed by a dictator who hates joy.”

The tunnel shook. A wave of fear rolled through the bridge above them as one side dipped several feet, and the power node brightened. Hope caught herself against a bolt. “It’s feeding off the crowd again.”

“Then we need the crowd less terrified.”

“Do you have a plan for that?”

Scott paused. In the tiny dark, surrounded by Doom’s hidden work, he thought of Cassie and all the times he had promised her the world could still be good. “Not a big one,” he said. “Maybe big isn’t always the answer.”

At the north end of the bridge, Jesus walked among the trapped people.

No one saw Him arrive in a blaze. There was no trumpet of light, no crack in the sky. One moment a mother was kneeling beside her little boy, trying to make him breathe slower while she was barely breathing herself, and the next Jesus was beside them, one hand resting on the roof of a crushed sedan, His eyes on the child. The boy stared up at Him, face wet with tears and soot.

“Is it over?” the boy asked.

Jesus knelt so they were eye to eye. “No.”

The mother made a broken sound.

Jesus looked at her, and His answer held both truth and tenderness. “But you are not alone in it.”

The boy’s hands were clamped over his ears. Jesus gently lowered them. Around them, alarms wailed and drones screamed overhead, but His voice was clear. “Take one breath with Me.”

The child tried. It came in sharp and uneven.

Jesus breathed slowly, not as performance, not as a technique, but as presence. The boy followed again. His mother followed too. A woman nearby saw them and stopped shouting. A police officer with blood on his forehead lowered his radio and took a breath he had been holding too long. The fear did not vanish. The danger did not fade. But something changed in the small circle around Him. Panic lost its first command.

The green light in the bridge cables dimmed by a fraction.

Peter, hanging beneath the roadway, saw the change on his scanner and looked up through the gaps in the steel. “Uh, Mr. Stark? Something just weakened the anchor field.”

Tony, still dogfighting above Midtown, pulled the data into his display. The numbers made no sense until he saw the live feed from the bridge. Jesus was walking through the crowd, helping a limping woman lean against Him while guiding others toward Sam’s evacuation path. He was not dismantling machines. He was not throwing lightning. He was not bending metal. He was telling frightened people the truth without leaving them inside it alone.

Tony’s throat tightened. He hated that it worked. He hated that he had not thought of it. He hated, most of all, the small suspicion that some things could not be engineered because they had to be received.

“Keep doing whatever He’s doing,” Tony said.

Peter sounded breathless. “I don’t think I’m in charge of that.”

On the bridge, Doom’s voice came through every car radio at once. “Citizens of Earth, observe the mercy offered to you. It asks you to breathe while the bridge beneath you fails. It offers comfort in place of command. It will let you die gently.”

The people stiffened. Fear surged like a living thing. The cables brightened again, and the bridge groaned under the pressure. Jesus stopped in the center lane and lifted His face toward the nearest radio speaker.

“Victor,” He said, and though He did not shout, every person near Him heard it. “You speak to their fear because you cannot bear to face your own.”

The radios crackled. For three seconds, Doom did not answer.

Then the drones attacked the bridge.

They came from above in black clusters, wings folded tight until the last second. Sam banked hard and intercepted the first wave, his guns cutting a path through them as Redwing darted between cables to tag targets. Rhodey dropped beside him with heavy fire, armor absorbing impacts that rattled his bones. Clint sent an arrow into the air that burst into a spreading shield over a group of children. Natasha rolled beneath a truck, came up behind a drone that had landed spiderlike on the pavement, and drove an electric charge into its core.

Peter swung from cable to cable, webbing drones together and yanking them into the river. “This would be a really good time for the bridge not to have feelings,” he said, then threw himself between a blast and an old man who never saw it coming. The hit knocked him through the window of a city bus. He landed hard among overturned seats and broken glass.

“Spider-Man?” Steve’s voice cut through the channel.

“I’m okay,” Peter said too fast, though he had to shove a seat off his ribs. “I am bus-adjacent but okay.”

Steve was on the bridge now, shield raised, moving at ground level because that was where fear had faces. He caught a blast on the shield and drove forward through the force of it, using his body to cover two paramedics pulling an injured girl from a taxi. T’Challa landed beside him, vibranium claws tearing through a drone’s armored head. The Black Panther suit drank in enemy fire and returned it in a kinetic burst that cleared the lane. He moved with royal precision, but when he reached the injured girl, his voice softened.

“You are safe for this moment,” T’Challa told her. “Let that be enough to take the next breath.”

Steve glanced at him as they moved together toward the next cluster of civilians. “That sounds familiar.”

T’Challa looked toward Jesus, who was lifting a fallen man from the pavement while fire moved behind Him. “Wisdom is not diminished when shared.”

Far above them, Tony ignored three incoming warnings and dove toward the Midtown construct. “Vision, I need a control path.”

Vision phased through a wall of enchanted machinery and emerged inside the construct’s central cavity, where code and spellwork rotated around a green core suspended in the air. He hovered before it, the Mind Stone glowing faintly as he studied the pattern. “The logic is adaptive. It predicts our efforts to overpower it and converts resistance into reinforcement.”

“Meaning punching it makes it worse,” Tony said.

“In simple terms, yes.”

“Hulk is going to be devastated.”

Several blocks away, Hulk leapt from a collapsed avenue and smashed a line of Doom walkers into scrap before they could reach a shelter entrance. The ground shook. People screamed, then stopped when Hulk turned not toward them, but toward the rubble blocking the doors. He dug both hands beneath the concrete and lifted. Bruce’s fear lived inside the massive green body too. It always had. He feared hurting the ones he meant to save. Yet here, under Doom’s cruel design, Hulk’s strength became a shelter when it bent low enough to serve. Families crawled out beneath the slab he held over them.

“Hulk holds,” he growled. “You go.”

A little girl stopped beneath his shadow and looked up. “Are you mad?”

Hulk’s face twisted with effort. “Yes.”

She trembled.

Then Hulk added, softer, “Not at you.”

She ran, and the slab stayed lifted until the last person was clear.

Inside the construct, Vision’s voice became more urgent. “Tony, the core is not merely responding to fear. It is amplifying shame. Doom has embedded recordings, memories, accusations. He is broadcasting them at frequencies below conscious recognition.”

Wanda, still fighting the bridge lattice, heard the word shame and nearly lost her hold. The green magic pushed back at her red light, and with it came voices she knew too well. Accusations. Screams. The names of places where her grief had become disaster. Her hands shook. The lattice grew brighter, feeding on the crack Doom had found in her.

Doctor Strange opened a portal beneath a falling drone and sent it into the river, then turned toward her roof. “Wanda.”

“I hear them,” she said, eyes wet and furious. “He’s using them.”

“I know.”

“No,” she snapped. “You know magic. You don’t know this.”

The red light around her flared, wild and beautiful and dangerous. The bridge shuddered. Jesus looked up from the roadway, and His gaze found her across smoke, distance, sorcery, and pain.

“Wanda,” He said.

She heard Him as if He stood beside her.

For a moment, the noise inside her loosened. She saw Him below, not accusing, not afraid of her power, not pretending the harm had been imaginary. His eyes held both the truth of what grief had done and the truth that she was not only the worst thing she had ever carried.

“Do not let the accuser teach you who you are,” Jesus said.

Wanda’s breath broke. Her hands steadied. The red light changed, no longer lashing outward, but gathering itself. She pressed both palms toward the lattice, not to dominate it, but to hold it still long enough for others to work. “Scott,” she said through the channel, voice shaking but clear. “Hope. The anchor is open.”

Inside the bridge, Wasp shot through the exposed seam and fired into the power node. Ant-Man grew from insect-size to full size in the cramped chamber just long enough to slam both fists into the loosened device, then shrank again as it burst apart in a flash of green smoke. One anchor went dark. The force wall at the north end of the bridge flickered.

“Evac path opening,” Sam called. “Move them now.”

Jesus turned to the crowd. “Walk. Do not run. Help the one beside you.”

It should not have been enough. One sentence should not have held back terror. But people began to move, not perfectly, not bravely in the way stories like to define bravery, but with trembling hands reaching for strangers. The mother took the hand of the old man Peter had saved. The police officer lifted a child. A businessman in a torn suit carried a woman’s oxygen tank. Fear was still there, but it was no longer alone, and Doom’s machines had been built for fear by itself.

Tony watched the evacuation numbers rise. He also watched the construct over Midtown adjust its posture toward the bridge. Doom was going to punish the place where mercy had weakened him.

“Carol, Thor,” Tony said, “that thing is turning toward Queensboro. Stop it.”

Captain Marvel burned through the cage that held her, light pouring from her shoulders as she drove upward with both fists. Thor met her from the opposite side, calling lightning back from the stolen storm with a cry that shook windows for miles. Together they struck the construct hard enough to tear one of its iron arms free. It fell toward the avenue below.

Stephen Strange opened a portal beneath the falling arm, but Doom anticipated him. The portal collapsed in sparks. The arm kept falling.

Tony dove after it. His suit calculated impact zones, civilian density, blast radius, structural collapse, and twelve possible failures. There were too many people beneath it. Too much mass. Too little time. His mind became a room full of names again.

Then a voice entered the channel, quiet beneath the alarms.

“Tony,” Jesus said, “you are not the savior of the world.”

Tony’s anger flashed hot. “Bad timing.”

“You are a man being asked to obey in this moment.”

The falling arm filled his vision. Tony wanted a bigger plan, a cleaner guarantee, a way to be everywhere and answer for every life. There was none. There was only the next faithful thing. He redirected all auxiliary power to his thrusters and hit the falling metal from below, not trying to destroy it now, only turning it enough to miss the crowd. War Machine slammed into the other side an instant later, shoulder to shoulder with him.

“I’ve got you,” Rhodey said.

Tony almost said something clever. He could not find it. Together they drove the iron arm into the river, where it struck with a wave that battered the shoreline but spared the avenue.

For one second, there was relief.

Then Doom opened the sky.

A vast image of his masked face appeared inside the storm ring, larger than the city, looking down on heroes and civilians alike. “You mistake small rescues for victory,” Doom said. “You save bodies while I conquer the will. You comfort the weak while I command history.”

Jesus stood on the bridge among the wounded, His robe marked with soot, His hands stained with someone else’s blood. He looked up at the iron face in the clouds.

“No, Victor,” He said. “You command fear because love will not kneel to you.”

