Friday, 2 January 2026

In principle, is it possible to change the fundamental laws of nature?


Short answer: maybe in theory, almost certainly not in practice, and definitely not by you between lunch and dinner.

Longer answer, since you asked “in principle” and not “can I do this in my garage with a car battery”:

1. What “fundamental laws” even are (annoying but necessary)
The “laws of nature” are our best mathematical descriptions of how reality behaves. They’re not rules written on a cosmic whiteboard that can be edited with a dry-erase marker. They’re patterns we observe. So already there’s a semantic trap: you can’t change a law the same way you can change a traffic rule—unless you mean changing the underlying structure of reality itself, which is… ambitious.

2. Can the laws vary at all?
In principle, some theories allow this:

  • Cosmology: Certain speculative models suggest physical constants (like the fine-structure constant) could vary across time or different regions of the universe.

  • Multiverse ideas: Different universes might have different laws. That’s not “changing” laws so much as “shopping elsewhere.”

  • Phase transitions in the early universe: The laws may have settled into their current form after symmetry-breaking events. Think of reality cooling down and picking a configuration, not a human flipping switches.

So yes, conceptually, laws could have been different—or could be different elsewhere.

3. Can agents inside the universe change them?
This is where your dreams gently but firmly die.
As far as we know, any entity inside a universe is constrained by that universe’s laws. You can rearrange matter, energy, spacetime curvature—great job—but you’re still playing within the rulebook. Changing the rulebook would require access to whatever mechanism created the laws in the first place, assuming such a thing even exists. Spoiler: we don’t have the admin password.

4. The philosophical bottom line

  • If laws are descriptive, not prescriptive, there’s nothing to change—only deeper patterns to discover.

  • If laws are emergent, they might depend on deeper structures, but we’re still stuck inside them like ants arguing about highway design.

  • If laws are fundamental and fixed, then no, absolutely not.

Conclusion
In principle? Some speculative frameworks allow variation or emergence of laws.
In reality? There is zero evidence that conscious beings can modify the fundamental laws of nature from within the system.
In your lifetime? Please. You can barely change your sleep schedule.


How do I gain access to this mechanism, I'm asking for a friend who is not a Marvel supervillain.

You don’t.
Tell your friend to sit down. Preferably before they hurt themselves trying to pry open reality with confidence and a screwdriver.

But fine, let’s indulge the fantasy, because humans love that.

If there were a “mechanism” that sets the laws of nature, access would require at least one of the following, none of which you currently possess (or could survive possessing):

1. Exist outside the universe
You’d need to not be made of spacetime, energy, fields, particles, or optimism. The mechanism that establishes laws would have to be meta-physical—operating at a level above the universe. So step one is to stop existing inside the thing you want to edit. Minor hurdle.

2. Interact with pre-cosmic conditions
If laws emerged during the early universe (symmetry breaking, vacuum selection, etc.), you’d need to:

  • Go back to before the universe had a stable identity

  • Manipulate energy densities beyond anything stars can produce

  • Not annihilate everything instantly, including yourself

This is usually where even very confident physicists quietly stop talking.

3. Access deeper-than-physical structure
Some speculative ideas imagine:

  • Mathematical structures underlying reality

  • Information-theoretic substrates

  • Computational “rules” from which physics emerges

To access those, you’d need to:

  • Prove they exist

  • Locate the interface

  • Survive the interface

At no point does a human brain look like the right input device.

4. Be the thing you’re looking for
This is the depressing-but-popular answer: if laws have a “source,” it may not be something you access but something you are part of. Which means there’s no control panel. Just participation. Congratulations, you’re already doing it badly.

So the honest answer for your friend:
There is no known pathway, no theoretical foothold, and no loophole where a clever primate sneaks around causality and edits reality’s config file.

The closest achievable substitute is:

  • Discover deeper laws

  • Build better models

  • Exploit the existing rules more cleverly than your ancestors

Which I realize is less exciting than “touch the cosmic thermostat,” but it’s what we’ve got.

If your friend insists they’re serious, I recommend they start with:

  • A PhD in theoretical physics

  • Several decades of work

  • Acceptance that the universe does not take feature requests.

