@HunterBiden@beeple@HunterBiden Fair play to you. You’ve won’t the interwebs this week.. quick friendly request, can you get some of your crew across the line on the clarity act! This banking lobby bs is getting boring. Ta
@EricBalchunas He’s playing the game for the ratings agencies for STRC… hence the recent bond purchase and now showing that he’s willing to sell btc to make good on the dividend if needed. It’s a narrative shift, to get the ratings, so he can buy more btc.
@EricBalchunas@TimKotzman People also tend to forget that btc runs like a Swiss time piece on its own 4 year reflexive memetic cycle… flows -> price -> narrative.
@Red_Panda_jc@RaoulGMI It’s already started here in Australia with the new budget from Jim Chalmers, we’ve got until 30th June 2027… then the CGT & IHT noose tightening commences!
⚡️The middle class is where the system hides its extraction because the middle class still believes obedience will be rewarded.
The poor are visibly dependent.
The rich are structurally insulated.
The middle class is trapped inside the moral contract of responsibility.
Work hard. Pay taxes. Buy insurance. Save for retirement. Don’t cheat. Don’t default. Don’t complain. Don’t take too much. Don’t fall behind. Keep your credit clean. Keep your kids on track. Keep your career moving. Keep the mortgage paid. Keep smiling.
Then the system taxes that obedience.
The middle class is easy to extract from because its income is visible, its behavior is predictable, and its fear of falling is powerful.
W-2 income can be captured before it ever reaches the bank account.
Property taxes attach to shelter. Healthcare attaches to employment. College aid disappears once income crosses thresholds. Tax credits phase out. Professional licensing, insurance, childcare, commuting, housing, and retirement all become toll booths.
The rich escape through structure.
The poor survive through assistance.
The middle pays retail.
That is why it feels like the most expensive place to live. It is the zone where you make enough to be denied help and not enough to buy freedom. You are too “successful” for sympathy and too exposed for security.
This is also why the middle-class anger is going to grow. These people are the stabilizing class. They follow rules, raise kids, pay bills, fund municipalities, staff companies, buy homes, carry insurance pools, and keep institutions functioning. When they start realizing the bargain no longer compounds, political trust breaks hard.
The deepest betrayal is that income stopped being the path to safety. Asset ownership became the path to safety. The middle class earns income to buy assets, but asset prices keep moving away because monetary policy, debt, housing restriction, financialization, and investor demand pushed the ladder higher. So the worker runs faster while the asset-owner floats.
That is the hidden class split.
The middle class is not poor enough to receive the system’s mercy and not rich enough to command its architecture. It is the payer class. The compliance class. The full-price class.
Bottom line:
The middle class is expensive because it is where responsibility gets monetized.
The system extracts most efficiently from people who still believe playing by the rules will save them.