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AnthroBlog
it takes a village...


Corporate Cringe
Navigate through any American town and you’ll feel it immediately — the uncanny sameness of it all. The long stretch of stroads — those bloated hybrids of streets and roads that serve neither people nor place — are lined with glowing signs that scream for attention but say nothing. This is corporate cringe — the visual and moral exhaustion of a civilization that has replaced meaning with marketing and place with parking.
Pete Ward
Dec 25, 20254 min read


The Return to the Polis
Anthropolis responds to social fragmentation, ecological decline, and corporate-shaped living by restoring local autonomy, shared responsibility, and ecological alignment. Organized around human-scale poleis, it integrates food, work, care, and governance into daily life. Connected by walkable, ecological corridors, these communities favor sufficiency, cooperation, and stewardship over extraction and sprawl.
Pete Ward
Nov 30, 20257 min read


The Agora-Acropolis
The Agora–Acropolis is the civic heart of the Anthropolis polis, uniting governance, culture, education, and long-term stewardship in a shared public space. It functions as both an open commons for daily participation and a stable anchor for memory and foresight, reconnecting decision-making to lived experience, shared meaning, and responsibility across generations.
Pete Ward
Nov 28, 20254 min read
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