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2022 was Really Weird [kyla scanlon, Kyla’s Newsletter]

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• This year has been a gift, with many opportunities for growth and learning.
• Three quotes that summarize the year:
– “It is easier to fool a man than to convince him he has be fooled” – Mark Twain
– “Panics do not destroy capital. They merely reveal the extent to which it has been previously destroyed by its betrayal into hopelessly unproductive works” -John Mills
– “One of the saddest lessons of history is this: If we’ve been bamboozled long enough, we tend to reject any evidence of the bamboozle. We’re no longer interested in finding out the truth. The bamboozle has captured us. It’s simply too painful to acknowledge, even to ourselves, that we’ve been taken. Once you give a charlatan power over you, you almost never get it back.” – Carl Sagan
• Crypto: The web3 spectacle was far removed from reality, and the land war in Europe and worries over food and energy resources caused the crypto world to come crumbling down.
• Commodities: Tech is the new FAANG, and as resources get cheaper, we find progressively dumber uses of them.
• The Federal Reserve: Expectations are all that matter, and the Fed is facing the verifiable metrics slowing inflation contrasted against the heavy burden of Ego.
• Venture Capital: The incentives are misaligned, and the focus is on venture funds and founders, not on building enduring companies.
• Housing: Mortgage rates have skyrocketed, and private equity firms are nosing their way into mobile home parks, nursing homes, and student housing. Housing is in a deep recession, and weakness i1n housing is a core part of recessions.
• 2022 was a year of economic and human behavior changes.
• The economy was in flux, with bonds and stocks moving together, market fundamentalism becoming dominant, and an over-reliance on tech and finance layoffs.
• Human behavior was characterized by anger, doomerism, and a lack of cooperation.
• There was a sense of fragmentation, with a monoculture emerging and a focus on profit and growth over creativity and expression.
• People were degraded to the status of mere consumers, and there was a deep sense of nihilism in Gen Z.
• The article calls for reconnection and understanding, and for people to recognize their passions and create a living world.

Published December 22, 2022. Visit Kyla’s Newsletter to read kyla scanlon’s original post.

Where in the World: Quartzite and Greentech [Peter Zeihan, Zeihan on Geopolitics]

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  • Green Tech solar and wind are heralded as a cure-all, however the process of producing PV cells is extraordinarily damaging to the environment.
  • Silicon, which is used to produce PV cells, is mined and refined with a blast furnace, often powered by coal, making the carbon footprint of the production process extreme.
  • Solar panels are not effective in most cities due to lack of sun, needing to run five times as long to make up for the carbon debt.
  • Wind turbines are a better option; they are non-toxic to manufacture, often created with carbon fiber and aluminum, and can be situated in places that make sense.
  • Wind power is more reliable, reaching higher speeds and able to be used for base load capacity, while solar power is intermittent and cannot be used for peak demand.
  • If solar is not used in the right location, it can become part of the environmental problem instead of the solution.

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LV-D9mKoig – December 21, 2022

Website: https://zeihan.com/where-in-the-world-quartzite-and-greentech/

December 2022 Newsletter: The World’s Money Problem [Lyn Alden Investment Strategy]

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Key Points of the Global Financial System and Bitcoin Network:

  • Developing countries suffer from a lack of access to foreign bank accounts, currency devaluation, and financial censorship.
  • Barter system with 180 different monies developed due to inability of most currencies to be sold outside of their local jurisdictions.
  • The invention of the telegraph and then telephone increased the speed of commerce and transactions to nearly the speed of light.
  • In 2008 and 2009, Satoshi Nakamoto proposed the Bitcoin network, a globally distributed public ledger to address the velocity mismatch between transactions and bearer asset money.
  • The Bitcoin network has a finite cap of 2.1 quadrillion units that are each divisible down to eight decimal points and open protocol ledger that allows users to control a private key to transfer units.
  • Stablecoins have found utility in developing countries due to currency problems, while in developed countries the technology is seen as a solution in search of a problem.
  • The decade of affinity scams, pump-and-dump schemes, hype cycles, and leverage demonstrates the need for caution when evaluating crypto projects.
  • Blockchain technology has enabled private entities to benefit from seigniorage and it is important to ask “Does it really need a token?” when investing in crypto projects.
  • Out of 20,000+ crypto assets, only 3 have ever managed to reach a higher-high in bitcoin-denominated terms.
  • Focus on the actual utility of crypto technology, storing and transmitting value, and invest in projects with a 7-10 year growth timeframe.
  • US economy is indicating economic deceleration and a recession is a real possibility in 2023, requiring disinflationary growth by improving the supply side.

Read the original newsletter December 2022 Newsletter: The World’s Money Problem – Published December 18, 2022

 

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