Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie’s Reviews > In This Economy?: How Money & Markets Really Work > Status Update
Like flag
Fahdii Ajmalal’s Previous Updates
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
"--- When people stop believing in the government’s ability to make responsible decisions, there is a risk of widespread disillusionment, political apathy, and social unrest. So taxes are more than just a tool to raise money; they are a social consensus mechanism that enables civic engagement and shapes societal priorities (sort of)."
— Apr 22, 2026 05:36PM
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
"--- Democracy fundamentally depends on the belief and engagement of its citizens; without their trust and active participation, it risks transforming into a different system entirely, where power is concentrated in the hands of a few. Without public belief in the integrity and ability of the government to serve the nation’s best interests, the foundation of democracy becomes shaky. ---"
— Apr 22, 2026 05:36PM
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
"In the United States, the tax system, like the monetary system, is based on the full faith and credit of the United States. In other words, people are going to pay taxes only if they believe in the system collecting them. There would have to be a catastrophic level of loss of faith for them not to, and there is a reason that the government has to maintain the trust of the people it serves! ---"
— Apr 22, 2026 05:35PM
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
"Of course, the thing we have to remember is that people are the economy. As we try to figure out how to integrate AI into our lives, manage wealth inequality, and try to maintain our labor market, we have to remember that people are everything."
🥲🥲🥲
— Apr 22, 2026 05:35PM
🥲🥲🥲
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
The answer must be in the attempt. We get so caught up in what happens at the end that we forget to simply exist. And maybe availability and optionality could both be solved if we were just more present in the moment. More reflective. More there for one another.
"The answer must be in the attempt." tebak pelm wkwk. full dialogue-nya aga bordering syirik ternyata yah baru ngeh
— Apr 22, 2026 05:35PM
"The answer must be in the attempt." tebak pelm wkwk. full dialogue-nya aga bordering syirik ternyata yah baru ngeh
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
"--- It was this belief that house prices could only go up, and so it didn’t matter whether the person who was buying a particular house might lose his or her job and default on their payments. The bank would be holding valuable collateral and everything would be fine."
— Apr 22, 2026 05:34PM
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
As Antoinette Schoar, an economist at the MIT Sloan School of Management, saw it:
"The problem with the banks was less a misalignment of incentives or deliberate misselling of loans to people who couldn’t afford it, and more, if you want, stupidity. ---"
— Apr 22, 2026 05:34PM
"The problem with the banks was less a misalignment of incentives or deliberate misselling of loans to people who couldn’t afford it, and more, if you want, stupidity. ---"
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
"--- The high energy consumption associated with crypto is also a major concern. Cultural issues exist, too, with a focus on get-rich-quick schemes and an abundance of scams and bad actors."
— Apr 22, 2026 05:33PM
Fahdii Ajmalal Fikrie
is 60% done
"But the problem of the rich getting richer remains unsolved. Crypto has the same problem that traditional finance has: People who have a lot of money have the greatest opportunity to make more money. And a lot of crypto solutions create more problems. There are a lot of scalability problems, and the industry is plagued by security issues, including hacks, attacks, and fraud. ---"
— Apr 22, 2026 05:33PM

