Between the Lies Podcast
Remember when The Circle came out and everyone kind of laughed it off? A social media company that just… becomes the government? Cute little dystopian fiction. Yeah. Elon Musk is pushing X toward full "everything app" status, payments, savings accounts, a Visa partnership, money on deposit. It's being sold as convenience. And it probably will be convenient. That's kind of the problem. This week Luke, Rob, and I dug into what happens when you let a single platform own your financial life. We used WeChat as our case study, a billion-plus users in China, integrated payments, location data, social media, and unencrypted communications all flowing through one pipe. The parent company, Tencent, is technically private. But the Chinese Communist Party holds golden shares, small equity stakes with board seats that give them direct influence over content, regulation, and strategic direction. You don't need a majority. You need the right seat at the table. Here's the part that made my head hurt: the U.S. government just took equity positions in Intel. We've talked about government creep into American corporations on this show before. Add in the fact that credit card companies are already issuing green scores based on your spending habits, and the social credit infrastructure isn't a future problem. It's already partially assembled. The "road to hell is paved with convenience" came up, and I think that's the real thesis here. Nobody signs up for surveillance. They sign up for one-click payments and a 6% savings rate. The control comes later, after the habits are formed and the alternatives have atrophied. Luke made the point that matters most: owning your own banking function, what we talk about every week with IBC, puts the control back in your hands. Not in X. Not in Tencent. Not in whatever government takes a golden share next. A private, non-market-correlated strategy that predates the IRS isn't convenient in the Netflix-buffering sense. But it doesn't go offline when a government subpoena lands either. And Rob reminded us that the problem being "solved" by X Money is convenience, not your actual money problem. Your money problem is that only a fraction of your money is working for you at any given time. That's what IBC solves. One platform to rule them all does not. Also: several of my friends had their X accounts hacked this week. Glad none of them had their bank accounts in there. Free toolkit and more at PerfectSpiralCapital.com/podcast Websites Referenced: * PerfectSpiralCapital.com/podcast * X.com / X Money [http://x.com] * WeChat / Tencent [https://www.wechat.com/] * Palantir [https://www.palantir.com/]
34 episodios
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