The words moved through the city in a way no broadcast could explain. The storm did not break. The war did not end. But in thousands of trapped places, people heard enough to lift their heads.

Doctor Doom heard it too. The giant image vanished, and every remaining machine in the city turned toward the bridge.

Steve saw it happen. T’Challa saw it. Natasha, Clint, Peter, Sam, Rhodey, Strange, Wanda, Vision, Thor, Carol, Scott, Hope, and Hulk all saw Doom’s strategy narrow with terrifying clarity. He had found the place where his spell was weakening. He had found the shepherd among the frightened. Now he would throw the full weight of his pride at the mercy he could not understand.

Tony landed on the bridge hard enough to crack pavement, faceplate opening as smoke curled from his armor. He looked at Jesus, then at the people still trying to escape behind Him.

“You knew this would happen,” Tony said.

Jesus met his eyes. “I knew he would reveal what he fears.”

“What does Doom fear?”

Jesus looked toward the machines gathering in the sky, then back at Tony with a sorrow so deep it felt older than war.

“A kingdom he cannot control,” He said. “And a King who does not need his crown.”

The bridge trembled again as the first wave descended.

Chapter Three will turn the pressure inward now: Doom’s attack starts forcing the Avengers to face the very fears he studied, especially Tony’s need to control the outcome.

Thought for 2m 23s

Chapter Three

The first wave fell on the Queensboro Bridge like a verdict. Doom’s machines dropped from the sky in layered formations, the smaller drones screaming ahead of the heavy walkers that unfolded in midair and struck the roadway with iron limbs. The bridge buckled under them. Cars bounced on their shocks. People stumbled, cried out, and clung to one another as Sam Wilson’s evacuation path narrowed beneath smoke and green fire.

Steve Rogers moved first because that was who he was. He ran toward the impact with his shield lifted, not because he believed metal could stop everything, but because somebody had to be the first visible sign that fear did not get to command the bridge. A blast struck the shield and threw him backward across the hood of a taxi. He rolled, came up, and drove forward again. T’Challa appeared beside him in a black blur, vibranium claws tearing through the nearest walker’s knee joint. When it pitched forward, Hulk hit it from the side and sent it over the railing into the river with a roar that shook the trapped cars.

“Keep the line open!” Steve shouted.

Natasha was already moving civilians through the flickering gap at the north end, one hand around a boy’s shoulder, the other firing at drones that tried to cut off the lane. Clint stood on the bus again, though the bus roof had folded under one corner, drawing and releasing arrows so quickly that the movement seemed less like aiming than breathing. One arrow split into three cables and pinned a machine against the bridge tower. Another burrowed into a drone swarm and released a pulse that dropped the whole cluster into the water below.

Peter swung low over the crowd, webbing children’s backpacks to his own suit two and three at a time, carrying them to safety and landing with apologies as if politeness could hold back the end of the world. “Sorry, sorry, sorry,” he kept saying, setting them down near Sam’s corridor. “Everybody is doing great. Very scary field trip, but great.”

War Machine came down hard beside Iron Man, shoulder cannons opening across the sky. Rhodey took the left flank without being asked, because some friendships were old enough to move before language. “You holding together?” he asked Tony over a private channel.

“That feels like a question with an agenda.”

“That means no.”

Tony cut through a diving drone with a repulsor blast. His suit warnings were multiplying. Heat stress. Arc distribution instability. External magical interference. Civilian casualty projections. Doom had turned the bridge into a calculation that punished every delay and every mistake. Tony’s mind kept trying to widen the frame until he could see all of it at once. Every bridge. Every hospital. Every shelter. Every city under threat. If he could find the right angle, he could force the world back into order. He had done it before. Or he had tried to. Or he had caused more damage trying. The difference was never as clean as he needed it to be.

Jesus stood in the center lane as the machines came on. He was not careless with danger. He moved the wounded behind cover, lifted the fallen, guided the terrified into the path Sam and Natasha had opened. When a drone fired toward a group pinned near a fuel truck, Jesus stepped between them and the blast. The shot did not explode against Him. It struck the air as if it had met something older than force, bent downward, and carved a black scar into the pavement at His feet. The people behind Him stared, but Jesus had already turned to help a woman stand.

Doom’s voice returned, not from the radios this time, but from the machines themselves. “Observe the pattern. They gather around Him. They expose themselves. They let compassion dictate formation. Predictable. Inefficient. Defeatable.”

The walkers changed tactics. They stopped targeting the strongest Avengers and began firing at the spaces between civilians, not to kill immediately, but to scatter. Panic rose again. The bridge cables brightened. The broken anchor that Scott and Hope had disabled stayed dark, but the others pulsed harder, compensating.

“Hope,” Scott said from inside another maintenance passage, “I’m getting the uncomfortable feeling that every time we win, the bridge takes it personally.”

Hope flew ahead of him in miniature form, dodging sparks and microscopic blades. “The next node is shielded. We need room.”

“Define room.”

“Grow big enough to break the casing, small enough not to collapse the anchor, and fast enough not to die.”

Scott paused. “I miss when your plans had more encouragement.”

“You said you wanted clear communication.”

“Regretting that now.”

He grew in the cramped chamber, not to giant size, but large enough that his shoulders scraped steel and his boots crushed Doom’s tiny sentry machines beneath them. The casing cracked under his hands. Hope shot through the opening before the defense system could seal and drove twin blasts into the second node. Green light burst across the tunnel. Above them, another section of force wall weakened, and Sam’s evacuation lane widened.

Yet Doom’s design was deeper than the bridge. Across the city, the storm ring contracted. Doctor Strange felt it first. The air around him thickened with old spells, not his own but shaped in mockery of his discipline. Symbols appeared before him, each one a memory disguised as a command. The crash. The ruined hands. The operating room. The unbearable humiliation of needing help. Doom had built a spell that knew where pride entered the soul and where fear made a man bargain.

Strange’s hands faltered, and one of his protective shields flickered above the street.

Wanda saw it and reached toward him with red light, but Doom turned the same weapon on her again. This time the voices were not only accusation. They were pleading. People she had loved. People she had lost. People she had hurt. Her magic surged around her in waves that cracked the roof beneath her boots.

Vision flew to her side, phasing through a blast meant for her and taking its force into his body. He dropped to one knee, then rose, gold cape torn by the impact. “Wanda, the voices are not the people themselves.”

Her eyes were wide and wet with power. “They sound like them.”

“I know.”

“No, you don’t. You know patterns.”

Vision’s expression changed, something almost human passing across the calm planes of his face. “I know enough to recognize when love is being used as a blade.”

Wanda looked at him then, really looked, and the red light around her stopped expanding. It did not vanish. It gathered close, fierce and grieving, but no longer uncontrolled. She turned that power toward the storm ring and held back one descending band of green fire.

Thor was fighting his own battle in the clouds. Doom’s storm had begun whispering in the language of kings and failures. Asgard’s fall. The dead. The lost. The times his strength had arrived after the funeral had already begun. Lightning crawled over his armor but would not fully answer. Captain Marvel streaked past him and shattered a line of orbital spears before they could pierce the atmosphere.

“Thor!” she called. “I need the storm broken open.”

“It resists me,” Thor said, jaw clenched.

Carol turned in the sky, light burning around her. “Then stop asking it who you used to be.”

Thor stared at her for half a breath, then laughed once, hard and sad. He lifted Mjolnir, not as a king claiming what was owed, but as a warrior offering what remained. Lightning answered differently then. It came not in a crown, but in a river, pouring through him and into Carol’s path. She caught the opening, became a spear of gold-white fire, and drove through Doom’s upper ring. For the first time since dawn, natural blue sky showed through the wound.

People on the bridge saw it and cheered. Not many. Not loudly. But enough.

The bridge lights dimmed again.

Doom noticed.

In Latveria, beneath a fortress where old stone had been wired with alien processors and occult engines, Victor von Doom stood before a wall of living screens. His armor reflected cities in crisis. His hands were still, but the air around him trembled. He watched civilians helping one another where they should have trampled one another. He watched heroes choosing rescue over domination when domination would have been faster. He watched Jesus walk through the smoke, and the sight disturbed something under his pride that he had spent a lifetime armoring over.

“Mercy is a temporary disorder,” Doom said to the empty chamber. “It collapses under sufficient pressure.”

A Doombot turned its blank face toward him. “Pressure escalating.”

“Not enough,” Doom said.

He lifted both hands, and the central engine behind him awakened.

In New York, every Avenger heard a sound no machine should make. It was almost a voice, almost a bell, almost a memory of being judged by someone who knew only the worst part of you. The sound moved through armor, magic, vibranium, flesh, and thought. It reached beneath discipline. It found the private rooms where each of them kept what they could not fully forgive.

Steve saw a battlefield from another century and men who had followed him into fire. Natasha saw red ledger pages turning by themselves. Clint saw the faces of people he had left to come back to war again and again. Bruce felt every frightened eye that had ever looked at Hulk as if he were the disaster instead of the rescue. T’Challa heard the question every king fears: did you protect them, or did you merely inherit their trust? Sam felt the weight of wings passed from one man to another, and the fear that he might drop what had been handed to him. Rhodey remembered falling from the sky. Peter saw dust, loss, and the awful possibility of adults disappearing while he was still trying to be brave enough for them.

For a few seconds, the Avengers did not fight as one. They fought alone inside themselves.

Doom’s machines surged.

Jesus saw it happen. He did not rebuke them for weakness. He moved toward Steve first, because Steve had stepped into a walker’s path without raising his shield in time. Jesus caught him by the shoulder and pulled him aside as the machine’s blade struck the pavement where he had stood.

Steve blinked, breath uneven. “I heard them.”

“I know.”

“I led them.”

“Yes.”

Steve’s eyes filled with a grief he rarely allowed to reach his face. “And some did not come home.”

Jesus held his gaze. “You are not faithful because everyone comes home. You are faithful when love sends you back to protect the living.”

Steve’s shield rose again, slowly, with less strain in his arm than before. “Protect the living,” he repeated.

He turned and threw the shield. It cut through the machine’s weapon joint and ricocheted toward another drone before returning to his hand.

Jesus moved next to Peter, who was crouched on the side of the bridge tower, staring at his own hands as if they might vanish. A drone lined up behind him. Before it fired, Natasha shot it out of the air.

“Kid!” she called.

Peter flinched, then saw Jesus standing on the cable below him.

