Mouffe's critical reading of Segal's stewardship metaphor — the recognition that every dam the Beaver builds redirects the current in ways that benefit some and disadvantage others, and that presenting this redirection as ecology rather than politics is the hegemonic operation.
The Beaver's dam in You On AI creates habitat for trout, moose, and songbirds — an ecosystem that flourishes because the builder has studied the river carefully and intervened wisely. Mouffe's framework accepts the ecological precision and presses the political question ecology alone cannot answer: whose ecosystem? The dam that creates a pool for trout reduces the flow downstream. The wetland that supports moose displaces species that occupied the shallows before. The ecologist who presents her management as rational optimization performs a political operation: the selection of winners and losers, presented as the natural outcome of good science. Toward life — Segal's phrase for what dams should flow toward — contains the hidden political question: which life? Whose flourishing?
The Beaver's Hidden Politics
In The You On AI Field Guide
Segal's Trivandrum training provides the paradigmatic case. Twenty engineers were trained on Claude Code. The team was retained rather than reduced. Productivity gains were