This monograph provides a comprehensive decoding of the modern “War State” through the dual lenses of Life-Value Onto-Axiology (LVOA) and Peace Research. By synthesizing the economic and moral philosophy of John McMurtry with the psychological and sociological frameworks of Johan Galtung, the authors identify a systemic “life-blindness” driving global conflict. The work unmasks the subconscious scripts of Chosenness, Manicheism, and Armageddon that legitimize the destruction of the “Life-Ground” — the essential social and ecological requirements for human survival. Ultimately, the manifesto proposes a shift from a “Money-Sequence” economy to a “Life-Coherent” system anchored in the Civil Commons and Planetary Solvency.
Tag: CMT syndrome
Global Projections of Deep-Rooted U.S. Pathologies (1996) | Johan Galtung | NotebookLM
This report presents a psycho-political analysis of United States foreign policy, positing that U.S. international behavior is driven by a “collective subconscious” rather than purely rational calculation. Drawing on the “Chosenness-Myths-Traumas” (CMT) and “Dichotomy-Manicheism-Armageddon” (DMA) syndromes, the text argues that deep-seated cultural archetypes compel the U.S. toward recurrent violence and a rejection of nonviolent alternatives. Through the examination of historical case studies — including the atomic bombings of Japan, the Cold War, and interventions in Latin America and the Middle East — the author illustrates how these pathologies manifest as a “repetition compulsion.” The report concludes with a prognosis of potential imperial decline if these syndromes remain unaddressed and offers a “therapy” focused on bringing national narratives to light, disarmament, and the strengthening of global civil society.
The Rupture: Diagnostic Lessons from the Global Frontline | NotebookLM
This Deep DIve podcast explores a 2026 global “rupture” where the established international order has fractured, leading to a clash between technocratic realism and nationalist populism. It contrasts Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s strategy of “variable geometry” and shifting alliances with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio’s “fire and brimstone” call for industrial restoration and civilizational defense. To diagnose these shifts, the text applies Johan Galtung’s CMT syndrome, which analyzes how myths and trauma drive aggressive foreign policy, and John McMurtry’s philosophy regarding the “cancer stage of capitalism.” McMurtry argues that current systems prioritize a “money sequence” of endless accumulation over a “life sequence” that sustains the biosphere and social commons. Ultimately, the overview questions whether these competing political leaders are solving global crises or merely serving as symptoms of a systemic pathology that ignores ecological reality. The discussion concludes by highlighting the tension between building national fortresses and protecting the civil commons essential for collective survival.










