Tuesday, 20 January 2026
MICHELIN KEYS
Monday, 19 January 2026
GOLD IS JUST THE START OF THE COMMODITY REPRICING SEQUENCE
1. Has Gold Peaked Or Is A Real Asset Repricing Underway?
• Has gold peaked at around $4,500, or is this only the opening phase of something larger.
• A broader real asset repricing sequence may now be underway.
• This can be observed as capital rotates along the monetary to industrial metals line.
Gold does not move in isolation. It usually moves first. What matters is what follows.
Anyone looking for short-term confirmation through price action can use technical analysis. One comprehensive and accessible source is the FinancialWisdom YouTube channel. Of course, price action is just a confirmation tool, not the underlying driver.
Or an easier way of managing a portfolio in QC Quadrant C is through ETFs.
2. The Real Asset Repricing Sequence: From Monetary To Physical
• The Real Asset Repricing Sequence, also known as the Commodity Capital Rotation, describes a recurring pattern.
• Capital exits financial assets and migrates into physical assets as confidence in fiat money weakens.
The sequence is broadly consistent across cycles. It begins with gold as the primary monetary hedge. It then broadens into silver, a hybrid monetary and industrial asset. Finally, it rotates into industrial metals and energy.
The logic is structural, not speculative. Inflation initially expresses itself through monetary debasement. Later, it expresses itself through real world scarcity and supply constraint. This is when physical assets stop being a hedge and start being an input.
3. Gold, Silver, And The Monetary To Industrial Bridge
• Gold moves first because it prices monetary risk.
• It responds to declining confidence in fiat currency, not economic growth.
• Silver follows later.
• It carries both monetary and industrial characteristics.
As liquidity expands and speculative participation increases, silver catches up. This transition can often be seen through the gold silver ratio.
That ratio has fallen sharply, from roughly 90 to around 20. This signals a shift from pure monetary hedging toward broader commodity participation. In effect, silver acts as the bridge between money and production.
4. When Inflation Shifts From Policy To Scarcity
• At a certain point, inflation stops being financial.
• It becomes physical.
• Early inflation is about money supply, liquidity, and repression. Late inflation is about shortages, underinvestment, and rising input costs.
Industrial metals and energy reprice last. This is capital repricing what cannot be printed.
Supply in these sectors is slow, capital intensive, and politically constrained. Years of underinvestment matter more than central bank rhetoric.
This is the phase where real assets assert themselves over promises to pay.
5. Capital Rotation In The Real Economy: Metals, Energy, And Consolidation
• Capital rotation eventually shows up beyond charts.
• It appears in mergers, acquisitions, and consolidation.
The Rio–Glencore merger discussion is a case in point. Large producers move to secure scale, reserves, and future supply. This is not financial engineering, it is strategic positioning for scarcity.
This stage tends to coincide with late cycle inflation and resource stress. Jeremy Grantham of GMO has written extensively on resource scarcity and late cycle inflation. These moves typically occur before shortages become politically visible.
6. How To Track The Rotation: Ratios, Regimes, And Signals
• The rotation should be tracked across multiple dimensions.
• Price ratios, such as gold to silver, then silver to industrial metals.
Capital flows, not just spot prices. Corporate behaviour, including mergers and capex decisions.
This process unfolds within a broader regime of persistent economic and policy environment affecting all asset classes, described by many writers including Ray Dalio who uses growth and inflation to distinguish between regimes, creating four quadrants A. B. C. D. We are late-stage C.
His framework helps locate where we are in the cycle but it doesn't explain the physical repricing itself.
Commodity rotations are nested inside longer monetary and debt cycles that tend to intensify as reserve currency credibility weakens.
Glossary Of Core Terms
• Monetary debasement – erosion of purchasing power through sustained monetary expansion.
• Real assets – physical assets tied to scarcity and production, not claims on future cash flows.
• Capital rotation – systematic reallocation of capital across asset classes as regimes change.
• Regime – a prevailing economic and policy environment that persists across markets.
