The Mountain Never Ends: Grinding and Thinking Long Term
I’m a member of Radigan Carter’s excellent Fortress group and there are always great learnings and recommendations that really make me question my views and opinions. Radigan pulled a quote from prominent investor Eric Peters that was powerful. So powerful, I had to share it here.
“Anecdote (Jan 2011): Pretty much everything I learned about climbing mountains, I learned from Vincent Ravanel. He’s a 7th generation high altitude mountain guide from Argentiere, France. From father to son, the Ravanel’s passed a simple mantra: “The Mountain never ends.” And like most things profound, it touches on something universal and fundamental. Because climbing mountains, physical and metaphorical, is what Man does, and has always done, and will always do.
Vincent would calmly whisper that mantra high on the rock and ice when we faced a challenge, a fork, a decision. It served to humble us both, remind us to pace ourselves, and to only press for the summit if conditions and timing were optimal. And it also served to inspire, to capture in a sentence our ambition to tackle something so large and enduring. You see, to bag a tough peak and return intact, of course you need skill/strength/tenacity, but you also need the right temperature/weather/visibility and a measure of good luck. Combine all those well, find the opening, push like hell, and bang – success.
But fight the elements, force it, press your luck, and, well, you know the result. So, I take a deep breath, and look up, a new quarter looms and above that, a new year, a new decade, a new century, even a new millennium.
And on these first steps of this ambitious climb, I remind myself of the importance of patience and humility, optimal conditions and timing, and a little good luck. But mostly, I tell myself to listen carefully, at those tough and lonely points that surely lay ahead, for the Ravanel whisper, “The Mountain never ends.”
What a beautiful passage. An analogy of investing. Even more an analogy of life. A mountain to me means problems, pain and challenges in life. A life without mountains aka problems & challenges is not a true or real life. There is always another mountain to climb.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads April 5th, 2026
"When Nature resumes her loveliness, the human soul is apt to revive also"--Harriet Ann Jacobs
"We are taught that “Personal Branding” is an asset. We are told to be consistent, relatable, and visible. But consistency is often just another word for stagnation. If you are forced to act according to how people perceive you, you are no longer free to evolve. You become a prisoner of your own “Success.” You start making decisions based on what “looks right” rather than what “is right” for your Sovereign Variable.
The ultimate signal of power is making a massive life change—changing your career, your location, or your philosophy—without a single public announcement. It shows that you do not require external validation to authorize your growth. You are the only “Stakeholder” in the corporation of your life."
https://luxlifestylelab.substack.com/p/the-reputation-prison
2. "Even as Trump pulls back from his threat to invade Greenland, the broader trajectory is unmistakable. We are drifting—not by accident, but by structural necessity—toward a world that looks far less like the liberal universalism of 1945 and far more like the balance-of-power order of the late 19th century: spheres of influence, managed rivalry, and transactional diplomacy. The United States will dominate the Western Hemisphere; China will dominate the Asia-Pacific; Russia will contest Europe’s eastern frontier. International law will persist, but as rhetoric rather than restraint.
There are no obvious winners in this world. Economic growth will fall as trade walls rise. Border-blind threats—to health, to the environment, to financial stability—will rise as cooperation falls. Wars will be quicker to start and harder to end. This world was always latent in liberal universalism itself. Trump did not invent its contradictions; he merely stripped them of their euphemisms."
3. America is in really big trouble due to over-financialization and elite incompetence. One of the most rational & cold takes on global macro. The world has changed, hard assets rule. Luke Gromen is a realist.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lYYF1HjnCZo
4. "Entrepreneurs looking for new ideas should lean directly into this. They should find the most unloved SaaS software they can and vibe-code their way into a new entrant in that market, grinding away to create a product customers love that delivers maximum value for minimal cost. It will not be glamorous, but I am confident thousands of entrepreneurs will do exactly this and build strong small businesses.
Incumbent SaaS companies are already under tremendous valuation pressure, and things are only going to get more challenging as a Cambrian explosion of vibe-coded SaaS applications comes online."
5. "Non-fiction works are great and we can learn a lot from them, but fictional characters like these inspire us to overcome the challenges of life and put forth the best version of ourselves to the world. That is why we continue to read fiction. It is not for entertainment alone, but to learn lessons that can make us better men."
https://thewaysofagentleman.substack.com/p/ten-fictional-men-who-still-teach
6. "This reflects a deeper reality of the New Cold War amid ongoing industrial revolution which proclaims the same mindset as during the previous one - the winner takes all. Power now flows through factories, data centers, logistics corridors, energy systems, and chokepoints as much as through military bases.
Deterrence in the 21st century is not only about how fast you can deploy forces but about how fast you can replace losses, scale production (including defense one), and deny adversaries geoeconomic leverage.
The 2026 U.S. National Defense Strategy does not promise peace. It promises managed confrontation amid New Cold War between the U.S. and the DragonBear. It accepts the permanence of competition with China, the persistence of the Russian challenge, the volatility of North Korea, and the impossibility of global U.S. dominance at the current stage of international affairs.
What it offers instead is a system design: homeland- and hemisphere-first security, denial-based deterrence, allied industrial mobilization, and geoeconomic statecraft."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/185630161
7. Good tips for running or setting up a Family Office for "Poor Millionaires"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_m87E0nxsFg
8. Always enlightening. Palmer Luckey is an American hero.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxPE7dvjVOk
9. Shipbuilding, USVs, and the Economics of Naval Autonomy. Pretty good discussion on defense-tech.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dzvbrmw0Oyo
10. "If you want inspiration for this moment in time I have two recommendations: watch Babylon Berlin and read the Foundation Trilogy. They are roadmaps for living a moral life in a time of profound regression.
The old order was clearly decaying. The rule of law had been undermined for years. Jack Welsh and his acolytes broke the economy. Private equity raided industries for short term financial gain. Everything got financialized. Government grew ever more bloated and ineffective. Well-meaning laws were weaponized to prevent anything from being built."
https://continuations.com/what-now-slow-down-the-worst-and-build-the-new
11. "New startup opportunities emerge not from training the largest models, but from training the specialists the executives call first."
https://tomtunguz.com/the-scaffolding-shift/
12. This was a fun OG old man VC conversation on the nuttiness of seed rounds right now. Loved it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsci7cd8a5s
13. "In my view, global equity markets are undergoing a profound regime change. We’re transitioning from a two-decade cycle defined by software abundance and capital-light scalability to a new era characterized by physical scarcity, kinetic friction, and industrial re-arming.
For the past twenty years, the prevailing investment orthodoxy has favoured the “intangible economy”: as it’s commonly said, bits over atoms, platforms over plants, and globalized efficiency over sovereign redundancy.
This period relied on two foundational axioms.
First, that the physical layer of the economy (energy, materials, manufacturing) was a commoditized utility that would remain cheap and frictionless. Second, that geopolitical integration would prevent great power conflict, allowing supply chains to optimize purely for cost rather than security.
Both axioms have been falsified."
https://www.polymathinvestor.com/p/asymmetric-opportunities-in-the-re
14. The world is still in play between America & China. Global macro with Luke Gromen. Growing importance of Gold and neutral assets.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fiHy1FoRl-Y
15. This is probably one of the best interviews with Tony Robbins I've seen in a while. Deeply insightful and it will make your life better.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I_w81rptxkc
16. Timely topic of covert action in the world we live in now. We are now in a new golden age of coups, assassinations & covert wars unfortunately.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=incV9B5Ry1M
17. "Then again, Silicon Valley’s political record so far ought to be surprising. The leaders of the tech sector are almost the only people in American life since the end of the Cold War who actually have some experience of sustaining our inherited greatness, and of foreseeing and building a better future. Indeed, tech elites today might well be said to have the same sort of reasonable claim to national leadership and esteem that the generals, planners, and engineers who won World War II enjoyed in the generation after 1945. Almost alone among contemporary Americans, intelligent young people at the Valley’s intersection of information technology and finance can find themselves not only richly rewarded for their talents and risk-taking but also equipped with the resources, skills, and mentorship to transform their own and our collective life.
With the innovative products they invent or bring to market, they reshape the way we buy, sell, make, move, talk, and think. Many of those who have made fortunes doing so turn their abilities to envision and execute far-ranging plans from commerce to broader goals on behalf of the shared future of humanity. In these respects they fulfill, whether they know it or not, functions that were once those of political, religious, scholarly, and industrial elites, whose own recent accomplishments seem comparatively dim.
Yet they seem to lack the ability to transfer their success and skills into politics. It is not that tech elites have failed to think about the subject—or about philosophy, culture, and other fields beyond their core areas of professional competency. They are conspicuous readers, or at least conspicuous owners and discussers of books that consider society and history from perspectives far removed from those of the engineer or capitalist.
As a historian, literary critic and political theorist, I have been struck, along with many of my colleagues, by the recent proliferation of a so-called “canon” of such books read by many of the Valley’s leading technologists and financiers, along with people who, from within or beyond Silicon Valley, wish to outdo, imitate, or simply better understand the mindset of those leaders."
https://colossus.com/article/education-broligarchy-silicon-valley-canon/
18. This is an impressive founder. A masterclass on running a high growth startup. I actually learned a lot from this. Also syncs with lots of my experience.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PhbVnUBmygA
19. The great geopolitical re-anchoring. Trying to understand the world from the lens of top analyst George Friedman.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HAXd5v5Ebb8
20. The man does not pull punches. Bessent is clearly the most articulate and smartest person in the Trump admin right now. Good to listen to if you want to hear where the US economy is going.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4NdoWTWwVUQ
21. "Today, YC’s increasing investment in defense tech startups is a microcosm of a broader industry shift — from building consumer and business applications to now embracing the technology of warfare. Such a shift for a respected incubator that attracts the crème de la crème of startup offerings is exemplary of the industry’s multi-year shift toward investing in warfare tech; it’s gone mainstream. While tech companies once downplayed their military contracts, the defense tech sector’s loudest voices now argue that their focus must move from consumer diversions to defending their nation.
Alex Karp, who founded Palantir in 2003 alongside entrepreneur Peter Thiel and others, bemoaned in a new book co-written with the company’s legal counsel Nicholas Zamiska, that Silicon Valley has “lost its way” for viewing the U.S. government as “an impediment to innovation and a magnet for controversy.” The country’s best engineers worked on delivery apps when they could’ve contributed to America’s military strength.
Silicon Valley has apparently begun to wake up, as investments and valuations in defense tech have ballooned. In just five years, from 2019 to 2024, venture capital investment in U.S. defense-tech startups grew more than 10 times, reaching around $3 billion, according to Crunchbase data."
https://www.noemamag.com/silicon-valley-goes-to-war/
22. I used to be a big fan of Chamath until the SPAC scam. But this interview with his wife really humanized him to me again. People are multifaceted. And can't argue with his investing chops.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MG4LWSJ_Xiw
23. "Bezos was right. Your margin is my opportunity. In software, that opportunity isn’t price. It’s the race to outspend everyone else.
Still, $8.7 trillion in enterprise value says the race is worth running."
https://tomtunguz.com/is-your-margin-my-opportunity-software/
24. "As this Stanford study asserts, winning isn’t an inherent skill, it’s something learned. Tom Brady didn’t win national championships at Michigan and Elon Musk didn’t sell his first company for a billion dollars, but as I look at the most successful folks in society, they have developed and reinforced patterns that enable them to win. They don’t complain about problems, they solve them. They attack them head on and are ruthless in their self-improvement to identify pathways to help further improve their odds of winning.
I often come back to this Tom Brady quote, “To be successful at anything, the truth is you don’t have to be special. You just have to be what most people aren’t: consistent, determined, and willing to work for it.” That’s how you win, not by scapegoating, whining or complaining, but by consistently showing up with the determination and work ethic necessary to take small wins and compound them into big ones. That’s how you learn how to win.
If you are a founder (or board member), don’t just identify problems, solve them. Stack the solutions on top of each other and sure enough, you will be sitting atop some wins. Those wins can help catapult you to even bigger wins. Complaining about the problems isn’t going to get you anywhere and will only reinforce patterns to failure. As Robert Frost once said, “The best way out is always through.”
https://newsletter.equal.vc/p/winner-or-whiner
25. "By extinguishing visibility, the regime has shown how dominance over communications infrastructure can neutralize coordination and insulate repression from scrutiny. The blackout functions less as censorship than as an operational enabler, transforming digital control into a mechanism for managing society itself.
Digital Control as an Instrument of Regime Survival.
The implications extend far beyond Iran. America’s adversaries are absorbing an important lesson: in modern conflicts between state and population, mastery of communications infrastructure can be as decisive as material force. Digital isolation compresses timelines and allows coercion to outpace accountability. Applied more broadly, this logic points toward the systematic use of advanced cyber and surveillance capabilities to penetrate encrypted channels, map opposition networks, and suppress resistance before it becomes politically visible, offering a replicable model for regime survival in an era of mass connectivity."
https://www.zinebriboua.com/p/cyber-power-iran-and-the-uschina
26. "Noblesse oblige matters because it is the answer to the challenges of human inequality. However much we might want to believe that perennial hierarchies can be quashed by the feel-good pronouncement of egalitarians, nature is hard to overwrite, and nature is hierarchical. Rather than breezily wishing it away, the aim must be to moderate the potential excesses of hierarchy and cultivate its advantages. A culture of noblesse oblige reminds the powerful that their blessings are to be used for good and not for plunder—and it attaches prestige and honor to good conduct, shame and disgrace to bad conduct.
The ideal has been in severe decline in recent centuries, and we need it back. Everything is riding on it."
https://thechivalryguild.substack.com/p/reviving-noblesse-oblige-here-and
27. "The petrodollar’s slow fade isn’t just about oil; it’s about trust. When allies like Europe grumble about US unpredictability, they start exploring expansion of trade with China. Trump’s “America First” sounds tough, but it’s leaving the US lonelier. Europe might cave short-term, but long-term resentment builds and EU countries are considering closer trade ties with China.
The irony is striking. By trying to contain China, the US is supercharging its rise. Beijing doesn’t need to provoke; America’s blunders do the work. The bombing of Iranian sites might have scored points with the military industrial complex, but it rallied anti-US sentiment, driving Tehran closer to China. The oil grab in Venezuela further alienated Latin America, where China’s presence grows unchecked.
In the end, the US’s behavior isn’t benefiting America; it’s making China great again. The weaponization of the dollar, the tariff tantrums, the ally-alienating antics—all of it is fueling a multipolar world in which China emerges as the steady hand.
If Trump really wants to deliver to his shrinking MAGA base, he might be smart to dial back the chaos. Otherwise, we’re all in for a bumpy and dangerous ride. The big winner of this geopolitical smackdown won’t be wearing stars and stripes. It will be the dragon waiting patiently in the shadows, gaining strength and credibility with every American misstep."
https://frankgiustra.com/posts/americas-geopolitical-blunders/
28. "The mountain woomph sounded the alarm to danger underneath a beautiful layer of powder. The financial markets went woomph as the yen weakened and JGB prices collapsed.[1] Quite a coincidence that both occurred in Japan. Many macro commentators smarter than I proclaimed Japan will be the match that lights the filthy fiat system ablaze. I don’t believe our betters who inhabit the relevant organs of power around the globe will allow said collapse to occur without trying to print their way out of it.
Therefore, analyzing the fragility that the yen and JGB injects into global markets at this juncture is extremely important. Will a meltdown of the yen and JGB markets cause some sort of money printing by the BOJ or the Fed?[2] The answer is yes, and this essay will explain the mechanics of the said intervention that was foreshadowed last Friday.
This discussion of Japanese financial markets is important because for Bitcoin to exit its sideways funk it needs a healthy dose of money printing. What I will present is a theory which the actual flow of money through the corroded veins of the global monetary system doesn’t support yet. As time progresses, I will monitor the changes in certain line items on the Fed’s balance sheet in order to validate my hypothesis. But most importantly, I will listen for the “Woomph”. Our masters want us to trade based on their manipulations. Therefore, I must be vigilant and listen to what is said and not said by the likes of US Treasury Secretary Buffalo Bill Bessent and BOJ Governor Ueda-domo.