“I don’t want to fail them,” Peter said, voice cracking.

Jesus looked down at the crowd still moving through danger. “Then love the person in front of you.”

“There are too many.”

“Yes.”

“I’m not enough.”

“No,” Jesus said gently. “You are not. You were never asked to be enough for everyone. You were asked to be faithful with the web in your hand and the neighbor within reach.”

Peter’s eyes moved to a bus tilting near the railing. A dozen people were trapped inside, and the frame was beginning to slide. He swallowed hard, shot both webs, and swung toward them. “Okay,” he whispered. “Neighbor within reach.”

Tony watched pieces of this unfold from thirty feet above the bridge while his armor fought almost without him. Jesus was not giving tactics in the way Tony understood tactics. He was entering the private collapse inside each person and bringing them back to the present. Not healed beyond struggle. Not suddenly invincible. Present. Obedient. Free enough to move.

It was working, and that frightened Tony more than Doom’s machines.

Because if it was working, then maybe the thing Tony had trusted most was not the thing that saved people best. Maybe the world did not need his control as much as it needed his surrender. The thought felt dangerous, almost irresponsible, and he pushed it away by opening a hidden panel in his command system.

A file appeared inside his helmet display.

LAST WORD PROTOCOL.

He had built it after too many invasions, too many gods, too many aliens, too many artificial intelligences, too many nights with casualty reports glowing in dark rooms. It was not Ultron. He told himself that often. It was not autonomous judgment. It was an emergency override capable of seizing compromised satellite systems, defense networks, Stark infrastructure, allied platforms, and hostile command architecture for a limited window. In the right hands, for the right seconds, it could shut Doom out of the world’s machinery.

In the wrong hands, it could become the very thing Doom claimed to offer.

Order.

Tony had never told the whole team. He had told himself secrecy was temporary, necessary, protective. But secrecy had a way of building rooms around fear and calling them safeguards.

Vision’s voice entered his channel. “Tony, I am detecting an encrypted Stark architecture attempting to interface with Doom’s network.”

Tony froze.

Steve heard the shift in Vision’s tone. “What architecture?”

“Tony,” Vision said, quieter now, “what is Last Word?”

Rhodey’s armor turned in midair. “Please tell me that is not what I think it sounds like.”

Tony’s jaw tightened. “It’s a controlled override. Emergency only.”

“Emergency like a global takeover?” Natasha said from below, her voice flat.

“I didn’t activate it before because Doom’s magic complicates the interface.”

Strange appeared through a portal beside Tony, cloak snapping in the storm. “Doom’s magic does more than complicate it. It corrupts systems through intention. If you seize the network with a will shaped by fear, you may hand him a throne with your name on the access key.”

“That is very mystical and very unhelpful.”

“It is precise.”

Another explosion rolled across the bridge. Hulk caught a falling support beam and roared under its weight. Sam and Rhodey pulled a medical helicopter out of a drone net. Carol and Thor were still tearing open the sky, but Doom’s ring was healing around the break. The world was not giving Tony time to be ashamed.

Jesus approached him across the roadway. He did not look up at Iron Man as a machine. He looked at Tony as the man inside it.

“Do not do this from fear,” Jesus said.

Tony landed in front of Him, armor smoking. “People are going to die.”

“Yes.”

The answer hit harder than any accusation. Tony’s faceplate opened because he needed air. “That’s it? Yes?”

Jesus stepped closer while the battle raged around them. “The truth does not become less true because it is painful.”

“I can stop him.”

“You can stop some of what he is doing.”

Tony’s eyes burned. “That’s not enough.”

Jesus’s voice lowered. “That sentence is the chain around your heart.”

For an instant, everything in Tony wanted to reject Him. Not politely. Not cleverly. Violently. He wanted to point to every corpse, every invasion, every child pulled from rubble, every time the world looked to the Avengers and then blamed them for not being gods. He wanted to say that heaven could afford calm because men like him had to build the shields. He wanted to ask where mercy was when missiles fell and monsters came through portals in the sky.

But Jesus was not looking away from any of it.

That made Tony angrier. It also made him less able to hide.

“You think I want this?” Tony said. “You think I want to be the guy with a kill switch for the planet?”

“No,” Jesus said. “I think you are tired of being afraid.”

Tony’s mouth opened, and no words came.

Doom’s voice entered his helmet alone, private and intimate. “He will let you fail, Stark. I will not. Activate your protocol. Give the world one mind, one shield, one final answer. You know they will forgive control if it saves them.”

Tony looked toward the civilians still limping off the bridge. He saw Peter holding the bus in place with webs stretched to their limit. He saw Steve and T’Challa fighting side by side. He saw Wanda crying and still holding back Doom’s spell. He saw Bruce in Hulk’s body shielding strangers from falling fire. He saw Jesus standing unarmored in a war zone, offering no illusion that obedience would spare them all pain.

Then Tony saw the truth more clearly than he wanted to.

Doom was not tempting him with cruelty. Doom was tempting him with responsibility emptied of trust.

Tony raised one armored hand. The Last Word activation prompt hovered before him.

“Tony,” Steve said over the channel, voice rough with battle and concern, “don’t make this call alone.”

For once, Tony did not answer quickly. He looked at Jesus.

“What does obedience look like,” Tony asked, “when every option is wrong?”

Jesus said, “It begins by telling the truth and refusing the lie that you must be God.”

The activation prompt waited.

Tony closed his eyes for one second. Then he opened the team channel to everyone.

“I built a global override,” he said. “I hid it. I told myself it was for the day we had no other choice. Doom can probably corrupt it if I run it from inside my own fear. I am asking for help before I do something I can’t take back.”

No one spoke at first. The battle did not pause. Trust, once cracked, did not repair itself with one confession. But the confession changed the air. Doom’s private channel hissed and vanished. The bridge cables dimmed sharply, as if the spell had lost a current it expected to keep.

Vision spoke first. “If the protocol is opened transparently and distributed across multiple wills rather than one, its architecture may be repurposed.”

Strange turned toward him. “A shared restraint.”

T’Challa’s voice came through steady and grave. “Wakanda will lend a partition, but not a crown.”

Carol descended through the storm, light still burning around her. “You want to turn his control trap into a rescue net?”

Hope’s voice came from inside the bridge anchor. “If we live long enough, yes.”

Scott added, “I vote for living long enough.”

Steve looked at Tony across the smoke. The hurt was there. So was the decision to remain beside him. “We do this together, or we don’t do it.”

Tony nodded once. It cost him more than most victories.

Jesus looked at him with quiet approval, not the approval of flattery, but of a physician seeing a patient finally stop hiding the wound.

Then Doom struck the bridge with everything he had held back.

The remaining anchors ignited at once. The force walls slammed shut. The roadway split between the towers, and the whole center span began to drop toward the river with civilians, heroes, machines, and Jesus still on it.

Chapter Four

The bridge dropped with the terrible slowness of something too large for the mind to accept. For one breath, the center span seemed to hang between the towers, broken steel groaning, cables snapping like thunder across the river. Then gravity took hold. Cars slid sideways. People screamed. Doom’s machines clung to the buckling roadway like insects on a dying branch, their green cores brightening as the fear beneath them rose in one violent wave.

Peter shot webs in every direction, anchoring buses, cars, and people to anything that had not yet torn free. The strain ripped through his shoulders and back. He cried out, but he did not let go. Steve drove his shield into a seam in the pavement and held a line of civilians behind him as the bridge tilted. T’Challa dug vibranium claws into the roadway beside him and caught the arm of a woman sliding past. Natasha wrapped a cable around her waist, locked it under a torn guardrail, and kept pulling people hand over hand toward the evacuation lane even as the lane itself collapsed beneath smoke.

Hulk landed near the split in the roadway and plunged both hands into the broken steel. His feet ground deep into the pavement. The bridge kept falling, dragging him forward inch by inch, muscles shaking under the impossible weight.

“Hulk holds!” he roared, but this time the words sounded less like rage and more like pleading.

Thor came down through the storm with lightning wrapped around both weapons. He struck the remaining suspension cables with Mjolnir and Stormbreaker, not to sever them, but to weld them in arcs of white fire. Captain Marvel slammed beneath the falling span from below, cosmic light blazing around her shoulders as she pushed upward with both hands. War Machine braced beside her, armor screaming under structural stress, while Falcon cut through the smoke above, carrying two children at a time to the nearest safe rooftop.

“Everybody pull center!” Sam shouted. “Do not fight alone. Tie off to each other.”

The words moved through the team because they were no longer only tactical. They were the truth of the hour. Do not fight alone. Tie off to each other. It was what Tony had resisted. It was what Doom could not understand. It was what Jesus had been teaching without turning the battle into a lesson.

Iron Man hovered over the split, the Last Word protocol open in his display, no longer hidden behind private authorization. The system pulsed like a forbidden door. Doom’s sorcery clawed at its edges, trying to find the fear that had built it. Tony could feel the temptation in a way that made his stomach turn. Not a voice now, not a threat, but the old hunger to end uncertainty by force. A single mind. A single command. A single answer sharp enough to cut through chaos.

He opened the architecture to the team.

“Vision,” Tony said, breathing hard, “partition the core. No unilateral execution. Require distributed consent, distributed load, distributed shutdown authority.”

Vision, hovering inside the damaged construct over Midtown, extended both hands into the rotating green machinery before him. The Mind Stone shone against Doom’s corrupted code. “I can divide the pathway, but Doom will attack each partition through the one who holds it.”

“Of course he will,” Rhodey said. “Why would today start being polite?”

“T’Challa,” Tony said, “Wakandan encryption?”

“Already moving,” T’Challa answered, one hand still gripping the woman he had saved while the other touched the bead at his wrist. “My sister would object to the untidy structure, but she would approve of the necessity.”

“Strange, Wanda, I need magical boundaries that do not let Doom steer the intent.”

Strange opened a mandala beneath the falling span, golden lines spreading like a net through the air. “Then every person tied into this must act without seeking dominion.”

Wanda, standing with both feet planted on a roof that was cracking under Doom’s backlash, lifted her hands. Red light threaded through Strange’s spell, fierce but steadier than before. “That means none of us can use it to punish him.”

Thor looked down from the lightning-welded cables. “A pity.”

Jesus, standing near the broken center of the bridge with wind tearing at His garment, looked up at Thor. “Justice does not need your hatred to be strong.”

