Ok, maybe… maybe I’ve had an idea. And I’m not sure if it’s incredible or completely insane. I was just thinking about how our financial system works, and then something clicked. It’s kind of terrifying to think this could actually change everything.
Every action we take, every skill we share—these are the true currencies that shape our world. What if value wasn’t about numbers in a bank, but about the impact we create for others in the right moment? Rethinking value might just be the key to a more abundant future.
@iamnot_elon Some thought: If you were able to identify the frequency of the location within an object and apply a vibrational force altering that frequency to another location, the object will move :)
@jordanbpeterson Absolutely! Bold exploration shapes both the individual and the systems we depend on. What if value wasn’t tied to unstable currencies, but to the skills and actions that drive progress? A system where personal responsibility creates real, decentralized value.
I can’t stop thinking about how much effort we pour into stabilizing something as volatile as money. Even with all the regulations and safeguards, the system still cracks. Maybe it’s time to rethink where we’re placing our energy.
Let’s be honest—so much energy goes into just keeping the monetary system running. Entire industries exist just to make sure money flows properly, and even then, things break down. It feels like we’re constantly fixing a system that’s always on the edge.
All the energy we spend trying to keep markets ‘stable’—doesn’t it feel like a losing battle sometimes? We’re propping up something that constantly needs fixing. What if we redirected that energy toward something more aligned with real value creation?
I don’t have all the answers, and I’m still figuring this out. But what if we’re on the edge of something bigger? A world where skills and actions are the currency? I’d love to hear your thoughts—does this idea make sense, or is it too far out there?
I’ve been thinking... if action is the real language of reality, and we create value through skills, does it mean we’ve been getting it wrong all along? Maybe money was just a tool to simplify things, but now it’s become too detached from the real value we provide.
I mean, it sounds simple on the surface—give what you’re good at, get what you need. But is it too idealistic? Maybe I’m overthinking it, or maybe there’s a new way to create value that we just haven’t fully explored yet.
But then again, how do we even begin to shift a system so ingrained in our society? It’s hard to imagine a world where skills and actions, instead of money, are what really matter. Could something like that even work in practice?
It’s kind of unsettling, honestly. The idea that everything we’ve built around money—markets, banks, wealth—could be out of sync with how value really works. What if we could just focus on what we do, and not what it’s 'worth' on some fluctuating scale?