John Paul II vs. the Machine: Freedom, Suffering, and the Unbreakable Person

2 days ago
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A fresh, long-form monologue on Pope John Paul II—not about fear, but about freedom. We look at how a Polish poet-philosopher helped crack a steel empire, why his “theology of the body” still embarrasses a culture of disposable desire, and how his warnings about the “culture of death” prefigure today’s dopamine economy. From Solidarity and the 1979 Warsaw homily to forgiving his would-be assassin in 1981, John Paul II treated every human as irreducible—never a data point, never a cog. This piece argues that his personalism is the antidote to modern reductionism: truth isn’t a vibe, dignity isn’t a setting, and suffering can be redemptive without being romanticized. If you’re hungry for a defense of the human person that can stand up to algorithms, market pressures, and fashionable cynicism—this is for you. Drop a comment, share it with someone who needs courage today, and hit subscribe for more uncompromising, long-form thought.

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