• Counterparty risk – the risk that an issuer fails to honour its obligation.
• Fiat currency – government issued money not backed by a physical commodity.
• Final settlement – payment that extinguishes obligation with no future claim.
• Liquidity – the ease with which an asset can be exchanged at scale without price disruption.
• Precious metals – monetary metals used primarily as stores of value, such as gold and silver.
• Industrial metals – metals valued mainly for economic utility, such as copper and aluminium.
• Monetary expansion – growth of money and credit beyond real economic output.
References And Further Reading
• Jeremy Grantham, GMO – Resource scarcity and late cycle inflation
https://www.gmo.com
• Ray Dalio – Long term debt cycles and regime analysis
• Brent Johnson – Dollar Milkshake Theory
• FinancialWisdom YouTube channel – price action and technical context
Saturday, 17 January 2026
PORTFOLIO CONSTRUCTION FOR QUADRANT C
Friday, 16 January 2026
INVEST IN PHYSICAL OR FINANCIAL (revised)
Thursday, 15 January 2026
GOLD IS MONEY, ALL THE REST IS CREDIT
Tuesday, 13 January 2026
HOW TO SERVE PASTIS
Monday, 12 January 2026
ELITE CAPTURE, FINANCIALISATION AND MASS IMMIGRATION
Table Of Contents
1. The Nation As An Extended Family
- A nation begins as an enlarged family bound by shared culture, values, history, sense of identity and mission, and mutual trust between members. This is not far from the idea of "tribe".
- Leadership originally grows out of this common social fabric, with rulers expected to reflect the moral standards and cultural identity of the people they govern, and the people to follow voluntarily; rather than have an elite that stands out and apart from its own people. Some people misunderstand this idea of organic leadership as "authoritarian" rule.
- This is all covered under the heading of "social contract". There are numerous posts on this website of the political philosophy behind this concept (#Philo).
- When this bond weakens, especially as rapid mass immigration dilutes a shared culture faster than it can be absorbed or assimilated, the sense of national continuity and belonging erodes.
- So what holds such a society together once that common culture is lost? Some people mistakenly think that "liberal democracy" will fix this.
2. Cultural Breakdown And The Western Case
- Western societies illustrate what, as a result of intense globalisation, happens when this organic bottom-up model breaks down and is replaced by what you might call top-down spectacle and excess.
- Political leadership increasingly reflects consumerism, financialisation, and cultural fragmentation, rather than shared civic norms; while large-scale immigration accelerates cultural incoherence instead of reinforcing a stable national identity and in-step advancement.
- So is it surprising that politics becomes theatrical and polarised rather than grounded and unifying?
3. From Community Leadership To Oligarchy
- When a nation no longer draws its leaders from a culturally cohesive people, power tends to drift away from a native people of origin, towards those sections that possess wealth and influence instead.
- Economic elites fill the vacuum left by weakened communal bonds, using money and media-reach to select leaders who resemble themselves, not the population at large.
- But if leadership now answers to capital rather than culture, whose interests are really being served?
4. Nation Recast As A Corporation
- The end result is a nation treated less like a shared home and more like let's call it a "managed enterprise".
- Citizens become customers, cultural inheritance and dissenting viewpoints get cancelled leaving only yes-men, and mass immigration is framed purely in economic terms as pro-growth reducing labour input costs, even while the original social contract holding everyone together gets dissolved.
- So how long can a country survive when identity, loyalty, and continuity are all reduced to economic short-term transactions?
Triffin’s dilemma. A global reserve currency must supply the world with liquidity, but doing so undermines its own long-term value and stability.
Sunday, 11 January 2026
CONTEMPORARY THINKING IN WESTERN PHILOSOPHY ON THE SOCIAL CONTRACT
Modern Western philosophy on the social contract, following previous pieces on the classical thinkers Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, and Hume. This one brings in contemporary thinkers and debates and shows how they build on, modify, and challenge the classic tradition.
