Latest Issues of #AxisOfEasy
Can Any Nation-State Survive the Era of Inequality and Scarcity?
We have an extraordinary opportunity to transform our unsustainable “waste is growth” economy and toxic inequality to sustainable systems that optimize well-being rather than collapse. The possibility that the United States could fragment is no longer a marginalized topic.
VIEW POSTOnce Risk-On Switches to Risk-Off, the Bottom Is Far Lower Than Anyone Believes Possible
So here we are, witnessing the switch from risk-on to risk-off in real time. All bubbles share common characteristics: during the euphoric expansion, participants are richly rewarded for buying every dip and for confidently embracing the belief that this time it’s different.
VIEW POSTThe Long Cycles Have All Turned: Look Out Below
But alas, humans do not possess god-like powers, they only possess hubris, and so all bubbles pop: the more extreme the bubble, the more devastating the pop. Long cycles operate at such a glacial pace they’re easily dismissed as either figments of fevered imagination or this time it’s different.
VIEW POSTThe Long Cycles Have All Turned: Look Out Below
But alas, humans do not possess god-like powers, they only possess hubris, and so all bubbles pop: the more extreme the bubble, the more devastating the pop. Long cycles operate at such a glacial pace they’re easily dismissed as either figments of fevered imagination or this time it’s different.
VIEW POST#AxisOfEasy 222: Jack Resigns As Twitter CEO “Effective Immediately”
The DC government was provided with billions of location records,
DDoS attacks increased more than expected in Q3,
7 million Robinhood users’ emails are being sold on a forum by hackers…this and more in Axis of Easy # 221
Why Inflation Is a Runaway Freight Train
The value of these super-abundant follies will trend rapidly to zero once margin calls and other bits of reality drastically reduce demand. Inflation, deflation, stagflation–they’ve all got proponents. But who’s going to be right? The difficulty here is that supply and demand are dynamic and so there are always things going up in price that haven’t changed materially (and are therefore not worth the higher cost) and other things dropping in price even though they haven’t changed materially.
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