This page organizes selected Substack essays by subject.
The full body of essays is published at williamjteesdale.com. The essays listed here are selected entry points into the main areas of Strategic Intent Analysis, the method of structural inquiry developed by William J. Teesdale.
Strategic Intent Analysis uses observation and pattern analysis to examine what natural and human systems preserve, protect, produce, and reveal over time.
Each section below gathers essays that introduce important ideas, recurring patterns, and major subjects within the work.
Foundational Essays
These essays introduce the method and core vocabulary of Strategic Intent Analysis. They explain how the work uses observation, pattern analysis, coherence, and repeated outcomes to examine natural and human systems.
This section is the best entry point for readers who want to understand the method before moving into specific subjects such as law, finance, politics, technology, classified power, or protected harm.
Selected essays:
- The Method of Structural Inquiry
- Strategic Intent Analysis: Inferring Direction Through Structural Convergence
- Truth Has a Coherent Structure
- Systems Do Not Accidentally Converge
- The War Machine: Strategic Intent and the Persistence of Conflict
- The Corruption of Order
- The Field Effect of Coherence
Natural Law and Structural Order
These essays examine natural law as structure: what holds together, what fails under pressure, and what consequences follow when systems move out of alignment with reality.
They consider rhythm, proportion, recurrence, resonance, living order, biological coherence, perception, field behavior, natural time, horizon, light, celestial motion, and the conditions under which order forms, breaks down, or is restored.
Selected essays:
- An Explanation of Natural Law
- The World Is Structural and Created
- Structured Water and Cymatics: Order Beneath the World
- The Flatness of Water
- The Axis Mundi: Polaris, the Turning Sky, and the Geometry of the Year
- Solar Cycles and the Search for a True Calendar
- The Spring Equinox and the Structure of Natural Time
- Health as Coherence, Not Intervention
- Light as Biological Information
- We Do Not Live in a Simulation
Consciousness, Coherence, and Perception
These selected essays examine awareness, perception, pattern recognition, identity, coherence, and the conditions under which people recognize or fail to recognize what is already visible.
They consider consciousness not as an isolated mental event, but as participation in a structured world where truth, order, distortion, beauty, contradiction, and meaning can be perceived.
Selected essays:
- Consciousness as Presence in a Structured World
- Truth Has a Coherent Structure
- The Structure of Consciousness
- Permission to Observe
- Humans Require Social Permission
- Artificial General Intelligence and the Field of Consciousness
- The Bee and the Observed Sky
Institutional Power
These selected essays examine how institutions behave over time. They look at government, law, regulation, emergency powers, enforcement systems, administrative authority, and the ways public power can preserve itself through repeated action.
The focus is on what institutions actually produce: which powers expand, which limits weaken, which behaviors are protected, and where public explanations fail to match institutional direction.
Selected essays:
- When Authority Becomes Lethal
- Inside the Warrantless State
- Operation Northwoods: A Completed Conspiracy, Not a Theory
- When Enforcement Escapes All Constraint
- Administrative Searches and the Collapse of the Warrant Requirement
- The Reichstag Fire: When Emergency Authority Becomes Permanent
- Normalization Drift: How Temporary Measures Become Permanent Structures
- Policy Failure and Feedback Breakdown
- Regulators Who Won’t Regulate
- Credentialed Systems and Corrective Failure
Protected Harm
These selected essays examine systems in which serious harm occurs while real accountability is delayed, diffused, proceduralized, or avoided.
They consider how legal, corporate, financial, religious, and administrative structures absorb injury while preserving the deeper arrangements that allowed the harm to occur. The focus is on how institutions process exposure without necessarily correcting the structure that produced the damage.
Selected essays:
- Purdue Pharma and the Structure of Protected Harm
- Extraction Systems and Institutional Protection
- Epstein the System: An Institutional Analysis
- Savile and the Architecture of Inversion
- The Sacrificial Prince: Institutional Survival Through Controlled Accountability
- Vatican Institutional Containment in the Catholic Abuse Crisis
- The Global Financial Crisis and the Architecture of System Protection
- Risk Without Owners: How Modern Systems Distribute Consequences
Classified Power
These selected essays examine secrecy, intelligence systems, compartmentalization, national security, disclosure, and public accountability.
They consider what happens when public authority moves into protected spaces where ordinary scrutiny no longer reaches, and how secrecy can shift from protecting the public to protecting the system from the public.
Selected essays:
- Classification and the Limits of Public Accountability
- The Military-Industrial Complex and the Persistence of Secrecy
- Compartmentalization and the Structure of Classified Power
- Disclosure Without Resolution: The UFO Issue as Institutional Containment
- The Intelligence State and the UFO Problem
- The Collins Elite and the Architecture of Deception
- Deception and UFOs: The 1998 Collins Elite Report Reconstructed
- The CIA’s Hidden Gold Reserve
- The Classified Security State
Politics and Managed Consent
These selected essays examine political life as a system of managed choices, public narratives, controlled conflict, and limited accountability.
They consider how public participation can be shaped by permitted choices, information control, social pressure, speech limits, visibility systems, and repeated political outcomes that continue beneath visible disagreement.
