People sharing a meal at a table.

I. The Table

II. Imagination as a Political Act

III. The Legitimate Grievance

IV. The Mechanism of the Wound

V. The Genealogy of the Image

VI. What the Table Actually Is

VII. The Harder Arithmetic

VIII. Imagining It Into Being

IX. The Candles

This Post Has 4 Comments

  1. Bill Wheatley

    You’re of course Bakchos, too many of us have given ourselves over to those who imagine with malice. Let’s give the people who imagine something better a chance.

  2. Kelly Conrad

    The core analytical distinction — attack the policy, not the person — is clear, consistent, and applied with rigour throughout. You derive it from a Muslim professional, you test it, you complicate it, and you return to it. That discipline gives the essay a spine.

    1. Bakchos

      Kelly, successive Coalition and Labor governments have neglected infrastructure development and new housing projects, and this is where we are now.

  3. The Faceless Freedom Fighter

    In 2026 Australia, the “table” you describe exists and thrives in many households, mine included, yet the broader electorate is voting with its feet toward tighter borders and slower change. The essay’s optimism that Hansonism is headed for the “dustbin of history” feels premature when polls show the opposite momentum.

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