By Andrew Klein
We are told we live in an economy. This is a lie. We live inside a game—a vast, multi-level simulation where the points are printed out of thin air, the rules are written by the winners, and the only sin is losing. The game board is the global financial system, and its fuel is fiat currency: money declared valuable by government decree, backed by nothing but debt and belief.
This is not an economic treatise. It is an exposé of a gaming engine that rewards psychopathy and punishes integrity.
Level 1: The Game Engine – Fiat Currency
Fiat money is the ultimate abstraction. Once, money was a claim on something real (a gold coin, a sack of grain). Today, it is a claim on future debt, created by central banks with a keystroke. This changes everything.
· It Detaches Value from Reality: When money is not tied to a finite resource, its quantity can be inflated infinitely to bail out failed bets, fund endless wars, or pump up asset bubbles. This is the “cheat code” for the house. As economist John Maynard Keynes himself noted, by this process “governments can confiscate, secretly and unobserved, an important part of the wealth of their citizens.” [Source: Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace]. The game masters control the money supply, redistributing real wealth from the productive many to the financial few.
· It Rewards Debt, Not Production: In a sound system, saving and building are virtues. In the fiat game, debt is the winning strategy. Those who take on massive leverage to buy assets (real estate, stocks) see their debts inflated away while their assets soar in nominal value. They are playing with fake money to capture real things. The 2008 financial crisis was a classic example: bankers made catastrophic bets, were bailed out with newly created money, and saw their wealth increase while millions lost homes. [Source: The Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission Report].
Level 2: The Player Avatars – The “Entrepreneurs” & Their Shells
The most skilled players understand the game is rigged, so they build avatars to play without risk.
They call themselves “entrepreneurs” and “innovators,” framing themselves as wealth creators. Too often, they are value extractors, using the fiat system’s liquidity to pump and dump schemes, predatory lending, and monopolistic platforms.
Their key tool is the corporate structure, particularly the complex web of shell companies and offshore entities. As documented by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) in the Panama Papers and Pandora Papers, these structures are “a chessboard.” [Source: ICIJ – The Panama Papers].
· The Pieces Are Visible: The branded subsidiaries, the public-facing CEOs, the retail products.
· The Players Are Hidden: The beneficial owners, the shadow directors, the capital moving through secrecy jurisdictions. They are the ones “determining the moves.”
· The Pieces Are Expendable: When a subsidiary is sued for poisoning a water supply, when a platform is found to be trafficking data, when a bank is caught laundering money—the parent company limits liability. The shell is sacrificed (a fine is paid, a unit is shuttered), the game piece is lost, but the player behind the screen walks away, their wealth intact and anonymous. Accountability is designed out of the system.
Level 3: The Endgame – Everything in a Box
The final, brutal logic of the game is the “box.”
In the fiat model, everything—nature, human labour, creativity, community—must be financialized. It must be turned into a tradable asset, a derivative, a data point on a Bloomberg terminal. A forest becomes “carbon credits.” A family home becomes a “mortgage-backed security.” Your attention becomes “monetizable eyeball hours.”
This is the “box.” It is the final abstraction, where all living, breathing reality is trapped within the spreadsheet logic of the game. Its value is only what the market (controlled by the biggest players) says it is today. Its purpose is only to generate a return.
And when the game cycle ends? When the bubble pops, the debt can no longer be rolled over, the resource is exhausted?
Everything in the box is liquidated. Companies, jobs, ecosystems, pensions—all are expendable tokens cleared from the board to prepare for the next round. The players retreat to their hidden vaults (of real assets: land, gold, art, Bitcoin) bought with the fiat they printed and gamed, while the public is left holding the empty box.
The Sovereign Conclusion: Breaking the Console
This is not capitalism. It is casino-financialism. It does not allocate capital efficiently; it allocates suffering and extraction efficiently.
The call is not for reform of the game. It is to smash the console.
1. Support Sound Money: Advocate for and adopt money that cannot be inflated at will—whether it be commodity-backed currencies, decentralized cryptocurrencies with finite supplies, or local credit systems. Remove the “infinite points” cheat.
2. Pierce the Corporate Veil: Demand laws that establish ultimate beneficial ownership transparency for all entities, stripping away the anonymity that enables the game. Follow the model of the EU’s 5th Anti-Money Laundering Directive (5AMLD) aiming for public registers. [Source: European Commission – 5AMLD].
3. Re-localize Value: Build economies where value is tied to real, local goods, services, and relationships. Reduce dependency on the abstract, gamified fiat system.
We must stop being tokens on their board. We must reclaim reality, value, and our souls from the box.
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