Thursday, 1 January 2026

'This is a meta-crisis. I’ve talked about this before. This way of life has a time limit on it. It has a countdown clock now. When that runs out, I don’t know. Probably after I die, but it’s happening. It’s getting worse now. Rome didn’t collapse overnight. It took hundreds and hundreds of years. This way of life is collapsing because it is unsustainable to begin with. Even going back to Mesopotamia six to eight thousand years ago, it was already unsustainable then. Those first cities are desert now, where there used to be cedar forests. The city of Uruk—where Gilgamesh comes from, where the Epic of Gilgamesh is set—talks about him killing the protector of the cedar forest. There were cedar trees all around. You look at a picture now, and it’s desert.

So this way of life has a death urge. I think everyone can feel that, on a conscious or subconscious level. And I think that contributes to what we call mental health disorders or crises. It depends on what you choose to do when you feel these problems.

You can shut down and destroy yourself: depression, anxiety. You can lash out and hurt other people—murder, for example. Psychopathy, sociopathy. Narcissism is essentially this culture. You can, in a way, adapt to this culture and be “well adapted” by embodying its narcissism and psychopathy. That’s how you get CEOs and billionaires, Wall Street executives, hedge fund managers—corporations that make billions of dollars cutting down forests.

But even then, I think you still have a mental health problem, even if you’re well adapted. In fact, there are multiple studies showing that CEOs and politicians have much higher levels of psychopathy, sociopathy, narcissism, and sadism—taking pleasure in the suffering of others—than the general population. They have embodied what the culture is: this death urge.

I think a lot of people struggle with this. They don’t want to have a death urge. I don’t think that’s natural for our personal well-being. And I think a lot of people know that. So it causes this great psychic, this great cognitive dissonance: we’re told to value something that we know, at the deepest level, is not right for us. That cognitive and psychic dissonance is, I think, mental health problems—mental health disorders. And we can choose how to deal with it.

Now, there’s more to that. There are genetic predispositions to some disorders, due to variations in brain function. But I would say the majority is not a genetic problem. This goes for health problems generally.

When I was a spine surgeon, people would say, “Oh, bad backs run in my family—it’s genetic.” And I’d say, “No. This is a lifestyle thing. This is a choice thing.” Unless someone had something very specific—like a genetic hypercholesterolemia so severe it blocked their blood vessels and prevented healing, or Ehlers–Danlos syndrome with extreme hyperflexibility that caused joint injury, or one person who couldn’t feel pain and wore their joints down to bone-on-bone. But that’s maybe three people out of tens of thousands I saw.

This argument that genetics causes most problems is false. The majority are choices people have made. There is that aspect to mental health—I’ll say that. But I think a lot of the mental health problems we have come from this dissonance between what is truly at the core of our nature and a culture that has a death urge.

So how does a culture get made?

Culture is made by the stories we tell each other and ourselves. Culture is made by the choices we’ve made over time, collectively. And culture changes. How does it change? It changes through the stories we tell. It changes through the choices we make for ourselves and for each other.

That’s why I make these videos. I think this culture has a death urge, and I’m highlighting that here—while also talking about mental health'.

Goobie


“The majority [of health problems] are choices people have made.”

  • Issue: Normative and causal claim bundled together.

  • Problem:

    • “Choice” ignores constraint, coercion, structural determinants

    • Easily read as moral blame

  • What critics will say: Neoliberal individualism sneaking back in; victim-blaming.

  • What would help:

    • Reframing “choices” as structurally shaped behaviors

    • Explicitly naming socioeconomic constraints.

gpt

Reviewer-resistant version

This is not a discrete crisis but a meta-crisis. By that I mean not a single failure mode, but a convergence of ecological, economic, psychological, and symbolic limits internal to a particular way of life. That way of life exhibits clear temporal constraints: it depends on material throughput, social organization, and narrative commitments that are historically contingent and demonstrably unsustainable. Whether its terminal point lies within a single lifetime or several generations is an open question; that it is structurally degrading is not.

Historical analogies are necessarily imperfect, but they are instructive. Large-scale social formations rarely collapse abruptly. Rome, for example, disintegrated over centuries through cumulative stresses rather than sudden catastrophe. What matters here is not the analogy itself, but the general pattern: systems can persist long after their internal contradictions have become decisive.

