The Clash of Civilizations
December 29, 2014·0 comments·game theory
We've told ourselves that free markets, elections, and Western institutions are spreading naturally across the world because people everywhere want them. But what if these practices never took root at all? What if they were just useful tools that regimes adopted when it served their interests, and abandoned when it didn't? As the monetary policy that masked these fundamental conflicts begins to unwind, the real nature of global competition is surfacing, and the institutions built on the assumption of permanent Western ideological dominance are facing their first serious test.
• The West confused borrowed stability for ideological victory. Five trillion dollars in quantitative easing didn't spread Western values. It temporarily made divergent civilizations cooperate because everyone benefited from rising asset prices. Now that stimulus is ending, that coalition is dissolving.
• Geopolitical conflicts aren't new. Their timing is. Ukraine, ISIS, North Korea, OPEC's collapse, currency wars. These eruptions coincide precisely with the Fed's exit from monetary dominance, suggesting they were papered over rather than resolved.
• Democracy and free markets work in the West because they're embedded in Western culture. Copy the institutions to a different civilization and you get a veneer, not conversion. China adopts markets but not elections. Islamic societies adopt neither. The West misreads surface adoption for ideological acceptance.
• Political leaders are increasingly playing one-shot games instead of long-term strategy. When politicians care only about domestic consensus and the next news cycle, they abandon the patient diplomacy that prevents civilizational clashes. Short-term gestures replace equilibrium-building.
• The real danger isn't market collapse. It's the vaporization of the belief that central banks can manage everything. Once that narrative breaks, investors will suddenly realize that beneath the financial stability lies unresolved competition between three global superpowers, each leading a different civilization.
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