Thor’s face tightened, but he nodded. He knew too well what hatred did when it was given a weapon and called righteous.

Doom’s image flared across the storm clouds again, larger and more furious than before. “You build committees while your world breaks.”

Steve’s voice cut through the team channel. “No. We build trust.”

He threw his shield across the gap. It struck a walker climbing toward a group of trapped civilians, then ricocheted into War Machine’s grip. Rhodey caught it without missing a beat, used it to deflect a blast from Carol’s exposed side, and hurled it back. Steve caught it as if the movement had always belonged to both of them.

Tony saw that. The protocol saw it too. Not the shield, not the motion, but the shared trust underneath it. The system stabilized by a fraction.

“Okay,” Tony whispered. “That’s the language.”

He stopped trying to make Last Word a command system and began rewriting it as a surrender system. Every node would require agreement. Every override would contain its own limit. Every action would be reversible by another member of the team. No single person could become the center. No single fear could become law.

Doom attacked immediately.

He drove his will through the storm ring and into the exposed protocol. The world inside Tony’s helmet vanished, replaced by a memory he had never fully escaped. Smoke. Metal. A boy’s face in a place Tony had not saved quickly enough. The sound of his own machines failing. The feeling of holding too much power too late. Doom did not need to invent shame. He only needed to magnify what was already there.

“Stark,” Doom said inside the memory, his voice close enough to feel. “They will die because you hesitate. All your confessions are vanity if you lack the courage to rule.”

Tony’s hands shook inside the armor.

Then Rhodey’s voice came through. “I’ve got partition two.”

The memory flickered.

Steve followed. “Partition three.”

“Four,” Natasha said, still dragging civilians through the smoke.

“Five,” Clint said, releasing an arrow that split three drones from the sky.

“Six,” Peter gasped, webs stretched so tight they cut into the edges of his gloves.

“Seven,” T’Challa said.

“Eight,” Sam called from above the bridge.

“Nine,” Carol said, holding the falling span from below.

“Ten,” Thor said, lightning pouring through him.

“Eleven,” Bruce growled from inside Hulk’s strain.

“Twelve,” Wanda said.

“Thirteen,” Strange said.

“Fourteen,” Vision said.

“Fifteen,” Hope said from inside the anchor chamber.

“Sixteen,” Scott added. “And I would like it noted that I am very small and very brave.”

Tony laughed once, but it broke halfway into something close to tears. The memory lost its grip. Doom had designed the attack for isolated guilt. He had not built it for confessed fear carried together.

Jesus stood beneath the storm and looked at Tony. “Now choose the next faithful thing.”

Tony exhaled. “Team, on my mark, we use the protocol only to open rescue corridors, disable active weapons, and sever Doom’s fear amplifiers. No occupation. No takeover. No throne.”

Steve answered, “On your mark.”

Doom’s fury shook the sky. “You would waste ultimate power on evacuation?”

Tony looked down at Jesus, then at the people still trapped on the bridge. “Yeah,” he said. “Turns out that’s what it’s for.”

He gave the mark.

The Last Word protocol opened like a vast net of light across the world, but it did not crown one mind. It moved through many hands. Vision carried its logic without letting it become cold. Strange and Wanda guarded its intention against sorcery. T’Challa’s encryption cut Doom’s hooks from the global defense grids. Tony and Rhodey redirected satellite cages away from cities and toward empty ocean. Carol shattered the orbital spears as the system exposed them. Thor drove lightning through the storm ring’s broken seams. Sam coordinated flight corridors. Natasha and Clint cleared ground paths. Peter’s webs held the last bus long enough for Wasp to cut the restraint lock from inside and Ant-Man to grow beneath the frame, lifting it back onto stable pavement with a groan that sounded half heroic and half terrified.

Across the world, Doom’s machines stuttered. Not all of them failed, but enough did. In hospital districts, weapons powered down. On bridges, force walls opened. Near shelters, drone swarms dropped from the sky. In Wakanda, the shield stopped trembling. In the Atlantic, aircraft carriers regained navigation. In cities where Doom had expected panic to rip through crowds, strangers began pulling strangers to safety because they had seen the first corridors open and hope had become practical.

The Midtown construct gave a long metallic scream. Captain Marvel drove upward through its spine. Thor followed with lightning. Hulk leapt from the bridge, caught one of its lower ribs, and tore it free. Vision phased into the core and released the final lock from within. The construct broke apart in pieces that Strange and Wanda caught with magic, lowering them away from the streets instead of letting victory become another disaster.

For the first time that day, Doom lost ground.

So he abandoned distance.

A portal of green fire opened in the center of the broken bridge. It did not come from Strange’s sling ring or Wanda’s magic. It tore itself into the world with the arrogance of a wound refusing to close. Doctor Doom stepped through it in full armor, cloak moving in a wind that belonged to Latveria’s high towers. He carried no army with him at first. He did not need one. The remaining machines halted, forming a ring around the broken span, as if the battle itself had turned to watch its master.

Steve raised his shield. Thor lowered from the storm. Carol landed with light still burning around her fists. Hulk dropped beside the others, cracking what remained of the pavement. T’Challa took his place with quiet readiness. Natasha and Clint moved to the sides. Peter pulled himself upright, exhausted but still standing. Sam and Rhodey hovered above. Strange and Wanda came through portals of their own, and Vision descended until the whole team stood between Doom and the civilians still being evacuated behind them.

Jesus stood in front of them all.

Doom looked at Him first.

“You have inconvenienced me,” he said.

Jesus’s face held sorrow, not mockery. “You have harmed the people you claim to protect.”

“They will thank me when they are safe.”

“They are not safe under your pride.”

Doom’s gauntlet tightened. “Pride is the insult weak men give to greatness before kneeling to it.”

“No,” Jesus said. “Pride is the prison a frightened man builds when he believes love will make him small.”

The words struck harder than any hammer in Thor’s hands. Doom’s armor flared green, and for a moment something human moved behind the mask, something wounded and furious and ancient in its refusal.

“You know nothing of what I have endured,” Doom said.

“I know the child who learned that pain could be hidden inside brilliance,” Jesus said. “I know the man who mistook control for healing. I know the ruler who cannot sleep unless every voice in his kingdom has become an echo of his own.”

Doom lifted both hands. The broken bridge rose around him in jagged pieces, hundreds of tons of metal turning sharp in the air. “Enough.”

The Avengers moved, but Jesus did not step back.

“Victor,” He said, and His voice filled the space between the river and the storm, “you may command machines. You may command armies. You may command nations for a season. But you cannot command the soul into peace.”

Doom hurled the metal.

Thor met the first wave with lightning. Carol shattered the second with cosmic force. Hulk smashed a falling girder aside. Steve’s shield deflected a blade of steel spinning toward Jesus. Wanda caught a storm of smaller fragments in red light, her face twisted with effort. Strange opened portals that swallowed the rest and sent them plunging harmlessly into the river. Black Panther sprinted through the chaos and struck Doom’s side with enough kinetic force to stagger him. Spider-Man webbed Doom’s arm to a bridge tower. War Machine and Iron Man hit the armor with synchronized repulsor fire. Falcon dove low and clipped the cloak’s stabilizers with a wing strike. Hawkeye fired an arrow that split open into a magnetic clamp around Doom’s gauntlet. Wasp shrank past the armor’s outer defenses and disrupted a power relay from the inside, while Ant-Man grew behind Doom and drove both fists into the back plate.

For a moment, Doom was surrounded not by greater power, but by united power.

Still he stood.

His armor released a blast that threw them all back. Jesus remained where He was.

Doom advanced on Him, each step cracking the pavement. “You stand behind champions and call it humility.”

Jesus looked at the wounded civilians behind Him, then at the fallen Avengers rising again around Him. “I stand with the wounded and call it love.”

Doom struck.

The blow never landed. Not because Jesus dodged. Not because He countered with spectacle. Doom’s armored fist stopped inches from His face, trembling in the air as if it had reached the edge of something it could not cross. The green light in Doom’s gauntlet flickered. The engines in his armor howled. The sorcery around him twisted and recoiled.

Jesus reached out and placed one hand against the iron mask.

Every screen in the world that still carried Doom’s image went white.

Doom saw no battlefield then. No army. No throne. No map of conquered nations. He saw himself as a boy, afraid and brilliant and alone. He saw the first time he decided never to need mercy. He saw every crown he had chased become another wall between his heart and peace. He saw the people harmed under the name of order. He saw the emptiness beneath the applause of those too afraid to disagree. He saw, most unbearably, that Jesus looked at all of it without hatred.

Doom stumbled back.

“No,” he whispered.

Jesus lowered His hand. “Truth is mercy before it is judgment.”

Doom’s armor flared again, but the light was unstable now. “I will not kneel.”

“I did not come to force your knees,” Jesus said. “I came to call your heart.”

The Avengers stood slowly around them. None of them spoke. Even Tony, whose armor smoked and sparked around him, understood that the center of the battle had moved beyond anything his weapons could solve. Doom had not yet surrendered. He might still choose destruction. But something had been uncovered that no machine could cover again.

Doom looked at the heroes, then at the civilians, then back at Jesus. Hatred and terror warred behind the mask. At last he raised both hands toward the storm ring and tried to pull its full power into himself.

“Victor, don’t,” Tony said.

Doom ignored him.

The storm ring collapsed inward.

For a dreadful second, it seemed as if Doom would become the center of his own apocalypse. Then the distributed protocol, still held by the team, responded to the overload. Not as a weapon. As a limit. Vision anchored the logic. Strange and Wanda sealed the magical channels. T’Challa’s encryption cut the political command streams. Tony shut down the access he had once wanted to control. The others held the rescue corridors open while Doom’s power folded in on itself and shattered the machinery that fed it.

Green light burst upward through the clouds and vanished into the open sky.

Doctor Doom fell to one knee in the center of the bridge.

Not in worship. Not in repentance. Not yet.

But the crown of storm above him was gone.

Jesus stood before him, quiet and steady, while the first clean sunlight touched the river.

Chapter Five

For a few seconds after the storm broke, the battlefield did not know how to become quiet.

Engines clicked and died inside Doom’s fallen machines. Broken drones sparked against the bridge railings. The East River moved beneath the torn span with pieces of metal floating in its gray water, and above the city, the hole Carol and Thor had opened in the clouds widened until morning returned by slow degrees. No one cheered at first. The living were still counting the living. The wounded were still being carried. The heroes were still standing in the strange exhaustion that comes after terror loosens its grip but has not yet left the body.

