martedì 31 marzo 2026

Berlin, 2030 — Dispatch from a Silent Capital - Roberto Minichini


Berlin, 2030 — Dispatch from a Silent Capital

By Daniel H. Krauss, International Correspondent

Berlin does not feel abandoned. It feels arranged. The train from Prague arrived on time, the platforms clean, the announcements precise, the passengers quiet in a way that suggests coordination rather than coincidence. Outside Hauptbahnhof, the city opened with an unsettling clarity: wide streets, controlled traffic, no visible disorder. No chaos, no noise, no friction. Everything moves, but nothing seems to happen. At first glance, the transformation of Germany under the Minichinian Party presents itself as efficiency elevated to a doctrine. Public buildings are restored, infrastructure immaculate, crime statistically negligible. The official figures are displayed everywhere, projected onto digital panels and etched into stone plaques alike. Order has become visible, measurable, almost aesthetic. Yet the deeper one moves into the city, the more that order reveals another layer. Large-format portraits of Roberto Minichini, tarot reader, poet and philosopher-turned-leader, appear on façades across Berlin. They are not crude or aggressive. They are composed, restrained, almost contemplative. In each image, Minichini looks slightly away from the viewer, as if engaged in thought beyond the immediate world. The effect is subtle, but pervasive: authority presented as reflection, power framed as intelligence. Above the central administrative district, flags line the rooftops. Three German tricolors—black, red, gold—without any emblem. Three Italian flags, green, white, red. No slogans accompany them. No explanations are offered. When asked, a local official simply states: “They represent continuity and direction.” The heart of the system lies not in spectacle, but in structure. The Minichinian Party, founded less than a decade ago, has reshaped governance through what it calls Interpretive Sovereignty. According to official doctrine, reality is not merely administered but interpreted, and political authority emerges from the capacity to read and order the hidden logic of events. It is a philosophy translated into statecraft, drawing, some say, from European metaphysical traditions, though references remain deliberately opaque. Parliament still exists. Elections are held. Opposition is not formally banned. But the mechanisms of participation have shifted. Candidates are pre-evaluated through a system described as “competence filtration,” and public discourse flows through tightly structured channels. Debate has not disappeared; it has been curated. Citizens I spoke with rarely express dissent in direct terms. Instead, they describe a sense of alignment. “A few years ago everything was fragmented,” said a middle-aged civil engineer who asked not to be named. “Now there is direction. You may not agree with everything, but you understand where things are going.” Understanding, here, seems to replace agreement. Security presence is visible but not intrusive. Guards in black ceremonial attire stand at key intersections, their posture rigid, their movements minimal. They do not engage unless approached. Their presence is less about intervention than about definition: they mark space, they frame it, they give it a boundary. Vehicles glide rather than drive. Black limousines move through the city with measured precision, never hurried, never delayed. They appear at predictable intervals, though no official schedule is published. The absence of spontaneity becomes its own atmosphere. Inside one of the main government buildings, a vast neoclassical hall recently renovated, Minichini’s presence becomes architectural. A central portrait dominates the chamber, surrounded by smaller iterations of the same image. The repetition is exact, calibrated, almost mathematical. Light falls in controlled gradients, emphasizing symmetry, reducing shadow. Above the central axis, an inscription in Latin reads: Imperium et Veritas. Power and truth. A senior cultural advisor, speaking on record, described the project in carefully chosen terms. “Germany has moved beyond the crisis of meaning that defined the early twenty-first century. We are no longer reacting. We are interpreting. That requires coherence, and coherence requires form.” Form, here, is not decorative. It is directive. Critics abroad have labeled the system authoritarian, pointing to the concentration of influence around Minichini and the party’s control over information flows. The government rejects such characterizations as outdated. “We do not suppress,” one spokesperson told me. “We integrate.” The distinction is difficult to verify from within. What is clear is that Berlin, in 2030, operates according to a different rhythm. The city does not argue with itself anymore. It does not hesitate. It advances, steadily, with a confidence that borders on inevitability. Walking through the empty expanse of a central square at dusk, with flags moving in a slow, synchronized wind and distant figures maintaining their positions with near-ritual precision, one begins to understand the deeper transformation. This is not a system built on fear alone, nor on persuasion alone. It is built on the redefinition of reality as something that can be organized, visibly, continuously, and without interruption. Whether that organization represents stability or enclosure may depend on where one is standing. From Berlin, the distinction is becoming harder to see.

