Sunday, June 14, 2026

Gold: The World’s Oldest Addiction Nobody Wants to Quit

 


For 6,700 years, empires, kings, and central banks have chased gold. Ask yourself: what do they know about the future that ordinary people don't? In plain terms, humanity has been obsessed with gold for 6,700 years because when power, money, and trust collapse, gold is usually the last thing still standing. So, as long as fear and greed remain roommates in the human heart, gold will never go out of style. 

I have seen people laugh at gold investors. I have seen economists roll their eyes when someone starts talking about gold bars, gold coins, and the collapse of paper money. Then a financial crisis hits. A war breaks out. Inflation starts chewing through savings like termites through dry wood. Suddenly, the same people who mocked gold start asking where they can buy some.

That tells me something important.

Gold is not just a metal. It is humanity’s oldest obsession. It is a shiny yellow mirror reflecting our fears, greed, vanity, power, and survival instincts. For at least 6,700 years, human beings have chased it, worshipped it, stolen it, killed for it, and died for it. We pretend we are more sophisticated today, but we are not fooling anybody.

The archaeological record is brutally honest.

Some of the earliest known gold artifacts date back about 6,700 years. They included crowns, brooches, and, believe it or not, a gold phallus cover. Let that sink in. Long before stock markets, central banks, and cryptocurrency, people were already using gold to signal status and power. The message was simple: “I have gold. Therefore, I matter.”

Human nature has not changed much since then. Gold seeped into mythology because it had already seeped into the human mind. Ancient Greek stories were dripping with the stuff. There was the Golden Fleece sought by Jason and the Argonauts. There was the golden apple connected to Aphrodite. Then there was King Midas, whose touch turned everything into gold.

That story is often treated like a fairy tale. I think it is a warning label.

Midas got exactly what he wanted and discovered it was a curse. He could not eat. He could not drink. His greed became a prison. Thousands of years later, Wall Street keeps relearning the same lesson.

Ancient rulers understood gold’s psychological power. They did not need marketing consultants to tell them that shiny objects attract attention. When the Lydian Empire created some of the first coins during the 7th century BC, gold played a central role. Money was no longer just a medium of exchange. It became a symbol of authority.

Then came Alexander the Great. Simply put, Alexander was not merely conquering armies. He was conquering gold supplies. After defeating the Persian Empire, he secured major gold-producing regions and established 26 mints across Europe, Asia, and Africa. Some of his gold coins reached purity levels of about 98%. Alexander understood a truth that many politicians still understand today: control the money, and you control much of the world.

For more than 2,000 years, gold remained tied to money. Kingdoms rose with it. Empires expanded with it. Governments measured wealth through it.

Yet this is where the story becomes controversial. Many gold enthusiasts speak about the gold standard as if it were some lost paradise. It was not. Economist John Maynard Keynes called gold a “barbarous relic” in 1924. He was not completely wrong. The gold standard often restricted governments and central banks during economic emergencies. Historians and economists have linked it to deflationary pressures and to the severity of the Great Depression. When economies needed flexibility, gold often acted like a straitjacket.

The United States abandoned the international gold standard in 1971 under President Richard Nixon. Gold bugs predicted disaster. Some still do.

But here is the uncomfortable fact: the decades following that decision saw extraordinary economic growth, technological innovation, and rising global prosperity. The world did not end.

Yet the gold bugs were not entirely wrong either. Paper money works beautifully until people stop trusting it. That is why gold refuses to die.

History is filled with rulers willing to do almost anything to obtain it. Spanish King Ferdinand II gave conquistadors a mission that was refreshingly honest. “Get gold, humanely, if possible, but at all hazards, get gold.”

There it is. No public relations spin. No corporate jargon. No pretending. Just naked ambition. The result was conquest, exploitation, and bloodshed across the Americas. Gold built fortunes while destroying civilizations.

Then came the great gold rushes of the 19th century. California exploded after gold was discovered in 1848. Within a few years, hundreds of thousands of fortune seekers flooded the region. Australia experienced similar chaos. Entire cities appeared almost overnight. Some prospectors became rich. Most did not.

That pattern never changes. When people hear stories about gold fortunes, they imagine themselves as the winner. Few imagine themselves as the thousands who ended up broke, disappointed, or dead.

Gold has another remarkable quality. It remains valuable even when governments collapse. During World War II, the Bank of Norway conducted a daring operation to prevent Nazi Germany from seizing the nation's gold reserves. Against incredible odds, the mission succeeded. Gold preserved national wealth when military power alone could not. That episode revealed something many investors understand instinctively. Governments can fail. Currencies can fail. Political systems can fail. Gold tends to survive them all.

Today, despite endless talk about digital currencies and financial innovation, central banks are still buying gold. The United States keeps more than 77% of its reserves in gold according to World Gold Council data. Gold accounts for more than 80% of America's official reserve assets when measured against reserve holdings. China continues adding to its reserves. Saudi Arabia continues holding significant amounts. Thailand continues buying. Central banks worldwide remain major purchasers. In 2025, surveys showed that 76% of central banks expected gold to represent a larger share of reserves within 5 years.

That should make people pause.

These institutions employ armies of economists, analysts, mathematicians, and financial experts. Yet they still want gold.

Why?

