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mission

Regarder began as a space for thought—but it’s evolving into a space for transformation.

The essays, meditations, and philosophical inquiries you’ll find here aren’t just intellectual exercises. They’re the scaffolding for something more concrete: a new way of understanding and organizing work in the 21st century. If attention is the rarest and most valuable resource of our time, then the systems we build should reward and refine it—not fragment it. That’s what Regarder is for.

I believe the future of work isn’t just remote or AI-enhanced—it’s ethical, attentional, and participatory. We need a framework where legal structures, economic incentives, and technological tools are aligned not around extraction, but around stewardship. Where knowledge isn't hoarded but cultivated and shared. Where institutions don't just manage power but earn legitimacy by how they distribute attention and care.

Regarder, as a platform, is my attempt to prototype this vision.

Drawing on traditions from philosophy, political economy, law, and theology, I’m interested in rebuilding the intellectual and institutional infrastructure for a more humane future—one where people don’t just survive the system but shape it. That starts with understanding how current systems function and fail, but it doesn’t stop there. It moves toward imagining and enacting better ones.

This blog is both invitation and blueprint. A place to think with others who believe that meaningful change begins in how we look at the world—and what we refuse to look away from.

If you're someone who believes that justice is not an abstraction but a practice, that work can be sacred, and that the questions we ask shape the lives we live—then you’re already part of this experiment.

Let’s not just pay attention. Let’s build a world that rewards it.

N.D.

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