• P03 Locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    My question for the last 9+ months has been, “how long can a market willingly ignore reality?”

    How long did we kick the foundations out of the US dollar when we got rid of the gold standard, and just let it float on speculation and feelings? What, 60-70 years now?

    How long has the stock market existed on the whims of people’s feelings over cold hard statistics and long-term analysis?

    Markets have been ignoring reality for many decades.

    • The_Italian_Uncut@beehaw.org
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      20 hours ago

      Exactly. Since the end of the gold standard, the economy hasn’t been about production — it’s been about valuation.

      70 years ago, companies were built to make things: cars, fridges, tools. Today, they’re built to inflate stock prices.

      The real product isn’t goods. It’s debt, speculation, planned obsolescence.

      And now, AI isn’t replacing workers to make things better. It’s replacing them to cut costs — while real needs go unmet.

      This isn’t progress. It’s the slow collapse of a system that forgot its purpose.

      • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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        13 hours ago

        It’s the slow but inevitable achievement of end-state of a system designed to re-frame and re-centralize power in the hands of the elite following the liberalization of political power.

        This is its purpose. It always has been.

    • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      24 hours ago

      To be fair there’s all the shit with dollar denominated oil, SWIFT, terrorist regime change on countries that don’t want to play along, etc. It might not be based on any kind of fair exchange of value, but that’s not quite the same as the USD’s global reserve currency status being vibes-only.