
The War on Reality: How Trade, Inequality, and Power Are Shaping Our Future
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About this listen
In this episode of Now I Get It, I explore what I call a "war on reality"—a conflict playing out across education, economics, and politics. Using a personal family story, I trace the long-reaching impact of the GI Bill on class structure and opportunity in America. From there, we dive into comparative advantage, the dangers of global trade dependency, and how geopolitical hotspots like Taiwan reveal hidden risks in our modern economy.
But this isn't just about history or theory. I connect the dots between economic inequality, natural selection, and the rise of right-wing authoritarianism. You’ll hear how growing class divides and misunderstood trade-offs are fueling a backlash against knowledge, freedom, and innovation—and why it’s critical for today’s knowledge workers to care deeply about protecting social cohesion if they want to preserve liberty.
In this episode, you will learn:
- (01:10) – How two brothers’ different experiences with the GI Bill illustrate the fracturing of the American middle class
- (03:45) – What “comparative advantage” really means—and how it can help or hurt global stability
- (05:50) – Why Taiwan’s chip dominance is a flashpoint in global power struggles
- (08:00) – How trade and tech-fueled inequality affects natural and sexual selection in society
- (09:30) – The political realignment of America’s working class—and the Democratic Party’s shifting identity
- (11:00) – Why rising inequality breeds authoritarianism, and how it threatens the very freedoms knowledge workers rely on
Let’s connect!
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