I say this with a caveat that I am still learning about economics under fiat.....I bought bitcoin a few years ago cause I trusted my orange piller, and only in the last 12 months I have started educating myself. To fix NZ, we must stop money printing, revert all policies that have been driven by climate change even the tiniest amount, end our membership of the WHO, WEF, UN, Paris agreement etc, and even become a republican country as long as the Royal family are in the pockets of aforementioned groups, lawfully end Maori land settlements, revoke all ability to self-identify in public spaces (do what you want in your own home), abate superannuation relative to your years of tax contribution, end all government contracts with pharmaceutical companies, make NZ farming great again by revoking all the stupid regulation that has forced up food prices of the most nutritious foods. Hopefully after this, the people that flocked here under any handout motive will return. Unfortunately I think thats only a start........oh and lets just decide on the correct name for New Zealand shall we.
Discussion
The economic model of the fiat world is rooted in Keynesian thinking—best summed up by Keynes’ own words: “In the long run, we are all dead.” It’s a short-term, kick-the-can-down-the-road mindset, and it’s exactly how central banks and governments behave today.
The backbone of the fiat system is debt. Central banks literally hold debt as their main asset. So how do they keep the game going? They inflate away the currency—paying off yesterday’s debt with tomorrow’s weaker money. It’s theft through dilution.
But here’s the disconnect: we live in a deflationary world driven by unstoppable forces—technology, automation, AI, robotics. These forces should make life cheaper, not more expensive. Instead, central banks flood the system with printed money to create an illusion of prosperity—rising GDP, inflated asset prices—while people struggle more than ever.
Meanwhile, initiatives like climate change, the WEF, and WHO, which should be rooted in truth and integrity, become tools for centralised control and financial grift. What starts as “doing good” often turns into massive money laundering machines for politicians and globalists.
The solution? A shift to Austrian economics and hard money like Bitcoin. A system that aligns with the reality of our deflationary world—where saving is rewarded, not punished, and real prosperity is built on productivity, not deception.