Greed, Aging, and the Game of Global Power

Greed is natural. It’s in all of us. But in the past, dharam helped control it. Not fully, but enough to maintain balance. Life used to follow a natural cycle. Young people wanted more – more money, more travel, more stuff. But after age 55 or 60, something changes. People start to slow down, spend less, want peace, not things.

This is why ancient systems had four life stages (ashrams). The last one – Vanprastha – meant withdrawing from greed and preparing for a peaceful end. Sadly, no one follows it today. But if you look at people over 60, many naturally stop chasing money. They just want time with their kids. No amount of money matters anymore.

Even rich entrepreneurs feel this. After building companies, they understand real joy is not in collecting wealth forever. It’s a natural shift in the mind, not because they retired or became poor. It just happens.

Now let’s talk global.

You asked: why did this system collapse in the U.S.? Why did the deep state let it fail? The answer is simple: profit. Big companies wanted constant growth. But now, birth rates have dropped. There aren’t enough workers, consumers, or innovators left. That’s why people like Elon Musk keep warning about population decline.

The U.S. followed the idea of “one life, live fast”. So their economy became a machine – consuming, printing dollars, and exporting influence. But the dollar now controls everything – what we wear, how we live, what’s trendy. Even poor clothes get awards if the dollar says it’s cool.

You can’t reverse this easily. You can’t “subvert the subverters.” They set the flow. We just follow. Even if we want to fight back, the game is rigged.

Still, something big did happen. On 30th November 2001, the term BRICS was coined – Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa. A new block to challenge dollar dominance. That same day, an old company like Enron collapsed, and a future tech giant like Nvidia began to rise.

It was symbolic. Old fraud fell, new tech rose.
And now, as crisis grows, Nvidia may survive, but the rest of the system? It’s cracking.

So where does it end?

It ends when we remember that real wealth is peace. Not greed. Not endless expansion.
It ends when families return to skills, time, and meaning – not just profit.

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