Selected essays:
- The Illusion of Political Choice
- Politics as Professional Wrestling
- Britain Has Never Had Freedom of Expression: Parliamentary Sovereignty and the Permission Model
- UK Immigration: Policy Failure or System Direction?
- Humans Require Social Permission
- Freedom of Information as Institutional Containment
- The Architecture of Visibility: How Systems Decide What Exists
- Search Engines Are Governance Systems
- The Systematic Destruction of Britain
Managed Participation
These selected essays examine systems that shape behavior by making ordinary participation conditional, uncomfortable, monitored, or reversible.
They consider how people are trained through airports, cars, platforms, scoring systems, administrative procedures, surveillance, and other managed environments. The focus is on how compliance is produced through design rather than openly demanded.
Selected essays:
- The Milgram Airport
- The American Air Traveler as Managed Threat
- Behavioral Scoring and Conditional Participation
- The Automobile as a Compliance Platform
- The Architecture of Continuous Monitoring
- When Systems Become Connective Tissue
- The Productivity Trap: When Measurement Replaces Value
Finance, Gold, and Monetary Systems
These selected essays examine money, gold, debt, central banks, liquidity, settlement systems, and financial fragility.
They consider what happens when paper claims, institutional promises, monetary models, and political explanations encounter physical reality. The focus is on trust, reserve structure, counterparty risk, debt dependency, and the role of gold when confidence in financial systems weakens.
Selected essays:
- Gold and Monetary Permanence
- The Federal Reserve Is Different — and That Difference Is the Error
- The Liquidity Illusion
- The Hidden Monetary System: How the Eurodollar Network Runs Global Finance
- Gold as Signal
- Gold Without Counterparty Risk
- Gold Reenters the System
- Gold After the Pricing Model
- Debt Without Exit
- Payments Infrastructure and Financial Control Systems
Energy, Infrastructure, and Geopolitics
These selected essays examine the physical systems that modern societies depend on: energy, shipping, communications, food, water, materials, logistics, and industrial capacity.
They consider how sovereignty, war, finance, and political stability are constrained by material reality. The focus is on chokepoints, dependency, fragility, and the moments when infrastructure becomes strategy.
Selected essays:
- Energy Sovereignty: The Precondition for Freedom
- From Ajax to Caracas: When Oil, Not Ideology, Decides Sovereignty
- Energy Infrastructure Concentration and System Fragility
- Nord Stream and the Discipline of Reality
- After Nord Stream: Risk in a World of Irreversible Loss
- Energy Chokepoints and Global Vulnerability: The Strait of Hormuz
- Energy Scarcity and Strategic Control
- Strategic Intent Analysis and the Iran War
- The European Energy Trap
- The Physical Internet: Submarine Cables and Global Communication
- The Container Shipping System and the Architecture of Global Trade
- The Global Supply Chain System
- The Infrastructure Stack
- Food Security and the Structure of National Resilience
- Water Infrastructure and Urban Fragility
- Rare Earth Minerals and the Structure of Technological Dependency
Sovereignty, Law, and Land
These selected essays examine the relationship between land, law, authority, consent, jurisdiction, and political independence.
They consider how control over land becomes converted into legal authority, how rights are narrowed into permissions, and how sovereignty can be weakened through treaties, administrative systems, property structures, speech limits, and institutional immunity.
The focus is on the difference between lawful order and managed authority.
Selected essays:
- When Conquest Became Property
- US Treaty Law and Indigenous Tribes
- Treaty Supremacy and Jurisdiction: Why the United States Has No General Authority Over Indigenous Treaty Lands
- Ownership Without Control: The Dawes Act
- Greenland Is Not the Point
- Freedom Without Permission: Oregon’s Free Speech Guarantee
- The Second Amendment as a Permit System
- Sovereign Immunity — A Remarkable Injustice
- The Constitution as a Minimal Limitation on Natural Law
Ritual, Spectacle, and Symbolic Power
These selected essays examine symbols, ceremonies, spectacles, myths, public narratives, and repeated institutional performances.
They consider how symbolic acts shape perception, memory, consent, fear, legitimacy, and belief. The focus is on symbolism and spectacle not as decoration, but as ways power communicates, consecrates itself, and organizes public meaning.
Selected essays:
- When Gold Was Still Sacred
- The Occult History of NASA
- The Collins Elite and the Architecture of Deception
- Deception and UFOs: The 1998 Collins Elite Report Reconstructed
- World Trade Center Building 7 and the Architecture of Containment
- Stargate and the Architecture of Non-Native Power
Technology and Control
These selected essays examine how technology changes the relationship between people, institutions, and power.
They consider automation, artificial intelligence, search engines, surveillance systems, behavioral scoring, digital identity, modern vehicles, platforms, and machine-governed decision systems. The focus is on what happens when ordinary life becomes dependent on systems that observe, rank, restrict, automate, or decide.
Selected essays:
- The Automobile as a Compliance Platform
- Hobbes Rewritten: The Digital Leviathan and the Centralization of Power
- Search Engines Are Governance Systems
- The Architecture of Visibility: How Systems Decide What Exists
- AI Safety and State Power
- When Systems Make Decisions
- WarGames Was Not About Nuclear War
- Behavioral Scoring and Conditional Participation
- Semiconductors and the Architecture of Technological Power