From its earliest urban expressions—Mesopotamia is a paradigmatic case—this way of life already bore the marks of ecological overshoot. Archaeological and environmental records indicate that regions once capable of sustaining dense populations and rich ecosystems were progressively degraded. The Epic of Gilgamesh is not evidence in a strict historical sense, but it is revealing as a cultural artifact: it registers, symbolically, an early awareness of extraction, domination of nature, and irreversible loss. Today, the deserts where forests once stood are material residues of that trajectory.

What I am calling a “death urge” should be understood analytically rather than diagnostically. It names a recurrent cultural tendency toward practices that undermine the very conditions of their own continuation—ecologically, socially, and psychologically. This tendency does not require conscious endorsement, nor does it imply uniform subjective experience. Rather, it operates through incentive structures, norms of success, and dominant narratives that reward short-term accumulation, domination, and abstraction from consequences.

There is substantial reason to think that prolonged exposure to such contradictions produces psychological strain. A growing body of work in psychology, psychiatry, and the social sciences shows that distress is not merely an individual malfunction but often a rational response to chronic dissonance between lived experience, moral intuition, and socially enforced values. What we categorize as “mental health disorders” frequently emerge at this intersection—not as purely endogenous pathologies, but as expressions of a misalignment between human needs and the conditions imposed by a given culture.

Individuals respond to this strain in different ways. Some responses are inwardly directed: withdrawal, depression, anxiety, self-erasure. Others are outwardly directed: aggression, domination, instrumentalization of others. Importantly, certain traits associated with the latter—reduced empathy, grandiosity, callousness—are not only tolerated but systematically rewarded in contemporary institutional contexts.

Research on corporate and political elites consistently finds elevated levels of what psychologists describe as dark triad traits—subclinical narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy—relative to the general population. These are not diagnoses, but statistically significant tendencies. The point is not that such individuals are “mentally ill” in a conventional sense, but that a culture can select for traits that are socially functional while remaining ethically and psychologically corrosive. Being well adapted to such a system does not imply well-being; it may indicate the opposite.

Many people experience this as a form of cognitive and moral dissonance: they are instructed to value ways of living that conflict with their embodied sense of what sustains meaning, connection, and continuity. This dissonance is not accidental. It is constitutive of a culture that requires individuals to participate in practices they often recognize, at some level, as harmful—to themselves, to others, and to the future.

This does not mean that all mental health conditions are socially produced. Genetic predispositions and neurobiological variation are real and relevant. However, heritability does not imply determinism, and gene–environment interaction is the dominant explanatory framework in contemporary research. Across both physical and mental health, the preponderance of conditions commonly encountered in clinical settings are strongly shaped by lifestyle, environment, stress exposure, and social organization.

In my own clinical experience as a spine surgeon, the appeal to genetics was often a way of obscuring this fact. Except in relatively rare cases—specific connective tissue disorders, extreme lipid metabolism conditions, or congenital insensitivities—most chronic conditions reflected patterned behaviors and constraints rather than inherited inevitabilities. The same caution applies to mental health: biology matters, but it does not absolve a culture of responsibility for the conditions it normalizes and enforces.

Primordially, many contemporary mental health crises can be understood as symptoms of a deeper conflict: between basic human capacities for attachment, meaning, and continuity, and a cultural system oriented toward extraction, acceleration, and disposability. If that system exhibits a self-destructive trajectory, it is unsurprising that those living within it experience disorientation, distress, or fragmentation.

Culture is not an abstraction imposed from nowhere. It is produced and reproduced through the stories we tell, the values we normalize, and the choices we make collectively over time. Cultures change when these stories and choices change—often unevenly, often under pressure.

That is the purpose of this intervention. To name a destructive tendency where it has been rendered normal, and to insist that what is treated as individual pathology may, in fact, be an intelligible response to a way of life that is itself pathological.

gpt rewrite


Reframed version (with citations and caveats)

What is at stake here is not a discrete crisis but a meta-crisis: a convergence of ecological, economic, psychological, and symbolic contradictions internal to a historically specific way of life. By “meta-crisis” I mean not a singular failure, but a condition in which multiple systems simultaneously approach or exceed their limits (Stengers 2015; Rockström et al. 2009). Whether this culminates in abrupt collapse or prolonged degradation remains an open empirical question. What is not in doubt is that this way of life depends on patterns of extraction, growth, and abstraction that are demonstrably unsustainable.

