The Future Of Power Apr 2026
The following essay explores this transition, focusing on the movement from state-centered control to a more fragmented, high-tech global landscape. The Future of Power: From Sovereignty to Systems
The most radical change in the 21st century is the "vertical" shift of power. Influence is leaking out of government offices and into the hands of non-state actors. Large tech companies now wield more influence over global information than many mid-sized nations. This "diffusion" means that a small team with enough compute power can build systems that rival national infrastructures. In this new era, the ability to control a narrative or manage a cyber-network is often more effective than the threat of a physical blockade. The Digital Backbone The Future of Power
Access to high-end GPUs and data is becoming as vital as access to coal was during the Industrial Revolution. The following essay explores this transition, focusing on
Technology is the new "hard power." We have entered an age of "Sovereign AI," where governments treat machine learning models as critical infrastructure. AI is now a force multiplier in every arena: Large tech companies now wield more influence over
For centuries, power was a simple equation of land, labor, and lead. If a nation had a large army and fertile soil, it held the "catbird’s seat" in global affairs. Today, that equation has been rewritten. As we move through 2026, power is defined less by what a state owns and more by how it connects to global networks—specifically in the realms of artificial intelligence, energy resilience, and "power diffusion". The Great Diffusion