This yen and JGB market manipulation by the Fed solves many financial problems for the Trump administration.
Strengthen the Yen
This will strengthen the yen against the dollar, which will help US export competitiveness.
Lower JGB Yields
Lower JGB yields will dissuade Japan Inc. from selling treasuries to buy JGBs. Japanese Prime Minister Takaichi can roll out a massive stimulus program funded by increased bond sales to placate Japanese plebes. Understandably, the average voter doesn’t relish the fact that their nation got nuked and then turned into an American colony. Prime Minister Takaichi can also increase defense spending and purchase more American-made weapons of mass destruction."
https://cryptohayes.substack.com/p/woomph
29. A good juxtaposition interview with Legora as compared to Harvey CEO interview previously. This one is much more Aggressive and competitive. Both companies are crushing it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZjwrXqjr59A
30. "Unless you’re building dev tools, those customers are probably going to have the same problem on Monday that they did on Friday. The latest AI model or open source agent didn’t change that.
By all means try new things. Spend time to test the new models and try the new toys. But for the love of god constrain the amount of time you spend doing that. If you started a company to solve a pain point that you’re passionate about, keep your eye on the prize (provided, of course, that you continue to believe that pain point matters).
And if you find yourself spending more time on the shiny new thing than you are on solving your customer’s pain points, think about that too.
In an age of distractions, the winners will be the ones who stay focused."
https://chrisneumann.com/archives/when-distractions-are-everywhere-focus-wins
31. "Every quarter, calculate exactly how much “Dry Powder” you have available for a sudden 20% market drop. If you don’t have a War Chest, you aren’t an investor; you’re a gambler hoping for good weather. Sovereignty requires the ability to be the only person with a checkbook in a room full of sellers.
Takeaway
Stop praying for stability. Stability is where you get stuck. Pray for the storm, and make sure you have the boat to sail it."
https://luxlifestylelab.substack.com/p/the-chaos-premium
32. "Every time access to the dollar system becomes conditional, participants learn to treat it less as infrastructure and more as exposure. Exposure demands management. Management demands hedging. Hedging demands alternatives.
This is not ideological de-dollarization. It is rational balance-sheet behavior in a world where financial plumbing has become an active instrument of policy rather than a passive utility. Once a system is used as leverage, it stops being treated as neutral. And once neutrality fades, even slightly, defaults become choices.
That is the true story of the dollar in early 2026. Not collapse. Not replacement. Not revolt. But a gradual shift from unconscious reliance to conscious management.
The world used to default into dollars without thinking.
Now it defaults into managed exposure.
That distinction is small in language, but enormous in consequence."
https://tanviratna.substack.com/p/the-dollar-system-is-acting-weird
33. "Outsourcing helped finance a Chinese bio industrial base with the scale, capability, and learning velocity to become a competitor. WuXi alone targeting 100,000 litres of solid phase peptide reactor volume in 2025 was not just contract research. That’s sovereign capability.
The Apple and Tesla lesson was not ‘never build abroad’. It was simpler. If you build your business on top of someone else’s factory, do not be surprised when the factory becomes the business.
Biotech is there now."
https://jwcass.substack.com/p/sovereign-risk-the-geopolitical-price
34. Great discussion on Clawdbot aka MOLbot & other topical subjects. Helpful to understand what's up in the world.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R_KyoqaXg1A
35. "Look at your biggest win this month. Ask: “How could I have achieved this with 90% less effort?” Usually, the answer involves a better relationship, a better piece of code, or a better narrative. The moment you find the answer, stop doing the “work” and start building that bridge.
If you’re tired, you’re doing it wrong. Efficiency is for the poor; Effectiveness is for the Sovereign."
https://luxlifestylelab.substack.com/p/the-meritocracy-myth
36. Lots of great takes and insights on Silicon Valley news.
Be Present: Old Man Wisdom From Landman
I love Landman the tv series and season 2 is excellent. Incredible acting.
There is this one scene when the main character is eating lunch with his dad and he is about to rush out to solve the regular intractable problems with running a massive oil company.
His dad says:
“What’s your hurry, son? All those problems you are racing home to fix is problems when you get there? And once you’ve solved ‘em, there is a whole new set right behind ‘em. You got to enjoy the moments between the problems. Otherwise, problems is all you’ll have.
You take a long hard look at me, I am the road map to living life wrong. Whatever time I got left, I’m gonna enjoy. This steak. That sweet tea. A dance with your wife. That granddaughter’s smile. You got it all, son. But you’re too fu-king stupid to see it. Or too mad. Or too addicted to the fix. Whatever it is, you’re missing it.”
Source: https://x.com/Mindset_Machine/status/2009262045665849508
Hard words. Powerful words. A good reminder that life is short. A wake up call.
Yes, you should work on hard problems, you get rewarded for solving hard problems. But don’t ignore your important relationships, your family. Be present more. Be grateful for even the smallest pleasures. And don’t forget to enjoy the time you have on earth.
The Thinking Game
For anyone who is curious about AI and the future, I strongly recommend the documentary on Demis Hassabi and his journey building Deepmind, now part of the Alphabet aka Google empire. It’s really well done and free on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d95J8yzvjbQ
The man is brilliant and maniacal, accomplished chess player at young age, early admittance to Cambridge Queens College, man behind the video game Theme Park. At age 11, he came to the hard realization. "Although I love chess this is not the thing I want to spend my entire life on." Thankfully for humanity he did as he started focusing on exploring AI before anyone else, leading him to cofounder Deepmind, where wanted to build AGI (Artificial General Intelligence) which is an intelligence just like the brain that learns many things versus AI which is single task focussed and specific.
He built and modelled Deepmind on the best of academia with a collection of some of the smartest people from around the world. "The founding principle of this place (The Institute for Advanced Study), it’s the idea of unfettered intellectual pursuits, even if you don't know what you are exploring. Will result in some cool things, and sometimes that then ends up being useful, which of course, is partially what I've been trying to do at Deepmind."
Tackling big hard problems and as one of their experts said: "I can tell you, if you are at the forefront of science, you will fail a great deal." But when it works, it really works. Power law again.
They started using the technology to win in video games, the complicated board game Go and even Alphafold, to figure out protein folding which could literally lead to life saving science. “These are gifts to humanity. Every single biological and chemistry achievement will be related to Alphafold in some way. Alphafold was an index moment. A moment people will not forget because the world changed.”
Demi’s learning from this: "The lesson that I learned is that ambition is a good thing, but you need to get the timing right. There is no point being 50 years ahead of your time. You will never survive 50 years of that kind of endeavor before it yields something. You'll literally die trying."
The race to AGI is on. "The advent of AGI will divide human history into two parts. The part up to that point and the part after that point. It will give us a tool that will allow us to completely reinvent our civilization" Exciting times.
As Demi says: “Everybody’s realized what Shane and I have known for more than 20 years, that AI is going to be the most important thing humanity’s ever going to invent. The pace of innovation and capabilities is accelerating, like a boulder rolling down a hill that we’ve kicked off and now it’s continuing to gather speed. AGI is on the horizon.”
So if you want to learn and be inspired by this exciting technology I highly recommend watching the documentary. It’s really worthwhile.
Go Get Some: Andrew Tate Motivation
Sometimes you just need a kick in butt to get going. The grind is hard I know so you have to find inspiration wherever you can. I find Andrew Tate’s harsh truth to be freeing. He did a video beginning of 2026 that I still go back to frequently when I get discouraged: https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=azZzdQEg4t0
I warn you though, it’s a long one.
“This year is going to be a transformative year. There will be energy in the universe. Energy that you can grab and transform into the building blocks required to improve your life in all realms. But none of it's going to matter unless you're prepared for it. None of it's going to matter unless you're doing due diligence on yourself.
You should only spend your time doing what you are good at. This is an extremely important concept not many of you understand. There's two primary ways you get to make money. You either give up your time or you give up your money. Now, if you become a specialist in something, your time is amplified. If you're a doctor, your time is worth more than if you're a cleaner. Why? Not everybody is a doctor. Anyone can clean.
With money, it can also come down to how much you know and how well you know how
to amplify your money. It's true. But to a degree, you need a specialization…….
Imagine you wanted to be completely self-sufficient and you had to make your own clothes and grow your own food and build your own house. Now imagine you were a very talented musician, but because you want to be self-sufficient, you don't have time to play piano because you have to build your own house, make your own clothes, and grow your own food. And you may have a few spare minutes in the day to play some piano. Whereas if you only play piano all the time because it's what you're good at so that you earn enough money that you can pay someone else to build your house, buy your clothes, now you get to become rich cuz it amplifies the value of your time.
If you want to be good at something, then you need to identify, well, what am I good at? Let me focus on that, which increases the value of your time so you make as much
money as possible. Conor McGregor was a good fighter. So he focused on fighting.
When he wanted to launch a whiskey brand, he then uses the money and
notoriety he had obtained from the only thing he is good at and hired people to
deal with distilleries to deal with starting an international alcohol brand
distribution.
Imagine instead he said, "I want to do a whiskey brand all by myself" and wanted
to build his own distillery, make his own whiskey, and drive it around in
trucks trying to deliver it to pubs. You don't get rich that way ever. Then
what you should be doing is doubling down on that thing, making as much money
as possible, and finding someone else to do that for you. You may ask yourself, well, how do I then find people who I can trust to do the other things that I can't do?”
I think this point is key. I think you have to both be a specialist and generalist. Like a T. Know something super super well, be an expert on one thing, this is the leg of the T. But you should also know a bunch of things generally. The top of the T. Knowledge is power.
“This comes back to the sofa store and learning how to manage people and manage relationships and not be a little social autist. Sitting on a chair all day will make you autistic. Nobody's going to like you. To be likable and trustable and relatable. You're going to learn that the hard way most often. But this is an extremely important concept I want many of you to understand. If you're making three grand a month from a pet store and that's what you're good at, you need to spend your time getting that
three grand a month up to 10 grand a month.
Not sitting there gambling the three grand a month trying to catch a lick because you saw shiny object with a once in a generation, god knows when it's ever going to come again. Because what crypto is doing is it's brain draining and there's people now who are forgetting the thing they are actually talented in to just sit and chase imaginary gains in a minus some gain and most of you are going to lose.
I make a lot of money with lots of things. I make a lot of money with property. I make a load of money because I can talk on a microphone and you will listen to me. I have a coffee shop. I have a car wash. I do everything. So, I'm not against money. What I am against is the idea of people not prepared to sit down and do actual genuine work. This obsession with shiny objects, this easy come, easy go, fast.
The truth about life is that there is no easy way out. There is no shortcut home. It's rocky. It's round 10. It's a slugfest. It's broken eye sockets and it's swinging. That's all life is ever going to be at the top. Even with money, it's the same for me. It's still jail.
It's still court. It's still problems. I can only deal with them because of my poor man lessons.
I went to jail in Romania. The gypsies who tried to pick on me. Not knowing I grew up in Luton. I'll fight all 10 of you right now. And they learned better. If I had caught a 10 million lick at 16, how would I have survived in jail?
Being poor saved me. Being poor saved me. And my brand has only ever been telling you that life is hard as a man. It's never happy. It's never smiles and rainbows.
And the ones who do are not going to end up happier than you. You have to wake up, realize life is do the right thing even though you don't feel like doing it. Dedicate yourself. Grind out brutal, terrible, hard labor. And if you do it the way you're supposed to do it, the lessons you will learn along the way makes money worth having.”
“There's no point having money if when you walk into the club, nobody gives a hoot who you are and nobody respects you. What's the point in money then? You see it all the time in Miami now. These crypto kids spending their 400 grand on bottles in a night. Who cares? Cuz we don't give a damn about how much money you have. We care about the quality of your character as a man.
How good are you in a firefight? You don't want a Ferrari before you can handle it.
Trust me, you're going to hit a tree. Ask yourself, do you deserve millions of dollars? You know you don't deserve it. And God knows you don't deserve it. And if he gave it to you, it would be a punishment. God only gives you what you're ready for.
And on the rare occasions he gives you something you're not ready for, you're going to regret it. You know, I wasn't even rich till I was 27. And I think back and I thank God I wasn't rich when I was because if I got rich before 27, I wouldn't be strong like I am now. And that's worth more than being rich.”
Money is important, especially in America these days. But it’s just one element of a man’s life. We all know folks who are super wealthy but are unhealthy, weak or worse, uninteresting. I see a lot of this in Silicon Valley. Tate is correct that you need to have the whole package, health, wealth and respect. To get respect from others, you have to have accomplished something hard, to have interesting experiences and stories. Interesting hobbies. And maybe more importantly, being physically and mentally strong. As Tate’s friend Justin Waller said: “I believe the true definition of a man is a person who can hold a baby and slit a throat on the same day.” Probably something to that.
“And I wouldn't have the lessons that I say to you on all these emergency meetings. And that's worth more than being rich. I like all the lessons I had when I was poor because I have the poor man's lessons and the rich man's money. So if God's decided you need some more of the poor man's lessons, then that is a blessing. So ask yourself a question.
If you were honest, do you want a 1% chance of making it today or do you want a 100% chance you're going to pull it off in 3 years from now? The intelligent people would say, "Well, three years of working, learning lessons along the way, plus a guaranteed success, I'll take the three years."
But most of you, if offered that chance, you would take the instant gamble bet. You want the hard work and you want the difficulty. Life is a neverending series of tests and battles. 80-year war and there is battle to win every single day. The best thing you can do is prepare for the future battle because you can be sure as you are that the sun will rise that a battle will come. Tomorrow's problems are guaranteed. But if you do not fix today's problems, you do not earn tomorrow's problems because problems in and of themselves are a blessing.
There is nothing worse than living in the eternal still, the ether of insignificance where you have no problems. It is stagnation which is destructive for the male soul. Is perhaps the most destructive thing. You don't want that life. You must change your attitude towards problems and see them as a blessing. If you do not get to enjoy today's problems and solve them, you're going to have no problems tomorrow.
And I guarantee you that the life you dream of with no problems doesn't exist. Because if you ever do find that life, it is torturous. And if life is perfect all the time, you don't appreciate anything. I actually think one of the worst lives you can have is a life where everything goes right all of the time. If you're spoiled to that degree, especially as a man, as soon as you reach any kind of difficulty, you're going to crumble. And I do not pray for an easy life. I pray for a difficult life with difficult challenges to solve and being strong enough to handle them.
If you really want an exceptional life and to do exceptional things, you can't only hope for the positive exceptional. The only reason you appreciate being rich is because you were poor. If you were born rich, you don't appreciate it. Only reason you appreciate being in good health is because you were once sick. If you've never experienced sickness, you don't know what health is. I don't believe that God will ever put you in a position where you get to tell the entire world how masculinity and how a rigid mental model and how an iron mind works without ever being tested.”
There is no light without darkness. Contrast is important and sadly you only appreciate something when you lose it. Nothing good comes without struggle and pain. The more important the mission the harder it is. The bigger the dream, the bigger the struggle. Nothing worthwhile is easy. This is the way it is. The sooner you understand this, the better off you will be.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads March 29th, 2026
“Nostalgia in reverse, the longing for yet another strange land, grew especially strong in spring." – Vladimir Nabokov
I enjoy learning from Ryan McBeth and his takes on geopolitics.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcUvd8dEZko
2. Luke Gromen is probably one of the best analysts of global macro and his takes are very sober. A world of financialized USD vs hard assets/commodities driven BRICS.
Net net: stack cash and get hard assets.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=re5CqaZXfCI
3. "No one else will truly care. So why do you choose to live like anyone’s opinion actually matters? If they won’t care about you struggling to make ends meet, to feed your family, to take care of medical bills, to bury your mother, to deal with health disasters of your own, then why the fuck do you care about what they have to say?
