‘Nothing’ Matters…

But to All Only

In an era of high-speed ideologies and “flat” political narratives, we have lost the true meaning of Common Sense. We treat it as a weapon to win arguments, but true common sense is not a sword—it is a floor.

This pamphlet is a guide to reclaiming the only standard that can stop the cycle of radicalization and division. It is built on a single, unyielding principle: “Nothing matters but to ‘All’ only.” If a belief, a law, or a “truth” requires an enemy to exist, it is not common sense; it is a private fantasy.

To survive the “ghost riders” of our time—be they world leaders or local extremists—we must learn to distinguish between the Inspiration that gives us life and the Universal Floor that keeps us all alive.

We are told that “common sense” is the ultimate argument. But if your common sense requires someone else to disappear, it isn’t sense—it’s a Fata Morgana (a mirage). When we say “It’s just common sense,” we are often just shouting our own private fantasies. True common sense isn’t a weapon to win an argument; it is the floor we all stand on. The Rule: If it doesn’t matter to the person you disagree with, it isn’t “Common

“A man without inspiration is a zombie. Let the man sing his song, celebrate his belief, and drive his F1 bolide of faith. But never let him call his song ‘Common Sense’ if it silences the song of another. Because in the end, nothing matters—no ideology, no border, no miracle—unless it matters to the ‘All.’ Anything less is just a ghost ride into the dark.”

The F1 Bolide and the Ghost Rider

  • The Analogy: An ideology (a Holy Book, a Political Party, a National Pride) is like a Formula 1 car. It is high-performance and incredibly powerful.
  • The Danger: In the hands of the “Ghost Rider”—the person with the “Label” but no “Social Reference”—this car becomes a weapon.
  • The Price: In 1992, people wanted to take the seatbelts off the cars to save money. Today, radicalized “Ghost Riders” want to take the “Seatbelts” (Morality and Law) off their ideas to save their “Nation” or “Faith.”
  • The Result: Without seatbelts, everyone on the track dies.

The Nuclear Plant of the Soul

  • The Energy: Education and Intelligence are like nuclear power. They can light up the world.
  • The Waste: But the same system creates “Waste”—the isolated, the disturbed, and the forgotten.
  • The Warning: If the “Winners” take it all and ignore the “Waste,” the waste becomes radioactive. It turns into the logic of the terrorist or the lone wolf.
  • The Goal: A school (or a society) isn’t successful if it produces one genius but leaves a trail of “Ghost Riders” behind. We must manage the waste with Empathy and Social Skills.

The Takeaway

Don’t use “Common Sense” as an argument. Use it as a test.

Before you speak or act, ask:

  1. Is this a “Song” or a “Floor”? (Is this my private inspiration, or a universal truth?)
  2. Am I a “Verstappen” or a “Ghost Rider”? (Do I understand the killing effects of my ideas?)
  3. Does this matter to the “All”? (If my logic requires a victim, my logic is a failure.)

“Be a Singer, not a Zombie. Celebrate your inspiration, but never use it to destroy the floor.”

1. The Test of Universality

If a principle is truly “Common Sense,” it must function like gravity. Gravity doesn’t care about your political party, your religion, or your level of education. It applies to the “All.”

  • The Reality: Any “Common Sense” that requires an Enemy to exist is actually just a War Plan.
  • The Rule: If your logic only works by excluding someone, it has failed the “All” test. It is no longer sense; it is a Niche Fantasy.

2. The Floor vs. The Weapon

Common sense is the Floor. It is the shared agreement that we all need food, safety, and the right to exist.

  • The Archetype Error: Leaders like Trump or Poilievre use “Common Sense” as a Weapon (a sword to divide) rather than a Floor (a foundation to build).
  • The Result: When you use the floor as a weapon, you eventually have nothing left to stand on. You tear the humans apart, and the “world goes flat”—it loses its depth, its humanity, and its stability.

3. Rejecting the “Flat” Narrative

To fit the world into one narrative is to ignore the “Reference Gap” of 1992 Beijing. It is assumed that your “Bicycle” or your “F1 Bolide” is the only vehicle on the road.

  • The Vision: The world is round, complex, and full of “waste” and “energy.”
  • The Title’s Promise: By saying “Nothing matters but to ‘All’ only,” you are forcing the leader, the cleric, and the youth to look past their own reflection. You are saying that the only thing with real weight is that which survives the scrutiny of the entire human collective.

The Collision Check: 5 Seconds to Save the Floor

Before you post, before you shout, before you drive your Bolide:

  1. Look for the Seatbelt: Does my idea include protection for the person who hates it? (If no, you are a Ghost Rider).
  2. Check the Rearview: Who is being turned into “Waste” by my logic? (If someone is being discarded, your Nuclear Plant is leaking.)
  3. Feel the Floor: Is this a “Song” I’m singing for my group, or a “Floor” I’m building for the world?

The Closing Pay-Off

“The world is round, but a flat mind will eventually fall off the edge. Don’t be a casualty of a Fata Morgana. Drive with skill, sing with passion, but stand on the Floor that belongs to the All.”


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