April 22, 2026
For if you suffer your people to be ill-educated, and their manners to be corrupted from their infancy, and then punish them for those crimes to which their first education disposed them, what else is to be concluded from this, but that you first make thieves and then punish them?
More wrote these words in 1516, a lawyer and statesman watching England execute hundreds for theft while the enclosure movement stripped peasants of their land and livelihoods. He was not a monk or a mystic but a man of power who chose to look honestly at the machinery of his own world. The quote cuts to the heart of simplicity not as aesthetic minimalism but as moral clarity, the willingness to trace suffering back to its root rather than manage its symptoms with complexity and punishment. In a world that manufactures need and then sells solutions to it, More's question remains uncomfortably clean.
Reflection
Where in your life have you accepted a complicated arrangement, a habit, a system, a relationship, that quietly creates the very problem it claims to solve, and what single, honest simplification might dissolve it entirely?
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