About Adam Marc Writes

This is not a pundit’s blog. It’s a space for political and philosophical writing that keeps humanity at the center.

Here, we explore U.S. politics, moral philosophy, and the histories that shape our present. We look for the patterns — the constitutional choices, the cultural narratives, the moral compromises — that define who belongs, who is excluded, and how we might choose differently.

I write from a place of presence, not panic; of care, not cynicism. My aim is to rally, not lament — to connect today’s political moment to the deeper ethical questions it raises about justice, dignity, and belonging.

My earlier work centered on the “projection era” — exploring what it meant to write, think, and relate in the presence of generative systems. That work remains part of my toolkit, shaping the way I listen, question, and build meaning. But here, the conversation widens: from AI and language ethics to the urgent questions of American democracy, cultural identity, and moral repair.

You’ll find essays that:

  • Analyze current events through a historical and philosophical lens.

  • Confront the politics of exclusion and imagine a more inclusive belonging.

  • Invite readers into the work of reclaiming values worth defending.

If you’re looking for hot takes or partisan cheerleading, this might not be your scene. But if you want to think deeply about where we are, how we got here, and how we might live together differently — welcome.


About the Author

Adam Marc (he/him) is a leftist Jewish pastor’s kid living with brain cancer. He writes about politics, history, and moral philosophy, drawing on both personal experience and the long arc of American democracy. His earlier work explored ethics and language in dialogue with AI — a practice that continues to shape his voice.

Subscribe to follow the unfolding work — or just read along as we reckon with history, confront the present, and imagine a more just future, one idea at a time.

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Moral clarity in a post-truth age: politics, belonging, and the ideas worth defending.

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Left jewish pastors kid living with brain cancer. Ai, politics, philosophy.