The Birth of Integral Money The prior installments (Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV, Part V) of this series traced the multi-millennial competition among monetary media, in which more integral monetary forms reliably defeated less integral ones with the impersonal regularity of water finding its level; examined how the gold standard was dismantled … Continue reading The Monetary Lens: The Past, Present and Future of Humanity Through the Architecture of Money, Part VI
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The Monetary Lens: The Past, Present and Future of Humanity Through the Architecture of Money, Part V
The Axis Mundi and the Fate of Gold The prior installments of this series traced the long competition among monetary media, in which more integral monetary forms reliably defeated less integral ones across millennia; examined how the gold standard was dismantled by political force and at what compounding cost; showed that the deepest ideological debates … Continue reading The Monetary Lens: The Past, Present and Future of Humanity Through the Architecture of Money, Part V
The Monetary Lens: The Past, Present and Future of Humanity Through the Architecture of Money, Part IV
The Dam Gives Way The first three installments of this series (Part I, Part II, Part III) traced the multi-millennial competition among monetary media, in which more integral monetary forms reliably defeated less integral ones with the impersonal regularity of water finding its level; examined how the gold standard was dismantled by political force rather … Continue reading The Monetary Lens: The Past, Present and Future of Humanity Through the Architecture of Money, Part IV
The Monetary Lens: The Past, Present and Future of Humanity Through the Architecture of Money, Part I
The Natural Selection of Money There is a familiar way of narrating history. It features oppressors and victims, conquerors and the conquered, and it assigns moral valence to deeds and outcomes. This framework is not wrong — power has been wielded cruelly, and the suffering caused has been real. But it is incomplete in a … Continue reading The Monetary Lens: The Past, Present and Future of Humanity Through the Architecture of Money, Part I
The Imperial Circle Returns: Are USD Stablecoins America’s Next Monetary Weapon?
This piece draws together ideas emerging from recent public conversations with some of the most compelling monetary thinkers around — most prominently Brent Johnson and Michael Every. What I find particularly striking is that the USD stablecoin thesis explored here isn't confined to one corner of the ideological map. Thinkers like Yanis Varoufakis, coming from … Continue reading The Imperial Circle Returns: Are USD Stablecoins America’s Next Monetary Weapon?
Copernicus, Wittgenstein, Gold, and The Dollar
In my previous post, I described how the Bretton Woods agreement placed the U.S. dollar at the center of the global financial system; how that embeddedness deepened over decades; and how the structural mechanics of that arrangement generated the imbalances we now experience as geopolitical strain, excessive financialization, and social fragmentation. Running quietly beneath that … Continue reading Copernicus, Wittgenstein, Gold, and The Dollar
