Monday, March 30, 2026

The Quiet Saboteur: Why Covert Narcissists are Fatal to Startups

 

by Julie Telgenhoff

In the high-stakes, "all-hands-on-deck" environment of a small startup, a manager’s personality can be the difference between a unicorn and a collapse. While most people look out for the "Overt" narcissist—the loud, bragging egoist—it is the Covert Narcissist who poses the greatest threat. 

In a small company where one person is given full power, a covert narcissist doesn’t just manage; they colonize. 

The Mask: The "Selfless" Professional 

Unlike their overt counterparts, covert narcissists lead with humility and victimhoodThey present themselves as the hardest worker, the most misunderstood, or the “only one who truly cares” about the owner’s vision.They don’t demand the spotlight; they manipulate others into shining it on them. In a startup, they become the owner’s right hand by being hyper-reliable and intensely loyal—at least on the surface. 

The Target: Jealousy as a Weapon 

In a startup, talent is the primary currency. If a manager perceives a subordinate as more innovative, better liked, or more naturally gifted, the covert narcissist doesn’t compete—they sabotage

Because their ego is fragile, they view a high performer’s success as a personal insult. Their sabotage is rarely an explosion; it’s a slow leak: 

  • Gaslighting: They withhold "need-to-know" information, then blame the employee for the resulting mistake. 
  • The "Vague" Critique: They give confusing directions so the employee can never truly succeed, then quietly frame the employee’s struggle as a “lack of ability.” 
  • Isolation: They frame the talented individual as "not a fit" or "difficult to work with," cutting them off from the rest of the team and calling them into HR incessantly. 

The "Fatal Attraction" and the Ignorant Owner 

The most dangerous element is the bond between the manager and the owner. This is often a "fatal attraction" dynamic where the manager acts as a social shield and emotional sycophant for the founder. 

The manager anticipates the owner’s needs and mirrors their values perfectly. They make the owner feel brilliant and protected. When the sabotaged employee eventually complains, the owner turns a blind eye because: 

  • Emotional Dependency: The owner has come to rely on the manager to handle the "messy" human parts of the business. 
  • The "Hero" Narrative: The manager has convinced the owner that everyone else is lazy or disloyal, and only they are keeping the ship afloat. 
  • Sunk Cost: The owner has given this person so much power that admitting they are toxic would mean admitting a catastrophic lapse in judgment. 

Because the owner has no idea he is being lied to and manipulated—he is too focused on maintaining his image to see what is actually happening inside his own company.

The Startup Stink Spiral 

When a covert narcissist is given total control, the startup loses its most valuable asset: its talent. High-performers leave or get taken out, the culture turns toxic, and the owner is left with a "loyal" manager presiding over a graveyard of missed opportunities. The narcissist's only goal is to be the last one standing next to the owner—Second in command, protected by the parasitic ‘yes sir’ culture.

The final result of this dynamic isn't failure, but a profitable, hollowed-out shell. In this "Success at Any Cost" model, the company continues to scale, bringing in massive revenue driven by a workforce of "yes people" the owner desperately relies on to maintain his ego.

Because the numbers are up, the owner remains blissfully unaware that he is being surgically manipulated by the manager he handed over full control. He is too preoccupied with his perfect public standing to notice that his "right hand" is actually a gatekeeper filtering his reality and stunting his growth.

Beneath the financial growth, the culture is a wasteland. Abuse is actively rewarded as "high performance," while genuine concerns are ignored or silenced. The office air is thick with the metaphorical smell of frustration and decay—a stagnant odor of suppressed talent and fear. As the manager systematically eliminates anyone she perceives as a threat, the "fatal attraction" deepens; she gets exactly what she wants—power, luxury, and control—while the owner attributes the high turnover and toxic atmosphere to "the price of greatness." In this environment, the company makes millions, but it breathes through the fragrance of a rancid parasitic stench. 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act: The Quiet Construction of a Ready-to-Activate National Draft List



For forty years, the U.S. military draft registration system was mostly a ghost.

If you have sons now in their 20s or 30s, you may not remember the Selective Service System because it became a forgotten form. Maybe it was seen at the DMV. Maybe it appeared on a college financial aid application. Or maybe your son never registered at all—and nothing ever happened.

That era of silent, largely ignored registration is now over.

With the passage of the FY 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, the government quietly changed how the draft database is built. The system is shifting from an “opt-in” registration model to an automatic enrollment system.

If you have young boys, nephews, or grandsons today, their generation will not encounter the same system your sons did. Their names will be placed into the Selective Service database automatically using existing federal records.

The list will exist whether they sign anything or not.


The Ghost Era: Why Your Sons Didn’t Feel the Pressure

From 1980 until now, the law technically required young men to register with Selective Service within 30 days of turning eighteen.

But in practice, enforcement was weak.

Most registrations happened through small bureaucratic moments: a checkbox on the FAFSA, a DMV form, or a postcard mailed to the government. If a young man didn’t do it, the consequences were usually indirect—losing eligibility for certain federal programs or jobs.

The key point is that there was still a moment of awareness.

A young man had to physically register. He had to sign something, click something, or mail something.