Doctor Doom remained on one knee, one armored hand pressed against the cracked pavement. Green light flickered weakly across his suit and went dark in uneven pulses. His cloak was torn. His mask still hid his face, but not the defeat that had entered his posture. He had not surrendered his pride. Not fully. Perhaps not even mostly. But the world had seen what his pride could not do. It could frighten nations, bend machines, weaponize shame, and turn power toward domination. It could not make mercy kneel.

Steve Rogers stepped forward with his shield raised, but not thrown. The others moved with him, forming a wide circle around Doom. Thor’s lightning faded into the head of Mjolnir. Captain Marvel’s hands still burned with restrained light. Wanda’s red energy moved around her fingers in careful threads, less wild now, but no less strong. Strange held a binding spell ready. Black Panther stood poised and silent. Vision hovered just above the ground, watching the unstable remains of Doom’s armor. Natasha and Clint covered the exits that were no longer exits. Sam and Rhodey hovered above the torn roadway. Peter stood beside a crushed bus, one hand pressed to his ribs, trying to look ready even though his whole body trembled. Scott and Hope emerged from a maintenance breach near the anchor, both returning to full size, both covered in dust.

Tony stood closest to Jesus.

His armor was damaged badly enough that one shoulder plate hung open and sparks crawled beneath the casing. The Last Word protocol was still active in its limited form, held across the team, each partition locked by shared restraint. Tony could feel the system waiting for a final command. There were still ways to use it. Doom’s networks were exposed. His command structures were weakened. His armor was vulnerable. Tony could end more than the battle if he wanted to. He could reach through the open architecture and break Latveria’s military spine, erase Doom’s hidden systems, seize every weapon the tyrant had built, and tell himself the world would sleep safer because one more dangerous man had been forced into silence.

The old part of him wanted to do it.

Not because he hated civilians. Not because he enjoyed control. Because he was tired of building flowers for graves after winning too late.

Doom lifted his head as if he could sense the temptation. “Do it, Stark,” he said, voice rough through the damaged mask. “Prove Him wrong. Prove that mercy survives only when power permits it.”

Tony stared at him. The bridge creaked beneath them. Behind him, paramedics guided civilians toward the widened evacuation route. A little boy cried into his mother’s coat. Hulk, smaller in his movement now though still enormous, carried an injured man on one forearm as gently as if the man were made of glass. Peter helped an old woman step over broken steel. Steve was watching Tony, not suspiciously, not coldly, but with the grave attention of a friend who understood that victory could still become failure in the last decision.

Jesus did not tell Tony what to do.

That was almost harder.

Tony turned his face slightly toward Him. “You’re not going to stop me?”

Jesus looked at Doom, then at Tony. “I have spoken the truth to you.”

“That is not the same as stopping me.”

“No,” Jesus said. “It is the way love honors the soul it is calling.”

Tony let out a thin breath. His eyes moved across the bridge, across the Avengers, across the people they had saved and the damage they had not been able to prevent. He thought about all the times he had wanted one last word against chaos, one final mechanism strong enough to answer fear forever. Then he thought about what he had seen on the bridge. Jesus kneeling beside a child. Wanda choosing not to let grief name her. Hulk holding rubble over strangers. Steve protecting the living instead of drowning in the dead. Peter loving the neighbor within reach. The team carrying his confession without pretending it had not hurt them.

The world had not been saved by one man’s control.

It had been rescued, piece by trembling piece, by shared courage under mercy.

Tony lowered his hand.

“Shut it down,” he said.

Vision’s eyes softened. “Confirming distributed shutdown.”

T’Challa answered, “Wakandan partitions released.”

“Sanctum boundary released,” Strange said.

“Chaos channel released,” Wanda said.

One by one, the others let go of their pieces of the system. The Last Word protocol dimmed until only Tony’s original authorization remained. It hovered before him in his helmet display, quiet and obedient, waiting to become whatever he chose.

Tony deleted it.

Not archived. Not hidden. Not renamed behind another layer of clever justification. Deleted.

Inside the armor, his hands shook. Outside it, he looked almost still.

Doom laughed, but the sound was strained. “Sentiment. You had a throne in your hands and chose weakness.”

Tony looked down at him. “No. I chose not to become you.”

Doom’s armor surged in a final violent pulse. He lunged toward Tony, not with strategy now, but with rage. Steve’s shield rose. Carol moved. Thor lifted Stormbreaker.

Jesus stepped forward first.

Doom froze, not by mechanical restraint, but because Jesus was suddenly close enough that the tyrant had to see Him. No projection. No battlefield image. No theological idea he could mock from a distance. Just the living Christ standing in front of a wounded man inside iron.

“You are still loved, Victor,” Jesus said.

Doom’s whole body went rigid.

The words did not excuse him. Everyone on that bridge knew it. The families who had nearly died knew it. The Avengers knew it. Even Doom knew it. Love did not erase justice. Love did not pretend the ruined streets were unharmed or the fear he had caused was harmless. But the words entered a place no weapon had reached, and for a moment Doom seemed more frightened by being loved than by being defeated.

“Do not,” Doom whispered.

Jesus’s face carried a sorrow that did not retreat. “You built a world where no one could speak to the man beneath the crown. I am speaking to him now.”

Doom’s gauntlet opened, then closed, then opened again. Strange’s spell wrapped around the armor in rings of gold. Wanda’s red light sealed the unstable sorcery still leaking from the chest plate. Vision reached into the damaged systems and disabled the final weapons without tearing through Doom’s body. T’Challa stepped close enough to place a vibranium restraint at the center of Doom’s back. Steve kept his shield ready, but his eyes stayed on the civilians, making sure justice did not become spectacle.

Doom did not ask forgiveness. He did not repent in front of cameras. He did not weep and become gentle because the battle had humbled him. Pride that deep rarely died in one public moment. But when the restraints locked and the last green light faded from his armor, his head lowered, not in worship, not in surrender to God, but under the first terrible weight of truth.

It was enough for the battle to end.

Across the city, the remaining machines collapsed or powered down. The force walls vanished from the bridges. Hospitals reopened their emergency doors. Aircraft regained safe routes. In distant countries, people stepped out from shelters and looked up at skies no longer owned by Doom’s threat. No one understood all of what had happened yet. The news would argue over it. Governments would demand answers. Historians would separate the technological from the miraculous and still fail to explain the most important part.

On the Queensboro Bridge, the Avengers helped people walk.

That was the first work after victory.

Thor lifted a fallen section of steel while Hulk braced the other end so rescue crews could pass beneath. Captain Marvel flew injured civilians to medical stations faster than ambulances could reach them. Sam coordinated air evacuation with the calm authority of someone who had grown into the shield without needing to become the man who carried it before him. Rhodey landed beside a group of firefighters and used War Machine’s systems to cut through trapped vehicles. Natasha sat with a girl whose parents had been separated in the chaos, speaking quietly into a radio until Clint found them three blocks away and guided them back.

Peter stood near the bus he had saved, accepting awkward hugs from children while pretending his ribs did not hurt. Scott tried to make one of the younger kids laugh by shrinking a broken drone part and making it disappear into his palm, until Hope told him gently that evidence probably should not be turned into magic tricks. T’Challa spoke with city officials and Wakandan medical teams, his voice low and steady, already thinking of restoration beyond the battle. Strange and Wanda sealed the last corrupted spellwork beneath the bridge anchors, and when Wanda’s hands shook after the final seal closed, Vision simply stood beside her without telling her what she should feel.

Steve found Tony near the edge of the broken span.

For a while, neither of them spoke. Below them, the river carried pieces of Doom’s machines toward the harbor. Above them, sunlight touched the torn clouds. Tony’s faceplate was open, and for once he did not look eager to fill the silence.

Steve rested his shield against his leg. “You should have told us.”

Tony nodded. “I know.”

“That one is going to take time.”

“I know that too.”

Steve looked at him then, and the firmness in his face made the mercy more real, not less. “But you told us before it was too late.”

Tony swallowed. “Barely.”

“Barely still counts when it turns you around.”

Tony gave a tired half-smile, then looked toward Jesus, who was kneeling beside an injured mechanic from one of the city maintenance crews. He had taken the man’s hand while paramedics worked, not interrupting them, not replacing them, simply staying close enough that the man did not have to suffer as an object under emergency lights.

“I wanted to save everybody,” Tony said quietly.

Steve followed his gaze. “I know.”

“No, I mean I wanted it to be true so badly that I kept building things that could prove it.”

Steve’s voice softened. “And today?”

Tony watched Jesus help the mechanic breathe through pain. “Today I think maybe saving the world starts with admitting I’m not qualified to own it.”

Steve did not answer with a slogan. He only stood there with him, because some truths needed companionship more than commentary.

When the last civilian left the bridge, Jesus walked toward the Avengers. They gathered without being called. Their suits were torn, armor dented, faces marked by smoke and weariness. They looked less like icons than people who had been through fire and discovered, again, that strength did not spare them from needing grace.

Thor bowed his head. T’Challa did the same. Steve stood with his shield at his side. Natasha’s expression remained guarded, but her eyes were bright. Bruce had returned to himself and sat wrapped in a rescue blanket that looked too small around his shoulders, staring at his hands with quiet wonder that they had been used to hold and not harm. Wanda stood near Vision, exhausted but present. Peter hovered at the edge of the circle until Tony gently pulled him closer with one armored hand.

Jesus looked at each of them.

“You have saved many lives today,” He said.

No one seemed to know how to receive it.

Then He added, “Do not let victory become another place to hide.”

The words settled among them with more weight than praise. They knew what He meant. There would be repairs to make that were not made of steel. Confessions that could not be solved by public statements. Trust that would need to be rebuilt in small honest decisions. Wounds Doom had exposed that still needed care after the emergency ended. The world had survived, but survival was not the same as wholeness.

Tony nodded first. Not dramatically. Just enough to show that he heard.

Steve looked at the team. “We start with the wounded. Then the city. Then the truth.”

Natasha holstered her weapon. “That order might actually work.”

Peter raised one hand slightly. “Does the truth part include telling my aunt I was on a collapsing bridge?”

Tony looked at him. “We may workshop that.”

For the first time all day, several of them laughed. It was small, tired, and fragile, but it belonged to the living. Even Bruce smiled. Even Wanda. Even Thor, who clapped Peter carefully on the shoulder and nearly knocked him sideways.

