honorificabilitudinitatibus
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday, 13 June 2026
On paper, it is simple enough: the world’s biggest football tournament arrives in Canada, shared across three nations, promising accessibility, global unity, and civic pride. In practice, it increasingly resembles something rather different — a carefully tiered system of access in which the experience of “being there” depends less on passion for the game than on one’s willingness to absorb what can only be described as escalating financial astonishment.
Let us begin with the official structure, because it is here that the story starts to fracture.
When FIFA first opened ticket sales, it introduced a tiered pricing system that already placed the event far outside the reach of the casual supporter. Category 4 tickets — the supposed entry point — were priced at roughly $1,300 CAD. Category 3, 2, and 1 climbed steadily from there, with most mid-tier seats falling somewhere between $1,500 and $2,500 CAD, while premium Category 1 seats reached approximately $3,000 CAD.
Even at this stage, the language of “global accessibility” began to feel slightly strained.
But the structure did not stop there.
FIFA later introduced a new classification — almost as an afterthought, though with rather significant consequences — called “Front Category 1.” These were positioned as the best seats in the stadium: front-row, prime sightlines, the kind of vantage point one would assume had already been included in the highest tier. They were not. Instead, they were priced at at least double Category 1, meaning $6,000 CAD and upward for a single match.
At this point, one begins to suspect that “category” is no longer a description of seating, but of social permission.
Then comes the matter of allocation. Fans were not always buying specific seats, but rather zones within stadiums — broad regions in which their eventual position would be determined later. In theory, this is efficient. In practice, it produces a peculiar kind of post-purchase anxiety: paying premium prices only to discover that one’s “Category 1” experience might involve corners, obstructions, or placements far removed from the imagined prestige of the purchase.
And then, almost inevitably, came revision.
After initial sales, FIFA began releasing additional “last-minute” ticket batches across all 104 matches, including fixtures that had previously been described as nearing capacity. This included high-profile games and so-called “flagship” matches, undermining the earlier sense that availability was genuinely scarce.
This is where the language becomes interesting. “Last-minute release” sounds like responsiveness. “Additional inventory” sounds like logistics. But to many fans, it felt like something closer to retroactive supply adjustment — an attempt to reconcile pricing ambition with actual demand.
The reaction, predictably, was not enthusiasm.
Supporters who had already purchased tickets in earlier rounds expressed frustration at what they saw as shifting rules. Some had paid top-tier prices under the assumption of scarcity, only to see new waves of tickets appear later. Others pointed out that if seats were still being released at scale, earlier pricing may have been calibrated more toward projection than reality.
The criticism was sharpened further by FIFA’s adoption of dynamic pricing, a system in which costs fluctuate based on demand. In principle, this mirrors airlines or concerts. In practice, it introduces volatility into what many still consider a civic or cultural event. Prices rise, shift, and segment in ways that make the final cost of attendance less predictable than ever.
The resale market completes the picture.
Tickets that originally cost $1,300 CAD in Category 4 have appeared on secondary platforms for significantly more. Mid-tier tickets in the $1,600–$2,000 CAD range have become common starting points for resale listings. Category 1 seats, originally around $3,000 CAD, have reportedly been listed for as much as $62,000 CAD in extreme cases.
At this point, we are no longer discussing pricing. We are discussing altitude.
All of this sits beneath the administrative umbrella of FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, who has overseen an expanded tournament structure featuring 48 teams and three host nations. The intention, at least rhetorically, is inclusion: more nations, more matches, more access. Yet the lived experience of ticket acquisition suggests a different reality — one in which expansion has been accompanied not by democratization, but by segmentation.
And so we return to Toronto.
What does it mean to host a “global game” in a city where ordinary fans increasingly find themselves priced out at the point of entry? What does it mean to speak of civic pride when attendance is stratified into financial tiers that escalate from the expensive to the prohibitive?
There is, of course, a technical defense available. Markets respond to demand. Premium experiences cost premium money. Not every seat can be cheap. All of this is true in a narrow sense, and irrelevant in a larger one.
Because the underlying question is not whether tickets cost money. It is whether the structure of pricing still bears any meaningful relationship to the idea of a shared public event.
If football is becoming a hierarchy of access codes, dynamic pricing curves, and post hoc ticket releases, then what is being staged is no longer simply a tournament. It is a filtering mechanism. A system that determines not just who watches, but who is meant to.
And Toronto, for all its openness and self-image as a welcoming global city, becomes in this arrangement not a home for the world game, but a showroom for its segmentation.
One is left, finally, with a rather uncomfortable thought: that the most universal sport in the world is being reorganized into something rather less universal in practice — an experience still spoken of in the language of the public, but increasingly delivered in the logic of exclusivity.
