From Ancient Models to Modern Crises: A Real Look at Global Economics and Power Games

Understanding today’s financial and geopolitical shifts requires a look into both the past and present. From Adam Smith to Central Bank Digital Currency, here’s what’s unfolding.

1. Ancient Indian Economic Model: The Temple Ecosystem

The complete Sanatan economic system included temples as financial hubs. In ancient India, wealth was not just held by the king or the state. People voluntarily donated a share of their produce to temples. These temples managed wealth not just for rituals but also to serve the community and maintain high moral values.

In this model, Dharma (righteousness) and Artha (economy) were never treated separately. This system inspired unity, devotion, and decentralised prosperity.

2. Capitalism and Adam Smith’s Division of Labor

When Adam Smith introduced his ideas of capital, division of labor, and economies of scale, it changed the world. He said: stop making everything and focus on producing just one specialized item. This led to factories replacing small entrepreneurs, making people jobbers instead of creators.

As a result, 90% of the world’s wealth eventually went into the hands of just 5% of the population. This is how extreme capitalism emerged—driven by centralization and loss of self-reliance.

3. Birth and Fall of the IT Sector: The Dotcom Crash

The IT and services sectors grew rapidly thanks to the US Dollar as a fiat reserve currency. Huge value flowed into dotcom companies. But when the European Union withdrew savings from the US Treasury, the bubble burst.

By October 2002, IT sector valuations had crashed by 78%, marking the first visible wave of dedollarization. Now we’re in the final phase—with tech companies laying off workers and predictions that US stocks, bonds, and derivatives may fall another 15–35% by year-end.

4. The Crypto Illusion: End of Decentralization

Earlier, people believed cryptocurrencies would bring financial freedom. But now, even cryptos are being brought under control. The US Senate passed a Stablecoin Regulation Bill, marking the start of regulating private cryptos.

This means:

  • Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) will take over.

  • The dream of decentralization is ending.

  • Deep state entities are moving into gold and crypto.

A 718% increase in gold prices (May 2025) shows that people now demand physical delivery. Even COMEX notices are rising. The world now knows: dedollarization is real.

5. The Pakistan Situation After PoK

Many now assume that PoK (Pakistan-occupied Kashmir) will be part of India soon. The next question: What happens to the rest of Pakistan?

If Pakistan accepts that its religious doctrine failed, a new path can open. India may take control of their policy-making, and with funding from Saudi Arabia and UAE, help Pakistan deradicalize.

But for that to happen, Pakistan must surrender its ideology and accept Delhi’s leadership. Without that, there is no real solution.

6. Media Narratives: Blame Games and Confusion

The global crisis is also exposing biased media stories. Japan is being painted as the cause of upcoming economic turmoil. But insiders know that the US signals the moves, and Japan executes them. Still, Japan will be blamed to protect deeper players.

This is not new. It’s a post-mortem culture—blaming someone after the crisis. Meanwhile, leaders like Donald Trump keep changing statements—one day claiming he stopped a war, the next day saying he didn’t.

Such behavior raises questions about leadership quality. People remember how Trump once made his entire cabinet praise him. These shifts are not just odd—they show deeper instability.

Conclusion: A Global Reset in Progress

From ancient India’s community-driven models to today’s centralized capitalism, the world has come full circle. With the collapse of tech valuations, the end of crypto freedom, and geopolitical shifts in Pakistan and Japan, we are seeing a global reset.

Now is the time for individuals and nations to rethink values, governance, and financial strategies. The old systems are falling, and a new order is quietly rising.

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