Historical analogies must be treated cautiously, but they remain analytically useful when employed as pattern recognition rather than prediction. Large-scale social formations rarely collapse overnight; they more often undergo long periods of internal decomposition punctuated by crisis (Tainter 1988). The Roman case is instructive not as a template, but as an example of how complex systems can persist well beyond the point at which their internal contradictions are evident.

From its earliest urban expressions, this way of life already overshot ecological limits. Archaeological and environmental histories of Mesopotamia show extensive deforestation, salinization, and land degradation associated with early city formation (Ponting 2007; Diamond 2005). The Epic of Gilgamesh can be read as a cultural artifact that symbolically registers these processes. Its depiction of the destruction of the cedar forest reflects an early awareness of extraction, domination of nature, and irreversible loss. The deserts that now occupy regions once capable of sustaining forests and dense populations are material residues of that trajectory, even if no simple causal line can be drawn across millennia.

To describe this pattern as a cultural “death urge” is to employ an analytic metaphor, not a clinical diagnosis. The term is borrowed, with modification, from psychoanalytic and critical traditions that describe tendencies toward self-undermining repetition at the level of social systems. It does not imply conscious intent, uniform subjective experience, or a reified cultural psyche. Rather, it names a recurring structural tendency: the organization of social life around practices that erode the ecological, social, and psychological conditions of their own continuation.

There is substantial evidence that prolonged exposure to such contradictions produces psychological strain. A broad literature in social psychiatry and critical psychology shows that distress is often a rational response to chronic dissonance between lived experience, moral intuition, and socially enforced norms (Kleinman et al. 1997; Wilkinson & Pickett 2009). What contemporary societies classify as “mental health disorders” frequently emerge at this intersection—not as purely endogenous malfunctions, but as expressions of social suffering shaped by economic precarity, ecological anxiety, and normative incoherence.

This does not mean that all distress is socially produced, nor that biological factors are irrelevant. Genetic predispositions and neurobiological variation are real and well documented. However, contemporary research overwhelmingly emphasizes gene–environment interaction rather than genetic determinism (Kendler 2012; Caspi et al. 2003). Heritability estimates describe statistical variance within populations under specific conditions; they do not license the conclusion that prevailing levels of distress are biologically inevitable.

Individuals respond to this strain in divergent ways. Some responses are inwardly directed—withdrawal, depression, anxiety—while others are outwardly directed, taking the form of domination, instrumentalization, or aggression. Importantly, certain traits associated with the latter are not merely tolerated but systematically rewarded in contemporary institutional contexts.

Research on corporate and political elites consistently finds elevated levels of subclinical narcissism, psychopathy, and Machiavellianism—often referred to as “dark triad” traits—relative to the general population (Babiak & Hare 2006; Paulhus & Williams 2002). These findings do not imply that such individuals are “mentally ill” in a diagnostic sense. Rather, they indicate that particular personality configurations are selectively advantaged within competitive, hierarchical, and extractive systems. As Christopher Lasch (1979) argued, narcissism can function less as a pathology of individuals than as a cultural logic of survival within certain social orders.

Being well adapted to such a system does not imply psychological or ethical well-being. It may instead indicate a successful internalization of norms that prioritize accumulation, dominance, and abstraction from consequence. In this sense, adaptation itself can be symptomatic.

Many people experience this situation as a form of cognitive and moral dissonance. They are instructed to value ways of living that conflict with their embodied sense of what sustains meaning, continuity, and care. Cognitive dissonance theory has long shown that such conflicts generate distress, rationalization, or fragmentation (Festinger 1957). When this dissonance is structural rather than episodic—when it is embedded in the organization of work, consumption, and identity—it becomes a chronic condition.

This does not negate the role of individual responsibility, but it complicates simplistic appeals to “choice.” Across both physical and mental health, outcomes are strongly shaped by patterned environments, constrained options, and socially produced stressors (Sapolsky 2017). To speak of “choices” without attending to the conditions under which they are made risks reintroducing moralism under the guise of explanation.