Or, to put it less gently, the game remains global.
It is just no longer clear that the seats are.
Wednesday, 10 June 2026
I. The First Mistake Was Thinking Language Would Hold Everything Still
I didn’t arrive in Nagasaki and Sasebo expecting confusion. I arrived expecting eventual clarity, the kind you get when you assume that unfamiliar things are only temporarily unlabelled. Food is usually like that in daily life. You don’t always know a new dish immediately, but you assume it can be named, filed, and retrieved later. That assumption is so normal it feels invisible until it stops working.
What I encountered instead was a steady refusal of the world to stay inside the level of naming I was operating at. I could see the food, I could taste it, I could remember it, but I could not reliably anchor it in language in a way that allowed return. The words I was given were often too broad to be useful for repetition. “Fish.” “Vegetables.” “Seasonal dish.” These were not wrong answers. They were just insufficient ones for the task I was trying to perform, which was not understanding, but retrieval.
At the time, I didn’t recognize that distinction. I thought I was missing vocabulary. I thought the solution was simply to learn more names.
So I escalated the problem to something I assumed would be more precise: scientific naming.
That didn’t solve it either.
Because scientific classification didn’t behave the way I expected it to behave. It didn’t separate everything I felt was different. Carrots—Western, Japanese, heirloom, red, thin, dense—collapsed into Daucus carota subsp. sativus. Sweet potatoes, regardless of their texture or culinary identity, remained Ipomoea batatas. The system underneath language was not multiplying distinctions in the way my experience suggested it should.
That was the first rupture. Not confusion, but compression.
II. Cultivars, Categories, and the Collapse of Everyday Precision
The second stage of learning came when I realized I was looking for the wrong level of difference. I was searching at the species level when the meaningful variation was happening at the level of cultivation, selection, and cultural usage. That is where the concept of the cultivar became unavoidable, because it explained why something could feel completely different while still being biologically the same.
A carrot is not a single object in the way I had been treating it. It is a branching outcome of human selection over time. The kintoki carrot, for example, used in Japanese cuisine, especially in Kyoto traditions, is still part of the same species as the Western orange supermarket carrot, yet it behaves differently in texture, color, and culinary role. The difference is not biological separation; it is agricultural intention layered over time.
Once that idea settled, the memory of the meals in Kyushu began to reorganize itself. What I had experienced as “unknown vegetables” started to resolve into structured variation. Not mystery, but multiplicity. Not absence of knowledge, but presence of a system I had not been trained to read at that resolution.
And that’s when something else became visible: English does not consistently preserve cultivar-level detail unless there is cultural pressure to do so. Some terms survive—daikon, kabocha, shiitake—because they enter culinary circulation as distinct objects. Others collapse into general categories like “vegetables,” “greens,” or “root vegetables,” not because the distinction does not exist, but because it is not required for everyday communication.
What I had experienced as loss of information was actually a selective compression of information based on assumed need.
III. Sansai, Season, and the Second Layer of Disappearing Detail
The deeper I reconstructed the experience, the more I realized that a significant portion of what I had eaten was not even part of the cultivated agricultural layer I was initially focusing on. In rural Kyushu, especially in regions like Nagasaki and Sasebo, food systems include a strong presence of sansai, or mountain vegetables. These are not industrial crops in the conventional sense. They are seasonal, partially wild, and closely tied to local ecological cycles.
Plants like warabi (Pteridium aquilinum), fuki (Petasites japonicus), yomogi (Artemisia princeps), nanohana (Brassica rapa subsp. oleifera), and takenoko (bamboo shoots, typically Phyllostachys spp.) do not behave like standardized supermarket vegetables. They emerge according to season, geography, and environmental conditions, and they are often embedded in cultural practices that assume familiarity rather than explanation.
What made this difficult at the time was not the absence of these names in Japanese. It was the way translation often collapses them into broader categories when moving into English. “Seasonal vegetables” becomes a catch-all phrase that hides the internal structure entirely. That phrase is not incorrect, but it is structurally incomplete for anyone trying to reconstruct a specific eating experience later.
So I was not dealing with unknown food. I was dealing with known food that had been compressed for communication.
IV. The Real Problem Was Not Naming, but Retrieval
The turning point in understanding came much later, when I realized my original intention was not linguistic. I was not asking for names in the abstract. I was trying to solve a very practical problem: how do I get this again?
That shifts everything. Because naming is not just classification at that point. It becomes a retrieval system. A label is only useful if it survives time, context, and translation in a way that allows the same object or experience to be re-accessed.