They are no one. You are everything. And everything you want should belong to you. Or at least, you should be able to go after anything and everything you want without fearing what a nobody will have to say.
That is your superpower. Wield it fiercely."
https://www.rawmanifesto.com/p/no-one-gives-a-fuck-about-you-and
4. "Most people are “Narrative Consumers.” They adopt the labels, the benchmarks, and the definitions of success provided by society. They compete in “Red Oceans” because they accepted someone else’s definition of a “win.” If you allow others to define what is “expensive,” “successful,” or “urgent,” you are playing their game on their board. You are a character in their script."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/185104164
5. These folks are tops in pre-seed. So some good insights in what is happening in venture capital investing right now in Silicon Valley.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nD2MlxhH2qw
6. Inside TBPN, the tech media phenomenon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVLRuIuLBe8
7. "Money doesn’t change you. It amplifies you.
If your mind is chaotic, more money just makes the chaos louder.
If your mind is structured, more money makes you unstoppable."
https://substack.com/@luxlifestylelab/p-178626294
8. Some good perspective on investing in AI startups from A16Z. Data moats are real.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3XVDtPU8xKE
9. Investing in the age of conflict.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-AH0UD_xsk
10. "The more gold trades in yuan, the more the yuan starts looking like a reserve asset. Meanwhile, the dollar—once as good as gold—now looks more like the Turkish Lira. With U.S. debt racing toward $40 trillion, it’s backed mostly by history, faith, and reassuring briefings.
The Shanghai Gold Exchange won’t replace COMEX or LBMA overnight, and the dollar won’t vanish tomorrow. But history moves in powerful tides, and you can see them if you pay attention. Empires rise and fall. The accelerating decline of the dollar against gold signals that America’s long run as the unchallenged hegemon is nearing its end.
Every trade settled in yuan instead of dollars, every bar stored in Shanghai instead of London, every central bank swapping Treasuries for bullion—these are all tremors in the tectonic plates underlying global finance. The old unipolar system is slowly giving way to a multipolar world where value isn’t just promised—it’s measured in something real.
The Shanghai Gold Exchange has played a quiet but pivotal role in this shift. It’s where finance reconnects with physics, where the abstraction of money meets the unprintable reality of atomic number 79. While central banks can print paper until the forests run out, gold remains gloriously finite.
The twentieth century belonged to the dollar. The twenty-first probably won’t belong to any single currency. It’s more likely to be a network of regional systems, each anchored by something that doesn’t need cheerleaders to prove its worth."
https://frankgiustra.com/posts/paper-promises-meet-physical-truth-how-shanghai-stole-the-gold-crown/
11. UAE's setbacks in their chaos agent strategy geopolitically. Also interesting possible development of a Muslim NATO with Saudi, Turkey & Pakistan, maybe even Egypt.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFAuZg1w_Gk
12. "What struck me then, and still does today, is how Mark has never lost his craft of operating as a forward deployed engineer—deeply close to the problem, clear-eyed about the people building the solutions, and relentlessly iterating on his own craft.
When Mark told me he was raising Fund II, I knew we needed to capture more than just the headline. This is the story of what it took—the real story—to go from a first-time $10M fund to a $45M Fund II in a tough market."
https://embracingemergence.beehiiv.com/p/how-mark-scianna-raised-his-fund-ii-in-a-matter-of-weeks
13. Learning about the MrBeast attention economy empire. Leveraging audience into new businesses.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9gSO66oC6U
14. "We have been sold the lie of “Productivity.” We are obsessed with doing things faster, better, and cheaper. But if you are moving at 200 mph in the wrong direction, your efficiency is just accelerating your failure. Most people spend their lives optimizing tasks that shouldn’t exist in the first place. This is “Busy-Work” dressed in high-end software.
The Thesis in One Line.
It is better to do the right thing slowly than the wrong thing at the speed of light."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/185210328
15. "The decline of the middle class began with the end of the Cold War. During the Cold War, a thriving middle class was seen as essential to US survival, leading to policies designed to grow and strengthen it.
It provided the industrial and technological capacity needed to fight a total war. People capable of wielding the complex machines of war and making them.
It stabilized US politics by forming a prosperous majority under a unifying identity: American. This shared identity simplified decision-making at the national level (people didn’t see each other as enemies) and provided a vast pool of loyal people willing to defend the nation if needed.
A prosperous and loyal middle-class majority was impervious to the ideological pressure of Communism.
When the Cold War ended, the need for a prosperous, protected, and loyal middle class evaporated. There weren’t any threats left to fight. This led to;
A reorientation of decision-making from a focus on nationalism (tied to the middle class) to globalism (GDP growth, corporate profits, financial market size/growth, the cost of labor/imports, etc.).
This shift began with deregulation and changes to tax/monetary policy that financialized the economy and eliminated rules, roles (jobs), and economic factors (cost suppression, pensions, etc.) that enabled the middle-class to produce and accumulate wealth.
Next, spurred by new levels of global connectivity (the Internet), the US focused on global expansion by eliminating barriers that protected the middle class, from trade barriers to immigration. US middle-class citizens went from being able to produce and accumulate wealth to becoming economically stressed competitors in a vast global market.
With the shift to globalization, a new group arose to replace the middle class. A small (10%), thriving group of people capable of competing on the world stage and/or exploiting weaknesses in domestic systems. A Cosmopolitan elite that has absolute faith in globalization. A faith proven by their success at producing and accumulating wealth."
https://johnrobb.substack.com/p/the-cosmopolitan-elite
16. “When you have conflicts, international geopolitical conflicts, even allies prefer not holding each other’s debt. They’d prefer to go to a hard currency. It’s logical, it’s factual, and it’s repeated throughout history.”
And the coup de grace:
“But let’s be cleareyed about where this leads. A world of fortresses will be poorer, more fragile, and less sustainable. And there’s another truth. If great powers abandon even the pretense of rules and values for the unhindered pursuit of their power and interests, the gains from transactionalism will become harder to replicate. Hegemons cannot continually monetize their relationships.”
It is an understatement to say there is a lot to think about these days.
Gold received the message from Davos loud and clear."
https://robertsinn.substack.com/p/ray-dalio-the-monetary-order-is-breaking
17. 10 non obvious things about Silicon Valley fundraising
https://chrisneumann.com/archives/10-nonobvious-things-about-silicon-valley-fundraising
18. "It means re-engaging in our communities from volunteering to serving in government to religious services to being involved at your kid’s school. It means deciding that the path we’re on is unsustainable for all but a lucky few and choosing to use your resources, your voice, your time differently. It means making sacrifices for the greater good. It means rejecting a zero sum view of the world that may feel good in the short term, but, unless you’re a sociopath, you always regret deep down in the long term.
This is still the greatest country in the history of the world. But not by accident and not by divine intervention. Because we’ve sacrificed and worked together and taken risks to make it so. That can continue. But only if we make it so."
https://bradleytusk.substack.com/p/the-manchurian-economy
19. This was incredibly timely. Every Type A individual should watch this. Learn how to live a better life.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xz-ymFOhBAE
20. "After the grand experiment in egalitarianism failed to go as the reformers had planned, we still have all of the old problems in full. Instead of equality we have laundered oligarchy—the rule of billionaires, tycoons, experts, and managers who embody the exact opposite of noblesse oblige (and who actually aren’t impressive in any way except for their ability to game the system). These new oligarchs experience no such pressure to do right for those beneath them; instead they dedicate themselves to extracting from them.
Almost every aspect of modern American life is defined by the oligarchic mode of demeaning, demoralizing, and extracting from normal people—from the mass immigration which drives wages down and housing prices up, to the ugly architecture, sports-betting apps, weed dispensaries, homo entertainment, and more. Big Medicine now has little to do with promoting health and everything to do with managing and medicating sickness. Big Food, seemingly in cahoots with Big Medicine, has poisoned just about everything on the shelves of our grocery stores.
Meanwhile fake experts make the matter still worse by confusing you with bad advice about what’s healthy and what’s good. “A patient cured is a customer lost,” they say—and this pattern applies almost uniformly across American life. The point is that our “elites” don’t give a damn about you and have turned our country into a “sheep-shearing operation,” as one poet put it."
https://thechivalryguild.substack.com/p/the-death-of-noblesse-oblige-the
21. "About 375 nautical miles to the east of Ramstein, you will find Wrocław (roughly the distance from Washington, DC to Portsmouth, NH). That is 375 nm closer to—yes, say it with me—NATO’s eastern front.
If you are a logistics geek—which you should be—there is a lot of important and serious work being done in Poland. This will help her security, and that of the NATO alliance.
While some of the—mostly—Western European allies are more interested in drama or reliving their anti-American tendencies from their youth—Poland is a serious nation and a serious leader in Central Europe. They are not playing around."
https://cdrsalamander.substack.com/p/plan-salamander-operationalized-at
22. "The geography is identical. The logic applied to it is not. One side approaches the Arctic as a field in which control and leverage are built incrementally. The other continues to treat it as a domain in which order can be maintained through management.
These different frameworks produce different conclusions across the board. When the United States looks at Russia, China, or Iran, it sees adversaries probing for advantage and testing enforcement over time. When many European governments look at the same actors, they see risks to be managed, delayed, or compartmentalized in order to preserve domestic stability and political cohesion. Agreement on who the adversaries are fails to translate into agreement on what confrontation requires.
Political constraints reinforce this divergence. In Europe, aging populations, coalition politics, and deeply embedded welfare commitments push leaders toward minimizing visible cost and escalation. In the United States, global commitments, industrial competition, and expectations of primacy force prioritization, trade-offs, and explicit burden calculations. These pressures shape not only policy outcomes but the way threats are conceptualized."
https://www.zinebriboua.com/p/babel-at-davos-why-the-transatlantic
23. This was a great episode this week and lots of good takes on OpenAI ads & D-RAM chips and learning from Matt Damon & Ben Affleck.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVANS_4McfM
24. So instructive: learning the art and science of venture investing from two masters of the game. Not the nicest people but super smart.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MBf1LZbk2Pk
25. "The ultimate status symbol in 2026 is a calendar with no recurring meetings and 80% white space. It signals that you are in total control of your time and that your presence is a scarce asset, not a public utility. When an elite individual says “I’m available,” it carries the weight of a rare astronomical event."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/185411259
26. "With Greenland suddenly back in the headlines, it feels like the perfect moment to revisit one of the most extraordinary men ever to set foot on its frozen terrain: Peter Freuchen. Towering at 6’7” in stature and even larger in spirit, Freuchen was not merely an explorer, he was a force of nature. He lived among the Inuit, crossed vast ice fields by dog sled, fought fascism, survived conditions that should have killed him many times over, and once famously saved his own life by carving a dagger from frozen feces.
Freuchen’s story reads less like a biography and more like an epic novel. It is equal parts survival tale, political thriller, and travelogue of a lost age of exploration. Yet every astonishing detail is true. This is the story of the man who helped map Greenland, defied death, and lived with a courage that few could imagine."
https://thewaysofagentleman.substack.com/p/forged-in-ice-the-man-who-became
27. Some of the best takes on Silicon Valley news and topics. I appreciate all the insights that come out from their conversations.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h_ZpvRjB9JI
28. "I anticipate that we will see the rapid development of defensive swarms in the not-too-distant future. Just as naval ships no longer protect themselves with heavy armor and point defenses, but instead distribute air, missile, and subsurface defenses among several escort vessels, it is easier for air and ground platforms to disaggregate their own defenses.
Drone swarms can be used to protect armored vehicles, radar sites, and any number of other high-value targets. The rate at which this is done may well determine how soon mobility is restored to the battlefield."
https://dispatch.bazaarofwar.com/p/swarms-packs-and-stigmergy-animal
29. "In the Mid-2020s, we have some of the same trends: 1) tech taking up more and more value, 2) people becoming more location independent - making it easier for tax havens to compete for citizens, 3) larger K-shape division of the haves and have nots, 4) massive need for more infrastructure and 5) encryption/privacy.
Tech Taking More Value: Simplistically, all the low end paper pushing or “if then” statement jobs will be replaced by AI. An example of “If Then” is booking a flight. Just put in the parameters and have it find the best flight at the lowest cost.
Similarly, this hits low-end white collar positions. Having a lawyer find and replace the same document and just change the name? Going to have even more wage compression. In the 1990s it was cool to be a rich lawyer in Chicago, in the mid 2020s, unless you’re at a top firm… pain
All that value gets transferred. Similar to energy. It has to go somewhere and that somewhere is tech as it replaces them.
Mega companies have the best information, this means betting against the monopolies is a bit foolish. How do you expect to create a high quality Artificial General Intelligence with bad info? Exactly."
https://bowtiedbull.io/p/investing-in-technology-2026-version
30. "A lot of people have become familiar with Venezuela over the past few weeks, since Operation Absolute Resolve, in which the United States captured Maduro and shipped him to Brooklyn. Many are trying to understand the implications for Venezuela, the region, and the United States. I’ve seen emotions from my friends and online bubbles that range from full blown catharsis to a cynicism that nothing substantive has actually changed.
I’m excited about it. Operation Absolute Resolve has created more open and exciting possible outcomes for Venezuela than any other event in my eight years in the region.
That said, in order to reap the country’s full benefits, people need to get excited about the right thing.
Oil is the obvious prize. But it’s a complicated one. President Trump asserts that selling oil from Venezuela is “gonna make a lot of money,” and it is true that Venezuela’s 304B barrels of reserves are the world’s largest. Until recently, more than 80% of its oil exports went to China. Redirecting the flow of Venezuelan oil would hamper Chinese road building and cut off 50% of Cuba’s oil supply, while giving America cleaner access to (very heavy, harder to refine) oil. Realignment could be as big a geopolitical win as a financial windfall.
But oil isn’t the only prize in Venezuela. It’s not even the biggest.
We must rebuild and reopen Venezuela because it’s the most underpriced opportunity on Earth."
https://www.notboring.co/p/the-venezuela-opportunity
31. Trying to understand the complicated geopolitics of the Middle East. Saudi Arabia & MBS asserting themselves in alliance with Turkey & Pakistan.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnhgnVm-peE
32. A good role model for young men and old men. From the military, intelligence services, private security, businessman and now tailor. Good conversation here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFCJzbUdrwo
33. "What proves far harder to replicate, and far more consequential, is the invisible layer: China’s manufacturing base. This is the part of the ecosystem that actually reshapes global supply chains, yet it remains the part most visitors never see and, in many cases, never think to see.
The concept of involution — roughly, competitive intensity that becomes self-destructive — captures something real but incomplete about Chinese manufacturing. Foreign visitors ask when margins will improve, assuming profitability is the primary goal. In the environment we saw, it isn’t. Endurance comes first. Margin expansion is earned later, once scale and position are secure and paired with groundbreaking innovation at irrefutable scale. CATL has achieved this combination. Huawei has as well. But these are rare winners.
China’s manufacturing system is optimized for survival under pressure, not comfort. That pressure shapes how companies think about success, risk, and reward.
The concern is legitimate. But it’s worth considering whether this perception is precisely what the sector intends to project. Manufacturing here is not a business where you sit back and collect profits. It is a relentless grind unless you are among the very top players, and the warning embedded in that reality may serve as its own barrier to entry."
https://ruima.substack.com/p/inside-chinas-real-advantage-manufacturing
34. "The tragedy of American power isn’t that it’s declining; it’s that it’s increasingly unserious. We still have the muscle, the money, and the moral case. What we lack is patience, humility, and the stamina for the boring part — asking “What happens next?” Until we relearn how to write second acts, every intervention will look the same: dazzling, destructive, and destined for a sequel no one asked for."
https://www.profgalloway.com/license-to-intervene/
35. "Do something UNIQUE. You want to be the only person who does what you do. Build a personal monopoly."
"Fewer emails. I send six emails every month (four free and two paid). Daily emails are not required, especially in professional services. People would much rather read something great once a week, than something mediocre every day."