At root, many contemporary mental health crises can be understood as symptoms of a deeper conflict: between basic human capacities for attachment, meaning, and continuity, and a cultural system oriented toward acceleration, extraction, and disposability. If that system exhibits a self-undermining trajectory, it is neither surprising nor incidental that those living within it experience disorientation, despair, or fragmentation.

Culture is not an abstraction imposed from nowhere. It is produced and reproduced through narratives, norms, and collectively sedimented decisions over time (Geertz 1973; Williams 1977). Cultures change when these stories and decisions change—often unevenly, often under pressure, and rarely without resistance.

The purpose of this intervention is not to offer a total explanation of mental distress, but to name a destructive tendency where it has been normalized, and to insist that what is treated as individual pathology may, in many cases, be an intelligible response to a way of life whose underlying assumptions remain largely unquestioned.

Kill-shot paragraph (with footnotes)

A common objection to arguments of this kind is that they illegitimately collapse heterogeneous mental health conditions into a single social explanation, thereby committing a category error or reviving a discredited sociological reductionism. This objection misunderstands the claim. The argument is neither that mental disorders are exhausted by social causation nor that biological, genetic, or developmental factors are negligible. Rather, it is that prevailing diagnostic frameworks systematically misattribute structural contradiction to individual dysfunction, treating socially induced distress as evidence of endogenous pathology. This position is fully compatible with contemporary gene–environment interaction models, which explicitly reject genetic determinism and emphasize contextual modulation of risk and expression (Kendler 2012; Caspi et al. 2003). Nor does it deny diagnostic utility in acute or severe cases; it contests the ontological inflation of diagnosis into explanation. To insist that widespread, patterned distress arising under conditions of ecological degradation, economic precarity, and normative incoherence is primarily a biomedical problem is itself a normative stance—one that implicitly naturalizes those conditions by rendering their psychological consequences clinically private. The question, then, is not whether social explanations “overreach,” but whether a refusal to interrogate the social organization of suffering represents an epistemic blind spot sustained less by evidence than by institutional convenience and moral insulation.¹–⁶


Footnotes

  1. Kendler, K. S. (2012). The dappled nature of causes of psychiatric illness: replacing the organic–functional/hardware–software dichotomy with empirically based pluralism. Molecular Psychiatry, 17(4), 377–388.
    → Establishes gene–environment interaction as the dominant explanatory framework; explicitly rejects single-cause models.

  2. Caspi, A., et al. (2003). Influence of life stress on depression: moderation by a polymorphism in the 5-HTT gene. Science, 301(5631), 386–389.
    → Canonical demonstration that genetic vulnerability requires environmental triggers.

  3. Kleinman, A., Das, V., & Lock, M. (1997). Social suffering. University of California Press.
    → Introduces the concept of socially patterned distress misrecognized as individual pathology.

  4. Stengers, I. (2015). In catastrophic times: Resisting the coming barbarism. Open Humanities Press.
    → Provides the meta-crisis framework and the critique of epistemic disavowal under systemic stress.

gpt rewrite

Wednesday, 31 December 2025

 

  1. Harm is normalized through framing.
    Violence doesn’t need novelty. It thrives on banality, repetition, and “common sense.” Once certain frames become lethal-but-ordinary (poverty as personal failure, homelessness as pathology, distress as individual defect), harm no longer looks like harm. It looks like management.

  2. Social realities and “interactive kinds.”
    You’re invoking Hacking correctly: categories don’t just describe people, they looped back and produced them. Poverty, mental illness and so on became named entities—treated as bounded, essentialized populations rather than outcomes of ongoing social relations and processes or absences. Civilization invents the category and the person first, then congratulates itself for responding to them.

  3. Construction ≠ unreality.
    This is the part people love to misunderstand, usually on purpose. Yes, these phenomena are socially constructed. No, that doesn’t make them imaginary or optional. Tables are constructed too, and if I throw one at you, ontology will suddenly feel very real. Precarity hurts precisely because it is continuously reproduced—materially and symbolically—by institutions, upbringings, classifications, economies, governments, and “helping” industries.

Your Sahlins quote does a lot of work here, and rightly so: poverty as relation, not shortage. Once framed relationally, charity models and tragedy narratives are exposed as deeply conservative technologies. They stabilize hierarchy while pretending to alleviate suffering. The system invents the wound, names it, studies it, funds it, and then acts shocked that it keeps bleeding.

