*This page is currently

under development

Truth is often

uncomfortable

Learn more

Latest

About

Content creator and marketing professional with controversial opinions, aiming to shape narratives around history, current events, and the forces influencing modern society.

Much of this work is driven by concern with how easily uncomfortable truths are avoided. Information is abundant, yet understanding is shallow. Real problems are left unaddressed, while their causes continue to influence behavior and decisions.

The focus here isn’t on surface-level interpretations, but on the forces behind them. Economic incentives, cultural pressures, and historical patterns shape outcomes quietly and consistently. When they’re ignored, the consequences don’t fade. They build, then compound.

This work exists because the refusal to ask why has become normalized. Its intention is to bring attention back to the causes beneath events, patterns, and outcomes too often accepted without question, and to treat history as a guide to the present, not something to be ignored.

The Cost of Forgetting

Over the past year, I realized how incomplete my understanding of history had been. At the same time, it became clear how historically disconnected the average person has become, often more distracted by what’s trending than by what shaped the world they’re living in. The present is discussed nonstop, but rarely understood in context.

History textbooks have failed to tell the full story, replacing complexity, darkness, and consequence with simplified narratives that are easier to digest. Much of what defines our reality is far more complex, darker, and consequential than what we’re typically taught. Key forces, motivations, and failures are frequently compressed, softened, or omitted altogether, leaving an understanding that describes events without ever explaining their causes.

About Fault Lines

I created Fault Lines as an attempt to make that understanding more accessible. It is a history timeline shaped by my own perspective, covering crucial and often controversial events, some of which are rarely taught or openly examined. Spanning from the earliest recorded civilizations to the present day, it follows history as a sequence rather than a collection of isolated moments. Patterns emerge clearly over time. Different eras, cultures, and systems change on the surface, but underlying behaviors remain strikingly consistent. History, in that sense, becomes a tool for understanding how decisions are made, how power operates, and how consequences take shape.