THE SOCIAL CONTRACT TODAY
CONTEMPORARY THINKING IN WESTERN PHILOSOPHY
12 January 2026
1. From Classic Thought To Contemporary Theory
Social contract theory, from Hobbes through Locke and Rousseau and Hume, once formed the backbone of Western political philosophy by explaining political authority through consent, rights, or collective will. But in the 20th and 21st century, philosophers have both revived and reshaped the idea. Rather than simply re-running old debates, modern social contract theorists investigate the conditions of justice, legitimacy, and cooperation in a pluralistic world.
2. Rawls: Justice As Fairness Beyond Ancient States Of Nature
One of the most influential modern figures is John Rawls. Instead of the historical “state of nature" question, Rawls asks: What principles would free and equal people choose when they do not know how their place in society will be assigned? These two device starting points - the original position and the veil of ignorance - produce a modern contract model aimed at justice as fairness. Behind that veil, no one knows their class, status, or natural talents, so principles chosen are impartial and will protect the least advantaged. Rawls transforms social contract theory into a framework for structuring basic institutions, not merely justifying authority.
For example, he asks how rational people would design their healthcare system if they did not know their own position in society.
3. Contractualism In Moral Philosophy: Gauthier And Others
Beyond political institutions, philosophers like David Gauthier have applied contractualism to ethics itself. Rather than grounding morality in sovereign power (Hobbes) or natural rights (Locke), Gauthier argues that moral constraints arise from the prudent agreements individuals would adopt when cooperating with others who are similarly disposed toward mutual cooperation. This is a strategic contractualism — morality emerges from rational self-interest made stable by mutual benefit.
For example, imagine a group of independent traders who repeatedly do business with one another. There is no sovereign enforcing behaviour, no shared moral code imposed from outside, no appeal to “rights” or higher principles. Each trader is purely self-interested and likely to cheat as n isolation, dishonesty pays.
So each trader asks: “What rules would it be rational for all of us to adopt if we want cooperation to continue?”
And they are likely to converge on norms like honour contracts, disclose relevant information, avoid exploitative behaviour.
This isn't Hobbes (no sovereign enforcing rules), not Locke (no appeal to inherent moral rights (not Rousseau (no collective moral will).
Instead, morality = rational constraints we accept to secure cooperation. And these constraints are self-imposed, conditional, and strategic (strategic meaning serve the goal above of continuing cooperation).
4. Feminist And Critical Perspectives: Contracts And Exclusions
Modern critics of classical social contract theory argue it omits or obscures real power relations in society. For example, Charles W. Mills’ The Racial Contract contends that traditional social contract thinkers implicitly assumed a society of white equals while excluding and subordinating people of colour. This reveals how social contract models may not only explain political legitimacy but also conceal structural injustices.
For example, feminist and critical contract theorists argue that the traditional social contract ignored care work such as childcare and elder care, which is essential to society but historically unpaid and borne mainly by women.
Their practical solution is not moral appeal but institutional redesign: treat care as part of the social contract itself through paid parental leave, pension credits for caregivers, and public childcare and eldercare systems; write this into rules and the law and create institutions to check this path of the contract.
The idea is simple enought - any rational person, not knowing their future position, would agree to social rules that recognise dependency and vulnerability as normal conditions of life, not private misfortunes.
5. Empirical And Evolutionary Challenges
Contemporary scholarship also questions the empirical grounding of classic social contract accounts. Researchers in evolutionary social sciences argue that Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau and Hume underestimated the complexity of human societies... the parts that exist beyond formal institutions, suggesting that informal norms and social structures often govern behaviour more effectively than abstract contracts. This has led to more nuanced views of human cooperation that combine contract ideas with social biology and culture.
As an example, consider how local cooperation rules are designed and enforced in communities, rules that combine formal contracts with evolved social norms in community-based resource management (for example fisheries, irrigation systems, or shared grazing land).
Instead of relying only on top-down laws or an abstract social contract, the system works like this: basic rules may be legally recognised by the state (who can use the resource, set limits and penalties), but day-to-day cooperation is driven by social biology and culture - things like reputation, reciprocity, peer monitoring, and shame or approval within the group.