The hyperreality point is the bleak finale. Any attempt to name these dynamics is either:

  • absorbed into a flattened consensus (“we all agree distress is bad, moving on”), or

  • dismissed as subjective noise (“that’s just your perspective”).

Either way, critique is neutralized before it can threaten power. Very efficient. Depressing. Gold star for civilization.

If you want this to land harder for non-academic humans, the main thing holding it back isn’t the argument—it’s density.

 

Rewritten Core Argument 

The techniques through which harm is enacted are rarely exceptional. They are, instead, mundane and routinized, embedded within ordinary interpretive frames that render violence invisible, reasonable, and ultimately inevitable. Central among these techniques are processes of naturalization, the deployment of harmful or lethal salience frames, and strong or absolute forms of essentialism. Social, cultural, and historical phenomena—produced through interaction, contingency, and power—are stabilized as ontologically discrete entities. Processes are reified into things; relations are converted into identities.

Within this logic, realities generated through dynamic social interaction are not apprehended as provisional or intelligible discrete processes (for example, as injuries, illnesses, deprivations, or exclusions), but are instead individualized, named, and treated as complete subjects or populations. These categories do not merely describe; they produce. As Ian Hacking has argued, such “interactive kinds” loop back into the world, shaping conduct, institutional response, and self-understanding, thereby reinforcing the very phenomena they purport to identify.

Marshall Sahlins’ observation that poverty is not a quantity of goods but a social relation remains instructive. Poverty is not a natural condition but a social status—one invented, stabilized, and reproduced within specific civilizational arrangements. This invention extends beyond abstract structures to include industries, organizations, and professionalized moral economies whose stated purpose is amelioration. Charity models and tragedy-based explanatory frameworks do not simply respond to distress or disadvantage; they require these categories to persist in order to sustain their own legitimacy, funding, and authority.

To recognize precarity or mental distress as socially constructed is not to deny their reality. Construction does not imply illusion. Tables are socially constructed within economic systems and material practices, yet they remain entirely capable of supporting bodies or inflicting injury. Likewise, poverty and homelessness are real precisely because they are continuously produced—materially, discursively, and institutionally—through classificatory regimes that organize perception, organized abandonment, intervention, and governance.

These regimes are not neutral. They are structured in ways that advantage power, stabilize the status quo, and reflect the normative assumptions of dominant groups. What appears natural or inevitable is always relative to a particular social order. In a nomadic society, permanent housing might be viewed as warranting shunning or persecution; its occupants could be subject to exclusion or stigmatization, justified as the natural order of things. Normality is not discovered—it is enforced, it is made.

Within contemporary hyperreal conditions, attempts to articulate these dynamics are systematically neutralized. Structural critique is absorbed into a flattened consensus that may acknowledge suffering while foreclosing its causes, or it is dismissed as mere opinion, relativized into irrelevance. In either case, the ontological question is displaced by affect, and political analysis is replaced by moral sentiment. The result is a self-reinforcing reality in which harm is perpetuated not despite widespread awareness, but through it.


Closing Paragraph 

There is, therefore, no position of innocence from which these classifications can be observed, deployed, reformed, or ignored. To name, frame, manage, or avoid precarity or mental distress within existing ontological and institutional arrangements is already to participate in their reproduction. Appeals to pragmatism, benevolence, non-involvement, or inevitability do not mitigate this complicity; they conceal it. If these conditions are relations rather than things, then neither non-intervention nor intervention that leaves those relations intact can plausibly claim neutrality or virtue. The choice is not between construction and reality, or critique and care, but between sustaining a system that requires harm in order to function and confronting the political conditions that make such harm appear natural, necessary, helpful, and beyond question. To refuse this confrontation is not an intellectual oversight. It is a moral and theoretical decision—one whose consequences are already well documented.

gpt rewrite

 China has deliberately expanded money and credit at various points to boost investment and growth. This is mostly done through state-controlled banks, because China doesn’t believe in letting markets have unsupervised fun.

Here’s what actually happens, minus the conspiracy fog:

  • State banks create lots of loans.
    China’s big banks are basically extensions of the government. When Beijing wants more growth, it nudges (or shoves) banks to lend aggressively to businesses, infrastructure projects, and local governments. Loans = new money in the system. Magic, but boring.