So when I was told “fish,” I was not being given a useful retrieval key. Inside the kitchen, there was almost certainly a specific species—salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.), mackerel (Scomber japonicus), sea bream (Pagrus major), or something local and seasonal—but what reached me was a compressed category that functioned for immediate communication, not future reconstruction.
The same applied to vegetables. “Daikon” was already one of the few terms that survived that compression intact. But beyond that, I was often given labels that were not designed to function as precise re-ordering tools. They were designed to function as descriptions of availability, not catalogs of identity.
And that is where the frustration lived. Not in not knowing what I ate, but in not being able to return to it.
Appendix: The Border Problem Between Language, Biology, and Everyday Use
What I eventually had to understand is that this is not a failure of Japanese, or English, or scientific naming. It is a structural mismatch between three systems that operate at different levels of resolution.
Biology operates at a classification level that is stable but not aligned with lived culinary distinction. Species like Daucus carota or Ipomoea batatas do not reflect the sensory and cultural variation that food experience actually depends on. Biology is precise, but it is not oriented around human repetition of meals.
Cultural naming systems operate at a different level entirely. In Japan, terms like daikon, kintoki ninjin, shungiku, or warabi preserve distinctions that matter within that culinary tradition. English does the same in its own way, but not always at the same granularity, especially outside specialized or imported food contexts. Both systems compress and expand depending on need.
Then there is translation, which sits at the boundary between these systems. Translation does not aim for maximal precision. It aims for functional equivalence. That means it often collapses multiple distinct items into a single communicable category when the receiver is not expected to require fine-grained differentiation for action. “Fish” is sufficient if the goal is to serve fish. “Vegetables” is sufficient if the goal is to describe a side dish category.
The problem arises when a person is operating at a different intention than the system assumes. I was not trying to consume and move on. I was trying to build a path back. That requires stable, specific, cross-context identifiers. And those are not always provided at the point of service, even when they exist upstream in the kitchen or in biological classification.
So what I experienced was not missing knowledge. It was a gap between levels of description: biological, culinary, and communicative. The food existed at full resolution. The language I received did not always carry that resolution forward in a reusable form.
And that is why it took so long to reconstruct what I had already eaten. Not because it was unknown. But because it was never fully encoded in a way that survived the journey into memory as something I could reliably return to.ro
Saturday, 6 June 2026
POV: You Meet the Coolest Girl in Toronto 😍#TorontoGirl #THECANE #江戸門戸, is performing exceptionally well
The experiment was simple.
A short video titled "POV: You Meet the Coolest Girl in Toronto" entered the wilds of YouTube Shorts. At first glance, it appeared no different from countless others competing for attention. Yet almost immediately, something unusual happened.
The audience stopped.
While most videos on the channel typically settled somewhere between 60 and 230 views during this stage of their life, this one surged past 667 views. More importantly, viewers weren't merely passing through. They lingered.
The first clue lay in the "Stayed to Watch" metric. Nearly 28% of viewers chose to remain, roughly double what the channel normally experiences. The combination of the POV framing and the Toronto-specific hook acted like a magnet, creating immediate curiosity. Viewers wanted to know more.
Then came the second clue.
Audience retention opened at an astonishing 175%, revealing that many viewers were not only watching but replaying the opening moments. For the first ten seconds, retention remained above 100%, a powerful signal that the algorithm tends to reward. Something in those opening frames compelled people to look again.
But every mystery contains a turning point.
At approximately four seconds, the graph revealed a noticeable shift. Retention began to decline, falling from roughly 171% to 130% over the next two seconds. The timing coincided with the phrase "a virgin" in the audio track. Whether due to the sudden change in tone, narrative direction, or audience expectation, a portion of viewers chose that moment to leave.
Even so, the overall performance remained remarkable.
The Toronto angle appeared to strike a chord with the audience, producing substantially greater reach than the channel's previous ten uploads. The formula had exposed something valuable: local identity, when paired with curiosity, could dramatically expand attention.
Yet another puzzle emerged.
Views climbed rapidly, but engagement lagged behind. Four likes. No comments. No shares. The audience was watching, but not yet participating. In the language of digital platforms, attention had been earned, but conversation had not.
The next move seems clear.
If Toronto is the hook, there may be an opportunity to build a series around it. Different neighborhoods. Different personalities. Different encounters. Each becoming another chapter in the same ongoing story.
The retention dip also deserves investigation. A smoother transition, stronger visual reinforcement, or additional on-screen text around the four-second mark could help maintain momentum through the narrative shift.
Finally, the audience should be invited into the story. A simple question—"Which part of Toronto should I visit next?"—may be enough to transform passive viewers into active participants.
