Country Crocked

Rape Culture

20 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio Rape Culture

Descripción

What if the foundation of modern human morality is an anomaly? In this episode of Country Crocked, we confront a staggering mathematical reality: the concept of consent—the absolute baseline of modern ethics—was virtually non-existent for roughly 98% of human history. When you look closely at the raw historical data, somewhere between 30% to 60% of all humans ever born were likely conceived under conditions that meet modern definitions of sexual coercion, capacity failure, or rape. This isn't a conversation about individual bad actors breaking the rules; it’s an exploration of a societal machine that was working exactly as designed. We map the monumental shift of human history through the lens of individual child psychology—drawing on the developmental models of Jean Piaget, Donald Winnicott, and Daniel Stern. We unpack how humanity is slowly clawing its way out of a primitive state of "object relating" (treating others merely as tools to be used) and entering a wider "intersubjective window" that recognizes the rich, separate inner worlds of others. Finally, we pose a chilling question for the future: If our window of empathy continues to expand past gender, past race, and eventually past our own species, what everyday actions that we currently consider mundane will our descendants view with the exact same historical horror we now reserve for the past? In this episode, we discuss: The Scale Problem: Why systemic structures like captive enslavement, child marriage, and economic coercion made sexual submission a default survival mechanism rather than a choice. The Evolutionary Arms Race: How forced copulation evolved as a deeply rooted biological strategy across the animal kingdom—from chimpanzees to mallard ducks (with a callback to our previous episode, "F**k a Duck"). The "Thin Skin" of Consent: Why our current legal frameworks are merely a thin veneer stretched over ancient structures built for coercion. Societal Person Permanence: How marginalized groups successfully forced the dominant system to recognize their distinct interiority and autonomy. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe [https://countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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20 episodios

episode Rape Culture artwork

Rape Culture

What if the foundation of modern human morality is an anomaly? In this episode of Country Crocked, we confront a staggering mathematical reality: the concept of consent—the absolute baseline of modern ethics—was virtually non-existent for roughly 98% of human history. When you look closely at the raw historical data, somewhere between 30% to 60% of all humans ever born were likely conceived under conditions that meet modern definitions of sexual coercion, capacity failure, or rape. This isn't a conversation about individual bad actors breaking the rules; it’s an exploration of a societal machine that was working exactly as designed. We map the monumental shift of human history through the lens of individual child psychology—drawing on the developmental models of Jean Piaget, Donald Winnicott, and Daniel Stern. We unpack how humanity is slowly clawing its way out of a primitive state of "object relating" (treating others merely as tools to be used) and entering a wider "intersubjective window" that recognizes the rich, separate inner worlds of others. Finally, we pose a chilling question for the future: If our window of empathy continues to expand past gender, past race, and eventually past our own species, what everyday actions that we currently consider mundane will our descendants view with the exact same historical horror we now reserve for the past? In this episode, we discuss: The Scale Problem: Why systemic structures like captive enslavement, child marriage, and economic coercion made sexual submission a default survival mechanism rather than a choice. The Evolutionary Arms Race: How forced copulation evolved as a deeply rooted biological strategy across the animal kingdom—from chimpanzees to mallard ducks (with a callback to our previous episode, "F**k a Duck"). The "Thin Skin" of Consent: Why our current legal frameworks are merely a thin veneer stretched over ancient structures built for coercion. Societal Person Permanence: How marginalized groups successfully forced the dominant system to recognize their distinct interiority and autonomy. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe [https://countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

Ayer20 min
episode The 100-Year Oil War: The Treaty of Versailles, Petrodollars, and the 2026 US-Iran Crisis artwork

The 100-Year Oil War: The Treaty of Versailles, Petrodollars, and the 2026 US-Iran Crisis