The advice I would change from 2021 is on distribution. Back then I wrote:
"Use Twitter. Almost all successful newsletter authors use Twitter to promote their newsletter. It is a great way to get momentum and build true fans. Twitter, word of mouth, and earned media are best growth strategies IMO."
Twitter, now X, was a great platform to promote newsletters in 2021. That diminished after Elon Musk bought the platform and heavily demoted any links to Substack. Today, a Twitter presence helps growing a newsletter but is not as important.
Three points:
Niches have tremendous value.
It's much easier to monetise if you directly help people do their job better.
Having an extra distribution channel (e.g., LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube) helps when getting started."
36. "From New York to Beijing, London to Dubai, the world’s major cities display remarkable aesthetic convergence: glass towers, disciplined geometries, restrained interiors, and consumer products that speak the same visual language. This global unity of form is often dismissed as the bland residue of modernism, but it was not an accident. It was constructed by a previous generation of elites, people closer in spirit to today’s founders and industrialists than to their cultural critics. The visual language of the modern world did not assemble itself. It was designed.
The architecture and design we inhabit descend from a deliberate cultural project born in Germany in the early twentieth century. A group of artists, architects, industrialists, and educators realized that the machine age would not produce a coherent society on its own.
Industrial life would require a cultural elite capable of shaping the conditions of everyday life rather than merely adapting to them. The aesthetics of the world we now inhabit, whether or not they match the spirit of our century, are the distant aftershock of this German project."
https://letter.palladiummag.com/p/the-triumph-of-german-industrial-051
37. An excellent glimpse into what's up in Silicon Valley. And it is silly and fun and exciting.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AgwMFLjxQa0
38. "You should strive to be interesting because once your time is up you will not think back to the money left in your bank account or the litigation of your business underway, rather all the marvelous stories you’ve created, the friendships you’ve formed, the life you’ve lived that only 1 in a million get to live, and even then, you did it better than them. To be interesting is to have the world as you see fit.
There are zero rules to this man, he truly has it all. Any desire gets acted upon because he has the skills, network, and resources to do so. The women, the dopamine-sources, the culture, the history, the knowledge, the skills, the people, the food. You have had a slice of every thing the pie of life had to offer. You beat the game and did it with a smile on your face. That is why you should strive to be the interesting man."
https://www.rawmanifesto.com/p/how-to-be-an-interesting-man
39. Really good explanation of the battle for dominance in the Middle East. Incredibly complicated. Qatar was the original chaos agent, now it's the UAE.
Eyes on the Prize: Focus on the Basics
As we get close to the end of Q1 in 2026, I am not sure about you but for me it’s sure been a grind. Plenty of business travel, lots of calls, lots of meetings, plenty of writing, plenty of learning. I keep wondering if I am making any progress at all. But then I remember to focus on the basics. Focus more on inputs and less on the outputs. Don’t get discouraged. Don’t get distracted.
Brother Lobo summed it up pretty well:
“If you just focus on exercising, reading, learning a martial art, picking up an outdoor activity, spending time with loved ones, building a relationship with God, working on something consistently, you will live a vibrant and fulfilling life. Everything will work out. It’s really that simple.”
Source: https://x.com/ellobosalvaje/status/2006868073958306199
It really is that simple. Life is a grind. Always has been. And now more so than ever before, it’s the grinders that win. So keep grinding.
Liquidity Kills: Check Yourself Before You Wreck Yourself
We are our own worst enemy. Having been in Silicon Valley, I’ve seen far too many cases of people blowing themselves up after a massive exit. As exited founder Steven Simoni said: “Liquidity F-cks you up!”
As many folks have worked most of our careers to get this liquidity (myself included), you may think: what are you talking about? This is the goal. Liquidity, financial wealth and independence. This is the dream. But like everything this cuts both ways.
I saw a tweet https://x.com/_The_Prophet__/status/1999972581135503541 on X that explains exactly why this happens:
“If you woke up a billionaire tomorrow, the most dangerous thing in the room would be you.
Not greed. Not enemies. Not bad investments. You.
Because sudden abundance does one thing almost no one admits: it destroys constraint, and constraint is what keeps identity coherent. Before money, reality pushes back. After money, reality goes quiet. That silence is not freedom. It’s loss of feedback. Most people mistake that silence for arrival.
They fill it with motion. Projects. Statements. Philanthropy. Visibility. Legacy narratives.
That’s how they rot. The real first act is restraint to preserve signal integrity. When constraint disappears, your thoughts get louder. Your intuitions feel divine. Your worst ideas arrive with confidence. Your ego stops being checked by friction.
That’s why billionaires get weird. Not because they’re evil. Because they are no longer corrected.”
Now I’m not saying you shouldn’t go for the big exit. You absolutely should. Money is a tool. Money is energy. Money is a score card. And especially in a place like America, money is survival. The more money you have, the better your life and those of your loved ones will be. The issue is that money enables everything and anything. Any vice you have. It means you can do anything. Worse, maybe it means you can do nothing. Literally nothing. So your brain starts to rot.
But Sightbringer has a cure. A way to deal with this so you don’t go crazy when it happens.
“So the real first move is re-introduce resistance on purpose. Delay. Isolation. Silence. Unobservable time.
You rebuild an artificial gravity well so your thinking doesn’t drift into fantasy. Only once you’ve proven to yourself that your internal signal still works without external correction do you act. And here’s the part people don’t like hearing: If you don’t do this, the money will eventually control you. Not through need. Through narrative.
You’ll start justifying. Explaining. Performing meaning. Believing your own story. At that point, the money has already won.
So the truth is: The first thing I’d do is protect my inner coherence as if it were the only scarce asset left. Because at that level, it is.”
Source: https://x.com/_The_Prophet__/status/1999972581135503541
Basically don’t change anything in your first year. Keep doing some kind of work. Don’t scale up your lifestyle. It helps to keep hobbies you had from before. It helps to stay curious and curate your circle. To stay fit, healthy and strong. Do everything you did when you were working toward wealth and liquidity. Keep internal coherence. It helps to have religion. It helps to have a bigger mission in life now that you are post economic.
Don’t be the cautionary tale we hear about all the time in Silicon Valley, Wall Street or Crypto. People who lose everything at a time when they supposedly gain everything, everything materially that is.
Finding the Future: The Practitioner Preacher
Another day, another new mind-bending event in technology, geopolitics, or straight up grift. I really believe we are in the Polycrisis of the West. The steady anchor of a trust filled society quickly degrades, beset by enemies outside taking advantage of the chaos inside our society. Everything we believed in before, whether companies, institutions or our elites have turned out to be false. As our grifter in chief Trump coined, everything is “Fake news” and no one has a shared narrative or belief anymore. There is no national consensus and America right now feels like one giant smash and grab.
Man, I really miss the America of the 1990s and even 2000s. 9/11 was horrendous but boy did it bring this country together. Considering how fractured America is today, not sure this unity would happen if we faced another attack or crisis like this again.
But as I learned the hard way, insanity is focusing on things you can’t control. To get through this polycrisis, you focus on what you can control. You rethink, you reframe and you adapt to the new situation. Us humans are made for chaos. We are built for it. All it requires is the right mindset and the ability to take pain. Pain tolerance is your moat. But most importantly, it's also who you follow, who you choose as your teacher and guide.
I read something that Radigan Carter wrote which really made sense to me, when discussing his mission.
“To be a trusted narrator who takes his own risks first and is always for individuals as we all navigate these times of geopolitical power shifts and institutions pursuing their own power. Like Thucydides, my purpose is to do, seek understanding, and tell the truth with clarity.
This letter is a revolt against abstraction, a return to the grounded, the tested, as titan states once again face off against each other and we all feel the weight of uncertainty.”
What Radigan talks about is being the Practitioner Preacher. In a trustless world of useless academics, grifters and social media influencers, we all need honest guides. As they say on Wall Street, “don’t tell me what you think, show me your book”.....ie. your investments and how you are positioned for this. Did you put money where your mouth is? Basically do you have skin in the game?
I’ve realized no man is an island and you can’t do everything yourself.Trust me, I’ve really tried. You can always use a guide in these tumultuous times. Use your own best judgement of course.
But it is a great idea to follow the practitioner-preacher.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads March 22nd, 2026
“An optimist is the human personification of spring." – Susan J. Bissonette
Peter Zeihan's recent takes on world events.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rg1hSqAohHw
2. AI and Physical AI: Discussion of the future with the head of Mckinsey & General Catalyst VC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8cXD5hTt3c
3. The basics of investing in deep-tech.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntGJhKKtZns
4. "Operation Absolute Resolve serves as a very loose proof-of-concept for this, showing how it is possible to employ large numbers of drones in close coordination with a few helicopters embedded in a much larger air campaign, with all the deconfliction headaches that entails. Employing hard-kill systems so close to rotary-wing platforms introduces yet another degree of technical complexity amidst even more congested airspace. Yet all the elements are there, and it may show a way forward."
https://dispatch.bazaarofwar.com/p/looking-for-lessons-in-venezuela
5. "Future great-power conflict victory will more likely resemble World War I than World War II. It is entirely conceivable that within the first weeks of fighting, inventories on all sides are rapidly depleted, followed by a prolonged “phony war” while stocks are replenished. In such a scenario, victory does not hinge on battlefield brilliance alone, but on which side can replenish its inventory fastest and achieve sustainable cost dominance.
The war in Ukraine has already exposed a critical weakness: the U.S. defense industrial base cannot scale production quickly, even when operating in peacetime conditions. To future-proof American military dominance, the United States must focus not only on system performance, but on how those systems are manufactured. Systems need to be manufactured using mass manufacturing techniques vs methods economical for low/medium volume. Just as importantly, the Department of War must begin running manufacturing-scale military exercises to ensure industrial responsiveness in wartime.
We need to prepare for a war of inventory."
https://marlinspike.substack.com/p/war-of-inventory
6. Such a great discussion on what is happening in AI and Silicon Valley and the nuances of Venture capital. A must watch.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXLJk-SyGfA
7. Educational episode to what is up in Silicon Valley. It helps me keep up and learn the zeitgeist.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2q99bDO-a1E
8. Man, an American gem. I always learn new stuff and get inspired by listening to Palmer Luckey.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dejWbn_-gUQ
9. Trying to understand the Donroe Doctrine and implications for Latin America.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=08w8SeNwkNA
10. "The world wants you to be “transparent” so it can sell to you more easily. Resist. True power is found in the shadows. Build a life so good that you don’t feel the need to prove it to a single soul on the internet. Silence is not just golden; it is a fortress."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184748132
11. "Since February 24, 2022, Russia has been fighting on two fronts.
One is kinetic und disastrous: tanks, missiles, drones, trenches, and attrition.
The other is non-kinetic—and aimed squarely at the European security architecture.
Energy blackmail. Food and fertilizer pressure. Migration instrumentalization. Hybrid warfare, including sabotage operations across European territory. Persistent nuclear coercion, designed not to be used but to paralyze.
This is not escalation by accident.
It is escalation by design.
And yet, Europe has largely refused to act as a continent under attack.
Why?
Because denial is more comfortable than mobilization.
Because moral rhetoric has replaced realpolitik analysis.
Because institutions built for crisis management during peace time were never designed for systemic confrontation.
Europe mistook restraint for virtue, and inertia for stability."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184785433
12. "That’s why many performance metrics are leading indicators. They don’t correlate to DPI perfectly, and sometimes conflate success with noise. For example:
Fast mark-ups, which show genuine fundraising momentum, which is often associated with underlying revenue traction. But more rounds also means more dilution, and thus return compression.
Winning access or allocation into rounds is a proxy for competitive position in the moment. But if funds are winning access to hot rounds, the upside is often at least partially baked in with higher prices, which lowers the potential for multiples (just look at your favorite 100x revenue AI deal!)
Reputation and brand, which shape future access and founder perception. But if the reputation is relevant to the wrong audience, then it won’t drive returns, and worse divert fund resources and attention.
Return proxies matter, but they are not the same thing as performance. Many venture debates are really arguments about such proxies, not outcomes."
https://99tech.alexlazarow.com/p/the-future-of-venture-capital-strategies
13. "Young men themselves are part of the solution. Women aren’t to blame for their relationship woes, just as immigrants aren’t responsible for America’s economic problems. Men need to seize the opportunity to become better, and we need to provide an off-ramp for red-pilled men who believe the mating market is rigged against them, helping to prevent their descent into bitterness and potential extremism.
Many young men struggle with mental health — understandable given the challenges they face. But here’s a truth the manosphere won’t tell you: In the end, meaningful relationships are the only things that matter. If you’re alone and resigned to being nutrition for Big Tech, you need to reset and commit to becoming voluntarily incelibate. If you sequester from other mammals, the anxiety and depression you’ll ultimately feel will dwarf any terror about disappointment that exists in the outside world — isolation is the only danger that compounds."
https://www.profgalloway.com/the-vcel-movement/
14. This event looks awesome. Anti-Fund Summit. Where was my invite??
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIH2C-dLLUc
15. "Entrepreneurs would do well to think intentionally about the journey from 10/90 to 90/10 and to develop the discipline and prioritization needed to spend the majority of their time on the areas where they are most uniquely skilled and suited. The path from 10/90 to 90/10 is often bumpy, but the entrepreneurs who grow and develop faster than their startups ultimately achieve the greatest success."
https://davidcummings.org/2026/01/17/90-10-or-10-90-entrepreneur/
16. "The world is getting louder and faster. The only way to win is to get quieter and slower. Your “Buffer” is your moat. If you can stay calm while everyone else is losing their minds, you don’t just win the game you own the board.
Takeaway:
The next time you feel the “urge” to respond to a stressful input, wait 4 hours. Observe the impulse, then let it die."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184802092
17. "Now more than ever, I believe we could all use a little beauty each day. Goethe understood something we often forget. What we regularly take in or view becomes part of us. We are shaped not only by what we do, but by what we contemplate. Sadly, beauty is no longer treated as a necessity in today’s world. In many places, it is dismissed as trivial, or worse, replaced with what is coarse or seems to be intentionally ugly. We do not have to accept that. We still have agency over what we allow to form us and what we take in each day."
https://thewaysofagentleman.substack.com/p/beauty-refreshes-the-soul-art-poetry
18. A Drone battle Super Bowl. This was a fun discussion with Olaf from Neros.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHelpDoyF40
19. How to scale a Venture capital firm. A16Z. A platform with many focussed funds.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kdql4I-NJ0M
20. NIA: the nature of work in the age of AI + Central Bank Stuff.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I24Yfhm8tm4
21. "Dan Robinson calls this the “nocturnal phase.” Ship features during the day, agents clean up overnight. But night is just the obvious gap. Everything CAN run in parallel while you’re somewhere else.
Managing agents feels exactly like managing a team. Set direction, spin up work streams, check outputs, adjust course. A decade of product management trained me for this without knowing it. Constantly thinking of new ideas. Building articulate plans. Rapid context switching. Good sense of outcomes. Talking to customers.
Great builders were always hamstrung by the pace of development. Not anymore.
The difference is I couldn’t run six projects simultaneously when I managed people. Now I can.
We work ~eight hours. Sleep eight. Sixteen hours every day where we don’t exist professionally. AI works those sixteen. Handles parallel tasks while you focus. Learns overnight while you rest."
https://writing.nikunjk.com/p/time-expansion-348
22. "The final distinction between big swings and fast swings, and king-making is permissionless vs. permissioned entrepreneurship. Big swings and fast swings are both permissionless paths to conviction. One through vision, one through learning. King making is permission-based; it only works on the basis of elite buy-in/consensus.
So “calling capital” and becoming a hypercapitalized club deal isn’t wrong per se. It’s just that it needs to come after you (the founder) already developed internal conviction and the vision to go put beaucoup bucks to use uniquely and productively. Once you’ve developed that on your own/without permission, getting into the club can transform you into a substantive, obvious winner. This is fundamentally the process of producing legibility and narrative momentum."
https://99d.substack.com/p/call-your-customer-call-your-shot
23. "It’s possible to spin all sorts of ad hoc hypotheses about why consumer sentiment has diverged from its traditional determinants. Perhaps Americans are upset about social issues and politics, and expressing this as dissatisfaction about the economy. Perhaps they’re mad that Trump seems to be trying to hurt the economy. Perhaps they’re scared that AI will take their jobs. And so on.
