Definitions by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal
Theory of Global Secret Elites
The belief that a single, coordinated, and immensely wealthy transnational cabal—often described in terms like the "Illuminati" or "globalists"—secretly directs world events from behind the scenes. This theory posits a unified group manipulating finance, media, and conflict to achieve a long-term goal like a "New World Order." It is a conspiracy theory that simplifies complex global dynamics into a story of a single, malignant puppet master.
*Example: Proponents of the Theory of Global Secret Elites might claim that the 2008 financial crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic, and a major war are all orchestrated by the same group of bankers and oligarchs to depopulate the planet and establish a totalitarian world government—a narrative that connects disparate, complex events into a single, sinister plot.*
Theory of Global Secret Elites by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
Theory of the Secret State
The concept that within the formal, constitutional structure of a government, a parallel, unaccountable, and permanent apparatus exists—often rooted in intelligence, military, and police agencies—that operates autonomously to protect what it defines as "state security," regardless of the elected government's policies. It is the deep state not as a conspiracy of individuals, but as an institutional zombie with its own mind, budget, and goals.
Example: According to the Theory of the Secret State, when an elected leader tries to radically alter foreign policy or reduce intelligence budgets, they are quietly stymied by leaks to the press, bureaucratic inertia, and even manufactured crises by career officials in agencies like the CIA or MI6, who believe they are the true guardians of the nation, above transient politicians.
Theory of the Secret State by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
Theory of Secret Power Struggles
The perspective that the publicly visible political drama—elections, speeches, scandals—is largely theater, masking the real, hidden conflicts for dominance occurring between clandestine factions within intelligence agencies, corporate boards, financial networks, and organized crime. In this view, the president or prime minister is often a frontman, while the true battles are fought in encrypted chats, safe houses, and boardrooms with no windows.
Example: The sudden, inexplicable resignation of a seemingly powerful minister might be explained by the Theory of Secret Power Struggles as the outcome of a hidden coup within the domestic intelligence service, which blackmailed him over a decades-old file, a fight completely invisible to the press and public.
Theory of Secret Power Struggles by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
Theory of Locality of Material Conditions
A more granular version of regionalism, focusing on how hyper-local variations in material conditions—a single valley's microclimate, a specific hill's defensibility, a unique local mineral spring—create radically different societal outcomes even within the same broader region. It emphasizes that history is made not on continents, but in parishes, neighborhoods, and watersheds.
Theory of Locality of Material Conditions Example: In medieval Europe, a village built on a rocky hill with a freshwater spring (local material conditions) could become an independent, fortified town. A village a few miles away on a fertile floodplain might become a wealthy but vulnerable estate of a feudal lord. Their divergent political fates were dictated by a few meters of elevation and access to water.
Theory of Locality of Material Conditions by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
Theory of Regionalism of Material Conditions
The analysis that the economic, technological, and physical resources available to a society—its "material conditions"—are not globally uniform, but are powerfully shaped by regional geography, climate, indigenous species, and historical path dependency. This theory argues you can't understand a region's politics, culture, or conflicts without first understanding what its land can grow, what its mountains hide, and what its rivers can carry. Fate is written in topsoil and ore deposits.
Example: The Theory of Regionalism of Material Conditions explains why the steppe regions of Eurasia, suited to horse pastoralism but not dense agriculture, repeatedly produced nomadic cavalry empires that clashed with the settled, grain-based imperial bureaucracies of China and Europe. The grass literally shaped global history.
Theory of Regionalism of Material Conditions by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
Academic Paradigm Theory
The analysis of the overarching intellectual frameworks that govern entire disciplines within academia, dictating what questions are worth asking, what methods are legitimate, and what counts as a meaningful answer. It looks at how fields like sociology, history, or economics are defined by competing paradigms (e.g., structuralism vs. post-structuralism, cliometrics vs. narrative history). These paradigms are often invisible to those inside them, acting as the unquestioned water in which academic fish swim.
Academic Paradigm Theory Example: In economics, the Keynesian paradigm (focusing on government intervention to manage demand) and the Neoclassical paradigm (focusing on market efficiency and rational actors) represent two different Academic Paradigm Theories. A professor trained in one may literally not see the evidence prized by the other, leading to economists talking past each other as if from different intellectual universes.
Academic Paradigm Theory by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026
Metatruth
A higher-order concept of truth that refers not to the factual correctness of a single statement, but to the accuracy and usefulness of the overall framework, narrative, or model within which individual facts are interpreted. A metatruth is about getting the story right, even if some details are fuzzy. It’s the difference between knowing isolated facts about the 1929 stock market crash and understanding the metatruth of systemic financial over-leverage and speculative mania as its cause.
Metatruth Example: In politics, a candidate might tell a dozen verified facts (truths) about crime statistics, but weave them into a metatruth narrative that "the nation is in a catastrophic moral decay," which may not be factually supportable. Opponents will battle over the isolated facts, but the election is often won or lost on which emotionally potent metatruth voters accept.
Metatruth by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 4, 2026