That moment created friction. It forced people to think about what they were doing.

Because millions simply ignored the requirement, the Selective Service database became incomplete and unreliable.

For decades, it existed mostly as a symbolic system rather than a ready-to-use mobilization roster.


The New System: Automatic and Invisible

The 2026 NDAA changes that structure.

Beginning December 18, 2026, the Selective Service System will automatically identify and register eligible men between 18 and 26 using existing federal databases such as Social Security records and other government data systems.

There is no card to sign.

There is no box to check.

A young man can reach his eighteenth birthday and already be listed in the system.

The administrative argument for the change is efficiency. Lawmakers say the government already possesses the data needed to identify eligible individuals, so the burden of registration should move from the individual to the government.

Critics see something else.

They see the construction of a ready-to-activate national draft list.


Predictive Programming and Quiet Acceptance

Opponents of the change argue that automation does more than streamline paperwork.

It removes visibility.

When systems operate quietly in the background, public awareness fades. There is no moment where a young man consciously decides whether to register. There is no conversation with parents about the meaning of signing that card.

The process becomes passive.

And when something becomes passive long enough, it begins to feel inevitable.

Critics call this a form of normalization—turning something controversial into something routine by embedding it invisibly inside digital infrastructure.

The public debate disappears because the process itself disappears.

By the time people realize the system exists, they are already inside it.


Why Parents Should Pay Attention

For decades, the draft registry resembled a dusty filing cabinet filled with incomplete records.

The new structure is different.

It is a live digital network built from synchronized federal databases.

The United States still operates an all-volunteer military force, and activating a draft would require congressional action. But the infrastructure required to run a national lottery is being modernized and updated.

In other words, the government is making sure the list is ready.

Supporters say this is simply prudent planning.

Critics argue it quietly solves the government’s long-standing non-compliance problem by removing individual choice from the process entirely.

Under the new system, resistance cannot occur at the point of registration.

By the time anyone notices the list exists, the names are already there.


A Generational Divide

For the generation that turned eighteen between 1980 and 2024, the draft registry was something many young men ignored without consequence.

For the generation growing up now, the experience will be different.

They will not be asked to sign the card.

They will simply appear in the database.

And once a name is on the list, the only question left is whether the system ever decides to use it.

By the time anyone notices the list exists, the names are already there.


The Quiet Question No One Is Asking

Most parents today will never remember filling out a draft card themselves. For younger generations, the Vietnam-era images of lottery numbers and envelopes arriving in the mail feel like distant history.

But systems do not disappear just because people stop talking about them.

They get modernized.

They get automated.

They get quietly connected to databases that already hold the personal details of nearly every American citizen.

The new generation of boys growing up right now will never experience the moment their fathers did—the moment of holding a card and deciding whether to sign it.

That decision has already been removed.

By the time they are old enough to understand what Selective Service is, their names will already be sitting inside the system.

And when a system is built so that every name is already collected, organized, and ready to be used, the only remaining question is not how a draft would happen.

It is when someone decides to turn the key.

Friday, March 27, 2026

The Currency of Clout vs. the Frequency of Soul

The One Thing a Multi-Millionaire Can’t Buy

by Julie Telgenhoff

There’s a quiet tension in the modern world that most people feel but rarely name. It’s the ongoing clash between clout and soul. One runs on money, visibility, and influence. The other runs on something far less measurable—integrity, humanity, and the refusal to sell out.

In today’s culture, the multi-millionaire has become the symbol of success. Wealth is treated as proof of intelligence, authority, and even moral credibility. If someone is rich enough, their voice is amplified automatically. Their lifestyle becomes aspirational. Their opinions become guidance.

Money, in this system, functions like armor. It protects reputations, rewrites narratives, and insulates people from consequences. Entire industries exist to maintain that shield. If criticism appears, it’s buried. If a scandal surfaces, it’s managed. If someone challenges the narrative, they are quietly pushed aside.

But this pattern isn’t new.

Ancient texts once described cities like Sodom not just as physical places, but as symbols of societies that had reorganized themselves around excess, power, and moral compromise. Over time, the name became shorthand for a civilization where indulgence replaces conscience and where wealth becomes the ultimate shield from accountability.

In that kind of environment, success is measured by dominance and visibility. Influence matters more than integrity. The higher someone climbs in the hierarchy, the more protected they become.

And that’s where the conflict between clout and soul becomes visible.

Because every era produces people who refuse to trade their inner compass for status. They don’t reshape their voice to fit the approved narrative. They don’t polish their identity to match what the system rewards. They remain human in a culture that increasingly values performance over authenticity.

Often, that person is a woman who simply refused to sell out.

And that choice comes with a cost.

Staying human inside a system built on clout rarely leads to an easy road. Those who refuse to bend often encounter resistance. Not always openly. Rarely in ways that can be easily proven. The pushback tends to appear through quieter forms—doors closing, reputations being quietly questioned, opportunities disappearing.

Sabotage in a system like this is rarely loud. It’s subtle. Strategic. The goal isn’t always to destroy someone outright. It’s to isolate them, exhaust them, or make them invisible.

Meanwhile, those enforcing the system often benefit from it.