People comply not just because of formal sanctions, but because humans are evolutionarily disposed to cooperate when behaviour is visible, repeated, and socially rewarded.
This approach reflects empirical findings (notably from Elinor Ostrom) that humans cooperate best when contracts provide a framework, while local norms and evolved social instincts do the real enforcement. In short: law sets the boundaries, while biology and culture sustain cooperation inside them.
6. Globalisation, Economics, And The Contract Renewed
The social contract in today's world faces new pressures from globalisation and economic transformation. Contemporary philosophers discuss how traditional contract models must adapt to interconnected economies, supranational entities, and new forms of cooperation and inequality. Some argue that social contracts now span economic rights, labour relations, and global justice, requiring renegotiation of obligations and entitlements beyond the Westphalian state.
A clear practical example is labour standards enforced through global supply chains, rather than through any single nation-state.
Implementation
Take multinational manufacturing. Instead of relying solely on national labour laws (which vary and are often weak), global social-contract thinking embeds obligations directly into trade agreements, corporate law, and supply-chain contracts. Firms are legally required to ensure minimum wages, safety standards, and union rights not just at home, but across their overseas suppliers. These obligations are written into contracts between firms, financiers, and states.
Enforcement
Enforcement is hybrid. States impose due-diligence laws and penalties. Courts allow lawsuits across borders. Investors and insurers condition capital on compliance. Consumers and NGOs provide reputational pressure. No single sovereign enforces the contract; instead, overlapping legal, economic, and cultural mechanisms do.
This reflects a new social contract. Workers in another country gain enforceable economic rights not because they are citizens of the same state, but because they are participants in a shared global economic system. Obligations and entitlements now track interdependence, not borders.
In short: the social contract is no longer just between citizen and state, but between states, firms, workers, and markets, enforced through law, contracts, capital flows, and reputation rather than a single sovereign authority.
7. The State, Legitimacy, And Democratic Participation
Modern theorists also focus on how legitimacy is sustained through democratic processes rather than mere historical agreement. Rawlsian contractualism places cooperative principles at the heart of legitimacy, while others argue that citizen participation, deliberation, and public reasoning are essential to a living contract. Contract theory becomes less about a hypothetical origin and more about ongoing political engagement and institutional justice.
A clear practical example is participatory budgeting and institutional oversight embedded in law.
Setup
Instead of grounding legitimacy in a one-off act of consent (elections alone), the system is designed so citizens continuously shape how power is exercised. Laws require local or national governments to allocate part of public spending through participatory processes, citizens’ assemblies, or deliberative forums. These bodies are not advisory only; their decisions are legally binding within defined limits.
Implementation
Citizens are randomly selected or openly invited to deliberate on budgets, policy priorities, or regulatory trade-offs, supported by expert input and transparent data. Institutions are structured so participation is routine, not exceptional. Justice is built into procedures rather than asserted by authority.
Enforcement
Compliance is enforced through administrative law, courts, and auditing bodies. If authorities ignore outcomes or undermine participation, decisions can be challenged legally, funding withheld, or officials sanctioned. Legitimacy is maintained not by origin stories (A clear practical example is participatory budgeting and institutional oversight embedded in law.
Setup
Instead of grounding legitimacy in a one-off act of consent (elections alone), the system is designed so citizens continuously shape how power is exercised. Laws require local or national governments to allocate part of public spending through participatory processes, citizens’ assemblies, or deliberative forums. These bodies are not advisory only; their decisions are legally binding within defined limits.
Implementation
Citizens are randomly selected or openly invited to deliberate on budgets, policy priorities, or regulatory trade-offs, supported by expert input and transparent data. Institutions are structured so participation is routine, not exceptional. Justice is built into procedures rather than asserted by authority.
Enforcement
Compliance is enforced through administrative law, courts, and auditing bodies. If authorities ignore outcomes or undermine participation, decisions can be challenged legally, funding withheld, or officials sanctioned. Legitimacy is maintained not by origin stories,A clear practical example is participatory budgeting and institutional oversight embedded in law.