Here’s another hypothesis: Maybe Americans are down in the dumps because their perception of the “good life” is being warped by TikTok and Instagram.
I’ve been reading for many years about how social media would make Americans unhappier by prompting them to engage in more frequent social comparisons. In the 2010s, as happiness plummeted among young people, the standard story was that Facebook and Instagram were shoving our friends’ happiest moments in our faces — their smiling babies, their beautiful weddings, their exciting vacations — and instilling a sense of envy and inadequacy.
In fact, plenty of careful research found that using Facebook and Instagram made people at least temporarily unhappier, and there’s some evidence that social comparisons were the reason."
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/trapped-in-the-hell-of-social-comparison
24. The case for why De-treasurization & De-Dollarization is happening.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYnFjWCZcV8
25. This is a must watch: Geo-economics. Helps you understand what is going on in the world right now.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=re5Ys6NYQKo
26. "Most people confuse “Expensive” with “High Value.” They buy what is trendy, loud, and recognizable. This is a low-status signal. It screams: “I want you to know I have money.” True elites use Quiet Luxury and obscure references as a coded language. If your status is easily recognizable by the masses, you aren’t exclusive; you are a target.
Good taste is the only fence that doesn’t require a security guard."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184989545
27. "In one week we witnessed the ever further erosion of morality and human decency to score some short term gains. Carney will never talk about freedom or human rights in relation to China, but he’s got some deals in his hand to prop up his position domestically. Trump steamrolls Greenland and is willing to lose relationships and allies that were the backbone of what once was a stable western democratic alliance. And finally the consensus appears to be that the ongoing slaughter of Iran’s finest is secondary to temporary regional stability.
That is your ‘new global order’. Transactional, vacuous and creating ever more uncertainty."
https://pieterdorsman.substack.com/p/a-new-world-order
28. "A returning to an old capital serves as a psychological, historical, and cultural anchor. Erecting a new order in old capitals lets a new government get the legacy and legitimacy from the old order.
Even in the event of a regime change or a new state, it’s very likely the successor (especially if they’re weak or unstable) will build its new capital on the rubble of the old one.
A new regime lacks the weight" of centuries. They use the physical landmarks of a previous state to give legitimacy to their new one.
Legitimacy rests on the habit of obedience. Moving a capital disrupts the collective gaze of the population. People are conditioned by cultural habit to look for power in the same geographical place as old ones.
Established capitals possess a centralization of elite labor and investment that exists independently of the government. Stealing or co-opting is politically more efficient."
https://pplsartofwar.substack.com/p/why-new-orders-likes-old-capitals
29. "There’s a silent crisis brewing in semiconductor physics, and almost nobody is talking about it. While the industry celebrates the march to 2nm logic—and the AI capabilities it promises—the memory that actually feeds these processors is stuck in the past. This matters most at the edge: the phones, wearables, sensors, and embedded devices where latency, privacy, and power efficiency aren’t nice-to-haves but existential requirements.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: the stagnation of SRAM scaling is creating a “density wall” that threatens to stall the evolution of on-device AI entirely. And solving it will force a radical rethink of both hardware architecture and model optimization."
https://investinginai.substack.com/p/how-to-invest-in-edge-ai-part-1-the
30. Ukrainian SOF is top tier & scary proficient.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgdR6BzP7PE
31. "There is a direct, causal relationship between the ever-increasing difficulty of achieving thermal comfort in Britain and the unpopularity of its current ruling class, currently embodied by the much-maligned and politically tone-deaf Sir Keir Starmer.
This analysis at the individual and dwelling levels also integrates up to society as a whole, where it quickly becomes clear why the pursuit of developable energy resources is a core strategic imperative for nation-states. Countries blessed with abundant energy assets and the technical capacity to both extract them and defend them from invasion tend to flourish, while those lacking either are easily conquered or gradually fade from prominence. Every war ever fought was, at its core, an energy war—whether the participants realized it or not."
https://newsletter.doomberg.com/p/cold-truths
32. "For upside to re-accelerate, the market’s constraints need to shift. ETF eligibility, funding costs and regulatory clarity are the levers that matter. When they move, capital follows.
Investors who outperform in 2026 will be the ones who understand where capital can flow and what needs to change for it to flow elsewhere. Investors waiting for the next cycle opportunity will be waiting a long time.
Crypto is more institutional, more disciplined and better capitalized than it’s ever been. The next rally will be quieter and more selective. But for those paying attention to the right signals and structure, it will be just as rewarding."
https://pomp.substack.com/p/why-the-next-crypto-rally-will-look
33. "There is great power in belief. It lends a heavy hand to the survival instinct and allows man to go beyond mere survival. It gives man the opportunity to leave his mark on the world. It allowed our ancestors to carve out an empire out of the new world from nothing. You are not going into space without it. Now, this isn’t throwing my hat in with one religion or another, but as Pindar said, “custom is the lord of everything.” There is an American metaphysics and Americans are most adapted to it and it will remain ingrained into our very cores until something superior takes its place.
The bare minimum a man must have is this belief, and despite everything, optimism over cynicism. No doubt this is the most challenging obstacle in our path because belief is being stomped out of everything with a merciless fury by the enemies of mankind. Without it, there is no hope. The great beyond is a frontier like no other. The ultimate frontier. It is damn near impossible to comprehend what it will take for man to separate himself from the earth. There is a secret fear we must consider if we want to attempt this legendary feat."
https://resavager.com/p/the-ultimate-frontier-and-the-american
34. "Today’s AI wave is riding the same mesa. The correlation remains above historical levels. The rapid pace of deal-making & explosive rates of inference growth suggest this roller coaster ride will continue."
https://tomtunguz.com/nvidia-pe-predicts-growth/
35. "You may not have children of your own, but you are no less influential. Every time you speak in public, comment online, hold a door, lose your temper, or extend kindness to someone, you are being observed by young people you may never meet. The cynic will scoff at this and insist that no one owes anyone anything, that in a free society, people are free to live however they please.
That is true, in a narrow sense. However, if we wish to live in a society marked by decency and mutual respect, then we must be willing to model those qualities ourselves. Cultures do not improve by accident; they improve by example."
https://thewaysofagentleman.substack.com/p/our-duty-to-the-next-generation
36. "Perhaps in a rich country like America, where the pie grows only slowly and there are lots of opportunities for redistribution, it’s natural for people on both the right and the left to start thinking of the world as a lump of “resources” to be divvied up. But in reality, it’s production that maintains our high standard of living, and which creates the wealth necessary for redistribution to occur. A dangerously large number of Americans seem to have forgotten that."
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/zero-sum-economics-keeps-failing
37. Agree with this take. Not sure why we are trying to take Greenland this way.
The Pain of Discipline: Be Hard On Yourself
I had a very chill winter break at the end of 2025. It was good. But I fell behind on my regular work outs. Bailing out at the last minute a few days in a row. It was terrible and I felt terrible physically. But I felt extra terrible emotionally. I pride myself on my discipline, doing things that are good for me but don’t always enjoy. Going to the gym is one of these things.
I am not naturally disciplined like my daughter, who is incredible at this, especially as a teen. Perhaps it’s from her Jr ROTC (Reserve Officer Training Corp) or her competitive hip hop dance team. However early the competition, however early the training (sometimes 7 am) she is up early and ready. I really need to learn from her.
So of course I spent most of that week beating on myself.I know they say don’t beat yourself up when you mess up, screw something up or don’t do something you know you should do. But you can’t help it. Especially for Type A individuals like myself, it’s like having an internal Tiger mom yelling in your ear for hours when it happens. It was bad enough having one in real life. I must have internalized much of this. If folks heard any of this internal monologue it would be deemed as “child abuse” these days.
But I think this is the only way anything gets done. Anything really hard to do. Your inner demons and traumas are actually being used positively in this case. Pain always leads to growth. My regular cycle: when you mess up, you beat on yourself internally, be brutal on yourself, learn and fix it and move forward. It’s not pleasant but it works.
I’d argue the issue with most young and old men these days is that they are NOT hard enough on themselves. It’s like they live a life full of excuses. Out of shape, unhealthy, unhappy and unfulfilled. At least try and put some effort into your life. Nothing is supposed to be easy or given to you. Definitely won’t be in the near future either.
As the great Confucius said: "When you are strict with yourself but lenient toward others, you will keep resentment far away."
Being hard on yourself, this is the only thing you can control. Don’t expect anything from anyone else. Total personal ownership. This is the way.
Staying Alive: Societal Lessons from the Late Bronze Age Collapse
It took me a while to really process the “1177” and “After 1177” books detailing the collapse of the Late Bronze Age as mentioned in a previous post. Also seemed really timely if you live in the political Western world. Basically these books talked about the brutal transition of the mediterranean world from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age and how some societies adapted and did well, while others disappeared completely.
The book listed out some key lessons and I list them here.
Have multiple contingency plans in place and redundant systems to fall back on if your primary ones fail
Be resilient enough to withstand whatever blows may come and strong enough to withstand any enemy invasion or attacks
Be as self-sufficient as possible, but do call on friends for assistance when needed
Be innovative and inventive, ready to turn nimbly and adapt or transform, rather than simply cope
Prepare for extreme weather conditions: if they come, you will be ready; if they don’t, it won’t matter
Be sure to have dependable water resources
Keep the working class happy
Damn. These seem super relevant. For countries at large and for your individuals and their families. Worth thinking about and lessons well worth heeding right now.
“The main takeaway from all of this is that clearly such a collapse is survivable, provided that we are resilient enough and able to cope, adapt, or transform as necessary. Societal collapse doesn’t always take everyone with it, and often cultures continue, even if at a simpler level or perhaps in a new iteration.”
After 1177 BC: The Survival of Civilization
One of the more fascinating archaeological and historical books I’ve read. 1177 BC, the first book by Eric Cline details the Late Bronze Age Collapse. When globalization ended for some reason due to many mass calamities, natural and man-made where a Mediterranean centered network economy and world completely collapsed.
Drought, massive invasions by migrating populations notably the “Sea People”, war, rebellion, famine, chaos, economic decline and a breakdown of supply chains. It was grim reading with many lessons for present day civilization. When things get bad, they get really bad.
I had to read his follow up “After 1177 BC” detailing what happened after. Which civilizations adapted and transformed themselves to dominate in the new world like the Phoenicians and Cypriots. Those who calcified but survived like the Egyptians and those who completely disappeared like the Minoans, Mycenaeans & Hittites. As normal, most folks don’t make it. Especially through the mass changes to the new Iron Age.
We learned that some societies thrived because of having the luck of being on the right trade routes, being situated by reliable and large river systems or having less climate disruption all leading to secure food supplies. Or having a cohesive elite or ruling class and society that pulls together during the crisis. Or having the resources to weather the storm so to speak. Fascinating if not grim stuff.
“For some, the end was sudden-invaders sacked their city or an earthquake brought down the walls of a house upon its occupants. For others, it was a catastrophe in slow motion, with drought impacting the crops and famine decimating the population. Nobody in the Aegean or Eastern Mediterranean regions escaped the effects of the Late Bronze Age Collapse.
Virtually everyone was affected in some way, shape or form: rich and poor, aristocrat and peasant, victims and survivors,those whose lives changed drastically or just a little. Life as they knew it, and as they had known it for centuries before, changed irrevocably. Those who survived the calamities of that age had to adapt, carry on, find some ways to persist–even as the drought continued, the trade routes disappeared or became prey to bandits and raiders, and basic resources became scarce.”
My lesson is that dark ages can happen. Technology and knowledge lost. Writing and records gone. Civilizations, even the more advanced, can decline and even disappear. Wiped away forever. Western civilization is a gleaming jewel and I am even more fervent that it needs us to be defended, one person and one family at a time.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads March 15th, 2026
“To plant a garden is to believe in tomorrow." – Audrey Hepburn
"The year-old show, at first called the Technology Brothers Podcast, is part CNBC Squawk Box, part Joe Rogan, part Daily Show. It’s available on YouTube, Spotify, and other podcasting platforms, but its spiritual home is X. “We turned the X timeline into an audiovisual show where we provide insider commentary and analysis,” says Hays.
In March, the show was rebranded to its new name, TBPN. They refined their brand kit: mahogany (“the official wood of business”), shades of green (the color of money), racing livery jackets and hats, and a hint of sci-fi. They also moved into a barrel-vaulted studio in the heart of LA with a meticulously curated back office: Glass cases of neatly stacked merch sit next to a library of leather-bound Great Books of the Western World beneath a huge American flag and black-and-white portraits of iconic investors like Peter Lynch and Charlie Munger.
As the show climbs the charts, an appearance on TBPN has become a status marker for the tech elite. Mark Zuckerberg, Marc Andreessen, and Sam Altman stop by to gab. When OpenAI released its hotly anticipated GPT-5 model in August, executives from the company offered up the kind of exclusive interviews tech journalists have spent years begging for. (I should know—I’m one of them.) Yet their biggest guests are sometimes the most niche—like Soham Parekh, an Indian software engineer who became X’s main character for a day after he was caught working for multiple start-ups at the same time.
Their guests are capitalizing on the clout economy, where the line between influencer and entrepreneur is blurred and attention is the most valuable asset. The mix of A-listers and memes captures something essential about TBPN’s appeal: Through their approachable lens, fans can access a parasocial relationship with the tech elite."
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/story/the-technology-brothers-have-silicon-valley-in-their-thrall
2. A Deep dive into the tech media phenomenon of TBPN. If you want to keep up with building a high growth media company in the 2020s.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UIaXSQOHrmU
3. "In 2026 we will be watching the investors and companies bringing tech sector approaches to the core of defence, building missiles, shell factories, and integrating AI into defence technologies. This is the heart of a new arms race in which adversaries with no regard for the ethics of defence are racing ahead. If we cannot match the pace of innovation, we are exposed."
https://resiliencemedia.co/resilience-medias-predictions-for-2026/
4. "When I was at the Department of Energy working on industrial policy, I can tell you, for many of the manufacturing and critical mineral projects — projects with outcomes of $10 billion plus — decisions were made on the basis of the three or four people we had in the department who had real industry background. If those three or four people hadn’t come in, who knows where those billions of dollars would have flowed. I think that’s true of every kind of industrial policy program we’ve seen.
The pipeline of talent for people with actual industrial experience is very small. Frankly, it doesn’t exist. I was also inspired by a lot of the tech policy fellowships that have now sprung up and have been very successful in shaping AI policy and tech policy more broadly and bringing in technical talent, software engineers, AI practitioners into government. I was like, “Well, where is that for industrial policy?” It didn’t exist, so we made it."
https://www.riskgaming.com/p/the-long-game-of-american-reindustrialization
5. Balaji is smart and he really has some good points but I am not as pessimistic about America and West as he is.
But I give him credit, he is putting money where his mouth is. He is setting up a "Foundation" as per Asimov books series.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sDHtc2R-cIo&t=17s
6. Geopolitics in the Middle East is incredibly complicated. A deep dive into UAE as the chaos agent in the region and Africa. MBZ & the Emiratis have been quite successful projecting power up until recently.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=au8rfmdUGvo
7. Developments in the Russian invasion of Ukraine. EU backing UA, China backing Russia. America is now behind on key innovations in war technology driven by the Ukrainians.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YhDg-tRkxIA
8. My deep dive into the complicated geopolitics of the Middle East. UAE is a pocket power and their strategies, usually at cross purposes with the rest of GCC.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0BmCF05sZs4&t=1s
9. The dark side of the UAE and the proxy wars and networks they have developed to project power regionally. + Incredible PR and influencer power. Money + Gold smuggling & Realpolitik at work.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vHwFNlNzUz4&t=2s
10. MBZ and his quest to build geopolitical power via proxy's like in Libya, Sudan, Yemen and other strategic places for them. Power grabs are always messy and bloody.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N2m4Ot0HOe4
11. "Here’s my take: Firing juniors (or not hiring them in the first place) will cut financial costs at first, but it enables a long-term hidden cost, a kind of tacit debt that replaces the learning curve with a curve of shortsightedness, waste, and eventual demise. This is a suicide model.