Doom was taken into custody under heavy guard, his armor sealed by science and sorcery together. He looked back once as they led him through Strange’s portal, and his masked face turned toward Jesus. Whatever passed through him then remained hidden. Hatred, perhaps. Shame. The beginning of a question he was not ready to ask. Jesus did not chase the moment. He simply looked at him with the same sorrowing love that had stopped the fist.

By evening, the city was still wounded, but no longer conquered.

Lights returned block by block. Volunteers carried water through apartment stairwells. Firefighters slept sitting against their trucks. Nurses worked past exhaustion. On the bridge, crews labored under temporary floodlights while Avengers moved among them without speeches. The world would remember the lightning, the armor, the shield, the webs, the magic, the strength, and the cosmic fire. But many who had been there would remember something quieter: a man in a plain robe telling them to breathe, to walk, to help the one beside them, to refuse the fear that wanted to rule them.

Late that night, beneath the command facility, Jesus returned to the small chapel.

The city above Him still groaned with repair. Somewhere in the building, Tony was sitting with Steve, Rhodey, Vision, and T’Challa, opening files he should never have hidden. Somewhere else, Wanda was speaking softly with Natasha in a room where no one demanded that either of them pretend to be fine. Peter had finally allowed a medic to examine his ribs. Bruce was asleep for the first time in days. Thor stood on the roof, looking at the stars through the clearing clouds. Sam was still coordinating relief flights. Clint had called home.

Jesus knelt where He had knelt before dawn.

No cameras followed Him. No anthem rose. No heroic banner moved behind Him. Only the low hum of generators, the distant sound of sirens fading into the night, and the quiet presence of the Father to whom He had always turned.

He prayed for the frightened city. He prayed for the wounded. He prayed for the heroes who had learned again that power without humility becomes another kind of danger. He prayed for Tony, whose heart had begun to loosen from the chain of control. He prayed for Victor, still loved beneath all that iron. He prayed for every person who would hear the story later and recognize the places inside themselves where fear wanted a throne.

And in the quiet, with the world not fixed but still held by mercy, Jesus remained in prayer.

Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph

Watch Douglas Vandergraph inspiring faith-based videos on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@douglasvandergraph

Support the Christian encouragement library through GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-douglas-vandergraph-build-a-christian-encouragement-lib

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from An Open Letter

I did squats today, second day back at the gym since starting to recover from this sickness. The program started with 225x10 which is apparently a pr. 6 sets of it. The first set hurt so fucking bad, my back hurt, my wrist hurt, and my lungs felt like they were dying. I wanted to stop so badly and just skip it and make an excuse. I dug deeper than I have in a long time. On the second set my back hurt more, everything felt horrible. I was getting very lightheaded and I would have stopped or taken it easier before. I thought about that study on positive self talk mid set. But it hurt and my body was screaming to quit. And so I kept chanting in my head “it hurts and I want it.” I kept mentally saying it until I was yelling in my head, and I got through three sets before I felt I had done enough to skip the rest. I got through it. And I’m proud of myself. I had to hold myself on the bar to let my heart and lungs catch up, but I did it. I’m grateful for the ambition to chase something hard. Even when it’s things that seem small it’s the willingness to push past what I think is right.

 
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from Logan's Ledger on Life

Let's be honest—not everybody is going to want to see all of these photos and videos. And that's okay.

We've all seen those old movies where someone traps their guests on the couch to watch three hours of vacation slides while everyone silently wonders how much longer they'll survive.

So if that's you, take a quick look, smile, and get on with your life.

But my kids... this is different.

Take your time. Linger. Look closely.

These aren't just pictures. They're pieces of your father's heart. They're moments I wanted to keep because you were worth remembering.

And yes—that means you too, Sydney and Kaylee. You're part of this family, and part of this story.

Note: This is a work in progress because as you know… your Dad (or John, or Lil’ Johnny) gets very confused sometimes. lol!

 
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from Semantic Distance

my brother said he didn’t become a person until he was 16. everything else prior was a blur or forgotten outright. how could he ever remember me as a child? or the apartment by lindsay park? or the walk from humboldt to graham? i swear i was there. i don’t say i’m from The South but my personality crystallized in the repeatable suburbs of florida. my friends drove me everywhere. i survived without a license by unapologetically imposing my presence on my peers to get a ride home. i was always a passenger lending an ear. i remember the muted teal pacifica with the peeling leather seats that sucked in the humid heat, a victim to my neurotic inspection on the way back, somewhere. i befriended the viscosity the florida heat bestowed upon me. i was always dewey with sweat. it never bothered me, really. the landmarks we considered holy were parking lots, stoplights, and boba shops within shopping centers. it’s trite but obvious but true! the backdrops to arguments were mundane. i look out to no skyline or bustling street. it’s a cul-de-sac i’ve walked 100 times. the prospect of leaving was more enticing than our daily lives. i can’t wait to go. my life will start once i leave this place. why would i ever come back here? i feel trapped; a prolonged prison sentence despite good behavior. when will i be released? the streets have not changed. the routes i organized in my mind still run the same. time has not moved. middle class hell indeed. no wonder no one ever wanted to stay. was i even supposed to be there in the first place? i became a person there.

 
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from SmarterArticles

In Boxtown, a neighbourhood on the southern edge of Memphis where the streets run flat toward the Mississippi and the air carries the metallic tang of the refinery, the noise arrived before anyone knew what it was. A low, continuous mechanical drone, the sound of dozens of gas turbines spinning around the clock. By the summer of 2025, residents of this predominantly Black community could stand in their gardens and watch the heat shimmer rising off a sprawling industrial site that had appeared, almost overnight, behind a chain of fences and non-disclosure agreements. The site was Colossus, the supercomputer built to train the artificial intelligence models of Elon Musk's company xAI. To power it, the company had installed as many as thirty-five portable methane gas turbines, most of them operating without the air permits that, as one veteran environmental lawyer put it, every set of turbines he had ever encountered was required to hold. It was the opening chapter of a fight that, by the spring of 2026, would harden into a federal lawsuit.

The people of Boxtown did not ask for a data centre. They were not consulted about it in any meaningful way. They derive almost none of the economic benefit from the chatbots and image generators that the facility's tens of thousands of graphics processors were assembled to produce. What they got instead was the exhaust: an estimated two thousand tonnes a year of smog-forming nitrogen oxides, according to filings cited by the Southern Environmental Law Center, layered onto a neighbourhood that the American Lung Association had already graded an F, in a part of Memphis that the local state representative Justin Pearson describes as hosting twenty-two of the thirty largest industrial polluters in the state of Tennessee. South Memphis has child asthma hospitalisation rates among the highest in the country and cancer rates that researchers have linked to its decades of accumulated industrial emissions. The turbines were simply the newest insult in a very long sentence.

Boxtown is not an aberration. It is a preview. As the AI boom collides with the physical limits of the electricity grid and the water table, the pattern visible in South Memphis is repeating across the United States with grim consistency. The communities absorbing the noise, the diesel particulates, the groundwater draw and the rising electricity bills of AI infrastructure are, again and again, the communities with the least political power to refuse it and the least access to the technology that demand is supposedly serving. The cloud, that weightless metaphor we use for the digital economy, turns out to have a very specific postcode, and it is rarely a wealthy one.

The Arithmetic of an Unequal Burden

Begin with the bills, because the bills are where the abstraction becomes a number on a household's kitchen table. In February 2026, the Environmental and Energy Study Institute, a non-partisan body founded by members of the United States Congress, published an analysis by its researcher Miguel Yañez-Barnuevo laying out the disparity in stark terms. Low-income residents, renters, and Black and Hispanic households in the United States can spend as much as twenty per cent of their income on energy, the institute found, against roughly three per cent for higher-income households. That is not a marginal gap. It is the difference between energy as a line item and energy as a recurring crisis, the kind that forces a choice between cooling the home and filling the fridge.

This is what researchers call energy burden, the share of household income consumed by keeping the lights on, the home warm in winter and survivable in summer. The American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, which has tracked the metric for years, has found that one in four low-income households spends more than fifteen per cent of its income on energy, with the figure climbing far higher in particular cities. In Baltimore, the council reported, the most burdened quarter of low-income households pay an average of around a quarter of their income on energy bills alone. As of early 2026, roughly twenty-one million American households, about one in six, were behind on their utility payments.

Now layer the AI boom on top of that. The institute noted that utilities received requests in 2025 for at least seven hundred gigawatts of new power connections, a figure that exceeds the entire electricity consumption of the United States in 2023. Data centres are the engine of that demand. They do not simply consume electricity; by competing for scarce generation and transmission capacity, they push the wholesale price of power upward for everyone connected to the same grid. The national average electricity price had climbed to nineteen cents per kilowatt-hour by the end of 2025, a twenty-seven per cent jump from 2019, and the institute projected residential prices could rise by up to forty per cent by 2030 against 2025 levels. Utilities filed for more than twenty-nine billion dollars in rate increases in just the first half of 2025.

The crucial point is who pays. When a utility builds a transmission line or a gas plant to serve a hyperscale data centre, the cost is frequently socialised across the entire ratepayer base rather than borne by the company that triggered the spending. The household already spending a fifth of its income on energy has no buffer to absorb the increase. The trillion-dollar corporation behind the data centre does. The burden flows, predictably, downhill.

Two Hundred and Sixty-Seven Per Cent

The clearest single illustration of this dynamic came from a Bloomberg analysis published in 2025. Its reporters examined wholesale electricity prices across tens of thousands of locations on the American grid, using monthly nodal data aggregated by the energy analytics platform Grid Status. The finding was arresting: in some areas near significant data centre activity, wholesale electricity cost as much as two hundred and sixty-seven per cent more for a single month than five years earlier. More than seventy per cent of the nodes recording the steepest increases sat within fifty miles of major data centre clusters.

Those wholesale costs do not stay wholesale. They are passed through to households and businesses, padded with the charges utilities levy to maintain and expand the network. The Bloomberg figure and the energy-burden figure are two ends of the same wire: the data centre boom raises the price of the commodity, and the people least able to absorb a rise pay the largest share of their income for it.