Setup
Instead of grounding legitimacy in a one-off act of consent (elections alone), the system is designed so citizens continuously shape how power is exercised. Laws require local or national governments to allocate part of public spending through participatory processes, citizens’ assemblies, or deliberative forums. These bodies are not advisory only; their decisions are legally binding within defined limits.
Implementation
Citizens are randomly selected or openly invited to deliberate on budgets, policy priorities, or regulatory trade-offs, supported by expert input and transparent data. Institutions are structured so participation is routine, not exceptional. Justice is built into procedures rather than asserted by authority.
Enforcement
Compliance is enforced through administrative law, courts, and auditing bodies. If authorities ignore outcomes or undermine participation, decisions can be challenged legally, funding withheld, or officials sanctioned. Legitimacy is maintained not by origin stories but by ongoing fairness of process... ie, the “contract” is no longer a hypothetical agreement in the past. It is a living institutional arrangement where legitimacy depends on continuous participation, transparency, and just procedures. Citizens are not just subjects who once consented, but active co-authors of the system as it operates.
8. Social Contract And Contemporary Justice Movements
Contract theory today also intersects with movements for justice, including feminist critiques, racial justice, economic rights, and environmental ethics. These perspectives insist that a just political order must address systemic inequalities and recognise historically marginalised voices, challenging any contract model that simply assumes idealised conditions of equality and consent.
9. What Has Changed — And What Hasn’t
Modern thinkers keep the core intuition of original contract theorists — that legitimate authority must be grounded in mutual justification — while radically reinterpreting what that means in a complex world. The state of nature becomes a thought experiment, the veil of ignorance is a tool for justice, and cooperation extends beyond national borders and into economic structures.
10. The Social Contract Today: A Living Debate
The social contract is no longer a single answer to political authority. It is a framework for discussing justice, legitimacy, cooperation, and inclusion in societies that are far more complex than Hobbes’, Locke’s, or Rousseau’s. Contemporary philosophy has shifted from imagining how societies began to how they ought to function now — how justice is constructed, defended, and lived.
In this sense, the social contract remains vital:
not as a historical mechanism, but as a principle of normative evaluation in debates about democracy, rights, and justice in the modern world.
DAVID HUME AND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT
DAVID HUME AND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT
CONVENTION, CUSTOM, AND THE LIMITS OF CONSENT
12 January 2026
1. The Problem Hume Was Trying To Solve
David Hume was sceptical of grand political theories.
Unlike Hobbes, Locke, or Rousseau, Hume was not trying to design the perfect foundation for political authority. He was trying to explain how societies actually function, without myth-making.
His question was blunt.
Do social contracts really exist, or are they comforting fictions?
2. Human Nature According To Hume
Hume’s view of human nature is pragmatic and unsentimental.
Humans are:
• Habit-driven
• Emotionally motivated
• Social by necessity
• Limited in reason
Reason, for Hume, is not the master of human behaviour.
It is the servant of the passions.
People do not organise societies through abstract rational agreement. They adapt, imitate, and follow precedent.
3. The State Of Nature: A Fiction, Not A Fact
Hume rejects the idea of a historical “state of nature”.
No society, he argues, was ever founded by individuals gathering to agree a contract. That story belongs to philosophy, not history.
Societies emerge gradually through:
• Family ties
• Custom
• Mutual advantage
• Shared expectations
Order grows organically, not contractually.
4. Government Without Consent
Hume is deeply sceptical of Locke’s idea of consent.
Most people:
• Are born into governments
• Never explicitly consent
• Have no realistic option to leave
Calling this consent stretches the term beyond recognition.
Obedience, in reality, is based on habit, necessity, and convenience.
5. Convention And Mutual Advantage
For Hume, social order rests on convention.
Rules concerning:
• Property
• Promise-keeping
• Justice
emerge because they are useful.
People follow them not because they are sacred, but because life is worse without them.
Justice is artificial, but indispensable.