When you replace kids who would eventually learn the know-how of any role with AI models that lack continual learning, embodiment, or a way to internalize those things you can’t read in a book, you’re signing your own death sentence. That’s a strong assertion, however, so let me make my case first before telling you the solution. You have the data, now hear the story."
https://www.thealgorithmicbridge.com/p/the-managers-apprentice
12. An interview with a legend in Silicon Valley and where A16Z is going. In light of their recent $15B Fund raise this year.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r8_2CSpcmls
13. This was immensely educational. A history and future of venture capital from an endowment manager’s eyes. How to stay relevant in the business.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ou6D9PLSBI
14. Lots of good insights on the business of venture capital. This seems to be a A16Z week.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5fTnZRsuhI&t=1s
15. "The ultimate status signal is controlling the timing of your responses.
Not wealth. Not title. Not follower count.
Temporal sovereignty."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184415646
16. "In this regard, character is usually not destroyed, but is dissolved over time. It is worn down by tolerating what we once resisted, by lowering our standards, and putting our comforts above everything and everyone else. The temptation to take what we want for our own comfort is a dangerous thing.
Perhaps the most dangerous force of all is not temptation, but drift. Drift is what happens when no standard is consciously held. When a man stops asking himself who he is becoming. When he ceases to examine his own habits. When he allows his environment to shape him rather than choosing his environment deliberately. Because this is the truth we rarely like to admit, no man is immune to influence."
https://thewaysofagentleman.substack.com/p/the-quiet-work-of-becoming-a-better
17. "Doing your homework before arriving in the Bay Area and looking up people you want to meet from the same city, school or former employer can give you a leg up when landing in Silicon Valley."
https://chrisneumann.com/archives/how-to-build-a-silicon-valley-network
18. "I’ve written about this idea of founder authenticity before, through a founder diligence lens and one about founder opportunity cost. It’s an idea that recurs. Time and again, we’ve seen authentic founders push through seemingly overwhelming odds, and inauthentic ones give up or take shortcuts when things don’t go their way. It seems to be one of the best bright line tests for whether a company will be successful in the long run."
https://www.alsoblogposts.com/p/k-pop-startup-hunters
19. "Your goal? Get to a point where your investments/assets make more than your capability to earn. Once you are here the game is over.
The problem? Most people sell their time and buy distractions/status objects.
Trade time for money → rent, materials → repeat
No assets = no leverage = no future exit
No matter how old you are. 15 years old or 30. You know that your entire goal is to buy assets. Period. Become an owner with equity in something at all times with all disposable income. You’re throwing as much coal as possible into that flame as early as possible.
At a young age you might thing “okay worthless since i don’t have assets”. Well. Abilities are assets.
You must learn to sell. This is no longer negotiable. The doomers will say it can be replaced by AI. It won’t. No CEO is going to talk to Gemini or ChatGPT to decide if it should sell/buy a new company. Period.
You must build niche knowledge. This could be anything from peptides to toothpaste to pre-sleep formulas as we’ve seen in the jungle. Choose one niche and be ahead of AI (which just scrapes consensus garbage and spits it out)
Learn to create attention. Don’t care how you do it. While OnlyFans gets a lot of hate, there is something to learn from it. If you can gather a bunch of attention you will be rich.
Take a step back. If you can sell then you can build equity (you can sell a product for someone with a stake in the company OR you could sell your own product). Opens a boatload of doors. If you have niche knowledge that is ahead of masses, you are by definition an owner of a valuable asset.
“Is this going to increase my abilities or attract customers?” If the answer is no? Move on. You don’t have time to waste."
https://bowtiedbull.io/p/if-starting-over-as-a-teenager-to
20. Some global macro and how to survive the global reset. A bit of libertarian bent but good to understand.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eVROsNCUoLs
21. "Those who believe that the debt is unsustainable believe that the government will eventually be forced to choose between outright default and “debasement” that would cheapen nominal yen claims relative to assets in other currencies as well as relative to real assets. For those who have spent decades warning—or scaremongering—about Japanese public indebtedness, the persistent (nominal) weakness of the yen in the face of rising (nominal) interest rates over the past few years therefore seems like vindication that this process is finally starting.
As of now, however, there is a more benign explanation: Japan may have finally exited its post-bubble stagnation.
The return of modest inflation alongside persistently faster wage and income growth should align with higher interest rates than those that prevailed when the economy experienced essentially no growth in yen terms between 1997 and 2019. Moreover, if the recent growth in nominal incomes is sustained, Japanese government borrowing costs would still be lower, relative to expected revenue increases, than in much of the past few decades. (That helps explains why the yen has not appreciated recently despite the apparent convergence of nominal yields with the U.S. and other G10 economies.) Far from indicating trouble, Japanese bond prices are implying that Japan has converged, in at least one important way, with the rest of the rich world."
https://theovershoot.co/p/is-japan-normal-again
22. "That means you need to make a conscious decision about whether you want to participate in the ongoing metals and mining bull market. If the answer is yes, the next step is to construct a portfolio that aligns with your risk tolerance and investment time frame.
If you feel an overwhelming urge to chase stocks on a day when everything on your screen is green, I would urge you to take a cold shower and instead channel that energy into building a watch list. Follow the stocks on your list and learn as much as you can about them over the next month. By the end of that period, I suspect you’ll have learned a great deal—and you’ll likely have a much clearer sense of when, and at what price, you’d like to buy.
Who knows? You may even get a fat-pitch buying opportunity in the meantime.
For those with a high risk tolerance, junior miners may be the right fit. For investors with a much lower tolerance for volatility, it likely makes more sense to stick with large producers or gold royalty companies such as Franco-Nevada (NYSE: FNV) or Barrick (NYSE: B)."
https://robertsinn.substack.com/p/the-psychology-of-bull-markets-greed
23. "In my view, the uncomfortable reality is that there is no coherent, well-thought out logical and rational case for why the United States needs Greenland in the way Trump describes. Neither was there a similar logical reason for Trump’s Liberation Day and the global tariff war, for capturing Maduro or for many other Trump decisions. Trump doesn’t have and doesn't really need one: he just wants Greenland because he wants it.
At some point in his life, Trump just came to like the idea of the United States having Greenland. Maybe because it looks big on a map, maybe because he wants to leave a mark on history for expanding U.S. territory, maybe because it makes so many people so angry, maybe because it’s a great distraction, maybe because of something else or maybe because of all of the above.
I would bet that people in his admin have no idea what the real reason for taking Greenland is either, just like they struggled to explain the reason behind Trump’s tariff Liberation Day. And I think that Trump probably couldn’t give one either - apart from feeling like it’s a good idea.
The bottom line is that there’s no logic behind this and there’s no point in looking for it."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184536902
24. "I recently listened to an audiobook about the Napoleonic Wars. Overall, the book wasn’t very good, but there was one interesting part where it described Napoleon’s ruling style as being mafia-like. His insistence that other European countries buy French exports, his attempts to shut Britain out of European trade, and a bunch of his other economic policies were fundamentally gangster-ish — they were ad hoc impositions of personal power, often with an eye toward taking revenge on personal enemies and entrenching his own authority.
I immediately recognized this as Donald Trump’s style of governance. Like Napoleon, Trump’s top priority isn’t creating durable institutions that will outlive him — indeed, he regards any such institutions as threats to his own personal power. Many observers have labeled this approach “personalism” or “patrimonialism”, but it’s really just gangsterism. Trump treats America like a mafia organization, and himself as the godfather.
This is the problem with running economic policy like a gangster. In the short term, bullying people into going against their economic self-interest might get you what you want. But in the long term, it just makes the economy less efficient, while the ad-hoc nature of policymaking causes instability and uncertainty. For a few years, everyone bends the knee, but eventually things start to break."
https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/gangster-affordability
25. Learning from our enemies.
"Rubikon’s formation marks a departure from the ad hoc, volunteer-driven drone initiatives that characterized much of the early war effort.
Instead of bottom-up improvisation, Rubikon reflects deliberate institutional design: centralized recruitment, direct state backing, and a mandate to professionalize drone warfare within Russia’s armed forces. This top-down construction distinguishes it sharply from traditional Russian military units and from the informal structures that preceded it.
Rubikon is often described as the decisive element that pushed Ukrainian Forces out of the Kursk Region in Russia, and they maintain extensive combat experience in Pokrovsk (Donbas) and Kupiansk (Kharkiv Oblast).
With over 5,000 personnel at its disposal, Rubikon can rotate units between frontlines with deliberate frequency. This rotation generates an asymmetric information advantage: Rubikon does not become locked into a single-terrain doctrine and does not face the same Ukrainian brigades long enough for systematic counter-adaptation.
Whether this consistently translates into tactical superiority remains unclear, but the mobility itself works in Rubikon’s favor."
26. A masterclass in doing M&A and building a high growth company.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yco9JP0PyLM
27. "We are drowning in “Fast Information.” We consume endless threads, bite-sized “hacks,” and reactionary op-eds under the guise of staying informed. This is a delusion. You aren’t learning; you are just renting other people’s opinions.
This constant input creates a “Mental Friction” that prevents original synthesis. If you consume the same feed as everyone else, you will inevitably think exactly like everyone else. You lose your edge because your brain has become a mirror, not a prism."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184579968
28. "Which brings us back to that line from Three Days of the Condor. The analyst who “just reads books” isn’t a fantasy. He’s a reminder that imagination, narrative, and interpretation sit closer to the center of power than we like to admit.
The Intelligence Community and the entertainment industry are both meaning-making systems operating under scarcity—information in one case, attention in the other. One conceals reality; the other stylizes it. But both decide which stories are told, which are softened, and which never reach the public at all.
Different missions. Different aesthetics.
Same underlying logic.
And once you see it, it’s hard to unsee."
https://www.insidecyberwarfare.com/p/the-agency-and-the-industry-two-worlds
29. "This is not simply “resource imperialism.” It is not a budgetary appropriation masquerading as strategy. It is not a throwback to classical mercantilism. The evidence — from market reactions to institutional choices — points toward something more complex:
A strategy built on financial engineering and multilateral cover, designed to realign a state in the Western Hemisphere without the political costs of taxpayer-funded reconstruction.
In other words, Venezuela is a pilot — not in the old Monroe Doctrine sense of direct colonial resource control, but in a new, financially mediated model of influence where institutions, markets, and legal authority interact in place of traditional foreign aid.
If this framework succeeds, it will shape how great powers engage distressed states in the decades ahead. And if it fails, it will offer a cautionary lesson about the limits of financialized geoeconomics."
https://tanviratna.substack.com/p/us-strategy-in-venezuela-what-it
30. "President Trump is winning enough of the Monopoly board that he can confidently bring almost his entire cabinet to the upcoming WEF meeting to effectively read the Riot Act to his opponents. Opponents mean the Europeans and Canada at this point, because Russia and China are both increasingly subdued as Trump cuts off their cash and energy supply lines. Trump’s biggest opponent to the peace process now are the EU and its member states and Canada who oppose his various peace plans and actions and who continue to work with his internal opponents - The Blob as some like to call it - meaning the coalition of those who continue to try and undermine his Presidency in their effort to preserve a system that provides reliable (but often illicit) cash flows and dependable (though, bought) voter outcomes.
I’m going to argue that what we are witnessing is not WWIII. It’s also not a proxy war between the superpowers. It’s an internecine war. It’s an interstitial war. It’s something more like an American Civil War played out on the global geopolitical Monopoly Board. The divide is not over geography or even ideology. It’s more like the fight over slavery. It’s a fight over cash flows and who gets to control them. It’s not a matter of whether those cash flows are morally right or wrong. It’s just about control. I am suggesting that the situation is not a straightforward old-fashioned superpower confrontation but rather a more intricate internal power struggle."
https://drpippa.substack.com/p/the-geopolitical-monopoly-board-venezuela
31. "Trump’s strategy is to limit the Blob’s influence at home and abroad, creating a showdown that manifests in voting booths across Europe, Greenland, Ukraine, Iran, and Pakistan. He hopes that voters will eject their Blob leaders, which might explain his heightened rhetoric about Greenland. The U.S. already has access to its military facilities—it’s not about taking Greenland but removing the Blob from crucial regions.
This isn’t a proxy war; it’s an interstitial and internecine conflict—not WWIII, but an American Civil War 2.0 playing out on a global stage."
https://drpippa.substack.com/p/the-geopolitical-monopoly-board-venezuela-18f
32. "Failing to adapt to tectonic shifts. If ever this were true, it’s true today.
Being physically or emotionally removed. Teams who don’t use AI daily miss the pace of change. The technology moves too fast for quarterly strategy reviews. If leadership isn’t prompting Claude or GPT every day, they’re already behind.
Cognitive biases are always hard to see in ourselves. A short seller’s mirror is a useful one at this moment in AI."
https://tomtunguz.com/dead-companies-walking/
33. This was deeply insightful. The art and science of building a venture machine. Flood the zone.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_OHeOZiij_M
34. This was a fun and educational interview with media and VC impresario Henry Stebbings. Chips on shoulders leads to chips in pockets.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lk2VN8wiTr8
35. "In the end, this isn’t really about Poland.
It’s about how we think about sovereignty and optimization in an era where geography is increasingly optional for earning income.
Portugal pioneered the “tax break for mobile talent” model with NHR. It worked brilliantly-for a decade. Then political pressure killed it. Italy tried to go ultra-premium. Greece added investment requirements.
Poland is offering what Portugal did in 2013: exceptional value for those who know where to look.
The pattern suggests this won’t last forever in its current form. Not because Poland will necessarily eliminate it, but because success breeds attention, and attention breeds political backlash.
But the question always is: what are you optimizing for?
If it’s complete tax elimination, well then you’re outside Europe entirely.
If it’s Mediterranean lifestyle with reasonable tax treatment, you’re looking at different trade-offs.
If it’s pure tax efficiency on capital gains with EU quality of life, Poland might be the best answer available in 2025.
Sovereignty in the 21st century means having options.
Poland is an option worth understanding."
https://palombo.substack.com/p/polands-flat-tax-europes-best-kept
36. "In that sense, Greenland is not the core problem but a catalyst. The real issue exposed by today’s meeting is the tension between American unilateral impulse and structural dependence on allies in an environment where power projection is hardest and cooperation matters most."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184603356
37. "This essay will present a cornucopia of chart porn annotated with my thoughts to contextualize the co-movement of these assets. I believe Bitcoin did exactly what it was supposed to do. It rode the wave of fiat liquidity lower, specifically dollar liquidity, as Pax Americana’s credit impulse was the most important force in 2025. Gold surged as price-insensitive sovereign nations hoovered it up because they were afraid to remain in US treasuries lest Pax Americana steal their wealth like it did to Russia in 2022. The act of war committed upon Venezuela by Pax Americana most recently only intensifies the desire for nations to save in gold rather than US treasuries. Finally, the AI bubble and all the ancillary industries that benefit, are not going anywhere.
In fact, US President Trump must double down on state support for all things AI because it is the largest contributor to GDP growth in the empire. This means that even if the pace of dollar creation slows, the Nasdaq can continue to rise because Trump effectively nationalized it. For those of you who study Chinese capital markets, you know stonks do very well in the early period of nationalization, but then underperform massively as political goals take precedence over return on equity for unpatriotic capitalists.