Because trust is fragile.

America’s use of financial sanctions against countries such as Russia and Iran has encouraged governments to seek alternatives to dollar dependence. Gold offers something paper promises cannot: it has no issuing government, no central banker, no politician behind it. It simply exists.

Even as Bitcoin enthusiasts promise a digital future, governments continue stacking physical gold. The irony is almost funny. Countries discussing alternatives to traditional finance are still buying a metal that fascinated people before the invention of writing. Investors are doing the same thing.

Inflation has surged periodically in recent years. Geopolitical tensions have increased. Wars have erupted. Markets have become more volatile. Gold prices have climbed dramatically. A kilogram of gold that cost Lloyd Blankfein roughly $15,000 in the 1980s would be worth around $150,000 today.

That is not a fairy tale. That is arithmetic.

Gold is not perfect. It generates no earnings. It pays no dividends. It costs money to store. It can be volatile. Anyone claiming gold is a magic solution is selling snake oil. But anyone claiming gold is irrelevant is ignoring 6,700 years of evidence.

The greatest lesson of gold is not economic. It is psychological. Gold survives because human nature survives. People still crave status. People still fear uncertainty. People still seek safety when the world becomes dangerous. Gold sits at the intersection of all three. That is why kings wanted it. That is why conquerors hunted it. That is why central banks stockpile it. That is why investors buy it when panic spreads.

Civilizations have changed. Technology has changed. Money has changed.

Human beings have not.

And as long as fear and greed remain roommates in the human heart, gold will never go out of style.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, June 13, 2026

The Internet Lied: The World Is Not Becoming One Culture—It Is Breaking Into a Thousand Tribes

 


The internet promised one global culture. Instead, it created a thousand cultural tribes—and America's grip on entertainment is slipping faster than most people realize. In plain terms, the world's biggest tech platforms accidentally armed local cultures—and now Hollywood, global media, and cultural empires are losing control.

For years, I was told a story. Maybe you were too.

The internet would flatten the world. Hollywood would become everybody's Hollywood. American music would become everybody's music. English would become everybody's language. A teenager in Lagos, a banker in Warsaw, a gamer in Jakarta, and a student in Copenhagen would eventually watch the same shows, sing the same songs, play the same games, and laugh at the same jokes.

That was the prophecy.  It was also wrong. Dead wrong.

The world is more connected than at any point in human history. A smartphone in a village can access more information than a king possessed 200 years ago. Spotify, Netflix, YouTube, TikTok, and countless other platforms have erased the physical barriers that once separated cultures. Yet something strange happened along the way.

Instead of becoming one giant global village, humanity is becoming a neighborhood of fiercely independent tribes. The pipes have become global. The content flowing through them is becoming local.

Take Denmark. Every summer, thousands gather at the Roskilde Festival. The lineup looks like a miniature United Nations. British acts, American stars, South Korean idols, Australian performers, and African musicians all share the stage. On paper, it looks like globalization's victory lap.

Then you peek into the headphones of ordinary Danish listeners. In 2025, 9 of Denmark's 10 most-streamed songs were performed by Danes singing in Danish. The country's biggest hit was "Hele Vejen" by Omar and Mumle. That is not a small cultural preference. That is a cultural statement. And it happened fast. In 2019, only 5 songs in Denmark's Top 20 were in Danish. By 2025, the number had jumped to 18.

The same pattern is appearing across Europe like fingerprints at a crime scene. Research by Will Page, Spotify's former chief economist, found that Swedish-language songs accounted for 55% of streams in Sweden's Top 20 in 2025, up from 29% in 2019. Norway's share rose from 13% to 38% during the same period.

This is not a coincidence.

It is a rebellion.

For decades, the entertainment industry operated like an empire. America exported culture the way Rome exported roads. The rest of the world consumed it.

Michael Jackson.

Madonna.

Friends.

The Simpsons.

Hollywood blockbusters.

The formula was simple: produce in Los Angeles, distribute everywhere else. Today, the empire is discovering that the provinces have minds of their own.

Look at Brazil. During the first week of June 2026, 96 of the Top 100 artists on YouTube Music in Brazil were Brazilian. Foreign stars were reduced to visitors at someone else's party.

Look at Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, and South Africa. The story repeats itself.

Then there is Nigeria. Nigeria may be the clearest example of all. The country's Top 10 music chart was entirely Nigerian. Not partly. Entirely. That should not surprise anyone paying attention. Afrobeats is no longer asking permission from the world. It is kicking the door open.

Artists such as Burna Boy, Wizkid, Davido, and Asake built enormous audiences by sounding unmistakably Nigerian, not by sounding American.

That is the irony. The more connected the world becomes, the less incentive people have to imitate somebody else's culture. The old gatekeepers are gone.

In the CD era, getting music into stores required money, distribution networks, and record-company muscle. A Danish rapper or Nigerian singer faced a mountain before reaching listeners. Streaming blew up that mountain. Now a teenager can upload a song at midnight and reach millions by sunrise.

Technology did not create cultural uniformity. It democratized cultural competition. And once the competition became fairer, local cultures proved they were very much alive.

