Global Finance
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On the Menu at Last

Mark Carney, Davos, and the Open Admission of Western Imperial Hypocrisy That Exposed the Conditional Morality of Western Power The speech delivered by Canada’s Prime Minister Mark Carney at the World Economic Forum in Davos warrants close scrutiny not for its surface-level defiance, but for the structural admissions it contains regarding Western power, hierarchy, and… Continue reading
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Who Is the Real Dictator? Western Hypocrisy and the Smearing of Iran’s Sovereignty

How U.S. power, media propaganda, and selective outrage redefine tyranny, while punishing any nation that refuses to kneel The New York Times labels Imam Ali Khamenei a “dictator.” But that accusation collapses the moment we apply the same standards to Western power. So let’s ask the obvious question: What do we call Donald Trump? A… Continue reading
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Mark Carney’s Speech at Davos: Is it just Theatrics?

So at the gathering in Davos, of the self appointed decision makers of the lives of 8 billion people, Switzerland, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney delivered what may appears to history defining speech to be recorded in future history text books era defining. However, is it all theater? Are these contentions genuine or just a… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, NATO, politics, Russia, warBritish foreign policy, Canada, China, Davos, economic weaponisation, European Union, Geopolitics, global governance, institutional immunity, mark carney, multipolarity, NATO, post-war international order, Russia, strategic disruption, systemic rupture, transatlantic relations, United States foreign policy, WEF -
Trump’s Chaos and the Disassembly of the Rules-Based Order

Strategic Realignment, Elite Resistance, and the Reconfiguration of Global Power The contemporary pattern of apparent disorder surrounding the Trump administration has been interpreted by several analysts as the visible surface of a deeper strategic reorientation of international power relations, rather than as an accumulation of uncoordinated or impulsive actions. According to geopolitical analyst Alex Krainer,… Continue reading
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The Cost of Iran’s Repeated Failures in Security and Economy

Understanding the Consequences of Ignoring Institutional Lessons and How Strategic Blind Spots Undermine National Stability Iran’s recent crisis reflects a repeated failure to learn established lessons about survival under sustained external pressure. These lessons concern preparation for regime change operations, economic stabilisation as a security function, internal security consolidation, and deterrence credibility against external coercion.… Continue reading
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Collapse of Western Power and the Global System in 2026

Monetary Weaponisation, Financial Fragmentation and Strategic Overreach during the Western Collapse Phase Western power in 2026 reflects the accumulated outcome of choices made since the end of the Cold War.The system did not drift accidentally into its present condition. Policy decisions consistently favoured financial expansion, global leverage, and institutional growth over domestic production and social… Continue reading
AI and Digital Control, America, China, economics, Energy, EUROPE, Foreign Policy, Geopolitics, Global Finance, israel, NATO, politicsArctic geopolitics, China Strategy, de-dollarisation, Elite Overproduction, Empire Decline, energy geopolitics, Financialisation, Game Theory, Geopolitics, Greenland Resources, Iran Sanctions, Kinetic Conflict Risk, multipolarity, Naval Escalation, Oil Tanker Seizures, political economy, sanctions warfare, Shadow Fleets, US foreign policy, Venezuela Oil, World War 3 -
The United States as the Principal Adversary of its Own Currency

The political economy consequences of turning financial infrastructure into weapons hence de-risking from America is a rational response to concentrated monetary power The United States dollar emerged as the core instrument of global trade and finance after 1945, supported by American industrial dominance, military reach, and the Bretton Woods framework. That position rested on confidence… Continue reading

