The world is shifting from a post-WWII "bundled" phase of globalization to an "unbundled" phase of populism. This decoupling, driven by anger at elite exploitation, is a predictable historical cycle, much like the recurring bundling and unbundling of media services.
The actions of armed individuals at protests are not just about aggression but are a form of testosterone-fueled status-seeking. In a subculture where pushing back against authorities grants clout, testosterone compels that specific behavior to climb the social hierarchy.
The key to national health is ensuring the middle class experiences a tangible sense of upward economic mobility. This feeling of progression is a foundational pillar of human happiness and societal stability, far more critical than static wealth or one-time benefits.
The government paying over a billion dollars to dead people is not just fraud; it's a symptom of profound operational failure. The inability of the Social Security Administration and the Treasury to share a simple "death master file" points to a systemic breakdown in data management and accountability.
Treating political opposition as a criminal enterprise creates an existential battle akin to nuclear MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction). It forces each side to escalate when in power, fearing they'll be jailed if they lose, which guarantees the destruction of the political system itself.
The reality of power is morally ugly, necessitating strategic alliances with monstrous figures, like the US partnering with Stalin to defeat Hitler. This isn't an aberration but a core function of geopolitics: using a lesser evil to combat a greater, more immediate threat.
A country's identity is built on a "founding myth" that provides social cohesion, like the idealized story of Thanksgiving. This narrative is often a deliberate simplification to mask a brutal reality. The conflict between the useful myth and historical truth is where a nation's soul is contested.
Russia's public support for Trump's Greenland move is a strategic play to encourage him. Moscow's goal is to provoke Trump into fracturing NATO, the very alliance created to contain Russian aggression, by having its leader attack an allied territory.
Inequality itself isn't inherently destructive; it can be a useful incentive for progress. However, societies must avoid "intolerable inequality," a specific threshold where the gap becomes so vast that it predictably triggers societal collapse, a cycle that occurs every 150-250 years.
In a populist era, your reaction to negative news about your own "team" reveals your moral standing. If your first instinct is to discredit the person who discovered fraud rather than address the fraud itself, you have succumbed to tribalism over principle.
America's ability to deficit spend relies on the world's appetite for US debt, which allows it to export inflation. If countries dump this debt, the US can no longer "tax the world," triggering immediate domestic austerity and creating a global power vacuum likely to be filled by China.
Recent physics experiments suggest the universe isn't "locally real," behaving like a simulation that only renders what is being observed. A tree falling on Mars may not actually fall until it's measured, similar to how an unseen area in a video game doesn't render.
Internal notes revealed in Elon Musk's lawsuit suggest OpenAI's leadership intentionally deceived him. They allegedly took his money under the premise of an open-source non-profit while privately planning a closed, for-profit structure, creating a massive legal and reputational risk.