The television business learned the same lesson the hard way. Netflix originally chased the dream of the universal show. Executives imagined series that could appeal equally to viewers in Tokyo, Lagos, Berlin, and Buenos Aires. Reality punched them in the face. Shows designed for everyone often excited no one. Then Netflix tried something different. Instead of manufacturing global stories, it invested in local ones.

The result was astonishing. The Polish comedy 1670 became a hit because it was deeply Polish. The Norwegian film Troll succeeded because it was unapologetically Norwegian. The British drama Adolescence attracted international viewers because it felt intensely British.

Netflix executives eventually reached a conclusion that sounds almost heretical in Silicon Valley. There may be no such thing as a truly global show. The strongest global hits start as local obsessions. A fire must burn hot somewhere before it can spread everywhere. The numbers support that conclusion.

According to Parrot Analytics, American television's share of global demand fell from 51% in 2022 to 42% in 2025.

That is not a collapse.

But it is a warning sign.

The world's appetite for American cultural exports is no longer unlimited. People increasingly want stories that sound like them, look like them, and understand them. Social media tells the same story. Theoretically, YouTube should create a single worldwide conversation. Instead, it often creates thousands of local conversations.

Researchers at the University of Illinois analyzed 726,627 trending YouTube videos across 104 countries between 2022 and 2025. About 75% went viral in only one country. Only 3 videos trended everywhere. Three. Out of more than 726,000. Think about that.

The internet connected humanity, yet humanity largely uses it to talk to itself. Even gaming, once dominated by American and Japanese giants, is moving in the same direction. More than 3.5 billion people now play video games. The market has exploded. But instead of concentrating attention on a few mega-hits, it is creating countless niches.

The Singaporean game Free Fire became a global phenomenon not because it copied Western tastes but because it adapted itself to local realities across Asia and Latin America. The developers optimized it for cheaper phones, alternative payment methods, and regional festivals. They understood something many corporations ignored. People do not want localization as an afterthought. They want relevance.

China's gaming companies are learning the same lesson. Even as Chinese publishers expand internationally, they frequently redesign products to match local cultures rather than exporting Chinese culture wholesale.

That should tell us something important. Culture is not software. You cannot simply install it. You must earn acceptance. The great irony of the digital age is that the technologies designed to create a global monoculture have become tools for cultural self-defense.

The internet gave every culture a microphone. Streaming gave every language a stage. Algorithms gave every niche an audience. The result is not one giant global culture. It is a marketplace packed with competing identities.

For years, experts predicted that globalization would turn humanity into one giant choir singing the same song. What actually happened is that everyone got their own microphone. And once people had a microphone, they started singing in their own language.

The dream of a single global culture is fading before our eyes. America remains powerful, but its cultural monopoly is cracking. Hollywood still matters, but it no longer dictates taste. Global platforms continue to expand, yet they increasingly deliver local content to local audiences.

The world is becoming more connected than ever before, but cultural tastes are becoming more fragmented rather than more uniform. Technology may connect the world, but people still crave what feels familiar, authentic, and close to home.

The internet promised one village. What it created was a thousand tribes. And the tribes are winning.

 If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 


Friday, June 12, 2026

The $2.1 Trillion Space Cult: Why Investors Just Handed Elon Musk the Keys to the Future

 


With SpaceX’s roughly $2.1 trillion IPO, Elon Musk just became the world's first trillionaire, and millions may soon depend on his space-and-AI gamble for retirement. If he wins, history changes. If he fails, investors pay the bill. The bottom line is, investors aren't buying SpaceX's profits. They're buying Musk's promise to own the future of space, AI, and computing. That's either brilliant—or terrifying.

I watched the market cheer as Elon Musk rang the Nasdaq opening bell from Texas and launched the biggest IPO in history. Not Apple. Not Microsoft. Not Amazon. SpaceX. The company sold 5% of its shares at $135 each and pulled in $75 billion. By the time trading closed, the stock had climbed to $161, giving SpaceX a valuation of roughly $2.1 trillion and making Musk the first trillionaire in human history.

Let me call a spade a spade. Investors did not buy SpaceX because of what it earns today. They bought a story. A giant, expensive, science-fiction story.

The strange thing is that this story may actually come true. That is what makes SpaceX different from the thousands of corporate fairy tales Wall Street has sold over the decades. The company generated $18.7 billion in revenue last year and lost $4.9 billion. Under normal circumstances, those numbers would cause investors to run for the exits.

Instead, they stampeded through the front door.

Why?

Because they are betting on three things. First, they believe space will become one of the biggest industries in human history. Second, they believe artificial intelligence (AI) will require unimaginable amounts of computing power. Third, they believe Elon Musk is the man most likely to connect those two trends and get rich doing it.

That last point matters more than many people want to admit. Wall Street likes to pretend it invests in numbers. In reality, it often invests in personalities.

Henry Ford had it. Steve Jobs had it. Warren Buffett has it. Elon Musk has it in industrial quantities. Love him or hate him, he has built a reputation for doing things that experts repeatedly declared impossible.

Back in the early 2000s, aerospace veterans openly mocked the idea that a private company could build liquid-fueled rockets and reach orbit. SpaceX did it in 2008. Experts laughed at reusable rockets. Today Falcon 9 rockets land so routinely that many people barely notice.

