
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The way we build wealth is shifting — and the speed of that shift is unlike anything we've seen before. In this episode, Colin and Wheeler tackle the idea that we may be living through the last great window of traditional wealth-building, and what that actually means for the average person.
They draw a direct line between today's AI and robotics boom and the original Gilded Age, when Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Morgan owned everything, and the gap between the haves and have-nots felt permanent. Tesla shutting down its most expensive car lines to build humanoid robots, xAI's expanding footprint, and the rapid displacement of white-collar work are all signals that the rules of wealth creation are being rewritten in real time.
The conversation moves from the macro to the personal: why ownership of assets, not income, is becoming the true dividing line, how Trump Accounts represent a government attempt to buy more Americans into the capitalist system, and what Finland's universal basic income experiment actually revealed about human behavior. Colin and Wheeler also confront the psychological side of displacement and what happens to identity, ambition, and purpose when work is no longer a given.
The conclusion isn't doom. It's a clear-eyed look at how disruption creates chaos and opportunity at the same time, and why the people who stay flexible, own assets, and invest in what's real will be the ones who come out ahead.
Follow Us:
Credits:
Created By: Wheeler Crowley and Colin Walker
Production, Editing and Post-Production: Tori Rothwell
By Compound GrowthThe way we build wealth is shifting — and the speed of that shift is unlike anything we've seen before. In this episode, Colin and Wheeler tackle the idea that we may be living through the last great window of traditional wealth-building, and what that actually means for the average person.
They draw a direct line between today's AI and robotics boom and the original Gilded Age, when Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Morgan owned everything, and the gap between the haves and have-nots felt permanent. Tesla shutting down its most expensive car lines to build humanoid robots, xAI's expanding footprint, and the rapid displacement of white-collar work are all signals that the rules of wealth creation are being rewritten in real time.
The conversation moves from the macro to the personal: why ownership of assets, not income, is becoming the true dividing line, how Trump Accounts represent a government attempt to buy more Americans into the capitalist system, and what Finland's universal basic income experiment actually revealed about human behavior. Colin and Wheeler also confront the psychological side of displacement and what happens to identity, ambition, and purpose when work is no longer a given.
The conclusion isn't doom. It's a clear-eyed look at how disruption creates chaos and opportunity at the same time, and why the people who stay flexible, own assets, and invest in what's real will be the ones who come out ahead.
Follow Us:
Credits:
Created By: Wheeler Crowley and Colin Walker
Production, Editing and Post-Production: Tori Rothwell