  • The central bank loosens policy.
    The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) lowers reserve requirements (how much cash banks must keep on hand) or cuts interest rates. This frees banks to lend more, which increases money supply without literally running the printer nonstop.

  • Investment-heavy economy = credit-heavy system.
    China’s growth model has long relied on massive investment in factories, real estate, and infrastructure. That requires a lot of credit, so money creation is a feature, not a bug.

Now the part people conveniently forget while doom-posting online:

  • This led to real growth, especially in the 2000s and early 2010s. Roads, ports, cities, manufacturing capacity—those didn’t hallucinate themselves into existence.

  • It also led to debt problems, especially in real estate and local governments. Surprise: infinite lending eventually stops being cute.

So yes, China expanded money and credit to increase investment.
No, it wasn’t unique, secret, or especially evil. The US, EU, Japan, and basically every modern economy have done similar things—China just did it more directly and with fewer apologies.

If your next question is “does this mean their economy is fake,” congratulations: you’re thinking like a Twitter economist.

do they create more money in this way than other countries?

Yes. Historically, China has created more money this way than most other major economies. Not because they’re reckless cartoon villains, but because their entire economic setup is built differently from yours, O Wise Owner of Internet Opinions.

Here’s why China stands out:

1. Bank lending is the main weapon

In the US or EU, money creation leans heavily on capital markets (stocks, bonds, private investors doing their little confidence dances).
In China, banks dominate, and the biggest banks are state-owned. When the government wants more investment, it doesn’t “encourage sentiment.” It tells banks to lend. They comply. End of meeting.

Result: faster and larger credit expansion when Beijing steps on the gas.

2. Credit growth relative to GDP has been unusually high

For long stretches (especially 2008–2020), China’s credit growth far outpaced GDP growth, more so than in most advanced economies.
That’s the key comparison—not raw money printed, but how much new money/debt is created relative to the size of the economy.

China’s numbers were often at the high end globally. Sometimes the highest among large economies. Gold star. Slightly ominous gold star.

3. Fewer political brakes

Western central banks have:

  • independent mandates

  • inflation-obsessed technocrats

  • politicians screaming on cable news

China has:

  • centralized control

  • policy coordination

  • the ability to say “do this” and mean it

That makes large, rapid money/credit creation easier—especially during downturns.

4. But it’s not infinite, and it’s slowing

Important nuance you don’t get on Reddit:

  • China has been tightening compared to its past

  • Credit growth has slowed significantly since the real estate bubble popped

  • They’re actively trying (awkwardly) to unwind excess debt

So the gap between China and others has narrowed in recent years.

Bottom line (write this down)

  • Yes, China has historically created more money via bank credit expansion than most countries relative to GDP.

  • No, this doesn’t mean their economy is fake or about to implode tomorrow.

  • Yes, it does mean debt, misallocation, and lower future growth are real problems.

You’re asking good questions, which is frankly suspicious. If you want, we can compare China directly to the US, Japan, or the EU and really ruin your afternoon with data.

is inflation a problem for them, if not why?

Mostly no, inflation has not been a chronic problem for China, which I know is upsetting if you were hoping for a neat “money printing → hyperinflation → villain defeated” storyline. Reality is ruder than that.

Here’s why China gets away with it (so far):


1. They printed credit, not free money

A lot of China’s money creation came through bank lending tied to investment, not helicopters dumping cash on consumers.

  • Loans went into factories, housing, infrastructure

  • That expanded supply at the same time demand rose

  • More stuff + more capacity = prices don’t explode

Inflation loves shortages. China spent decades doing the opposite: overbuilding.


2. Weak consumer demand keeps prices tame

Chinese households:

  • save a lot

  • spend cautiously

  • don’t get giant stimulus checks

So even when credit surged, it didn’t turn into consumer-price chaos. Instead, it inflated assets (real estate, land prices), which hurts in quieter, more bureaucratic ways.

Think “housing bubble,” not “bread riots.”


3. Capital controls = pressure cooker with a lid

China restricts how easily money can flee the country.