Virginia offers the textbook case, because Virginia is where the modern data centre industry was effectively born. The corridor running through Loudoun, Prince William and Fairfax counties in the state's north, known to the industry as Data Center Alley, hosts around four-fifths of Virginia's data centre capacity and a substantial fraction of the world's internet traffic. In December 2024, the state's own Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission, a non-partisan watchdog known as JLARC, delivered a sober assessment to legislators. If the industry continued to grow at an unconstrained pace, the commission warned, Virginia would struggle to supply enough power, and ratepayers would help foot the bill for the infrastructure the buildout required. The average residential customer of Dominion Energy, the report estimated, could see generation and transmission costs rise by between fourteen and thirty-seven dollars a month by 2040, independent of inflation. Virginia, unsurprisingly, was among the regions Bloomberg identified as having seen wholesale increases of up to two hundred and sixty-seven per cent over five years.

The same pressure shows up in the wholesale capacity markets that keep the grid reliable. PJM Interconnection, the operator responsible for the grid across thirteen states and the District of Columbia, ran its most recent capacity auction in December 2025. Prices hit a record high of 16.4 billion dollars, the third record-setting auction in a row. PJM's independent market monitor calculated that data centre load accounted for around 6.5 billion dollars of that total, roughly forty per cent, much of it relating to data centres not yet built. The bill for that demand lands on every household in the region, including the one already a payment behind.

The Squeeze on Time and Steel

There is a second, less visible mechanism through which the AI boom inflates bills, and it has to do with the physics of building power plants faster than the world can supply the parts. The surge in demand has collided with a supply chain that simply cannot keep pace, and the resulting scarcity radiates outward as cost. The Environmental and Energy Study Institute's analysis traced the squeeze in unsettling detail. The cost of constructing a new natural gas plant, it reported, had roughly tripled since 2022, to around two thousand dollars per kilowatt of capacity. Refurbishing an ageing coal plant to keep it running could now run to as much as 1.3 billion dollars. The wait for a single large gas turbine, the workhorse component of new fossil generation, had stretched to as long as seven years, and the time needed to build a gas plant from start to finish had grown from roughly four and a half years to at least six.

Each of those numbers is, in effect, a tax on every household sharing the grid. When utilities must pay triple the price for new generation and wait years longer to bring it online, they recover those costs through the rates they charge, spread across the broad base of customers rather than the data centres whose appetite created the shortage. The household already spending a fifth of its income on energy does not get to opt out. It pays the premium embedded in every kilowatt-hour, one it had no hand in creating and draws no benefit from.

The timing dimension matters because it converts a temporary surge in demand into a long-lived cost. Generation built today at inflated prices will sit on the rate base for decades, its expense amortised across a generation of bills. A community that absorbs a data centre in 2026 is not signing up for a one-year inconvenience; it is committing its children to paying down the infrastructure for years. The asymmetry between the speed at which AI demand materialises and the slowness with which the grid can answer it guarantees that the gap will be filled, in the interim, by the cheapest and dirtiest expedient to hand. In Memphis, that expedient was a field of unpermitted gas turbines. Elsewhere it is the deferral of coal-plant retirements that public-health advocates had spent years fighting to secure. The machines need power now, and now is precisely when clean power is hardest to build.

A Map of Old Wounds

Here is where the story turns from arithmetic to geography, and the geography is not random. The single most revealing document of the past year is a report published in December 2025 by the Kapor Foundation, an Oakland-based organisation focused on equity in technology. Titled The Unequal Burden of Data Centers, it mapped California's operational and planned data centres against the state's environmental health data and produced figures that ought to be impossible to ignore.

Eighty-two per cent of California's data centres, the foundation found, are sited in communities already classified as facing poor air quality, as measured by diesel particulate levels. Sixty-five per cent sit in areas with the highest level of groundwater threat. Seventy-nine per cent are in census tracts carrying the greatest burden of hazardous waste. These facilities are not being dropped into pristine landscapes. They are being stacked on top of communities that have already been designated, by the state's own screening tools, as the places carrying the most pollution.

The report's three case studies read like a tour through the history of American environmental racism. Bayview-Hunters Point in San Francisco, scoring in the seventy-fifth to ninety-second percentiles on California's CalEnviroScreen tool, hosts a colocated forty-five-megawatt data centre and a thirty-six-megawatt standalone facility. This is a neighbourhood whose Black population grew during the Second Great Migration to work the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, a site so contaminated by chemical and radiological waste that the federal government designated it a Superfund site in 1989. Generations of redlining concentrated Black residents there, in what historians and residents alike describe as a sacrifice zone, with cancer rates and chronic-disease hospitalisations running well above regional averages. Now the cloud has come to Bayview, and it has come because Bayview was already deemed a place where industry goes.

Del Paso Heights in Sacramento, scoring in the eighty-fourth to ninety-fourth percentiles, sits near two data centre campuses. Hawthorne, in Los Angeles County, hosts a twenty-eight-megawatt facility in a community scoring as high as the ninety-fifth percentile. The pattern across all three is the same: the infrastructure of the most futuristic industry on earth is being routed, with near-mechanical precision, into the neighbourhoods that an earlier century's discriminatory policies already hollowed out. The Kapor Foundation projected that diesel-generator emissions from these facilities could contribute to a meaningful share of asthma deaths in affected communities by 2030, and noted that California's data centres consumed around seventeen billion gallons of water in 2023, roughly the annual usage of more than four hundred thousand residents.

This is the heart of the matter. The decisions about where to build AI infrastructure are not being made on a blank map, but on one already scarred by a century of choices about whose neighbourhoods could be sacrificed. Land is cheaper where the air is already bad. Political resistance is weaker where residents have been told for generations that their objections do not count. The cold logic of site selection, optimising for cheap land, available power and minimal friction, reliably points the bulldozers toward the communities with the least power to say no. The industry does not have to be malicious to produce this outcome. It only has to be efficient.

The Thirst of the Machines

Electricity is the burden that makes headlines, but water may be the one that bites hardest where it can least be spared. Cooling tens of thousands of densely packed processors generates enormous heat, and the cheapest way to shed it has long been evaporative cooling, which consumes water directly. Estimates across the industry suggest a single large data centre can draw up to five million gallons a day, the equivalent of a town of tens of thousands. Loudoun County, the heart of Virginia's Data Center Alley, used around nine hundred million gallons across its roughly two hundred facilities in 2023.

The xAI Colossus facility in Memphis was reported to draw up to a million gallons a day for cooling. Memphis sits atop the Memphis Sand aquifer, a source of unusually pure drinking water that residents have long regarded as a civic birthright. The prospect of a supercomputer drinking from it, alongside the gas turbines fouling the air above it, sharpened the sense among residents that something they held in common was being quietly enclosed for a purpose that served someone else.

The scale of the coming water demand is only beginning to be understood. A research team at the University of California, Riverside, working with Caltech and led by the associate professor Shaolei Ren, modelled the additional water infrastructure that American communities will need to absorb the peaks in data centre cooling demand. Without significant efficiency gains, the team projected, data centre cooling within four years could require between 697 million and 1.45 billion gallons of additional peak water capacity per day, a figure roughly equivalent to the entire daily water supply of New York City. The cost of building that capacity, the researchers estimated, could run anywhere from ten to fifty-eight billion dollars. As with electricity, the question is not only how much, but who pays, and the answer once again tends toward the ratepayers rather than the corporations driving the demand.

The cruelty of the geography compounds here too. Many of the communities targeted for new data centres sit in water-stressed regions of the American South and West, where drought is a recurring fact of life and the residents competing with the machines for the aquifer are, disproportionately, the ones with the least. To draw down a community's water for cooling, where that water is already scarce and unequally distributed, is to convert a shared resource into a private input in precisely the places least able to absorb the loss.

When the Lawsuit Becomes the Only Voice

The communities on the receiving end of this are not passive. Boxtown organised. By mid-2025, residents had submitted more than two thousand comments to the Shelby County Health Department, the great majority opposing the gas turbines and demanding that xAI power its facility with something cleaner. The Southern Environmental Law Center, acting on behalf of the NAACP, issued a sixty-day notice of intent to sue over the original Colossus facility, alleging that xAI had violated the Clean Air Act by installing and operating turbines that, under the law's Prevention of Significant Deterioration requirements, should have been treated as a major source of pollution requiring full permitting and public oversight. That notice, it turned out, was only the opening move. In response, xAI removed the unpermitted turbines at Colossus and obtained permits for the fifteen that remained, and for a moment the pressure appeared to have worked.

It had not. Rather than abandon the strategy that had drawn the legal fire, xAI exported it. The company built a second facility, Colossus 2, to power its Grok chatbot, and this time installed the gas turbines across the state line in Southaven, Mississippi, while the data centre itself sat in South Memphis, Tennessee. Twenty-seven turbines went up, capable of as much as four hundred and ninety-five megawatts, and once again they were switched on before any air permit had been obtained, the same copy-and-paste approach carried one jurisdiction over. The Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality granted a permit for them in March 2026, but only after they had already been running. By then xAI had added six more unpermitted turbines, bringing the total to thirty-three and the estimated emissions to around two thousand five hundred and eight tons a year of smog-forming nitrogen oxides, which the plaintiffs call potentially the single largest industrial source of NOx in the greater Memphis area.

So the litigation escalated to match. In February 2026, the Southern Environmental Law Center and Earthjustice, acting on behalf of the Mississippi State Conference of the NAACP and the national NAACP, sent a fresh notice of intent to sue over Colossus 2. On the fourteenth of April 2026, the NAACP filed an actual lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Mississippi, naming xAI and its subsidiary MZX Tech and alleging Clean Air Act violations for installing and operating the turbines before any permit was granted. On the sixth of May, the plaintiffs asked the court for a preliminary injunction to halt the unpermitted pollution at once. “A data center should not be a potential death sentence,” said Abre' Conner, the NAACP's director of environmental and climate justice, accusing the company of “a blatant disregard for the law” in expanding an unpermitted power plant despite decades of clear direction for permitting. Laura Thoms, an enforcement director at Earthjustice, put the emergency motion plainly: “We're asking the judge to halt all unpermitted pollution and make sure xAI follows the law.”

