Politics is a puzzle worth solving — one piece at a time.
Every political system begins with a question no one remembers asking. It sits beneath constitutions and campaigns like bedrock — invisible, load-bearing. The puzzle starts here: not with answers, but with the shape of what we don't yet understand.
Two truths that cannot both be true at once — yet both persist. This is the central tension of civic life. We hold contradictions not because we are confused, but because the puzzle is genuinely complex. The piece that doesn't fit is often the most important one.
Somewhere between disagreement and understanding lies the tab that fits the socket. Not compromise — something more structural. The moment when two opposing ideas reveal they were always part of the same picture, just rotated wrong.
Something complete emerges.