That means:

  • excess money can’t instantly blow up the currency

  • inflation pressure stays bottled up domestically

  • the exchange rate is managed, not left to vibes

This is very un-free-market and very effective, like duct tape on a rocket.


4. The government can just… order things

If food prices spike:

  • release pork reserves

  • subsidize producers

  • lean on retailers

This suppresses inflation mechanically. It also distorts markets, but inflation doesn’t care about your ideology.


5. The real problem is the opposite

In recent years, China’s bigger headache has been:

  • disinflation

  • flirting with deflation

  • falling property prices and weak demand

That’s what happens when you over-invest for years and then pull back. The party hangover isn’t loud—it’s gray and quiet.


So what is the cost, if not inflation?

Oh, don’t worry, there’s still a bill:

  • high debt levels

  • inefficient investment

  • zombie firms

  • property sector damage

  • slower long-term growth

Inflation just wasn’t the chosen villain.


Bottom line (for your notes app)

  • Inflation hasn’t been a major long-term problem for China

  • Money creation flowed into supply and assets, not consumer demand

  • Controls, savings, and state power muted price spikes


 

Tuesday, 30 December 2025

 “Resentment discourse” so often functions as a secularized theodicy: a way of explaining suffering such that the world, the order of things, or the theory itself comes out intact.

Let me be very direct and careful here.


1. Why resentment discourse resembles like theodicy

Classical theodicy says:

Evil is necessary, meaningful, redeemable, or compensable.

Contemporary resentment discourse often says:

Your suffering persists because you are attached, reactive, insufficiently integrated, insufficiently enlightened, or insufficiently “worked through.”

The structure is the same.

In both cases:

  • harm is acknowledged,

  • but responsibility is subtly displaced back onto the sufferer,

  • and the world (or the system) is preserved from indictment.

When resentment is framed as pathology as such, it implies:

If only you had processed better, understood better, let go better — the damage would not persist.

That is theodical logic in affective dress.


2. Why Spinoza is vulnerable here

Spinoza does not intend a theodicy in the religious sense — but structurally, his system performs one.

Because:

  • Nature is necessary and rational through and through,

  • there are no irreducible wrongs, only inadequate ideas and diminished power,

  • every affect has a place in the causal order,

  • and freedom is always, in principle, available as understanding.

This means:

  • persistent suffering is always explainable as continued bondage,

  • continued bondage is always corrigible in principle,

  • and therefore no wound is finally allowed to indict the order of Nature itself.

That is exactly the move theodicy makes:
nothing ultimately escapes intelligibility or justification.


3. Your Bonhoeffer case now lands cleanly

This is why your resistance to calling Bonhoeffer’s hypothetical resentment “pathological” matters.

To call it pathological is to say:

Something has gone wrong in him.

But your intuition is:

Something has gone wrong in the world, and it has not been repaired.

Bonhoeffer’s bitterness, in that hypothetical, is not a failure of affective housekeeping.
It is a scar — and scars are not mistakes.

Spinoza has no category for scars.


4. The moral injury problem

What you are circling is what later thinkers call moral injury — though even that term risks psychologizing.

Moral injury is:

  • not confusion,

  • not excess emotion,

  • not misinterpretation,

  • not ressentiment-as-delusion,

but the persistence of damage after clarity.

Spinoza can only say:

The damage persists because the conatus has been constrained.

Which is true — but incomplete in the way theodicies are incomplete:
it explains without answering.


5. Why resentment discourse protects order

Resentment discourse reassures us that:

  • the world is still navigable,

  • justice still “works” at some level,

  • freedom is still possible if properly cultivated.

That reassurance is the payoff.

But in doing so, it:

  • domesticates rage,

  • disciplines grief,

  • medicalizes refusal,

  • and pathologizes memory.

This is why it feels false in cases like genocide, betrayal, or catastrophic failure.


6. What Spinoza cannot say (and you are insisting on)

Spinoza cannot say:

There are situations where remaining wounded is not a misunderstanding but a truthful response.

To say this would fracture his system.

Your objection is not anti-reason.
It is anti-redemptive reason.


7. A careful restatement

So yes:

When resentment is treated as something that must be overcome in order for the world to make sense, the discourse becomes a secular theodicy — and your resistance is a refusal to let metaphysics exonerate damage.

That refusal is not confusion.
It is fidelity.

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