Wednesday, 3 June 2026
WHAT IS GLOBALISATION
WHY BIG GOVERNMENT IS SO BIG
Tuesday, 2 June 2026
3/3 ETFs FOR ROTATING INTO PHYSICAL ASSETS
Overview
For four decades capital flowed into financial assets as falling interest rates, rising debt and globalisation inflated stocks, bonds and property. Today the pendulum seems to be swinging back towards the physical economy.
Gold, energy, industrial metals, agriculture, infrastructure and water all sit at the foundation of modern civilisation, and growing scarcity is forcing investors to take notice.
This article examines the possible sequence of that rotation between physical asset classes, and explores the ETFs that provide exposure to the tangible assets in those classes.
Limits on Capital movement
Governments can limit financial freedom by restricting access to foreign currencies, limiting transfers abroad, taxing overseas investments, imposing withdrawal restrictions, requiring institutions to hold government debt, or making it harder to move savings outside the domestic financial system.
The common objective is to keep capital at home and help finance government borrowing at lower cost.
2/3 ROTATION FROM FINANCIAL INTO PHYSICAL - EFFECT OF HORMUZ CLOSURE
1/3 FINANCIALS V. PHYSICALS
Sunday, 31 May 2026
SYSTEMS THINKING: SEEING THE MACHINE BENEATH EVENTS
4. Ray Dalio's "machine"
Ray Dalio frequently describes the economy as a "machine" because he wants people to think in terms of cause-and-effect relationships rather than isolated events. In his framework, individuals, businesses, banks, governments and central banks interact through flows of money, credit, spending, income and debt. Each participant responds to incentives and constraints, creating feedback loops that influence the behaviour of the whole economy. What emerges is not simply the sum of millions of individual decisions, but a dynamic system whose behaviour can often be understood through recurring patterns.
What makes Ray Dalio's macroeconomics so interesting is that he is concerned with the behaviour of the economy as a whole: growth, inflation, credit, debt cycles, interest rates, productivity, government spending and monetary policy....macroeconomics.
But his distinctive contribution is that he presents macroeconomics through a systems-thinking angle.
Traditional macroeconomics will study variables like GDP, unemployment, inflation and interest rates. Dalio goes a step further by emphasising the interactions and feedback loops between these variables. He asks questions such as:
• How does credit creation affect spending?
• How does spending affect income?
• How does income affect borrowing capacity?
• How does rising debt affect future spending?
• How do central bank actions alter the behaviour of the entire system?
From a systems-thinking perspective, Dalio's machine is essentially a system. It contains
• components (households, firms, banks and governments),
• processes (borrowing, lending, spending, investing and producing),
• inputs (labour, capital, resources and credit),
• outputs (goods, services, income and profits), and feedback loops (interest rates, asset prices, inflation and debt servicing costs).
The system evolves through time as today's outputs become tomorrow's inputs. Economic booms, recessions, debt crises and recoveries seen in this way are not isolated events, but emergent behaviours arising from the interaction of the system's many interconnected parts.
Machine - Dalio's term for a system whose behaviour can be understood through recurring cause-and-effect relationships.
System - a collection of interconnected components whose interactions produce outcomes that cannot be understood by examining the parts in isolation.
Feedback Loop - a process whereby the outputs of a system influence its future behaviour by becoming inputs into the next cycle.
Emergent Behaviour - patterns or outcomes that arise from interactions within a system rather than from any single component.
Friday, 29 May 2026
FIVE WAYS THE EU WILL TRAMPLE YOUR FREEDOM THIS YEAR 2026
"In the 1930s, the Third Reich weaponised the German tax and legal system long before it built the extermination camps.
In April 1938, the Nazi government issued the Decree on the Registration of Jewish Property. Every Jewish citizen of the German Reich possessing assets exceeding 5,000 Reichsmarks was legally compelled to register their entire financial portfolio with the state.
This was the preparatory phase for one of the largest and most meticulously documented acts of theft in history.
Following the state-sponsored violence of Kristallnacht in November 1938, the Nazi government did not merely arrest people; it levied a collective fine of 1 billion Reichsmarks against Germany's Jewish community, cynically blaming them for the damage caused by the Nazi rioters themselves.
This fine, known as the Judenvermögensabgabe ("Jewish Property Levy"), was collected through measures including the freezing of bank accounts, the forced sale of businesses, and the confiscation of assets.
By the time deportations to the death camps began, the German state had already expropriated, taxed, and absorbed the entirety of the community's private wealth to fund its rearmament program. The physical destruction of the people was the final brutal step after their economic utility had been completely drained.
It seems that these deportations took place over the course of a millennia, not because of a religious or social incompatibility, but becaue of a repeating pattern of sovereign default and failing empires."
https://youtu.be/HTMrS8zWWys?si=vujW69qcFvqNjPlw
Saturday, 23 May 2026
WELCOME TO THE GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH
1. The Greatest Political Show On Earth
There was a time when governments tried to present themselves as sobre administrative machines. Politicians wore dark suits, spoke in measured tones, and pretended that governance was a rational process conducted quietly behind polished doors. That world has not entirely disappeared, but it is fading fast.
Modern politics increasingly resembles theatre.
Governments today blend:
• governance
• branding
• entertainment
• permanent campaigning
• media spectacle.
The distinction between politician, celebrity, influencer, salesman, and performer has become more abd more blurred. It is now form over substance. Television began the transformation. Social media accelerated it. Politics is now conducted not so much through institutions and policy papers, but more through images, narratives, emotional performance, and getting continuous public attention.