They climb. They gain recognition. They build financial security. From the outside, it looks like success. Promotions appear. Platforms expand. The money flows.

But there is always a trade happening beneath the surface.

Systems built on clout require loyalty. To stay inside them, people must learn when to stay silent, when to protect the narrative, and when to ignore what their conscience might be telling them. Over time, that compromise becomes normalized.

That is the real currency exchange of a “Sodom” culture.

Some people trade authenticity for access.
Their voice for approval.
Their conscience for influence.

And once that trade is made, the rewards often follow.

But the woman who refused the exchange walks a different road.

She may face struggle. She may lose opportunities others accept easily. She may be pushed to the edges of systems that reward conformity.

Yet she keeps the one thing those systems can never manufacture.

Her soul.

This is why the contrast between clout and soul is so powerful. One side accumulates wealth and protection by playing the game. The other side may endure resistance for refusing to participate in it.

A multi-millionaire can buy influence, networks, protection, and admiration.

But there is one currency that remains beyond the reach of money.

The frequency of a human being who never sold out.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

When the Machine Took the Podium

 

For two centuries the East Room of the White House has staged the rituals of human power. Presidents announce wars there. Treaties are celebrated. Medal ceremonies honor acts of courage that no machine could replicate.

Then, quietly, the symbolism changed.

A humanoid robot stood at the microphone.

On March 25, 2026, during the “Fostering the Future Together” Global Coalition Summit hosted by First Lady Melania Trump, a faceless AI-powered robot named Figure 03 addressed an audience of global leaders, diplomats, and technology executives. It thanked the First Lady for the invitation and greeted attendees in multiple languages.

And just like that, the future walked into the room.

Not as an exhibit.

Not as a science project.

But as a participant.

For people who have been watching the steady expansion of artificial intelligence into every corner of life, the moment felt less like innovation and more like the next step in a script that has been unfolding for years.

A script that has quietly been moving society toward a world where machines are not just tools—but intermediaries between humans and reality itself.


The Symbolism No One Is Talking About

Look carefully at the image.

Behind the robot stand two of the most recognizable figures of the Western political establishment: the First Lady of the United States and the First Lady of France.

In front of them stands a machine with no face, no expression, and no identity.

That machine is speaking.

And the humans are standing behind it.

Whether intentional or not, the symbolism is unmistakable. The machine is literally positioned at the center of the stage while human authority fades into the background.

This is how normalization works.

Not through force.

Through imagery.

Through repetition.

Through the gradual shift of what feels normal.


From Smartphones to Humanoid Authority

During the summit, the conversation moved toward a vision where artificial intelligence moves beyond screens and becomes physically embedded in daily life. The idea floated during the event was that humanoid AI systems could soon assist with educating children inside their homes.

The pitch sounds harmless on the surface.

A patient tutor.

A personalized teacher.

An endless supply of knowledge delivered directly to the child.

But anyone paying attention to the trajectory of modern technology recognizes the larger pattern.

First, the internet centralized information.

Then social media centralized communication.

Then algorithms began filtering what people see, read, and believe.

Now artificial intelligence is being positioned to mediate education itself.

The same system that filters your news feed could soon filter what children learn.


The Pandemic Was the Test Run

The concept of keeping children at home while learning through digital systems isn’t new.

The world already experienced the largest remote education experiment in history during the COVID lockdowns.

Millions of children were removed from classrooms and placed in front of screens.

Social development plummeted.

Attention spans collapsed.

Mental health problems surged.

Yet instead of viewing that period as a warning, the new vision appears to be doubling down—replacing screens with humanoid interfaces.

The classroom becomes the living room.

The teacher becomes a machine.

And the authority behind that machine remains invisible.


The Predictive Programming Effect

Moments like this function as cultural signals.

Before a major shift occurs, the public is shown a preview.

A demonstration.

A soft introduction.

The robot does not arrive as an enforcer.

It arrives as a guest.

It gives a polite speech.

It speaks multiple languages.

It thanks the First Lady.

The message is subtle but powerful: this is normal now.

By the time machines like this begin appearing in homes, factories, and public institutions, the psychological barrier will already be gone.

People will have seen it before.

At the White House.

On television.

In viral photographs.

The future will feel familiar.


The Quiet Merge of Technology and Governance

One of the most overlooked aspects of the event is who was present.

Delegates from dozens of countries.

Technology organizations.

Political leadership.

Education policy discussions.

When technology companies and political institutions stand on the same stage introducing machines that will influence how the next generation learns, it reveals something deeper than innovation.

It reveals alignment.

Technology is no longer developing outside of governance.

It is merging with it.


The Real Question

The debate around artificial intelligence usually focuses on whether the technology will work.

But that misses the bigger issue.

The real question isn’t whether AI tutors will be effective.

The real question is who programs them.

Who decides what information they provide.

Who controls the algorithms behind the “knowledge.”

Because once education is mediated through centralized AI systems, the flow of information becomes programmable.

History becomes programmable.

Reality becomes programmable.

And the robot standing in the East Room becomes something far more significant than a technological novelty.

It becomes a symbol.

The moment when the gatekeepers of the future quietly stepped into the room.