About this site

borkedsys is an independent systems-analysis project focused on making the architecture of modern institutions visible. Many of the crises people experience today aren’t personal failures they’re structural outputs of systems built on scarcity, competition, and centralised control.

This site exists to trace those structures, map their incentives, and provide clear explanations for why institutions behave the way they do.

Why borkedsys exists

Most discourse treats social and economic breakdowns as moral or ideological disputes.
But systems behave according to their design.

When incentives reward extraction, extraction becomes normal.
When power is centralised, autonomy contracts.
When scarcity is engineered, conflict becomes predictable.

borkedsys explores these mechanisms with one aim:
to make the logic of the system visible.

Understanding the mechanism is the first step toward structural alternatives.

What you'll find here

1. Articles

Long-form explanations of systemic behaviour:
incentive structures, institutional drift, control logic, and regenerative alternatives.

2. Models and Diagrams

Clear conceptual tools that visualise feedback loops, failure points, and transition pathways.

3. Notes on Transition

Analysis of how societies might shift toward cooperative, post-scarcity designs drawing from systems science, RBE principles, cybernetics, and integral design.

What this space is

  • a place for clarity
  • a map of incentives and structures
  • a reference point for systemic thinking
  • an evolving archive of models and explanations

What this space is not

  • not a movement
  • not an ideology
  • not an activist brand
  • not a hierarchy
  • not a personality project

It’s simply a lens for understanding the systems we live inside.


A final note

If you read, think, or reflect with the ideas here: thank you.
This project isn’t about followers or “growth.”
It’s about coherence, offering one small node of clarity in a world built on noise.

The future doesn’t need louder arguments.
It needs better structures.
This site is an attempt to explore what those structures might look like.