If the 2025 price action of Bitcoin, gold, and stonks validated my market schema, then I can continue focusing on the vicissitudes of dollar liquidity. To remind readers, my prognosis is that Trump will pump credit to run the economy fucking hot. A rip-roaring economy helps the re-election chances for Team Red Republicans this November. Dollar credit will expand as the central bank balance sheet grows, commercial banks lend more to “strategic industries”, and mortgage rates decline because of printed money."
https://cryptohayes.substack.com/p/frowny-cloud
38. Depressing conversation on how the West over-financialized, screwed up our supply chains and became over-reliant on China for key metals and minerals. We will have to take some major pain to fix this.
Don’t Get Disconnected: Losing Touch with Reality
In a recent visit to Vancouver to see my folks, I learned I had a very old bank account. So I went with my dad to shut it down. Long story short, it was an administrative headache, taking an hour, although I will say they were very nice and polite. I walked out going, “what a pain but whatever” as I got to spend time with my dad and daughter so it was fine. But normally this kind of stuff is so irritating and infuriating.
I started thinking about the super wealthy and super famous people I knew. All post-economic. When you are so wealthy you don’t need to do the everyday things of getting groceries, waiting in line at post office or bank, sorting out random things at the mall. You have people do that for you. You don’t fly commercial airlines, you fly private so you don’t go through lines. You holiday away from the “poors” and regular people. I totally get it. You want security and you don’t want to waste your time. You don’t do anything you don’t want to.
Because of this, I’ve also noticed in general, how completely out of touch they were with regular folks and all the hassles regular people have to put up with. Do this for many years and you completely lose sight of the reality of most people. You literally have no idea. No sense. This shows up in the cluelessness and callousness of the things they say on stage or in the media. Or worse, the flashiness of their luxurious lifestyle on social media. Real ragebait for the down slope of the K-shaped economy.
I recall the public outcry during the pandemic when the Kardashians flew their entire family to a luxury resort island to celebrate a family member's birthday, while all of us were locked down. So many such cases and it’s no wonder people want to eat the rich. There is very little sympathy for the wealthy, even in America despite the large amount of charitable causes they support.
The point I write here is that it's good to do everyday things and experience hassles every once in a while. It’s good to not isolate yourself, unless you live in a crime ridden hellhole. Interact with everyone, of all socioeconomic stratas.
And if you do happen to be well off, don’t be flashy, don’t be an a–hole. Tip super well. Live like a normal dude. Be stealth wealth. Why? It’s good not to be a dick and there is such a thing as karma (although it takes a while). No one likes a show off. More practically, the backlash coming against the wealthy in this decade will be ferocious due the AI and finance driven layoffs coming. A backlash specifically for tech and finance bros. So stay quiet, stay smart, stay alert and stay alive. Especially in times of massive change like we are in right now.
Winners and Losers: It’s All in Your Mind
I am a fan of Andrew Huberman of the Huberman Labs podcast, where he talks about health and wellness via the lens of biohacking. It felt like he came from nowhere to being everywhere.
He is a life long learner and someone living life to his own definition. A winner for sure. I listened to an interview and he said something that really stuck with me.
"Someone I really respect said this, 'There are basically two kinds of people in life. Winners and losers.' And the definition is this—losers take things that happen to them... and the wallow and they use it for self or outward destruction."
"Winners take whatever they feel, it sucks, and they transmute it into things that are good for themselves and for the world."
Most people according to this then are losers. I was one of these people for a very long time in my life. But I worked on myself. I am still working on myself. I had to change my mindset of victimhood. I’m a conqueror. Everything is my fault and I’ll act accordingly. I don’t control the outside world but I can control how I react to it.
Mindset and action is the only thing that determines a winner from a loser. Don’t be a loser.
Go Direct: You are the Message
Everyone needs a personal brand. Whether you are a politician, business man or even individual contributor or employee. Literally everyone needs to build one. It’s the only way to stand out. I’ve heard many people talk about this like Marc Andressen, Balaji or even Tai Lopez. I got it intellectually and directionally but I did not truly grok this until entrepreneur and former YC partner Qasar Younis blogged about it. He really explained what is driving this and the context of this massive change.
He wrote:
"One of the hallmark trends of our generation is the fall of confidence in institutions. From the 1970s until now, people have lost faith in almost every major institution, from government to corporations. Post–World War II, America trusted places like General Motors or The Wall Street Journal as organizations acting in society’s interest, serving as gatekeepers. The world was different. Information was scarce and slow-moving.
The internet blew all of that up. As information got to end users faster, the narrative became a bit harder to control. But it wasn’t so much that these institutions were blatantly lying – but institutions, like a business, are just groups of people working together. And within every group there is a complex, sometimes conflicting, set of goals and actions. All this results in the average person getting mixed messages and therefore not trusting the institution. You see this in politics too as being the “establishment” candidate is basically a death sentence now.
The alternative narrative is fundamentally direct-to-consumer. Just like brands that skip traditional distribution, ideas now bypass institutions entirely.
Everyone from Alex Karp to Zohran Mamdani to President Trump operates on this wavelength:
I don’t want to hear from your corporation or your party. I want to hear directly from you.
Institutional filtering is now an anti-signal. How many corporate X accounts are you following and taking seriously?"
It’s so critically important, especially in the age of AI. In the age of infinite slop. This is the only way to stand out in the crowd and really differentiate yourself. Whether you do it on X, write a newsletter, or do a podcast. You need to be a one person media company. You need to build your personal brand. This is job one for everyone.
Marvin’s Best Weekly Reads March 8th, 2026
“If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need." – Marcus Tullius Cicero
The impact of revolutions. Freedom is not always the outcome.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TiOCJssqfDs&t=108s
2. The importance of Comms & PR: Storytelling for startup founders. Such an overlooked skill and clear differentiator in such a crowded market right now.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GRoU1T4E9rQ
3. "In 2012, we cared that we used software. Today we care how we use it.
The difference is trajectory.
In the last decade, adopting software was the priority. Moving from on-premise to the cloud or digitizing a manual workflow promised productivity gains. Adoption was the finish line.
Today software is ubiquitous. Every salesperson uses a CRM & every engineer uses an IDE. The edge no longer comes from having the tool but from the specific path & manner in which that tool is used to achieve an outcome : a trajectory through software."
https://tomtunguz.com/ai-trajectories/
4. "It doesn’t matter if you’re a soldier, a human rights advocate, an economist, a financier, a manufacturer, or a farmer. War affects us all. This is certainly the case in wars close to our homes or in which we’re active participants. But it remains true even when a war is seemingly removed by geography or participation.
Wars interrupt supply chains and threaten global trade, increasing prices and destabilizing economies."
https://buildingourfuture.substack.com/p/defense-is-for-everyone
5. "Often when you’re stuck, a better cliche to follow than “just do something” is to double down on strengths. I didn’t use the framing of “double down on what’s working” because presumably if you’re stuck, things don’t seem to be working. If you’re at a low point, even the word “strengths” might fail to conjure up a long list.
Be that as it may, most of us have lived life. We’ve lived in certain places, done particular things, befriended particular people. That’s a good starting point."
https://www.optimaloutliers.com/p/better-than-just-do-something
6. Good episode this week. Lots of good takes and predictions for 2026.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yEb2DX0TzKM
7. "Humans evolved around campfires, sharing stories for thousands of years. The power of a story is unlike anything else. My recommendation for entrepreneurs is to exercise their storytelling muscle and actively look for ways to improve their craft. Writing, speaking, and every other form of communication becomes far more powerful when driven by compelling stories."
https://davidcummings.org/2026/01/10/intentional-story-teller/
8. "In life there are many ways to make money. Some restrict you more than others.
Prioritize building income streams that don’t take away your freedom. Because money is far more useful to a free man than to an un-free man.
It is far superior to make $250k a year from an online business that lets you travel whenever and wherever you want than to make $500k a year from a job or an offline business that forces you to be at a particular location all the time.
People often regret working “too hard” and making money they have no use of while the years of their life go by. No one ever regrets enjoying their life, travelling often, and living to their fullest."
https://lifemathmoney.com/dont-waste-your-20s-how-to-maximize-your-twenties-part-2/
9. "Why the US should be expected to have any contact with a country like Kyrgyzstan is a fair query to start with. Look at a map zoomed out and the country seems to be swallowed in an embrace by China to the east and by Kazakhstan and — more distantly — Russia to the north. The country is poor, with a nominal GDP per capita of under $3,000, and has limited natural resources. It’s mountainous and largely rural, with proud nomadic traditions, a culture taking in elements from the Russian, Chinese, Arabic, and Turkic worlds, and its history couldn’t be more remote from America’s.
But spend time here and a certain US influence becomes obvious enough. I am able to teach my journalism course in English at an international university with good comprehension from my students. My students routinely make fun of me for how behind the curve I am in following P. Diddy’s trial or not quite being able to explain who Charli XCX is. Many of them fantasise about living in the US. If I’m in a cab, it’s routine for the driver to suddenly put on speakerphone a brother or cousin who’s living in the States so that we can trade pleasantries with one another. Bishkek is filled with malls that give me flashbacks to the time I spent living in Los Angeles.
And, as an American, I am treated with a respect and an interest that I don’t think I’ve quite experienced anywhere else in the world — there’s just a curiosity about Americanness that I think much of the rest of the world has moved past."
https://unherd.com/2026/01/the-land-that-westernisation-forgot/
10. "Let’s review the state of the chessboard.
The US now has a vertically integrated loop for supplying itself and the entire world the critical medium and heavy crude oil products.
It can play the hand of favorites for those states willing to supplicate. This strengthens its position within the Western Bloc as the de facto Hegemon.
While the US controls the “Perfect Machine” (Gulf Coast Coking Refineries), the Eastern Bloc relies on a clumsy, distributed “Symbiotic Chain” where Russia/Iran acts as the crude extraction colony and China acts as the dirty processing lab.
The US also gains a geographic arterial strike advantage by only having to monitor the Persian Gulf, Indian Ocean, and Yellow Sea.
By seizing Venezuelan Orinoco heavy oil, the US also effectively secures the highest-value feedstock for its specialized machine, forcing China to run its “Teapot” refineries on inferior or politically volatile alternatives. This heavy oil sludge can be more easily cracked into lower forms as needed for desired usage.
Heavy oils give US optionality in refining. It is more efficient to “chop” that it is to “glue.”
The US will very likely install governance and corporate structure that is supplicating to its national needs. It can begin to squeeze the Eastern Bloc slowly by reducing exports of Merey 16. Or it can simply increase prices. China was able to buy this sanctioned oil at discount.
Now the US controls this oil supply. It’s categorization is “Clean.” So China pays fair market prices for continuing their infrastructure construction.
The same way that China uses REE controls.
We can make an estimation that China currently relies upon Venezuelan bitumen for roughly 50% of its asphalt production needs.
Depending on the mood of the US administration, this is about to get very expensive or outright disappear from China’s procurement.
Whether by design or coincidence, the US now has a very real wartime advantage against China.
It’s likely the US does not recognize this fully. They just wanted China OUT.
You probably just read an intelligence report that governments pay millions of dollars for to use in war gaming simulations.
“Amateurs talk tactics.
Professionals talk logistics.”
https://endtropy.substack.com/p/trumps-enormous-c-length-win-over
11. "Success often brings a hidden curse: Structural Density. You build a company, then a larger home, then a staff to manage the home, then a legal team to manage the staff. Before you realize it, you are no longer a creator; you are a high-end janitor for your own life. You have built a gilded cage where the cost of maintenance both financial and mental exceeds the joy of ownership. You are “rich,” but you are no longer sovereign.
The ultimate signal of power today is the Ghost Presence. No active social media, no public-facing email, no “About” page on a website. You exist only to those who have your direct number. While the middle class is busy building “personal brands” for strangers, the sovereign elite are busy deleting themselves from the public record. Anonymity is the new private jet."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184149503
12. "Stop trying to optimize the trivial. You cannot build a sovereign life by managing a thousand tiny leaks. Find the one variable that defines your trajectory and ignore everything else. The gallery is only beautiful because of what the curator chose to leave out."
https://substack.com/@luxlifestylelab/p-182844265
13. "As ice recedes, there’s even talk of future trans polar routes straight over the North Pole—essentially new Panama Canals made of water. You can bet that Greenland—the nearest land for thousands of miles—would be strategically valuable for supporting or monitoring such routes. Every navy with Arctic ambitions would love a friendly port or refueling point in Greenland’s sheltered fjords.
And let’s not forget about natural resources. Beneath Greenland’s icy surface lies a treasure trove of minerals and energy—a fact not lost on world powers. Geological surveys indicate that Greenland is rich in rare earth metals, uranium, iron ore, zinc, lead, gemstones, and potentially oil and gas. In 2023, a survey found that Greenland has 25 out of the 34 minerals deemed critical by the EU for modern economies.
That’s huge, because many of these “critical minerals” (like rare earth elements, cobalt, and so on) are essential for things like smartphones, electric car batteries, wind turbines, missile systems—basically the high tech gadgets and green energy gear that power modern life. Right now, China dominates global supply chains for a lot of these materials. So, the U.S. and Europe eye Greenland’s untapped reserves as a golden opportunity to diversify supply. In fact, Greenland’s rare earth deposits are among the largest outside China, which is one reason the island has popped up on Washington’s radar (pun intended).
To sum up, today’s Greenland is a weird and potent mix of “old school” strategic geography and “new school” climate tech importance. It’s still that same crucial Arctic waypoint for defense and transit, just like in the 20th century. But it’s also gaining fresh relevance due to melting ice (new sea lanes) and the tech boom (need for rare minerals). Add in its enormous size (did I mention Greenland is three times the size of Texas?), and you have an enticing piece of real estate for any global power. Which brings us back to one global power in particular that made a very public play for Greenland not so long ago…"
https://gbnt1952.substack.com/p/the-strategic-value-of-greenland
14. Understanding American strategy & doctrine under Trump 2.0.
Unrestricted competition against everyone: hard knuckle policy and action (economic and kinetic) by America. Don't like it but here we are.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2-eNucEYSg
15. K-shaped economy & living in a trustless society. Society is split between those who have everything to lose and those who have nothing to lose.
Scary time in America & UK (Canada & Europe are not in any great shape either).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnIv60_Y3jc
16. "We live in an era where building a multimillion-dollar company no longer requires massive teams, big offices, or investor funding.
The “one-person business” revolution has arrived driven by technology, automation, and global distribution.
From creators and consultants to software developers and digital product sellers, individuals are scaling businesses to millions in revenue without hiring a single full-time employee."
https://luxlifestylelab.substack.com/p/the-rise-of-one-person-businesses
17. "Let me be specific about what I think we should expect from elites. This is not a demand for sainthood. It’s a demand for something more than nothing.
Use your cognitive capacity for more than career advancement. Spend time understanding problems that matter. Don’t outsource your worldview to whatever your profession tells you. Think, actually think, about what’s broken and what might fix it.
Use your economic security to take risks. You have a safety net that most people don’t. Use it.
That might mean taking a lower-paying job with more impact. It might mean funding something uncertain. It might mean speaking up when speaking up has costs. The security is wasted if you never use it.
Use your social capital to open doors. You know people. You have access. Some of that access could be made available to people doing important work. Introductions, legitimacy, and connections are valuable and you’re hoarding them.
Use your institutional position to push for change. You’re somewhere in the system. Maybe you can’t change everything, but you can change something. The question to ask: “What’s the most important thing I can affect from where I sit?” Most people never ask this. They just do what’s expected.
Rethink the allocation of your time and energy. You probably work fifty or sixty hours a week. How much of that is genuinely necessary? How much is status maintenance, or hedonic treadmill, or just what you’ve always done? The reallocation doesn’t have to be dramatic. Even ten hours a week redirected to something that matters would, across millions of elites, transform what’s possible.
This doesn’t mean becoming an activist or a monk or a martyr.
It’s about the marginal question: given what you have and what you can do, are you doing enough?