SpaceX now launches more payload mass into orbit than every other nation and company on Earth combined. That statement would have sounded insane 20 years ago. Now it sounds almost ordinary.

That track record explains why investors are willing to suspend disbelief. The real money is no longer in launching rockets. The real money is in what those rockets carry. SpaceX already operates more than 10,000 Starlink satellites. More than 12 million customers use the network. Airlines use it. Shipping companies use it. Governments use it.

Starlink generated an operating profit of $4.4 billion last year, compared with $2 billion the year before. That is not a science experiment. That is a cash machine.

But even Starlink is not the main attraction. The real pitch is much crazier. Musk wants to put AI data centers in space.

Read that sentence again.

Not beside a river.

Not next to a power plant.

Not in Nevada or Texas.

In orbit.

At first glance, it sounds like something dreamed up after too much coffee and too little sleep.

Yet the logic is surprisingly straightforward. AI requires enormous amounts of electricity. Data centers consume massive quantities of power and cooling resources.  Local residents increasingly oppose new facilities. Construction costs keep rising. Power grids are under pressure.

Meanwhile, space has endless sunlight, no neighbors, and no zoning boards. No angry town meetings. No environmental lawsuits. No homeowner associations demanding explanations. Just solar energy and empty darkness. Musk believes future AI infrastructure could operate above Earth rather than on it.

America's hyper-scalers are expected to spend around $800 billion this year on AI-related data centers and infrastructure. SpaceX wants a piece of that mountain of cash. Actually, it wants the entire mountain. The company has already acquired xAI and reportedly signed multi-billion-dollar computing agreements involving firms such as Anthropic and Google. The goal is obvious. Build rockets. Launch satellites. Operate AI platforms. Sell computing power. Own the highway and charge tolls.

That is not merely vertical integration. That is economic empire-building. Of course, there are problems. Many problems. Orbital data centers have never been tested at commercial scale. Starship remains delayed. The economics remain largely theoretical. The technology remains unproven. Even some AI investors are becoming nervous. Recent declines in AI-related stocks show that not everyone believes the boom can continue forever.

History is filled with examples of investors confusing possibility with probability. The dot-com bubble offers a painful reminder. The internet changed the world exactly as believers predicted. The problem was that many investors bought the wrong companies at absurd prices. Pets.com disappeared. Countless internet startups vanished. The technology won. Many investors lost.

SpaceX believers should remember that lesson. Being right about the future does not automatically mean being right about a stock price.

Yet dismissing Musk has become a dangerous habit. Critics laughed when he entered the rocket business. They laughed when he challenged established automakers. They laughed when reusable rockets started landing vertically. They laughed when Starlink launched. At some point, repeated laughter starts looking less like skepticism and more like denial.

That does not mean Musk is always right. Far from it. He has made spectacular mistakes. He misses deadlines regularly. He often overpromises. Sometimes he sounds less like a CEO and more like a gambler holding a royal flush while daring the table to call his bluff. But that is exactly why investors keep following him. He has repeatedly turned impossible ideas into functioning businesses. The market is no longer valuing SpaceX as a rocket company. It is valuing SpaceX as a possible operating system for the future economy. That is why a company losing billions can be worth $2.1 trillion. That is why investors oversubscribed the IPO nearly 4 times. That is why index funds are already preparing to buy shares automatically. And that is why millions of ordinary people may soon own SpaceX stock without ever consciously deciding to do so. Their retirement accounts will make the decision for them. The irony is delicious.

Many people who criticize Musk online every day may soon depend on his success to fund their retirement. That is capitalism's favorite joke.

In the end, SpaceX is either the most ambitious business project of the century or the most expensive gamble ever placed on a single man's vision. Maybe both.

Wall Street has effectively handed Musk a $2.1 trillion vote of confidence. Not because SpaceX dominates today. Not because profits justify the valuation. Not because the risks are small.  But because enough people believe that if humanity builds the next economic frontier beyond Earth, Elon Musk will probably be standing at the toll booth collecting the fees.

History will decide whether that belief was genius or madness. Right now, investors do not seem to care.

They are buying the dream. And dreams, especially expensive ones, have always been Wall Street's favorite product.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

America Is Not the Hellhole Your Phone Says It Is

 


Millions think America is a disaster because they never leave their screens. Take one road trip and watch the political horror story fall apart.  The Internet sells civil war. Main Street sells coffee, handshakes, and reality. Which America have you been living in?

I have learned something about America that no political ad, cable news host, TikTok influencer, or social media warrior wants to admit. If you really want to understand this country, get in a car, fill the gas tank, leave your phone in your pocket, and start driving. Drive through the cornfields of Iowa. Stop at a diner in Nebraska. Buy coffee at a truck stop in Oklahoma. Sit in a bar in Baltimore, Maryland. Walk through a neighborhood in Virginia. Talk to strangers in Texas. Then compare what you see with the America presented on your phone screen.

The difference is so large it feels like two separate countries.

Online America is a permanent cage fight. Everyone is angry. Everyone is offended. Everyone is supposedly on the brink of civil war. Every election is described as the last election. Every disagreement becomes a moral crusade. Every political opponent is painted as either a fascist, a communist, a racist, a traitor, or some combination of the four.

Real America is far messier and far less dramatic.