If this is true, it wasn't Donald Trump who invented political theatre. He simply understood it earlier, more instinctively, and more openly than most of his rivals, perhaps it was his character, perhaps it was his earlier experiences in entertainment and business. While critics still analyse politics as if it were an academic seminar or legal proceeding, Trump often approaches it more like a travelling circus, complete with ringmaster, strongmen, fire eaters, barkers, illusionists, and loyal carneys working the crowd beneath the big top.
OK, the comparison is humorous, but it also contains an uncomfortable truth. Modern political success increasingly depends not merely upon competence, but upon the ability to dominate attention. In the media age, spectacle itself has become a form of power.
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THE CARNEYS
1. Donald Trump — The Ringmaster
Every circus needs a ringmaster, and no one has ever played the role with more conviction. Trump stands at centre ring in top hat and tailcoat, cracking the whip, bellowing through the megaphone, and ensuring that every eye in the tent remains fixed on him at all times. He does not perform a single act himself — he does not need to. His act is the show. He sets the narrative, announces the next spectacle before the last one has finished, and keeps the crowd in a state of permanent excitement. Whether the audience is cheering or booing, their attention belongs entirely to him. In the circus, the ringmaster's power has nothing to do with any particular skill. It rests entirely on his ability to command the room.
2. Pete Hegseth — The Strongman
Every circus has a strongman: loud, physical, projecting raw aggression, here to reassure the crowd that their side has the muscle. Hegseth flexes his way through the performance - chest out, jaw set, animal-print costume barely containing the performance of toughness. He picks the fights, fires up the crowd, and keeps the enemies clearly identified. In the classic circus tradition, the strongman does not need to demonstrate intelligence or subtlety. His role is simpler and more primal: to make the audience feel protected, threatened, and thrilled in quick succession. The bulldog on the chain is not incidental ... it is the whole message.
3. Scott Bessent — The Magician
The magician's job is to make uncomfortable realities vanish. Bessent performs his act in a top hat of his own — quieter than the ringmaster's, more refined — conjuring reassurance from economic turbulence. Tariffs? No problem. Short-term pain? Long-term win. Markets will love it. The smoke curling from his cabinet of "Economic Illusions" is not an accident of the act; it is the act. Every magician depends on the audience's willingness to be fooled, and on the brief, dazzling interval between the moment something disappears and the moment anyone asks where it went.
4. Marco Rubio — The Fire-Eater
Fire-eaters perform acts of controlled danger. They breathe fire, they warn of threats, they are always on television. Rubio occupies this role: warming up the crowd with geopolitical alarm, gesturing dramatically at China, Iran, and a world more dangerous than the audience realises. The fire-eater does not resolve the danger - he performs it. His purpose in the show is to generate heat, sustain tension, and ensure the audience remains convinced that the world outside the tent is sufficiently frightening to justify everything happening inside it.
5. Pam Bondi — The Knife Thrower
(This section needs deliberately updating)
Knife-throwing requires precision, nerve, and a target. Bondi takes the role of legal weapon deployed with surgical intent - throwing legal daggers, targeting the enemies, the caption notes: the law is the weapon. In the circus, the knife thrower's art is about controlled menace: the knives land just where they are intended to. The target does not move. The crowd holds its breath. The act is not really about justice; it is about demonstrating that the performer has perfect command of something genuinely dangerous.
6. Kristi Noem — The Lion Tamer
(This section needs deliberately updating)
The lion tamer enters a cage of wild things and walks out again unharmed, performing composure under pressure. Noem's circus role is border security and illegal immigration - the savage animals that must be brought to heel. She tames the chaos, the image insists, keeps America secure, and sends the beasts back to the cage. The lion tamer is always photographed with a whip and a look of absolute authority, because the audience needs to believe that someone, somewhere, has the dangerous creatures under control.
7. Elon Musk — The Human Cannonball
The human cannonball is the most spectacular and least controllable act in the circus. He is loaded into the apparatus, launched at high velocity across the tent, and lands ... or doesn't ... somewhere in the vicinity of the target. Musk performs this role as Special Government Employee: maximum risk, maximum explosion, maximum disruption, the caption noting that if it explodes, we learn faster. The human cannonball does not plan carefully. He generates an enormous amount of attention, a great deal of noise, and occasionally hits something useful. The crowd gasps either way.
8. Howard Lutnick — The Barker
The barker never performs himself. He stands at the entrance, sells the vision, hypes the deals, and keeps the cash flowing. Lutnick's Commerce Secretary role fits the character precisely: everybody who enters the tent gets the pitch. Tariffs! Deals! Jobs! Made in America! The barker's art is the art of perpetual salesmanship - he does not need the promises to be delivered, only to be made loudly enough, and often enough, that the crowd keeps buying tickets.
9. JD Vance — The Tightrope Walker
The tightrope walker's entire performance consists of not falling. One wrong step and the whole thing ends badly; the caption puts it plainly. Vance navigates the wire between populism, establishment acceptance, and nationalism - live, loud, unpredictable - staying for the show through pure balance and nerve. The tightrope walker does not advance, does not retreat. He simply maintains his position above the crowd, performing the act of political survival in real time, and hoping the wire holds.
10. The Communications Team — The Clown Car Brigade
No circus is complete without the clown car: a vehicle from which emerge, improbably, far more figures than physics should allow, all talking at once, all performing chaos, all confusing the crowd into exhausted laughter. The communications team - flooding the zone, spreading fake news, confusion, distraction - serves this function precisely. Message is chaos. Chaos is the message. The clowns are not failing at communication; they are succeeding at a different kind entirely.
Attention is power
Spectacle is strategy
Welcome to the greatest show on Earth.