And for most elites, the honest answer is no."
https://edankrolewicz.substack.com/p/buried-talents
18. This is excellent. A real debate on the future of America and China, India and Internet civilization. Insight dense conversation.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0_uIqjmbJg8&t=85s
19. You need to hire obsessed maniacs. Basically that is what startups require.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PWFuck9NxVw
20. "The two new notable drivers of USD demand are 1) the building US mega-IPO pipeline for 2026, and 2) the LATAM investment / dollarisation boom. Both force dollar demand as much out of necessity as they do preference."
https://dollarwatchtower.substack.com/p/resurrecting-the-us-golden-age
21. I do think BTC is digital gold as a tech guy. But Giustra is pretty smart though.
"Now, I’m known as a gold guy. Guilty as charged. I started buying physical gold in 2001 when I realized the U.S. dollar was walking into an inescapable debt trap and was bound to lose value against gold. I’ve helped finance dozens of mining companies, and as I recount in my memoir *The Money Dilemma* (out later this year), my faith has paid off.
Is Bitcoin a similar store of value and hedge against failing fiat currencies? Maybe someday. Call me a cynic , but I have my own reasons to believe there is much risk in taking that chance as a store of my wealth, and I prefer to sleep at night. I would rather accumulate an asset that for the past decade has been quietly, and at times covertly, amassed by 120 of the world’s most powerful central banks and nations—an asset they mine, hold, and trade among themselves to sideline the dollar—than an asset being hyped by a cabal of billionaires and their media proxies.
Bitcoin is many things. It’s a reaction to the 2008 financial crisis. It’s a libertarian belief system wrapped in software, an ambitious attempt to create money that isn’t issued by the state. It’s an experiment to see whether code can substitute for governance. It’s a speculative asset fueled by a quasi-cultish belief.
Like gold, it’s rare, it’s mined, and it’s often hoarded. Have many investors made a fortune on Bitcoin? Absolutely. But is it digital gold? Not there yet, in my opinion."
https://frankgiustra.com/posts/is-bitcoin-really-digital-gold/
22. "Ohio’s leaders have parlayed this newfound gas bounty into cheap electricity production. According to EIA data, nearly 60% of the state’s electricity is generated from natural gas, a fuel that provides both baseload and dispatchable power. Coal and nuclear power supply about 80% of the remaining balance, while wind and solar combined contribute just under 8% of total generation. Of course, Ohio does not operate its grid in a vacuum, and local price dynamics are heavily influenced by the Pennsylvania–New Jersey–Maryland (PJM) regional transmission organization, of which it is a member.
Given this fact set, Ohio would seem an ideal place for large data centers to set up shop. Indeed, almost unique among US states, Ohio’s political leaders have created a regulatory framework that sets the stage for a massive boom in the construction of such facilities while working to protect consumers."
https://newsletter.doomberg.com/p/intelligent-design
23. "As AI models commoditize, the economics of running them (inference) matter more than the cost of building them (training). Hyperscalers like Google (TPU), Amazon (Trainium), and Microsoft (Maia) are all building internal chips to escape the “Nvidia Tax.” Groq was the only independent startup providing a “good enough” alternative for real-time workloads like voice AI, robotics, and autonomous systems. By neutralizing Groq, Nvidia has removed the escape hatch.
What This Means for the Inference Landscape.
The signal to the market is clear: Inference is where the long-term revenue lives. Training is a massive, one-time CapEx event; inference is the recurring, scaling OpEx that happens every time a user prompts a model.
By the end of 2026, everyone will be focused on inference economics. If you are going to place your investing bets, that’s the place to start."
https://investinginai.substack.com/p/the-inference-land-grab-begins
24. "Unfortunately, European states currently face a substantial capability gap in deep-strike weapons, including medium- to intermediate-range ballistic missile systems comparable to the Oreshnik. While these capabilities are gradually being developed and deployed, Europe is likely still several years away from fielding the types and quantities of missile systems required.
In addition, without the United States, Europe’s nuclear capabilities are limited in both quality and quantity and are insufficient to credibly address Russia’s large and diverse nuclear arsenal, including its pronounced advantage in non-strategic nuclear weapons. In a conflict with NATO, particularly one in which the United States was not involved, Russia would therefore retain significant coercive leverage in the nuclear domain.
Overall, Oreshnik poses a distinct challenge to European security. This challenge stems less from the missile’s technical characteristics, which remain overstated, than from the way it exposes and amplifies existing European capability gaps that require urgent attention."
https://missilematters.substack.com/p/oreshnik-is-overhyped-but-poses-a
25. "TL;DR:
The US is betting on intelligence. China is betting somewhere else!The US frequently frames its competition with China as an AI race, similar to the space race it ran with the USSR. The idea of a race was triggered around a year ago with the launch of DeepSeek. Ever since, much of the US media has been fascinated with the idea of the US winning the AI race against China.
Ironically, it isn’t much of a race if the US is the only one running it.
The American ‘AI race’ is framed around who will build the smartest models, as if superior intelligence alone decides the future.
China’s strategy reveals a different understanding of the game altogether.
It is not trying to win AI at all. It is betting that intelligence will become abundant, and that power will flow instead to whoever can reliably turn intelligence into economic value."
https://platforms.substack.com/p/us-vs-china-how-to-win-the-wrong
26. "Against this background, Greenland must be considered as a denied strategic space, not an ignored one. The Arctic reality in Cold War 2.0 is therefore neither hysteria nor denial: Greenland is not encircled, but the High North remains a real exposure, with the DragonBear risk vector becoming asymmetric, primarily Russian in military terms, and Chinese in shaping the long-term geo-economic environment."
https://substack.com/inbox/post/184203912
27. 1517 is an underrated vc firm, working with founders at the earliest moments and ages. Lots of observations on how to help and work with younger founders. True belief capital.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7jIc-9N1ck
28. "When Salesforce throttles Slack’s API, they’re telegraphing where the value is. When Epic locks down patient records, they’re drawing a map. Incumbents don’t build walls around worthless assets. And they don’t build defenses unless they perceive credible & urgent challengers.
AI’s speed enables both startups & incumbents to own a stack end-to-end. That’s offense in an era of walls."
https://tomtunguz.com/defense-comes-to-software/
29. "In conclusion, there were three big geopolitical losses inflicted by Mr. Putin on Russia. Economic, political and ideological loss of relations with Europe; reduced national security due to the presence of NATO on Russia’s borders and willful disregard of national treasure; and finally, the creation of a Ukraine that, by its very construction, will remain an anti-Russia for a very long time. While the war was justified by arguing that it would improve Russia’s geopolitical situation it achieved the opposite."
https://branko2f7.substack.com/p/the-long-term-political-consequences
30. "2026 is when the AI story stops being about a fairytale of infinity and starts being about proof. Proof of economics. Proof of defensibility. Proof that scale compounds instead of hollowing out the core. Who will survive when the narrative meets reality?"
https://snailmail.slow.co/p/the-only-ai-questions-that-matter-for-2026
31. Nuff said: Palmer Luckey of Anduril! Always a fun and interesting interview with him.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHLiA76hVps
32. "The use of an Oreshnik missile in Lviv makes strategic sense to Putin. Their use is the sign of a fearful, worried leader and not one that is confident and anticipating victory."
https://mickryan.substack.com/p/the-russian-oreshnik-strike-on-lviv
33. "It is easy to fall for the average trap and start designing your life according to it. Average people are everywhere around you. They are your colleagues. Your friend. and the people you pass on the street. Does that mean they are bad people? No. Does that mean you should be like them? Absolutely not.
Ask yourself whether you want to live the life they are living. The answer will tell you everything.
Most average traits are ownership issues. Once you take control of your actions, emotions, and thoughts. It will all click.
Three months is all you need to get rid of a pattern or behavior you want to change."
https://www.beautyofsaas.com/p/traits-of-the-average-people
34. "Copper has emerged as a foundational metal of the 21st century, uniquely critical to the electrified economy underpinning artificial intelligence (AI), data centers, renewable energy, electric vehicles (EVs), grid expansion, and defense systems. As global electrification accelerates, demand for copper is projected to rise sharply — yet supply is not keeping pace, creating a widening gap that could constrain economic growth, technological advancement, and global infrastructure development.
S&P Global recently published a report titled “Copper in the Age of AI: Challenges of Electrification”. The S&P Global report frames copper not just as another industrial commodity but as the “connective artery” of modern infrastructure — essential wherever electricity flows, wires are deployed, or advanced digital systems are installed. It highlights how AI’s energy and hardware needs intensify demand on an already stressed supply chain.
When you think of copper as the connective artery of all modern infrastructure, you quickly come to understand the strategic importance of the red metal and why the price has to move higher over the coming years."
https://robertsinn.substack.com/p/the-essential-role-of-copper-and
35. "We are talking about fifty people, maybe even fewer. That’s because there’s so much overlap. The CEO of Google alone is a key decision maker for search, apps, videos, music, podcasts, and much more. The same is true of Amazon, Apple, and Meta. They have their fingers in every pie, and an insatiable appetite for more.
The story gets even worse. If you look at the background of these fifty people, you find that most of them lack experience or credibility in arts and culture. They are technocrats or administrators. There’s no evidence that they love music or books or paintings—or anything except their share price and pay checks.
But they get to decide almost everything in the culture sphere. And they’re incentivized to make decisions out of financial self-interest, totally divorced from aesthetic concerns.
2026 will be a struggle. The legacy institutions and tech platforms are consolidating, and this gives them more power. It’s reassuring to see how poorly they exercise that power—churning out reboots and retreads. (If they were smarter, the culture would suffer even more.) Their mistakes offer an opportunity for the outsider.
And the next new thing always comes from the outside. The culture stagnates without fresh infusions from the fringe.
This year we need to keep that fringe alive. We need to help it on the indie platforms and the indie labels and the indie cinemas and indie galleries and indie media outlets.
But that requires action from us, both as creators and members of an informed audience—those fifty culture elites in positions of power couldn’t care less. They’re too busy looking at the share price.
This is the defining tension in the culture ecosystem. On one side, we have consolidation of power among a tiny number of elite insiders. On the other, we hear clamoring outsiders with their alternative voices and independent perspectives."
https://www.honest-broker.com/p/fifty-people-control-the-culture
36. Some Alt-Geopolitics. Lots of this stuff is wacky and conspiracy theorist. But listen to everyone to try to understand all the crazy that is going on in the world.
Warband Maxxing: Build Your Tribe Part Deux
Like many men, when times get tough, I naturally close inward and cut off contact with friends and family. I refuse to ask for help or even talk to anyone. This is a huge mistake. You have to fight your instincts.
This also seems to be more common especially in an extremely individualistic, isolated and cold society like America, where we only usually come together in times of direct threat. No surprise that the rise of prepper culture is mainly an American thing. Where you keep a stockpile of food, supplies and weapons to ride out a crisis or emergency.
But Lone wolves die quickly & quietly. And as usual there were some interesting takes on X that point to the right mode to get through these times of poly-crisis.
Homeric Futurist: “But if you look at people in Afghanistan, Lebanon, Brazil, or wherever. Nobody is living on years of stockpiled supplies. That is a bourgeois notion.
They thrive through their networks, local influence, capacity for violence, black market economies etc.”
Titus Manlius describes what happened during the brutal decades long civil war in Lebanon in the 1970s & 1980s: “Christians in Lebanon stockpile ammo and supplies. Fortify their homes (gates, barred windows, cameras, solar, generators). But yes, they thrive with family, local/international networks, influence, neighbors, associations, churches. It sh-t hits the fan, the bells ring.”
Source: https://x.com/HomericFuturist/status/1998799690020827635.
This is absolutely the way. You need to build your tribe. Maybe better said, your war band.
Like “Rogue Frontier” you have to actively work on building these communities before a crisis. And there are many old historical precedents beyond recent times. It’s almost like men are wired for this in reaction to societal breakdown and challenges.
“Modern man feels a profound sense of meaninglessness precisely because his bonds of fraternal brotherhood have been shattered.
The great lie is that civilization is "evolving", progressing toward some bright, utopian future. The reverse is clearly true — as we move further from traditional hierarchy, the more rapidly society degenerates.
We men of tradition strive to become the most exemplary members of our folk, capable of reorganizing hierarchy around our superiority. We must be of such powerful quality that men find purpose through service to our ideals.
Now is the time to revitalize traditional structures of camaraderie and manifest a new destiny for our people — this begins with the formation of your own comitatus.
Ghengis Khan, in fact, began his conquest of the world with his "four fierce wolves" or "the dogs of Chinggis" — Khubilai, Jelme, Jebe, and Sübedei. Naturally, like Ghengis, the more heroic qualities you embody, the more men who will seek to serve your greatness.
In the ancient world, benefits of a comitatus were abundant:
"The lord in turn rewarded his comitatus, especially the core group of friends, by treating them as his own family, sharing his habitation and worldly goods with them, and bestowing much wealth upon them.
Warriors belonging to a comitatus were rewarded with almost unimaginable wealth and honor in their societies, not just once but over and over throughout their lives, as long as they served their lord, and in the afterlife as well.”
Source: https://x.com/RoguesPhilo/status/1998873215020708237.
Exploring this topic led me down the path to an old fictional book “Kara’s Game” that took place during the horrific Serbian siege of Sarajevo in 1994. It’s a gripping read and a frightening reminder of the depths that people can fall to. But there was a quote that seemed apt for the times, you learn about who you can count on when things get bad. “If you cannot help those who help you and yours, who can you help? If you can’t be loyal to those who are loyal to you and yours, then who or what the hell can you be loyal to.”
History is a great educator. Mike Shelby wrote:
“History is littered with the good guys losing the war and atrocities perpetrated against their innocent family members.
Stop thinking America could be any different. Don't lose faith that we will win, but be realistic that we could lose. Then keep training and preparing to win.”
So go build your war band. Everyone needs their crew during challenging times. 2026 to 2029 is going to be wild.
Go Tribal: Build a Clan
There is something about the highlands and mountains that creates fierce people. Think about the Scottish, Gurkhas, Dagestanis, Chechens, Georgians, Houthis and the ultimate empire killers, the Afghans. Some of the toughest human beings on earth. The tough, desolate and isolated terrains create brutal clannish people. Just like how the deserts and steppes also created tough brutal people like the Moroccan Tauregs, Turks, Mongols and Arabs of the past.
Brutal environments with scarce resources where every scrap was fought for. Clans and close family ties were critical for survival. People who you could count on, people who had your back no matter what. Who would shelter you, feed you and help you when you were sick. This gave you some margin of error and increased your chances of survival. We’re all wired to be tribal to begin with.
These cultural legacies still last into modern times. I remember being told by friends not to mess with Afghanis when I was growing up because when you mess with one of them, you get the whole family. Uncles, brothers, cousins and distant cousins would all come after you. They lived by feuds and as I recall the Ten Rings Boss man of Shang Chi said something along these lines: “A blood debt has to be paid by blood”. Or as was popularized by the Sicilian mafia: the vendetta.
I used to think these things such as clans and tribes were irrelevant & outdated. And they were in the magical global world we lived in. The Pax Americana of globalization where we all prospered together. Those days are over. The cycle has turned.
America, the formerly unified and trusting society is decaying. Broken institutions, broken infrastructure abetted by grifting, corrupt elites grabbing as much loot as they can. No one cares about you or your family, definitely not your politicians. Both Democrats and Republicans are equally venal and useless. Everyone, literally almost everyone is trying to get their bag and I absolutely hate this. We are now in a trustless society where people will be fighting far more than ever for the scraps left over. Dog eat dog.
I saw a Tweet by @Ellliotttb that summed this up: “Everyone hates you and wants to rob you…..anyone associated with the administration, local politicos, a16z, unions, pension consultants, loser real estate syndicators, crypto treasuries, spac sponsors, you’re alone on an island of pick pockets.”
@buccocapital describes the mode we need to work under accordingly: “This is the default state of being alive and operating with this mindset is how you get and stay rich.”
A great economic reset that has huge social implications for everyone. To survive and thrive, we need to learn from our not too distant past. Go tribal. Build your network. A network of brains, brawn, guns and cash. Better yet, build your clan or warband. You’re gonna need it as it’s gonna get ugly for a while.