The voices in that fight are worth recording precisely, because they belong to real people speaking for a real place. KeShaun Pearson, who directs the group Memphis Community Against Pollution, framed the failure as one of accountability: “Our local leaders are entrusted with protecting us from corporations violating our right to clean air, but we are witnessing their failure.” Patrick Anderson, a senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center, captured the absurdity of the permitting claim plainly: “Every single time I've ever seen turbines anywhere, they have an air permit.” His colleague Amanda Garcia put the equity stakes in a single sentence: “No one should be above the law, and it is Memphis communities who have been paying the price for xAI's unpermitted pollution.” Dorthy Seawood, a resident whose mother died of cancer, reduced it to the human floor beneath all the legal argument: “It's not fair to us that we have to deal with whatever comes out of this plant.”

There is something telling in the fact that litigation became the community's primary instrument of voice. A neighbourhood excluded from the planning, bound out of the conversation by non-disclosure agreements, that learned of the turbines from the noise and the satellite imagery rather than any public process, was left with the courts as its main avenue of objection, and the live federal case now pending in Mississippi is the measure of how far that avenue has had to be pushed. That is a symptom of a deeper failure, not a sign the system is working. When the only way a community can register its interests is to sue after the fact, and then to sue again when the same company relocates the same conduct over a state line, the decision-making process has already failed the test of fairness. The harm was done first, and the process invoked afterwards.

The same script is playing in dozens of other places. Across the country, residents show up to county zoning meetings, file public-records requests, form coalitions and discover, often, that the deals were struck before they were ever told. The asymmetry is structural. On one side sit corporations with effectively unlimited legal and lobbying budgets, the promise of jobs and tax revenue, and the ear of local officials eager to land a marquee investment. On the other sit residents with day jobs, a folding table of leaflets and the slow machinery of administrative complaint.

The Vocabulary of Energy Justice

To name what is happening here, it helps to borrow a framework that scholars have spent the past decade refining. The energy researcher Benjamin Sovacool and his colleagues have argued that questions of energy can be assessed through the lens of energy justice, which they break into distinct components. There is distributive justice, concerning how the benefits and burdens of the energy system are spread across society. There is procedural justice, concerning whether the people affected by energy decisions get a genuine say in making them. And there is recognition justice, concerning whether marginalised and vulnerable communities are seen and given special consideration rather than treated as invisible or expendable.

Map the data centre boom onto that framework and the failures line up with uncomfortable neatness. Distributively, the benefits of AI, the productivity gains, the valuations, the convenience of the tools, accrue overwhelmingly to affluent users and shareholders, while the burdens, the particulates, the noise, the water draw, the higher bills, settle on low-income communities of colour. Procedurally, those communities are routinely excluded from the decisions, sometimes literally bound to silence by non-disclosure agreements, and left to litigate after the fact. And in terms of recognition, the entire logic of siting depends on these neighbourhoods having already been classified, by an earlier era's policies, as places where pollution is acceptable. All three forms of justice fail at once, and they fail in the same direction.

This is not an argument against artificial intelligence, nor the infrastructure that runs it. The grid will be built; the demand is real. The argument is about whose interests sit at the centre of the decisions about where and how it goes up. At present, the answer is plainly the companies building the facilities and the officials competing to host them. The residents who breathe the air and drink the water are, at best, an afterthought to be managed, and at worst an obstacle to be routed around. Taking the burden seriously means inverting that order of priority, and it is worth being concrete about what that would require.

What Taking It Seriously Would Look Like

The first and most obvious lever is who pays. If a data centre triggers new generation, transmission or water infrastructure, the cost should fall on the company that caused it rather than being smeared across every household in the region. Regulators call this cost causation, and it is not a radical idea; it is simply the principle that the party generating a cost should bear it. Several states have begun moving this way, creating special rate classes for very large electricity users designed to insulate ordinary ratepayers from the AI buildout. The household spending a fifth of its income on energy should not be subsidising the cooling of a supercomputer. That single reform, applied consistently, would change the economics of siting overnight, because much of the appeal of a given location lies precisely in the ability to externalise these costs onto others.

The second lever is procedural, and it goes to the heart of the recognition failure. Communities asked to host this infrastructure should have a genuine, early and binding voice in the decision. That means an end to the non-disclosure agreements that kept Boxtown in the dark until the turbines were already running. It means meaningful public hearings before permits are issued rather than litigation after harm is done. It means transparency about water draw, emissions and grid impact as a condition of approval, not a fact prised loose by journalists and lawyers months later. A process in which the affected community learns of the project from the noise in their gardens is no process at all.

The third lever is distributive, and it asks a harder question: if a community is going to bear the burden, what does it get in return? Genuine community benefit agreements, legally enforceable rather than rhetorical, could direct a share of the value back to the host neighbourhood, as funded energy efficiency and weatherisation, rooftop solar, lowered bills, clean-up of legacy contamination, or direct investment in the schools and clinics that sit in the turbines' shadow. There is a particular logic to using the infrastructure to reduce the host community's own energy burden, closing the loop between the demand the facility creates and the bills the neighbours pay.

The fourth lever is recognition itself, the most demanding because it requires looking at the map differently. The screening tools California and other states already use, the very tools that revealed eighty-two per cent of the state's data centres sitting in poor-air-quality communities, could be turned from a diagnosis into a constraint. A siting regime serious about justice would treat a high cumulative pollution burden not as a green light, a sign of cheap land and weak resistance, but as a red one, a reason to look elsewhere or demand far more in return. The communities that have already given the most to a century of industry are precisely the ones that should be asked to give the least to the next.

None of this is technically difficult. The water can be recycled; xAI itself proposed an eighty-million-dollar grey-water reclamation plant in Memphis once the pressure mounted, which rather proves the point that cleaner approaches were available all along and simply not chosen until someone forced the question. Cooling can be made far more efficient. Clean generation can be built ahead of demand rather than gas turbines bolted on in a hurry. The obstacles are not engineering ones. They are obstacles of cost, speed and political will, resolved at present in favour of whoever is building fastest and against whoever is breathing hardest.

The Postcode and the Promise

Return, at the end, to Boxtown, and to the woman standing in her garden listening to a sound she did not invite, breathing air made worse by a machine she will likely never use to produce intelligence she will likely never own. Her postcode was poisoned long before xAI arrived; the shipyards and refineries and gas plants saw to that, decade by decade, decision by decision. The data centre is only the latest layer, but it is a revealing one, because it shows that the most advanced industry humanity has yet built is reproducing the oldest pattern of harm rather than escaping it. And the fight has not ended with the first turbines; it has followed the company across a state line into Mississippi, where a federal judge is now being asked whether the law still means what it says.

The promise of artificial intelligence is routinely framed in the language of universal benefit, a rising tide of productivity and discovery that will lift everyone. But a tide does not arrive everywhere at once, and the physical foundation of this one is being laid in specific places, on specific people, who are absorbing the costs of a future from which they have been largely excluded. The defining question of the AI build-out is not whether the machines will think. It is whose lungs, whose water table and whose electricity bill will pay for the thinking, and whether the people answering that question can be persuaded that a community's powerlessness is not the same thing as its consent.

There is nothing inevitable about the geography of the cloud. It was chosen, node by node, permit by permit, and what was chosen can be chosen differently. To take the burden seriously is, in the end, a simple proposition: to insist that the people who breathe the exhaust of the AI economy be treated as something more than the terrain on which it is built. Boxtown, and now Southaven, are asking that question already, in courtrooms and council chambers and comment letters. The rest of the country will be asking it soon enough, because the turbines are coming, and the only thing still undecided is whose garden they will hum behind next.

References

  1. Yañez-Barnuevo, Miguel. “Data Center Power Demands Are Contributing to Higher Energy Bills.” Environmental and Energy Study Institute, 24 February 2026. https://www.eesi.org/articles/view/data-center-power-demands-are-contributing-to-higher-energy-bills
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  14. Sovacool, Benjamin K., and Michael H. Dworkin. “Energy Justice: Conceptual Insights and Practical Applications.” Applied Energy, 2015. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0306261915000082
  15. Carleton College. “History and Legacy of Environmental Racism in the Bayview Hunters Point Neighborhood.” https://www.carleton.edu/chemistry/diversity-equity-inclusion-and-respect/our-actions-as-chemists-have-consequences/history-and-legacy-of-environmental-racism-in-the-bayview-hunters-point-neighborhood/
  16. World Resources Institute. “From Energy Use to Air Quality, the Many Ways Data Centers Affect US Communities.” https://www.wri.org/insights/us-data-center-growth-impacts
  17. TechPolicy.Press. “Data Center Boom Risks Health of Already Vulnerable Communities.” https://www.techpolicy.press/data-center-boom-risks-health-of-already-vulnerable-communities/

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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from Notes I Won’t Reread

I just got home. It’s quiet, too quiet every time i walk through that front door, there’s this stupid little moment where i expect to hear, “Daddy’s home!” or “Daddy, you’re back”, then i remember. Instead, I get that, “welcome back, sir”. you have no idea how miserable it is to go from hearing a sweet soul calling you, welcoming you like you mean the world, to just hearing what’s left. she wasn’t even my biological daughter, but that didn’t matter. i raised her anyway. Ever since i was a teenager, she was there. Her parents handed her to me because they couldn’t be bothered. And I was stupid enough to believe that if i spent enough years loving a child, the universe would eventually decide that counted for something, but no, not when it comes to me. One random day, they decided they wanted to be parents again. How convenient, right? After years. they walked back into her life like they hadn’t abandonded it in the first place, and somehow they got to take her. they didnt earn a single second of it, they didnt deserve to hear her call anyone “dad” or “mom” but they got her anyway, what kind of pathetic excuse for human beings abandons their own child, then suddenly remember they exist years later because it suits them? fucking selfish whores, I’ll annihilate them, ill take out their jaws with my own hand, I’ll shoot their brain out and ill fuck that hole. ill fuck their brain so hard till i cum. Every part of their body is so worthless I won’t even keep it in my luxurious house, i would eat their organs but it’ll be too gross, ill make them eat it themselves. i hate people, i hate humans. Every single day they somehow find a new way to prove they’re disgusting creatures pretending to have morals until its inconvient. enough. I’ll sleep it off, after i clean my room, because my housemate decided my room needed whatever the fucking hell he did to it while I was gone, so that’s waiting for me tomorrow morning. Wonderful, wonderful i love humans, i do, i wish they all decided to disappear at the exact same second. right nowww. noo hesitation, noo dellaays just, right. That’s enough of that. at least the cats were happy to see me. just little idiots demanding attention five seconds after i walked through the door, ill stay with them for a while. They’re better company than most people ill ever meet.

I should sleep, or whatever.

Sincerely, Ahmed

 
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