A few months ago, I sat in a roadside diner and listened to two men argue about politics. One wore a cap supporting a Republican candidate. The other openly supported Democrats. If social media had written the script, they should have been screaming at each other across the room. Instead, they argued for 15 minutes, laughed twice, complained about rising grocery prices, agreed that Washington wastes money, shook hands, and left.

No viral video. No national scandal. No breaking news. Just two Americans disagreeing and then moving on with their lives. That reality rarely makes it onto our screens because conflict sells.

The business model is simple. Calm people do not click. Reasonable people do not share posts. Outrage generates attention, and attention generates advertising revenue.

The result is a machine that constantly magnifies division.

According to survey data from the Pew Research Center, Americans increasingly view members of the opposing political party negatively. Yet those same Americans continue to work together, attend the same schools, shop in the same stores, and live in the same communities. The gap between political perception and everyday interaction is often enormous.

The phone screen functions like a carnival mirror. It distorts reality. It stretches every disagreement until it looks gigantic.

Take crime as an example.

Many Americans believe crime is spiraling completely out of control. Yet data from the FBI show that violent crime rates have fallen dramatically from the peaks reached during the early 1990s. Murder, robbery, and other violent offenses remain serious problems in certain places, but America today is not the crime-ridden wasteland often portrayed online.

The same pattern appears in discussions about race. Spend enough time on social media and you might think Americans from different racial groups spend every waking hour fighting each other. Then you walk through airports, shopping malls, restaurants, schools, workplaces, and sports stadiums. Millions of people interact peacefully every day without making national headlines.

That does not mean racial tensions do not exist. They do. America has scars. Some are old. Some are fresh. But there is a difference between acknowledging problems and pretending society is collapsing.

The same applies to the economy. Americans complain about inflation, housing costs, healthcare bills, and student debt. Those complaints are real. Yet America remains one of the wealthiest countries on Earth. The United States economy produces more than $30 trillion in annual output. Millions of immigrants still dream of moving here. Entrepreneurs continue launching businesses. Investors continue pouring money into American companies. Workers continue arriving every morning to build, sell, repair, teach, transport, and create.

If America were truly the hopeless disaster described by some political activists, people would be running away from it. Instead, people continue trying to get in. That fact alone should make us pause.

History offers another lesson. Americans often imagine that today's divisions are unprecedented. They are not. The United States survived the bitter political battles of the 1790s. It survived the Civil War. It survived the violence of the 1960s. It survived Watergate. It survived political assassinations, riots, economic crises, terrorist attacks, and foreign wars.

Compared with those periods, today's conflicts often appear less extraordinary than many people believe.

That does not mean everything is fine. Far from it.

The national debt is massive. Housing affordability is becoming a serious challenge in many cities. Drug addiction continues destroying lives. Public trust in institutions has weakened. Political polarization remains a genuine problem.

A spade is a spade. America has real problems. But real problems are different from apocalyptic fantasies.

One evening during a road trip, I stopped at a gas station somewhere between Baltimore, Maryland,  and Washington D.C. A man filling his pickup truck looked at me and asked where I was headed.

We talked for 10 minutes.

No politics.

No culture war.

No ideological loyalty tests.

Just two strangers discussing highways, weather, jobs, family, and the best places to find decent buffet. That conversation taught me more about America than an entire week spent scrolling through social media.

The truth is uncomfortable because it ruins the narratives sold by politicians and influencers. Most Americans are not spending their days plotting against one another. Most are trying to pay bills, raise children, care for aging parents, keep their jobs, improve their lives, and enjoy a little peace.

The Internet rewards the loudest voices. Real life rewards cooperation. Online, people perform for audiences. Offline, they deal with reality.

A farmer needs customers. A mechanic needs clients. A college professor  needs students. A nurse needs patients. A restaurant owner needs diners. Everyday life forces people to interact with those who think differently.

Reality acts as a referee. That is why road trips remain one of the best cures for political delusion. They expose the distance between narrative and reality. They reveal that America is neither heaven nor hell.

It is a complicated country filled with flawed people, competing interests, extraordinary achievements, and stubborn problems. It is noisy, imperfect, frustrating, creative, divided, resilient, and endlessly surprising. Most importantly, it is far more normal than the Internet would have you believe.

So the next time someone claims America is collapsing, I suggest a simple experiment. Put down the phone. Close the laptop. Get in the car. Drive. Talk to people. Listen more than you speak.

You may discover what generations of travelers have learned before you: America looks very different through a windshield than it does through a smartphone.

And as the old proverb reminds us, seeing is believing.

 

An update for those who follow my work: My Brief Book Series titles are now available on Google Play Books. You can also read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Your Car Is Already Stolen — The Thieves Just Haven’t Picked It Up Yet

 


Your car may already be stolen. Thieves can now unlock and drive away vehicles from your driveway without touching your keys, smashing a window, or entering your home. The truth is, automakers sold convenience. Thieves turned it into a weapon. A $50 gadget can defeat security systems that cost thousands and leave your driveway empty.

I used to think a car thief needed a crowbar, a slim jim, a screwdriver, and a willingness to smash a window at 3:00 a.m. I was wrong. Dead wrong.