6. Legitimacy Through Utility
Hume replaces moral legitimacy with practical legitimacy.
A government is justified if it:
• Maintains order
• Protects property
• Promotes stability
Authority persists because it works.
When it stops working, loyalty fades.
7. Authority And Opinion
Hume makes a crucial observation.
All government rests on opinion.
Force alone is never sufficient. Rulers depend on public acceptance, custom, and belief.
Power survives not through contracts, but through shared assumptions about legitimacy.
8. Change, Reform, And Caution
Hume is wary of radical political change.
Abstract reforms often destroy functioning institutions before better ones exist.
He favours:
• Gradual reform
• Respect for custom
• Skepticism toward political purity
Stability is fragile and easily lost.
9. Hume Compared To Hobbes, Locke, And Rousseau
Hobbes grounds authority in fear.
Locke grounds it in consent.
Rousseau grounds it in collective will.
Hume grounds it in habit and utility.
Where others construct systems, Hume observes behaviour.
He is less dramatic, and more realistic.
10. Hume In The Modern World
Hume’s influence is quiet but pervasive.
His ideas explain:
• Why states persist without consent
• Why revolutions are rare
• Why legitimacy survives hypocrisy
Modern politics speaks the language of contracts and rights, but operates on custom, inertia, and managed opinion.
Hume removes the romance.
There may be no social contract, only a shared understanding that life is better with order than without it.
For Hume, that is enough.
JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU AND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT
JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU AND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT
FREEDOM, EQUALITY, AND THE GENERAL WILL
12 January 2026
1. The Problem Rousseau Was Trying To Solve
Rousseau was not primarily worried about chaos, nor merely about tyranny.
He was worried about corruption.
Not corruption in the narrow legal sense, but moral and social corruption.
How societies deform human beings.
His question was stark:
How can people live together without losing their freedom?
2. Human Nature According To Rousseau
Rousseau’s view of human nature is radically different from Hobbes and Locke.
In the state of nature, humans are:
• Peaceful
• Independent
• Compassionate
• Largely equal
They are not rational calculators or violent competitors.
They are simple beings with basic needs and a natural sense of pity.
Conflict emerges not from human nature, but from society itself.
3. The Origin Of Inequality
For Rousseau, the turning point is property.
The famous line captures it:
“The first man who, having enclosed a piece of ground, thought of saying ‘This is mine’… was the true founder of civil society.”
Property creates comparison.
Comparison creates pride.
Pride creates inequality, envy, and domination.
Civilisation does not refine us.
It deforms us.
4. The Social Contract: A Collective Act
Rousseau’s social contract is not a surrender to authority.
It is a transformation.
Each individual agrees to:
• Unite with others
• Form a collective body
• Submit to laws they prescribe to themselves
In doing so, individuals lose natural freedom but gain civil freedom.
They obey the law, but the law is their own.
5. The General Will
This is Rousseau’s most controversial idea.
The general will is not the sum of individual desires.
It is the collective interest aimed at the common good.
It expresses what citizens would choose if they set aside private advantage.
When laws reflect the general will:
• They are legitimate
• They bind everyone equally
• They preserve freedom
6. Freedom Through Obedience
Rousseau’s paradox is deliberate.
True freedom does not mean doing whatever one wants.
It means living under laws one has collectively authored.
“Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains.”
The task of politics is to reconcile those two facts.
7. Equality As A Political Requirement
For Rousseau, freedom is impossible without equality.
Extreme inequality makes genuine consent meaningless.
Those who depend on others cannot be free.
Therefore:
• Economic extremes must be restrained
• Power must not concentrate
• Citizenship must be active
This is not liberal individualism.
It is civic republicanism.
8. The Danger In Rousseau
Rousseau knew his ideas were dangerous.
If the general will is claimed by:
• Elites
• Parties
• Leaders
Then it becomes tyranny disguised as virtue.
Forcing people to be “free” is the dark edge of his philosophy.
9. Rousseau Compared To Hobbes And Locke
Hobbes trades freedom for order.
Locke trades power for rights.
