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SUDDEN DROP II : The Great Arizona Haboob of 2025
HUD to Finally Stop Illegal Aliens from "Riding the Coattails of Hardworking American Taxpayers
Buy our scheme to fix the weather for half a trillion says Business Council and everyone will be...
They're coming for the farmland: 750 acres GONE
Neuroscientists just found a hidden protein switch in your brain that reverses aging and memory loss
NVIDIA just announced the T5000 robot brain microprocessor that can power TERMINATORS
Two-story family home was 3D-printed in just 18 hours
This Hypersonic Space Plane Will Fly From London to N.Y.C. in an Hour
Magnetic Fields Reshape the Movement of Sound Waves in a Stunning Discovery
There are studies that have shown that there is a peptide that can completely regenerate nerves
Swedish startup unveils Starlink alternative - that Musk can't switch off
Video Games At 30,000 Feet? Starlink's Airline Rollout Is Making It Reality
Grok 4 Vending Machine Win, Stealth Grok 4 coding Leading to Possible AGI with Grok 5
The real story of the US economy isn't about AI, it's about an economy that's run out of rope. AI is being hyped not just by promoters reaping billions of dollars in stock market gains, it's being hyped by the entire status quo because it's understood to be the last chance of saving an economy doomed by the consequences of decades of artifice.
The real story of the US economy is that decades of "financial innovations" finally caught up with us in 2008, when the subprime mortgage scam–a classic example of "financial innovations" being the cover story for greed and fraud running amok–pulled a block from the global financial Jenga Tower that nearly collapsed the entire rickety, rotten structure.
Our political leadership had a choice: clean house or save the scam. They chose to save the scam, and that required not just institutionalizing moral hazard (transferring the risks of fraud and leveraged speculation from the gamblers to the public / Federal Reserve) but pursuing policies–zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), quantitative easing, increasing the money supply, and so on–that had only one possible outcome:
An economy permanently dependent on inflating asset-bubbles that enriched the top 10% while the bottom 90% who depend on earned income fell behind.
The desired goal of permanent asset-bubbles is the "wealth effect," the cover story for transferring all the gains into the hands of the top 10%, who can then go on a spending spree which 'trickles down" to the bottom 90%, who are now a neofeudal class of workers serving the top 10% who account for 50% of all consumer spending and collect 90% of the unearned income and capital gains.
This arrangement is inherently unstable, as "financial innovations" suffer from diminishing returns. Eventually the debt-serfs can no longer borrow more or service the debt they already have, and every bubble being bigger than the previous bubble guarantees the next implosion will be larger and more devastating than the previous bubble-pop.
So what does a system that's run out of rope do? Seek a savior. The rope has frayed, and the rocks are far below. The impact is going to be life-changing, and not for the better.