The Valley and the Namer

Why suffering alone isn’t wisdom, and what turns it into one The car was a Mercury Topaz we called the Blue Bomber. The bumper was duct-taped on and wood-screwed to the body. The radio didn’t work. This was before modern cell phones, so there was no workaround, no Bluetooth, no podcast, no Spotify queue to fill the silence. I was in my twenties, and I drove that car ninety minutes each way between my place and my parents’ house. An hour and a half of nothing but the windshield, the road, and whatever was in my head. ...

February 5, 2026 · 10 min · John Schultz

The Watchman Principle

Why you’re accountable for warning, not for results, and why silence isn’t neutral Ezekiel was a priest with no temple to serve in. He was thirty years old, living in exile by a canal in Babylon, watching his homeland crumble from a distance. The first wave of exiles had been taken in 597 BC. Jerusalem hadn’t fallen yet, but it would. His purpose had been stripped away. And then God showed up, not in the holy place, but in enemy territory. ...

February 1, 2026 · 9 min · John Schultz

Opening the Filters

Why the obvious hides in plain sight The Chinese surveillance balloons floated across American airspace for years before anyone noticed. Not because we lacked sensors. Not because we lacked data. The U.S. defense system collects more information than any surveillance apparatus in human history. The balloons went undetected because of something far more dangerous than technological failure: we weren’t looking for them. I heard this story recently on the Jordan B. Peterson podcast from Garry Nolan, a Stanford immunologist who’s become one of the more credible scientific voices in UAP research. He explained how our defense sensors are programmed to filter for known threat signatures (rockets, planes, missiles). Everything else gets discarded immediately as noise. The system processes what it expects and throws away what it doesn’t. ...

January 23, 2026 · 7 min · John Schultz

What the Mongols Knew

What we forgot when we called ourselves civilized The largest contiguous empire in human history was built by people we call barbarians. Twenty-four million square kilometers. More land than Rome, more than Britain at its peak, more than any empire before or since. Built in a single generation by a man who started with nothing, no army, no wealth, no political connections. Just a mother who dug roots to keep him alive and a wife who told him to stop following and start leading. ...

January 21, 2026 · 7 min · John Schultz

History Rhymes

Why “we’ve seen this before” is the laziest thing you can say History doesn’t repeat itself. It rhymes. That’s not a cute saying. It’s the difference between someone who files a situation under “seen it” and moves on, versus someone who does the actual work of figuring out what’s the same, what’s different, and why it matters this time. Most people stop at the first version. It feels smart. It’s not. ...

September 22, 2025 · 4 min · John Schultz