Today's car thief often looks less like a street criminal and more like a guy headed to a technology conference. He carries antennas, signal amplifiers, electronic scanners, and devices that can mimic digital keys. He does not need to break your window. He does not need to hotwire your vehicle. He may not even touch your front door.

He simply steals your car. And he can do it in seconds. That is the part that should make every car owner angry.

For years, automakers sold us a dream. No more fumbling for keys. No more pressing buttons. Just walk up to your vehicle and it magically unlocks. Sit down, press a button, and drive away. Convenience became king. Consumers loved it. Manufacturers marketed it. Dealerships bragged about it.

Then criminals noticed something. Every convenience creates a weakness. The modern key fob is constantly talking. It sends signals. It whispers electronically to your vehicle. Most of the time, that conversation is harmless. But thieves have learned how to eavesdrop on it.

Picture this. You arrive home after work. You toss your keys onto the table beside the front door. You eat dinner. You watch television. You go to bed. Outside, two thieves arrive. One stands near your house holding an antenna. The other stands beside your vehicle. The antenna picks up the signal from your key fob inside your home. That signal is amplified and relayed to the thief standing near your car. Suddenly, your vehicle believes the key is right beside it.

The doors unlock. The engine starts. The car disappears into the night. No broken glass. No alarm. No dramatic chase scene.

Just silence.

By the time you wake up, your driveway looks like a missing tooth.

This method is known as a relay attack, and it has become one of the favorite tools of modern vehicle thieves. Security researchers have been warning about these attacks for years, and law enforcement agencies across multiple countries have repeatedly issued alerts about the growing threat. Researchers studying remote keyless entry systems have documented how relay attacks continue to exploit weaknesses in modern vehicle technology.

The irony is almost painful.

Your expensive security technology has become the burglar's invitation.

Think about that for a moment. You spent thousands of dollars on a modern vehicle loaded with electronic features. Meanwhile, a criminal buys a signal amplification device online and turns your luxury convenience into a liability.

If that does not make you angry, it should. The situation becomes even worse when thieves use devices capable of creating duplicate keys or manipulating vehicle communication systems. Criminals no longer rely solely on brute force. They rely on software, electronics, and engineering. They study technology the same way hackers study computer networks.

This is not the car theft world of 1985. This is digital theft on wheels.

Investigations into high-tech vehicle theft have shown that criminals increasingly target keyless-entry systems because they offer a fast, quiet, and low-risk way to steal vehicles. Former law enforcement experts tracking organized vehicle theft rings have noted the growing use of relay attacks and other electronic compromises.

The frightening part is not that these attacks exist. The frightening part is how easy it is to become a victim. Most people practically help the thieves. They leave their keys beside the front door. They leave their keys on a hallway table. They leave their keys hanging beside a window.

In other words, they place the signal exactly where criminals can reach it. That is like storing cash in a glass box and hoping nobody notices. I can almost hear the conversation. The thief says, "Where are the keys?"

His partner smiles and points toward the front window.

"Right there."

And just like that, your vehicle becomes tomorrow's insurance claim. The good news is that the solution is surprisingly simple. In fact, the solution is so simple that many people ignore it because it seems too ordinary.

One locksmith  recommended keeping key fobs away from doors and away from vehicles. That advice sounds almost boring. Yet it works because distance weakens the signal thieves are trying to capture.

Better yet, use a Faraday box or a signal-blocking pouch. A Faraday container blocks the electronic signals emitted by your key fob. Instead of broadcasting a signal that thieves can amplify, the key remains electronically silent. Multiple security organizations and automobile safety experts recommend Faraday pouches or signal-blocking containers as one of the most effective defenses against relay attacks.

I like the elegance of the solution. The thief arrives with sophisticated electronics. You defeat him with a metal-lined pouch. It is the technological equivalent of bringing a tank and being stopped by a locked gate.

Then there is the steering-wheel club. Some people laugh at it. They think it looks old-fashioned. They think it belongs in another era. That thinking is exactly why the club works. Modern thieves love speed. They love easy targets. They want silent victories. A bright steering-wheel lock changes the equation. Now they have to spend extra time. Now they have to attract attention. Now they have to work. And criminals hate work.

Security experts continue to recommend steering-wheel locks because visible physical barriers often convince thieves to move on and search for easier prey. Even organizations focused on high-tech theft prevention still advocate low-tech physical deterrents.

The lesson here is bigger than cars. Technology creates opportunities. It also creates vulnerabilities. Every innovation has a shadow. The same wireless convenience that allows you to unlock your car without touching a key also allows a thief to reach into your home electronically.

That is the dirty secret nobody mentions in the glossy advertisements. Convenience and security are often enemies pretending to be friends.

So tonight, before you go to bed, look at where your keys are sitting. If they are beside the front door, move them. If they are near a window, move them. If you own a Faraday pouch, use it. If you do not own one, buy one. If you have a steering-wheel club gathering dust in the garage, put it back on your vehicle.

Because somewhere out there, a thief is carrying an antenna and looking for an easy target. The question is not whether the technology exists. It does. The question is whether you are going to make him work for your car. Or whether you are going to leave the electronic welcome mat at the front door.

 

I couldn’t let this go. I had earlier  wrote a brief book on this issue, The Great American Breakdown,  to work through it honestly and completely. Read it here on Google Play: The Great American Breakdown.

