An argument that God is not best understood as an external commander, but as the inward source of moral recognition: the strength by which we see the good, stand by it, and give it outward form in law, art, worship, and responsible action. Drawing on Jesus, Paul, Shakespeare, Wilfred Owen, and the failure of external religion, the article reflects on truth, conscience, self-command, and the need to recover the spiritual key to Western moral life.
A reflection on how broadcasting has shifted from its original public mission — to inform, to educate, to entertain — into a marketplace driven by attention, emotion, and confirmation. From medieval town criers to the BBC, from early newspapers to today’s partisan media, the thirst for drama and validation has always shaped the news. This essay asks what broadcasting is now for, why audiences gravitate toward outrage and simplicity, and why I write without seeking approval — letting my thoughts exist, like Shakespeare’s sonnet, for those who may one day find them.


