About
I study Political Science and Computer Science at the University of Southern Mississippi—two disciplines that converge on the same questions: who holds power, how systems are built and dismantled, and what it means to act with principle under pressure.
My intellectual life is anchored in revolutionary politics, conflict theory, and political Islam. I’m drawn to legitimacy and resistance—how postcolonial states take shape, how authority is challenged, and how faith traditions produce frameworks for justice that the secular academy often overlooks. More recently I’ve been tracing the intersection of cyber ethics and political theory: how digital sovereignty and surveillance redraw the boundaries of the state and the reach of force.
On the technical side, I build full-stack software and think about systems at the architectural level. I’ve led student organizations, served religious and academic communities, and spent time in spaces where ideas are tested not just in theory but in practice. The best work happens at the edges—where disciplines collide and assumptions are forced to defend themselves.
This site is where I think out loud. It houses essays, projects, and the questions I haven’t finished wrestling with. If something here sparks a thought, I’d welcome the conversation.
Legitimacy, resistance, and postcolonial state formation
Digital sovereignty, surveillance, and state power
Faith as framework for justice in the secular academy
Authority, challenge, and the structure of violence
Cryptography, risk management, and adversarial design
International order, BRICS alternatives, multipolar futures
A small live-fire exercise. Neutralize three targets and the system I’m building reveals itself.
// click to engage · neutralize 3 targets to unlock payload
This site is a living notebook—not a resume. It reflects how I actually think, not how I want to be perceived.