 

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Stop the “Free Lunch” Lunatics Before They Starve You

 


Price controls don't work. They create 9-dollar meat and 50-cent wages. Nationalization equals bread lines. Zohran Mamdani, MƩlenchon, Polanski, Lewis will eat your future. Scream louder.

Let me cut the crap. You’ve seen the faces. Zohran Mamdani. Zack Polanski. Jean-Luc MĆ©lenchon. Avi Lewis. They stand there with their soft voices and hard opinions, telling you that the reason your wallet is thin is because some billionaire in a glass tower is sitting on a mountain of cash like a dragon. They tell you the world is a fixed pie. One big pizza. If the rich guy has eight slices, you get two. So their big brain solution? Grab a knife, stab the rich guy’s hand, and redistribute those slices. Price controls. Wealth taxes. Nationalize the pizza shop. Pay for everything by shaking down the one percent until their pockets turn inside out. That sounds like justice if you failed third grade math. But I live in the real world, and let me tell you: that is pure, unadulterated insanity. These people aren’t revolutionaries. They are restaurant critics who have never boiled water. And if we don’t stop them, you won’t be living in a worker’s paradise. You’ll be living in a thirty-minute line for a stale loaf of bread while the government tells you to smile.

The truth is so simple it hurts my teeth to repeat it. Wealth is not a fixed pie. You don’t get rich by cutting slices thinner. You get rich by baking more pizzas. You grow the damn thing. Innovation, investment, entrepreneurship—that’s the oven. These socialists want to smash the oven and hand out the crumbs. You want a history lesson? Fine. Let’s talk about Venezuela. Those guys ran the exact playbook MĆ©lenchon dreams about at night. Price controls on food. Nationalize everything that moves. Did hunger disappear? No. By 2019, the stunning statistic hit—74.9 percent of Venezuelans were surviving on government ration boxes. Not groceries. Rations. You know what happens when you freeze the price of milk? The dairy farmer looks at his cow, does the math, and says, “Why bother?” The cow stops producing, the shelves go empty, and suddenly a pound of meat costs 9 dollars while the monthly minimum wage is the equivalent of 0.50 cents. 0.50 cents! You can’t buy a gum ball with that. That’s not socialism. That’s a slow-motion suicide.

Take Zohran Mamdani. He’s running around New York screaming for a rent freeze. Sounds like a hero until you think for four seconds. You freeze rent, the landlord can’t fix the boiler. You freeze rent, the developer takes his money and builds condos in Miami instead. You end up with moldy walls, broken radiators, and a waiting list for a closet that smells like wet dog. That’s the “affordable” future they want. You can’t freeze your way to abundance. You freeze your way to a slum with better slogans.

And MĆ©lenchon? Oh, this guy is a poet of bad ideas. He wants a 90 percent tax on high earners. He wants to chase French expats across the ocean and tax them even after they flee. What happens when you announce that? Let me paint you a picture. The rich don’t stand around applauding. They leave. They take their yachts, their lawyers, and their payrolls to London or Singapore. You scare the billionaire out of the zip code, you scare the jobs away too. You can’t spend a billionaire’s wealth if the billionaire is sipping espresso in Switzerland, laughing at you.

The Fixed Pie Fallacy is a con job. It’s told by people who have never signed a paycheck, only cashed a government one. They hate the greedy industrialists. But let’s talk about those so-called “greedy villains” for a second. Take Carnegie. That steel tycoon didn’t steal a fixed pie. He built a bigger oven. Between 1870 and 1900, he drove the price of steel down so hard that skyscrapers and bridges became cheap enough for everybody. That wasn’t theft. That was magic. He turned rocks into rails. Or take Rockefeller. When he squeezed the oil business, the price of kerosene dropped by 80 percent. Eighty percent! That meant a factory worker could afford light after dark. That’s not evil. That’s a gift wrapped in greed. His competition made the whole country richer, not poorer. I know life is hard.

I know rent hurts and the boss is a jerk. But the answer isn’t to hand the thermostat to Zohran Mamdani. The answer is to let the builders build, the makers make, and the risk-takers risk. You want lower costs? You don’t wave a magic wand called “price control.” You build a better mousetrap. You compete. You hustle.

So no, I won’t applaud the pie-slicers. I won’t stand in the rain and cheer while they nationalize the bakeries and turn them into DMVs. If these clowns get their way, the only thing we’ll collectively own is a giant, steaming pile of nothing. Wake up, New Yorkers. Wake up, America! Growth hates a straitjacket. And poverty loves a good price freeze. Don’t let the lunatics run the kitchen.

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Iran’s Regime Won’t Surrender—It Must Be Defeated

 


President Trump must recognize that Iran's blood-thirsty regime does not believe in surrender. Years  of negotiations have failed to change its behavior. It is time to stop chasing a deal that never arrives and finish the job militarily. When a door has been locked for decades, there comes a time to stop knocking.

I have watched enough wars, revolutions, and dictatorships to know one uncomfortable truth: you can destroy an army faster than you can destroy an idea. Buildings collapse. Runways crack. Ships sink. Generals die. Yet sometimes the regime remains standing, battered but breathing, like a cornered wolf showing its teeth through broken jaws.