 

(author: Roberto Minichini)

The Age of the Minichinian Party: Berlin, 2030 - Roberto Minichini


It is now widely accepted that the rise of the Minichinian Party had been anticipated long before it became visible, while the real point of contention concerns the origin of that anticipation and the peculiar nature of the documents in which it first appeared. The earliest references emerged in a series of fragmented texts attributed, with extreme caution and without any stable chain of transmission, to a late manuscript connected to Nostradamus, and precisely this absence of verifiable origin granted those fragments a strange authority among those accustomed to dealing with materials that circulate outside official recognition. The quatrains themselves differed markedly from the known corpus, presenting a language that appeared less obscure and at the same time more exact, almost as if the traditional density had been replaced by a disturbing clarity that did not invite interpretation but rather imposed recognition, and within them one could already discern the central motif that would later define the Minichinian phenomenon, namely the emergence of a form of authority grounded entirely in repetition.

“The face that multiplies without division, the name that stands where voices once were, in the northern city of ordered stone, silence shall crown what speech cannot sustain.”

At the time, such lines were dismissed as apocryphal, and the objections raised by scholars followed a predictable pattern, ranging from linguistic inconsistencies to supposed anachronisms, yet the most persistent suspicion concerned the very precision of the text, since it seemed incompatible with what was generally expected from Nostradamus, whose obscurity had always been treated as a structural feature rather than a stylistic accident. This skepticism maintained its position until the first visible transformations began to occur, and what is striking in retrospect is the manner in which those transformations unfolded, since they did not announce themselves through declarations, programs, or recognizable political rituals, but instead appeared as modifications of surfaces, as if the entire process had chosen to bypass discourse altogether and operate directly within the field of visibility. A building was restored, a square was cleared, a portrait was installed, then replicated, then aligned with others in such a precise and unwavering manner that the idea of contingency could no longer be sustained. The initial reaction consisted in attempts to interpret the phenomenon within familiar categories, and observers moved rapidly from one explanatory hypothesis to another, considering the possibility of an artistic intervention, a conceptual provocation, or a temporary installation designed to stimulate public debate, yet the very persistence of the images undermined each of these interpretations, since they neither evolved nor responded, but remained exactly as they had first appeared, gradually exhausting the interpretative impulse itself. It was in this moment of exhaustion that the name began to circulate, not as a formal declaration but as a repeated reference, emerging in minor publications, marginal analyses, and scattered notes that seemed to presuppose an already established understanding, and thus the Minichinian Party entered the field without foundation, without doctrine, and without any need to justify its own existence. This absence of articulation constituted its first decisive advantage, since earlier political forms had depended on the production of discourse, on manifestos, speeches, and ideological frameworks that required continuous maintenance, whereas the Minichinian configuration operated through presence alone, establishing itself by stabilizing the visual field and reducing variability to a minimum. The multiplication of identical portraits did not function as decoration but as structure, creating a condition in which comparison lost its relevance and alternatives ceased to appear as viable options, while space itself adjusted to this new logic, eliminating irregularities and reinforcing alignment. A second quatrain, which began to circulate during this phase, reinforced the emerging pattern:

“No law shall bind what is already aligned, no voice shall rise where form is complete, the many shall gather without appearing, and the order shall stand without being declared.”

By this point, the need for explanation had largely disappeared, since the phenomenon no longer presented itself as an event within the world but as a condition shaping the appearance of all events, and the absence of visible opposition, frequently interpreted through outdated models of repression, can be understood more accurately as the result of a transformation in the underlying conditions required for opposition to form, given that contrast depends on difference, difference requires space, and space itself had been reorganized in such a way as to minimize divergence before it could become perceptible. Within this framework, even elements that initially appeared secondary, such as the presence of guards or the positioning of vehicles, reveal their precise function, since the guards do not intervene but indicate, confirming the intentional nature of the arrangement and the continuity between the visible and the invisible order, while the vehicles remain as signs of potential movement that does not need to occur, expressing capacity in a purely formal manner. A third quatrain, less widely circulated yet frequently cited in specialized contexts, provides what many now consider the most complete formulation of the entire configuration:

“The throne without throne shall be seen in the square, the rule without rule shall be felt in the air, he who is named shall not need to command, for all shall be held within what does not stand.”