The verdict?
Among recent uploads, this video is not merely performing well. It is behaving differently. And when a piece of content behaves differently, it is often worth paying close attention to why.
2024 tweets
Calling all #AnimeNorth2024 attendees! Looking for that unique art piece to commemorate the convention? Check out the amazing #EdScholzGallery at the artist alley! #Scholz [アニマンορス (Anime North in Japanese)]
In the grand tradition of epic lore, photographer's artistry sings of Anime North's community, where contraptions, reminiscent of the infernal abyss, doth take on strange forms, woven into a heroic tapestry of the eternal struggle between Heaven and Hell. #EdScholzGallery #Scholx #Edmundo #AnimeNorth For #AnimeNorth2024 A #animenorth2017 history
As Paradise Lost recounts the cosmic struggle 'twixt Heaven's host and Hell's legions, so too doth #Kimbashi's lens capture Anime North's triumphs and peculiar wonders, such as contraptions of infernal design, amidst a kaleidoscope of good and evil. #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #AnimeNorth #AnimeNorth2024 #history of #animenorth2017
tweet 8
Tweet 1
Toronto’s streets transform into a celestial stage as #AnimeNorth's cosplayers bring characters to life with unparalleled creativity and flair. Their artistry is a testament to boundless imagination. Reflecting on the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 2
In the vibrant heart of #AnimeNorth, cosplayers shine like ethereal beings, their intricate costumes and performances turning Toronto into a paradise of fantasy and art. Echoes of the history of #AnimeNorth2017 linger. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 3
#AnimeNorth's cosplayers doth weave a tapestry of wonder and imagination, each costume a masterpiece, each performance a dance of creativity and passion. Toronto's streets are their canvas. Inspired by the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 4
With unmatched dedication and skill, #AnimeNorth’s cosplayers transform Toronto into a living gallery of heroes and legends. Their artistry captures the spirit of creativity and community, a tribute to the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 5
At #AnimeNorth, cosplayers breathe life into beloved characters, their vibrant costumes and performances making Toronto a beacon of fantasy and artistic expression. Remembering the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 6
In a grand celebration of creativity, #AnimeNorth's cosplayers grace Toronto’s streets, their elaborate costumes and passionate portrayals echoing with artistic brilliance. A legacy of the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 7
#AnimeNorth’s cosplayers, with their exquisite costumes and performances, turn Toronto into a dreamscape where imagination knows no bounds. A true celebration of artistic excellence inspired by the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 8
Toronto’s streets resonate with the vibrant energy of #AnimeNorth's cosplayers, whose dedication and artistry create a magical realm of fantasy and inspiration. Reflecting on the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 1
Toronto’s streets transform into a celestial stage as #AnimeNorth's cosplayers bring characters to life with unparalleled creativity and flair. Their artistry is a testament to boundless imagination. Reflecting on the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 2
In the vibrant heart of #AnimeNorth, cosplayers shine like ethereal beings, their intricate costumes and performances turning Toronto into a paradise of fantasy and art. Echoes of the history of #AnimeNorth2017 linger. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 3
#AnimeNorth's cosplayers doth weave a tapestry of wonder and imagination, each costume a masterpiece, each performance a dance of creativity and passion. Toronto's streets are their canvas. Inspired by the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Appendix on JOurnal
Tweet 4
With unmatched dedication and skill, #AnimeNorth’s cosplayers transform Toronto into a living gallery of heroes and legends. Their artistry captures the spirit of creativity and community, a tribute to the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 5
At #AnimeNorth, cosplayers breathe life into beloved characters, their vibrant costumes and performances making Toronto a beacon of fantasy and artistic expression. Remembering the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 6
In a grand celebration of creativity, #AnimeNorth's cosplayers grace Toronto’s streets, their elaborate costumes and passionate portrayals echoing with artistic brilliance. A legacy of the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 7
#AnimeNorth’s cosplayers, with their exquisite costumes and performances, turn Toronto into a dreamscape where imagination knows no bounds. A true celebration of artistic excellence inspired by the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Tweet 8
Toronto’s streets resonate with the vibrant energy of #AnimeNorth's cosplayers, whose dedication and artistry create a magical realm of fantasy and inspiration. Reflecting on the history of #AnimeNorth2017. #AnimeNorth2024 #Cosplay #StreetPhotography #Scholx #EdScholzGallery #GreatguyTV #Toronto
Sunday, 31 May 2026
Greatest Irony Capitalism Made Marxism Profitable
Greatest Irony Capitalism Made Marxism Profitable
by E Scholz
RESPONSE TO
The curious thing about Marxist literary criticism is that it may itself be one of the finest products capitalism ever produced.