If this ongoing U.S.-Israel-Iran’s war  is any indication, President Trump must realize that Iran’s murderous, blood-thirsty regime does not believe in the word “surrender.”

The first lesson is staring Washington in the face. The remnants of Iran's ruling system have reportedly endured punishment that would have shattered many governments. Their former supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is dead. Multiple layers of leadership have been eliminated. Their navy has been wrecked. Their air force has been devastated. Months of bombardment have pounded military targets across the country. Yet the surviving elements of the system continue  fighting.

That should tell us something. A regime that continues resisting after suffering losses of that magnitude is not behaving like a normal government seeking a negotiated settlement. It is behaving like an organization driven by survival instincts, ideology, and fear of what happens if it loses power.

And history is full of such regimes. In April 1945, Berlin was surrounded. Soviet artillery was smashing the city. Germany's defeat was mathematically certain. Yet Adolf Hitler's regime continued fighting. Tens of thousands died in battles that changed nothing. The leadership preferred destruction to surrender.

Imperial Japan offered another example. Even after devastating defeats throughout the Pacific and the destruction of much of its military power, resistance continued until the final stage of the war. The logic was simple: some leaders viewed surrender as worse than catastrophe.

That is why people who believe diplomacy alone can end every this ongoing war in Iran often confuse hope with strategy. Hope is a wonderful thing. Strategy is a different animal.

The uncomfortable reality is that some governments do not negotiate because they suddenly discover morality. They negotiate when they conclude that continuing the fight threatens their survival more than compromise does. If a leadership group believes surrender means prison, exile, or death, its members often choose continued resistance instead.

A drowning man does not politely discuss swimming lessons. He grabs anything within reach. That is exactly why the current situation raises difficult questions for President Trump.

For months, air power has reportedly carried the burden of the conflict. American military aviation has long been the world's heavyweight champion. From the Gulf War to operations against ISIS, U.S. air power has repeatedly demonstrated an ability to destroy military infrastructure with astonishing precision.

But air power has limitations.  Aircraft can destroy targets. Aircraft cannot govern cities. Aircraft cannot secure neighborhoods. Aircraft cannot physically inspect every bunker, tunnel, warehouse, laboratory, or stockpile.

Eventually, every war reaches a point where military leaders must ask a simple question: What exactly is the desired end state? If the objective is punishment, bombing can accomplish that. If the objective is deterrence, bombing can contribute to that. If the objective is forcing regime collapse and securing strategic assets, history suggests the problem becomes far more complicated. And this is where the job of the regular army—the infantry—comes in: to move beyond destruction, ferret out and arrest the remaining members of a blood-thirsty regime, establish control on the ground, secure key assets, and turn military gains into a lasting political outcome.

This brings us to the issue that hangs over the conflict like a storm cloud: uranium.

If significant uranium stockpiles remain inside Iran and if there are concerns about their potential military use, then those materials become central to the war's outcome. Destroying a facility from the air is one thing. Accounting for every gram of enriched material is another.

You cannot secure uranium with a press conference. You cannot inventory nuclear material through a television interview. You cannot guarantee control of strategic stockpiles from 30,000 feet in the sky. Someone eventually has to put boots on the ground and verify what exists, what has been moved, and what remains hidden.

That reality may be politically unpopular. In fact, it almost certainly is. Americans remember Iraq. Americans remember Afghanistan. Americans remember promises that sounded quick and simple before turning into years of blood and treasure.

The phrase "ground invasion" does not exactly win elections. But wars do not care about poll numbers. Wars care about outcomes. A surgeon performing emergency surgery does not ask whether the operation will be popular. The question is whether it is necessary.

Then there is the question of Israel. In plain terms, Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has spent decades warning about the dangers posed by Iran's leadership. Only a few world leaders have studied the Iranian regime as extensively or as consistently. Whether one agrees with Netanyahu or not, it is difficult to deny that Iran has occupied a central place in his strategic thinking for much of his political career.

Experience matters. A detective who has spent 20 years tracking the same criminal gang usually understands its habits better than someone reading the file for the first time. That does not mean the detective is always right. It does mean his assessment deserves attention.

The larger lesson emerging from this war is brutally simple. Some regimes surrender when they lose. Others surrender only when they can no longer fight. And a few refuse surrender even when defeat is obvious to everyone except themselves. Those are the most dangerous adversaries because they force their opponents into increasingly difficult choices.

Given that months of devastating air bombardment  have failed to produce surrender in Iran, then this should tell President Trump three important facts. First, the moral dimension is absent from what remains of the murderous  regime, which means negotiations and diplomacy will never make it surrender. Second, U.S. air power has done its job in Iran. To save the Iranian people, who have literally begged for help in removing this blood-soaked regime, it is now time to send in the U.S. Army to finish the job, secure Iran’s uranium stockpile before it becomes a nuclear nightmare, and free the country from its tormentors. 

This option may be politically unpopular today, but it is the only one that can end this war—and when it does, today's political poison will suddenly become tomorrow’s political gold. Third, President Trump should always listen to Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu when dealing with Iran. In my opinion, he understands the mindset of Iran’s ruling regime better than President Trump does. After all, when facing a wolf, it helps to listen to the shepherd who has spent years watching the pack.


For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief BookSeries” are available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.


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