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Cogitating Ceviche’s Week in Review (January 5–10, 2026)

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Editorial Summary

This week’s offerings spiral across epochs and genres—echoing laughter in sanctuaries, automation in our palms, Rome through the pen of Cassiodorus, and freedom from within. Conrad Hannon revisits the gentleman dissenter and diagnoses automation’s iron grip; Calista F. Freiheit pens a theological meditation on humor as spiritual resistance. Gio Marron gives us a noir entrée and a Komroff classic, while history looms large with a defense-less but not senseless Cassiodorus. The week ends where it began—in search of freedom, mystery, and meaning.

Articles

* The Christian Sense of Humor: Laughter as ResistanceCalista F. Freiheit | January 5, 2026An exploration of sacred wit—how laughter, rightly tuned, becomes a theological and political act.

* The Automation Trap: When Tools Make You WorseConrad Hannon | January 6, 2026A critique of the seductive erosion of skill under the guise of productivity, from spellcheck to steering wheels.

* How Does It Feel To Be Free?Gio Marron (Manuel Komroff) | January 7, 2026A republication of Komroff’s meditation on interior liberty—fierce, lyrical, and unblinking.

* Cassiodorus: Saving Rome Without Defending ItConrad T Hannon | January 7, 2026First in the “Custodians of Meaning” series, this piece considers how one man preserved Rome by giving up its sword.

* The Gentleman Dissenter Is ExtinctConrad Hannon | January 9, 2026A polemic on the vanishing breed of principled dissenters—and what’s replaced them.

* The NorwegianGio Marron | January 10, 2026The first part of a new Mimi Delboise mystery, tinged with fog, suspicion, and linguistic codes.

Quote of the Week

“To laugh in a time of collapse is to bear witness to resurrection.”Calista F. Freiheit, “The Christian Sense of Humor: Laughter as Resistance”

Questions

The Christian Sense of Humor

* Can laughter serve as a form of nonviolent resistance in secular contexts?

* What are the limits of theological humor?

The Automation Trap

* Have our tools replaced our instincts—or just dulled them?

* Is “ease” always the enemy of excellence?

How Does It Feel To Be Free?

* Is freedom a condition or an orientation?

* How does Komroff’s idea of inner liberty clash with modern definitions?

Cassiodorus: Saving Rome Without Defending It

* Can culture preserve what politics fails to protect?

* What modern analogs exist for Cassiodorus’ role?

The Gentleman Dissenter Is Extinct

* What happens to dissent when civility disappears?

* Can new forms of dissent still carry moral weight?

The Norwegian

* What defines Mimi Delboise as a detective in a digital age?

* How does ambiguity serve suspense in serialized storytelling?

Additional Resources

* “Amusing Ourselves to Death” by Neil Postman — A foundational critique of media and meaning.

* “The World Beyond Your Head” by Matthew Crawford — On attention, automation, and the loss of embodied skill.

* “From Dawn to Decadence” by Jacques Barzun — On cultural transmission and preservation.

* “The Abolition of Man” by C.S. Lewis — Dissent, civility, and eternal standards.

* “Thinking in Systems” by Donella Meadows — For reading behind the tools and structures we create.

Calls to Action

* Calista: Reflect on where humor has disarmed bitterness in your life.

* Conrad: Audit a digital tool you use daily—has it made you better?

* Gio: Follow Mimi into mystery—what do you suspect in Part II?

* General: Join the discussion in the comments—Who’s your Cassiodorus?

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Thank you for your time today. Until next time, stay gruntled, curious, and God Bless.



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