From a historical perspective, the rise of the Minichinian Party can be situated within a broader sequence of transformations, interpreted as a development of mass politics, an evolution of propaganda, or a refinement of technological control, and while such interpretations offer a degree of continuity, they fail to capture the defining characteristic of the phenomenon, which lies in its absence of visible effort, since no strain, urgency, or excess of force accompanies its operation, and the system advances by maintaining rather than by expanding, replacing earlier forms through a process that remains almost imperceptible. Berlin functions in this context as a demonstration rather than an exception, a space in which historical density has been preserved while its function has been reoriented toward the stabilization of a single visual regime, allowing architecture, memory, and cultural layers to operate as a frame rather than as independent sources of meaning. The experience of moving through the central districts confirms the coherence of this arrangement, as every element corresponds with every other, and the repetition achieves a level of exactness that produces a form of clarity rarely encountered in previous political structures, where contradiction and noise had played a central role. Over time, however, a more difficult question begins to emerge, not as an immediate reaction but as a persistent awareness that resists integration, and it concerns the nature of governance itself within a system that no longer requires justification, opposition, or speech, and that presents itself as the very condition under which visibility operates. In such a context, the problem no longer concerns the identity of those who govern, but rather the possibility that governance, as a recognizable activity, has already been replaced by something that no longer needs to declare itself in order to exist.

 

Signed: Roberto Minichini, the finest dystopian writer in Europe

lunedì 30 marzo 2026

John Addey e la rifondazione armonica dell’astrologia nel XX secolo - Roberto Minichini


Nel panorama dell’astrologia europea del secondo dopoguerra emerge una figura che ha tentato un’operazione rara e radicale, riportare l’intero edificio astrologico a un principio unico, coerente e formalizzabile, John Addey, nato nel 1920 e morto nel 1982, attivo nel contesto dell’astrologia britannica che tra anni Sessanta e Settanta conosce una fase di riorganizzazione culturale, segnata dalla fondazione e dallo sviluppo della Astrological Association, istituzione che diventa punto di riferimento per una generazione di studiosi orientati a un approccio tecnico, verificabile e meno dipendente da suggestioni esoteriche di tipo narrativo. In questo ambiente Addey elabora una delle teorie più rigorose dell’astrologia moderna, esposta in forma sistematica nel volume Harmonics in Astrology, pubblicato nel 1976, testo che rappresenta il tentativo più compiuto di costruire una base matematica dell’interpretazione astrologica, recuperando implicitamente una linea che risale alla tradizione pitagorica e platonica, dove numero, proporzione e ordine cosmico costituiscono un unico campo intelligibile. Il nucleo della sua proposta consiste nell’idea che tutti gli aspetti astrologici derivino dalla divisione del cerchio zodiacale in parti uguali, principio semplice nella formulazione, vasto nelle conseguenze, perché consente di ricondurre opposizione, trigono, quadratura, sestile, quintile e aspetti minori a una struttura unitaria basata sulle armoniche, cioè sulle divisioni intere del ciclo di 360 gradi, da cui discende la possibilità di costruire carte armoniche ottenute moltiplicando le longitudini planetarie per un numero intero e riportandole nel cerchio zodiacale, operazione che rende evidenti configurazioni che nel tema natale appaiono disperse o difficilmente leggibili. Questo passaggio tecnico ha implicazioni teoriche rilevanti, perché trasforma l’astrologia da sistema descrittivo fondato su simboli relativamente autonomi in un sistema strutturale fondato su relazioni, proporzioni e risonanze, introducendo una forma di coerenza interna che consente anche tentativi di verifica empirica, aspetto che Addey affronta attraverso analisi statistiche e confronti tra gruppi di soggetti, in linea con una tendenza presente nell’astrologia inglese del periodo, attenta al problema della validazione e della replicabilità dei risultati. Il suo lavoro si inserisce in una tradizione che comprende figure come Charles E. O. Carter e successivamente David Hamblin, contribuendo a spostare l’attenzione dall’interpretazione puramente qualitativa a una lettura più formale delle configurazioni celesti, nella quale le armoniche diventano strumenti di analisi fine, capaci di isolare livelli differenti dell’esperienza, dalla tensione polare delle divisioni binarie alla dinamica creativa delle divisioni quinarie, fino alle strutture più complesse legate a numeri primi elevati, che Addey associa a processi meno accessibili alla coscienza ordinaria. Allo stesso tempo, il suo approccio mostra un limite riconoscibile, legato alla tendenza a privilegiare la dimensione matematica a scapito dell’elaborazione metafisica esplicita, che nelle grandi tradizioni speculative costituisce il quadro entro cui numero e forma trovano significato, lasciando quindi aperta la possibilità di integrare il suo modello con una visione più ampia dell’essere e della conoscenza. A distanza di decenni, il contributo di Addey mantiene una posizione singolare, perché fornisce strumenti tecnici di grande precisione e introduce una concezione unitaria degli aspetti astrologici, offrendo a chi studia seriamente l’astrologia una via di accesso a livelli strutturali del tema natale che difficilmente emergono attraverso i metodi tradizionali, e collocandosi come uno dei pochi tentativi riusciti di trasformare l’astrologia in un linguaggio formalmente coerente, capace di dialogare con matematica, musica e teoria delle proporzioni senza perdere il riferimento alla pratica interpretativa.

