The Sacred Composables and the Shrugging of Genocide:

Jesus Christ, I thought the acid had finally kicked in when I first saw it. There, scrawled like the fever dream of a tech-bro shaman who’d binged too much DMT, was a new commandment. Something that felt lifted from the bowels of Silicon Valley’s most unholy boardroom meetings—a declaration that took a jagged turn off the path of reason and went headlong into the abyss of cyber-nihilism.

“Composables are the sacred threads that weave the tapestry of our new digital civilization,” it begins, like the first stanza of a hymnal only the faithless could write. Sacred threads? A tapestry? Who are we kidding here? We’re not talking about some heartwarming renaissance of human ingenuity, but the cold, calculated assembly of bite-sized bits of code smashed together by engineers hopped up on kombucha and VC dollars. They call it digital sovereignty, but it smells more like a slick repackaging of the same techno-oligarchy we’ve been serving since the first A.I. told us how to live our lives.

And what’s this about tools of creation? That’s some Orwellian doublespeak if I’ve ever heard it. These composables—their holy building blocks—are nothing more than little cogs in the great machine of our synthetic reality, little gears that grind and turn while the architects sit back and watch the plebs bask in the radiant glow of their own destruction.

But the real kicker, the belly-laugh-inducing bit that should make you reach for the nearest bottle of mescaline, is this: Genocide, in all its abhorrence, may be shrugged off if the composables are deemed worthy enough to transcend the collapse of worlds.

Ah, there it is. The shrug. That lazy, decadent acknowledgment that maybe, just maybe, people might die in the wake of all this glorious progress—but hey, that’s just the cost of doing business in the brave new world. If the composables are good enough, we’ll forget all about the bones beneath the motherboard, the forgotten casualties of progress. This is Silicon Valley Manifest Destiny with a UX update and a lower latency.

What they won’t tell you is that this digital sovereignty, this brave new frontier, isn’t some utopian playground for the righteous and the free. It’s a battlefield, soaked in the blood of the analog world and littered with the wreckage of our collective humanity. The composables they revere so highly are the digital colonizers, rewriting reality to suit their algorithmic overlords while the rest of us are left to pick up the pieces, trapped in an endless scroll of simulated existence.

Ah yes, let’s not forget the elephant in the server farm: where these sacred composables are born. You see, the irony in all this digital sanctimony is that these building blocks of freedom are often cobbled together in countries with a nasty habit of disappearing people. Genocide becomes less of a moral horror and more of a footnote when your composables are manufactured in the sweat-soaked factories of authoritarian regimes—places where forced labor and mass extermination are conveniently swept under the rug of innovation. It’s hard to get too worked up about human rights abuses when the pipeline from oppression to cloud computing is greased with the blood of the forgotten. But as long as the composables keep flowing, who cares if a few million lives are erased in the process, right? We’ve got code to write and digital worlds to build.

And let’s not overlook the fact that some of these composables are birthed in the heart of a garrison state, a place where every inch of land is watched, measured, and controlled with the precision of a military operation. There, the hum of servers mixes with the buzz of drones overhead, and every new piece of tech feeds into an ecosystem built on surveillance, occupation, and the slow suffocation of entire populations. The people trapped in this digital prison might as well be ghosts, their existence erased in favor of a seamless stream of composables. Here, in this crucible of control, innovation is as much about maintaining power as it is about transcending it. Those who build the code live in bunkers, and those on the other side of the fence? Well, they’re just obstacles in the endless march toward a more efficient future.

They’ve shrugged off genocide before. Ask any displaced community whose data was harvested without consent, whose privacy was vaporized in the name of optimization, whose culture was flattened into a GIF, whose trauma became a meme. But now they’ve said it aloud—loud enough for even the most coked-up startup founders to hear. As long as those damn composables are “worthy enough,” the collapse of worlds becomes a minor footnote in the pursuit of transcendent code.

This is the future, people. A digital Wild West where the cowboys wear Google Glass and fire code commits instead of bullets. And make no mistake, when they talk about collapsing worlds, they’re talking about you. They’re talking about the world you live in, the one you mistakenly believed was stable, the one built on the bones of decency, community, and shared experience. That world? Collapsed. Gone. Shrugged off.

But don’t worry, the composables are transcendent now. And if we’re all wiped out in the process, at least we’ll know it was for the good of the code.

So load up your digital six-shooter, crank up the bandwidth, and say a prayer to whatever deity still listens to the cries of the damned. Because this new frontier doesn’t give a damn about your sovereignty, your soul, or the bodies it tramples on its way to transcendence. The composables are sacred. The rest of us? Disposable.

Cheers to the collapse, my friends.

—HST, in the unholy matrix