5 points

spot on

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8 points

Sounds exactly like Michael Hudson lol.

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lol yeah, basically any actual economist as opposed to a neoliberal propagandist understands this

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7 points

Indeed!

He’s even making references to Rome lol. Hudson just wrote a book about Rome and debt.

I guess the cool economists like to compare the US Empire to the fall of the Roman Empire.

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While we should be careful making historical comparisons like that, there are many parallels. I find I like to look at this in terms of selection pressures. Once you see what factors are driving behavior it becomes clear where things are headed.

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3 points

Well greece and rome are considered the cradle of western civilization, they ultimately will suffer the same end.

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9 points

It feels like a specific form of the “decomposition” phenomenon laid down by Lenin in 1916, right? An inevitable development of imperialist economies

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Basically that’s what it comes down to. Corporations prioritize maximizing shareholder value over growth, often engaging in financial engineering activities like stock buybacks instead of productive work. Additionally, financiers aim for maximum profits with minimal risks, which leads them to invest more in intangible ventures such as tech startups. This creates selection pressures that push industries away from the imperial core.

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A sub for discussing Marxist economics and how the bourgeois economists did us dirty.

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