When a line is drawn on a map, it’s just ink—until you add imperial politicians and a massive subterranean reservoir of crude oil. In this deep dive, we strip away the daily political noise to dissect the proposed 2026 US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding. Valued at a staggering $300 billion, this agreement is far more than a modern news headline. We trace the structural architecture of this deal back through a century of history: from the “coercive extraction” of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles to the frozen military stalemate of the Korean Armistice. Discover why this modern conflict is less about physical barrels of oil and entirely about the preservation of the U.S. petrodollar system. Finally, we look ahead to a sobering reality: as the West transitions to green energy, are we already quietly drafting the next “Versailles” over lithium and cobalt in Africa and South America? This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe [https://countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

16 de jun de 202621 min
episode Human Husbandry artwork

Human Husbandry

What if the guilt you feel, the deference you give to authority, and the moral rules you live by weren't designed for your benefit — but for the survival of the institutions that installed them? This episode unpacks the theory of human husbandry: the idea that ancient religious traditions and moral virtues function as highly refined population management systems, exploiting predictable vulnerabilities in human development — childhood attachment, the chaos of puberty, the lag of the prefrontal cortex — to install self-policing behavior before we're old enough to question it. From the Prodigal Son's elder brother getting economically ripped off, to Foucault's panopticon, to the missionary as cognitive cement, to why neurodivergent people are naturally selected out of these systems — this is a deep structural audit of the invisible fences inside your mind. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe [https://countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

11 de jun de 202623 min
episode Inside the AI Loop: The Closed-Loop Hallucination of Modern Finance artwork

Inside the AI Loop: The Closed-Loop Hallucination of Modern Finance

Are we in a standard tech boom, or have we engineered an unprecedented financial machine that feeds on its own data? In this episode of The Deep Dive, we unpack the mind-bending reality of the AI Stock Feedback Loop. Join us as we explore how tech giants, quantitative hedge funds, and everyday retail investors are strapped into a closed-loop system. We break down the literal plumbing of modern finance—from the massive physical GPU clusters to the systematic momentum algorithms pushing valuations to the moon. We also look at historical parallels like the 1840s railway mania and the 1987 portfolio insurance crash to answer the ultimate question: What happens when the next generation of AI is trained entirely on a synthetic, hyperinflated financial reality created by its predecessors? Key Takeaways: * The Plumbing of the Boom: How “circular revenue” among hyperscalers is funding the massive, very real physical infrastructure of AI. * The Death of Friction: Why the disappearance of traditional human intermediaries and the rise of “epistemic capture” targets our emotions before our logical brains can engage. * The Coiled Spring: How systematic algorithms suppress market volatility on the way up, setting the stage for a highly synchronized, mechanical unwind. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe [https://countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

9 de jun de 202619 min
episode Deathonomics & The King of the Hill artwork

Deathonomics & The King of the Hill

Deathonomics & The King of the Hill The Episode in a Nutshell In this episode, we pull back the curtain on the “deathonomics” of 2026. From the front lines of the Russo-Ukrainian war to the archives of the Vietnam era, we explore how the state identifies, prices, and consumes “expendable” populations to stay at the top of the hill. Key Discussion Points * The Russian Debt-Trap: How the Kremlin is using a 10-million-ruble debt forgiveness law to bridge a recruitment deficit of 5,000 soldiers per month. * The Math of Deathonomics: Why, in Russia’s poorest regions, the state has priced a certain death ($130,000–$170,000) higher than an entire lifetime of civilian labor ($150,000). * McNamara’s Ghost: A look back at Project 100,000 in 1966, where the U.S. “lowered standards” to create a reservoir of disposable infantry from the disadvantaged. * Redefining the State: Moving beyond Max Weber’s “monopoly on violence” to view the state as a manager of an ecology of violence. * The King of the Hill: Understanding the state not as a natural entity, but as a temporary, contested position defended by the mediation of citizen anxiety. Notable Quotes from the Essay “The state has, in effect, priced a certain death higher than an entire working life.” “The state is not the monopolist. It is the dominant player in an ongoing negotiation about who gets to hurt whom and under what conditions.” “Part of holding the hill is making the population’s fear of losing the hill’s protection stronger than their fear of whoever is currently standing on it.” This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe [https://countrycrocked.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

3 de may de 202621 min