
The 2008 financial crisis felt chaotic but was actually a systemic failure rooted in mistaking debt for real wealth: easy lending inflated housing prices, mortgages were repackaged into “safe” assets, and when defaults broke the underlying cash flows, both the debt and the illusion of wealth collapsed together. Today, that same structure hasn’t been fixed—it’s been scaled globally, with sovereign debt, corporate bonds, and real estate forming a vastly larger web of leveraged claims presented as stable assets. Rising interest rates have already exposed cracks, just as in 2008, but now the entire global balance sheet is intertwined, with central banks deeply embedded in the system. The core lesson remains: when credit is mistaken for wealth, the system becomes fragile, and if the promises embedded in massive debt levels can’t be fulfilled, the perceived wealth built on top of them will be rapidly repriced.
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The Illusion of Wealth Part 3: A New Denominator

The Illusion of Wealth Part 1: Paper Claims

Scott Dedels | Bitcoin, Time, and Architecture

Giovanni Santostasi | A Participatory Network
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