 

Roberto Minichini, marzo 2026

John Addey and the harmonic refoundation of astrology in the twentieth century - Roberto Minichini


Within the landscape of post-war European astrology, one figure stands out for having attempted a rare and radical operation, to bring the entire astrological edifice back to a single, coherent and formalizable principle, John Addey, born in 1920 and deceased in 1982, active within British astrology, which between the 1960s and 1970s underwent a phase of cultural reorganization marked by the foundation and development of the Astrological Association, an institution that became a reference point for a generation of scholars oriented toward a technical, verifiable approach, less dependent on narrative esoteric suggestion. Within this environment, Addey developed one of the most rigorous theories in modern astrology, presented systematically in Harmonics in Astrology, published in 1976, a work that represents one of the most accomplished attempts to construct a mathematical foundation for astrological interpretation, implicitly reconnecting with a line that reaches back to the Pythagorean and Platonic tradition, where number, proportion, and cosmic order belong to a single intelligible domain. The core of his proposal lies in the idea that all astrological aspects derive from the division of the zodiacal circle into equal parts, a principle simple in formulation yet vast in its consequences, since it allows opposition, trine, square, sextile, quintile, and minor aspects to be understood as expressions of a unified structure based on harmonics, that is, integer divisions of the 360-degree cycle, from which follows the possibility of constructing harmonic charts obtained by multiplying planetary longitudes by an integer and reducing them within the zodiac, an operation that reveals configurations that in the natal chart appear scattered or difficult to discern. This technical step carries significant theoretical implications, transforming astrology from a descriptive system grounded in relatively autonomous symbols into a structural system grounded in relations, proportions, and resonances, introducing a form of internal coherence that also allows for attempts at empirical verification, a dimension that Addey addressed through statistical analysis and comparative studies of groups, in line with a broader tendency within British astrology of the period, attentive to the problem of validation and replicability of results. His work belongs to a tradition that includes figures such as Charles E. O. Carter and later David Hamblin, contributing to a shift from purely qualitative interpretation toward a more formal reading of celestial configurations, in which harmonics become instruments of fine analysis, capable of isolating different levels of experience, from the polar tension of binary divisions to the creative dynamics of quinary divisions, up to more complex structures linked to higher prime numbers, which Addey associates with processes less accessible to ordinary consciousness. At the same time, his approach presents a recognizable limitation, related to the tendency to privilege the mathematical dimension while leaving the metaphysical elaboration implicit, whereas in major speculative traditions number and form find their full meaning within a broader ontology, thus leaving open the possibility of integrating his model into a more comprehensive vision of being and knowledge. Decades later, Addey’s contribution retains a singular position, providing highly precise technical tools and introducing a unified conception of astrological aspects, offering serious students of astrology access to structural levels of the natal chart that rarely emerge through traditional methods, and standing as one of the few successful attempts to transform astrology into a formally coherent language capable of entering into dialogue with mathematics, music, and the theory of proportions without losing its connection to interpretative practice.

 

Roberto Minichini, March 2026

Roberto Minichini - german archaic philosopher

 


Martin Heidegger and Roberto Minichini