Rousseau trades individuality for collective freedom.
Hobbes fears violence.
Locke fears tyranny.
Rousseau fears inequality and alienation.
Each solves a different problem.
Each creates a different risk.
10. Rousseau In The Modern World
Rousseau’s legacy is everywhere:
• Democratic sovereignty
• Popular legitimacy
• Nationalism and revolution
• Collective moral language
He inspires both emancipation and authoritarianism.
Rousseau does not offer comfort.
He offers a challenge.
Can a society be both free and equal —
without becoming coercive in the name of virtue?
That question remains unanswered.
TRUST, ORDER, AND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT
1. INTRODUCTION — TRUST, ORDER, AND THE SOCIAL CONTRACT
We exchange a measure of personal sovereignty for the benefits of belonging to a group.
This is the foundation of the social contract.
But Western democracies are are showing growing signs of disorder.
The Fourth Turning is deepening.
Elites know that conditions are worsening, public confidence in our free press and institutions is eroding, the torque on our freedoms is tightening, the governors surely realise that societies are beginning to fracture internally.
When the captain no longer trusts the crew, discipline replaces dialogue - the beatings begin. This is control disguised as safety and protection.
2. PUBLIC ORDER AND THE COMING STRAIN
We already see the signs:
• declining trust
• weaker institutions
• social fragmentation
• rising protests and disorder
• a muzzled press
A state that fears its own peoples will always reach for surveillance, coercion, and centralised authority.
But these measures worsen the breach rather than repair it.
At issue is the part played by technology and threats to security, but the challenge is to governance rooted in trust.
3. FOUNDATIONS OF ORDER
These brief videos explain the values and ideas that built the Western political tradition.
They clarify what we are in danger of losing.
• John Locke
https://youtu.be/bZiWZJgJT7I?si=wHamFS3YldsmFVUv
• Thomas Hobbes
https://youtu.be/9i4jb5XBX5s?si=cIj9qTOX7GYhB-kP
• David Hume
https://youtu.be/HS52H_CqZLE?si=ldg65NRnNZ4RvKqS
• Jean-Jacques Rousseau
https://youtu.be/81KfDXTTtXE?si=nopDVzIxcbXLrvyD
These thinkers frame the tension between liberty, authority, and civil peace.
Their ideas matter now more than at any time in the past half-century.
4. WHERE THE CRISIS BEGINS — THE ECONOMIC TRIGGER
The political trouble begins in the economy.
Triffin’s Dilemma explains the structural flaw at the heart of the dollar system:
• the world demands dollars for trade
• the world demands dollars as a store of value
• to facilitate demand the United States must supply the world with dollars
• supplying them means expanding (fiat) money and credit
• expanding money destroys confidence in the dollar itself
There are now far more paper promises than real assets backing those promises.
Confidence weakens with each new expansion.
• Triffin’s Dilemma
https://youtu.be/p9v6ixgjK3o?si=OZ3pCbReQOCyWshU
5. THE U.S. RESPONSE — PRINT, RAISE RATES, AND FIGHT
My expectation, from the history of previous Empires, is simple:
The United States will do three things to preserve the exorbitant privilege of the dollar:
• print money
• raise interest rates
• and, finally, go to war to defend its position
Each step carries its own contradictions.
Raising interest rates crushes the private sector.
Businesses fail.
Unemployment rises.
People rebel.
Think of the Jarrow March - economic desperation becomes political energy.
Yet printing money fuels more inflation, undermining living standards and savings.
The result is a split reality:
• deflation in the private sector
• inflation in the public sector
This is the hallmark of late-stage monetary regimes.
6. CONCLUSION — THE CHOICE AHEAD
A society built on trust moves ahead lightly and confidently.... nimbly, if you prefer.
A society ruled by fear and coercion becomes rigid and resentful.... lifeless.
As disorder grows, the question is no longer about surveillance, money, or ideology.
It is whether the social contract can be renewed ... or whether it will continue to be outdated by new systems and justifications of control.









