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In this episode, we challenge claims about economic stagnation by examining how interest, investing, and long-term saving actually shape wealth and retirement outcomes, including what it takes to reach a million dollars on different income levels. We then turn to public health, discussing the failures of the original food pyramid, the rise of snacking and carbohydrates, and the proper role of government as an information provider rather than an enforcer. In the “foolishness of the week,” we look at New York City’s expanding housing bureaucracy and why rent control continues to worsen affordability. We close with an in-depth discussion of Iran’s nationwide protests, internet shutdowns, water shortages, and the geopolitical consequences of a potential post-theocratic Iran for the Middle East and beyond.
00:00 Introduction and Overview
00:25 The “52 Years to Escape the Middle Class” Myth
02:29 What It Takes to Retire With $1 Million
04:25 Saving on Median vs. Bottom-Income Earnings
06:15 Narratives About Stagnation vs. Financial Reality
07:10 The New Food Pyramid and RFK Jr.’s Role
08:53 Why the Original Food Pyramid Failed
11:04 Government as Information Provider vs. Enforcer
13:04 Foolishness of the Week: NYC’s New Housing Bureaucracy
16:06 Rent Control and Why It Makes Housing Worse
17:46 Iran’s Nationwide Protests and Media Silence
20:26 Why Theocracies Look Strongest Before Collapse
22:02 Internet Shutdowns and Regime Panic in Iran
24:08 Why Mainstream News Isn’t Covering the Story
26:31 What a Post-Theocracy Iran Could Look Like
31:11 Iran’s Looming Water Crisis
34:07 Geopolitical Fallout for Russia and the Middle East
36:24 Final Thoughts on Regime Change and Human Cost
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
By CiVL4.8
357357 ratings
In this episode, we challenge claims about economic stagnation by examining how interest, investing, and long-term saving actually shape wealth and retirement outcomes, including what it takes to reach a million dollars on different income levels. We then turn to public health, discussing the failures of the original food pyramid, the rise of snacking and carbohydrates, and the proper role of government as an information provider rather than an enforcer. In the “foolishness of the week,” we look at New York City’s expanding housing bureaucracy and why rent control continues to worsen affordability. We close with an in-depth discussion of Iran’s nationwide protests, internet shutdowns, water shortages, and the geopolitical consequences of a potential post-theocratic Iran for the Middle East and beyond.
00:00 Introduction and Overview
00:25 The “52 Years to Escape the Middle Class” Myth
02:29 What It Takes to Retire With $1 Million
04:25 Saving on Median vs. Bottom-Income Earnings
06:15 Narratives About Stagnation vs. Financial Reality
07:10 The New Food Pyramid and RFK Jr.’s Role
08:53 Why the Original Food Pyramid Failed
11:04 Government as Information Provider vs. Enforcer
13:04 Foolishness of the Week: NYC’s New Housing Bureaucracy
16:06 Rent Control and Why It Makes Housing Worse
17:46 Iran’s Nationwide Protests and Media Silence
20:26 Why Theocracies Look Strongest Before Collapse
22:02 Internet Shutdowns and Regime Panic in Iran
24:08 Why Mainstream News Isn’t Covering the Story
26:31 What a Post-Theocracy Iran Could Look Like
31:11 Iran’s Looming Water Crisis
34:07 Geopolitical Fallout for Russia and the Middle East
36:24 Final Thoughts on Regime Change and Human Cost
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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