The standard story runs in the opposite direction. Capitalism creates oppression; oppression creates Marxism; Marxism arrives as the intellectual cavalry to rescue the downtrodden. Yet the history of the university suggests something rather different. Marxist literary criticism did not emerge despite the incentives of the academic marketplace. It flourished because of them.
For centuries, literary study was an exclusive club. Few attended university. Fewer still entered literature. A tiny minority could reasonably expect to become writers, teachers, critics, or professors. The field was small, the competition limited, and the supply of commentary comfortably matched the demand for it.
Then prosperity arrived.
The capitalist machine, that tireless engine of abundance, expanded higher education beyond anything previous generations could have imagined. Universities multiplied. Degrees multiplied. Departments multiplied. Most importantly, aspiring intellectuals multiplied. Suddenly there were not dozens of minds examining literature but thousands, then tens of thousands, then armies of graduate students marching through libraries armed with highlighters and caffeine.
A problem emerged.
After two centuries of increasingly professional literary criticism, most of the obvious things had already been said. Shakespeare was brilliant. Milton was ambitious. Dickens was socially observant. Austen was subtle. One could rearrange the furniture, but the house itself remained stubbornly familiar.
How does a young academic distinguish himself in such a crowded field?
Novelty becomes necessity.
The incentive structure was clear. If everyone else was building additions onto the same old cathedral of literary interpretation, the easiest way to attract attention was not to add another brick. It was to announce that the cathedral itself was a prison.
Enter Marxism.
Here was an intellectual frontier of astonishing scope. Literature could now be read not merely as literature but as evidence. Every poem became an economic document. Every novel became a class struggle. Every hero concealed an oppressor. Every institution masked a hierarchy. The possibilities were endless because the framework was infinitely expandable.
More importantly, it offered something every ambitious profession rewards: differentiation.
In commerce, one develops a brand. In academia, one develops a theory. Marxist criticism supplied a ready-made intellectual trademark. It allowed scholars to present themselves not as custodians of an old tradition but as revolutionaries exposing hidden structures of power.
And there was an additional advantage.
Traditional literary criticism generally assumed a shared enterprise. Critics disagreed, certainly. They fought duels over interpretation, emphasis, and meaning. Yet they were usually attempting to illuminate the same work. Their disagreements resembled arguments among architects discussing how best to preserve a building.
The new critical movements often found greater rewards in demolition than preservation.
Why argue over the placement of a window when one can declare the entire structure fundamentally corrupt?
Suddenly, one's predecessors were not merely mistaken. They were complicit. The old canon was not merely incomplete. It was oppressive. Previous generations of scholars were not simply wrong. They were participants in systems of exclusion, domination, colonialism, patriarchy, or class privilege.
This had an obvious professional advantage. If your predecessors are respected authorities, you must compete with them. If your predecessors are morally compromised relics, you can replace them.
The academic marketplace had discovered a remarkable business model: criticism that simultaneously generated scholarship and eliminated competitors.
The irony, of course, is exquisite. A movement dedicated to exposing the hidden operations of power became exceptionally successful at navigating the power structures of modern institutions. A theory devoted to criticizing capitalism became one of the most effective career strategies within an intensely competitive intellectual marketplace.
Like many revolutionary movements, it eventually developed a taste for its own members. The habits of perpetual critique do not stop at departmental boundaries. Once every hierarchy is suspect, every authority illegitimate, and every orthodoxy a target, today's revolutionary becomes tomorrow's reactionary. The guillotine, having exhausted its enemies, begins searching for fresh necks.
Thus the spectacle continues.
A theory born from the critique of competition became increasingly competitive. A philosophy intended to dismantle status hierarchies generated new status hierarchies. And an intellectual movement that promised liberation from economic incentives became remarkably adept at exploiting them.
The final joke may be that Marxist literary criticism was never capitalism's gravedigger at all.
It was one of capitalism's most ingenious creations.
Wednesday, 27 May 2026
Explore the vibrant world of 江戸門戸, where traditional meets modern and creativity knows no bounds. Dive into a universe of captivating visuals, bold statements, and art that speaks to the soul. #江戸門戸 #Artist #CreativeVision"
#CitizenCanada #scholx #scholzandfriends
「伝統と現代が交わり、創造性が無限に広がる 江戸門戸 の鮮やかな世界へようこそ。心を揺さぶるビジュアル、大胆なメッセージ、そして魂に語りかけるアートの宇宙へ飛び込もう。
#江戸門戸 #アーティスト #クリエイティブビジョン
