How to Use Game Theory to Protect Your Wealth

The stock market further traversed its high wire act this week. Tiptoeing along, while trying to not look down.

Congress even reopened the government – until January 30. That way members can kick back over the holidays before they return to Washington, where they’ll once again pretend to do real work after the New Year.

For sensible investors, staring down extreme valuations and mounting uncertainty, there’s little out there to grab onto. Given these prospects, what can a savvy investor do to find something – anything – that feels genuinely certain?

To answer this question, let’s turn to one of the greatest minds of the 20th century. A Renaissance man named John von Neuman who shaped everything from quantum mechanics to digital computing, and the development of the first American atomic and hydrogen bombs.

Von Neumann was born in Budapest in 1903 and studied in Berlin at a leading scientific institution; one that considered Einstein unqualified for a research grant. He’s also referred to as “the founder of game theory,” and could multiply eight digits by eight digits in his head. Continue reading

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Chainsaw First

One of the mysteries of life is why a large cross section of the population is opposed to freedom. When given the choice of liberty and independence they resist.

They demand more government programs. More government intervention in the economy. And more meddling in their lives.

Like pigs rolling around in their waste, this is where they find comfort. The recent election of Zohran Mamdani, an ardent socialist, as Mayor of New York, bears this out.

On rare occasions, however, when the failings of big government have stacked up to utmost misery, people will finally get it through their thick skulls that more government is not the solution; that, rather, it has been the problem all along.

Argentina, after a near century of big government madness, has happened upon one of these rare occasions. The public has finally awakened from its collectivist hangover. In fact, this was recently reaffirmed by the outcome of the Country’s midterm election.

In today’s guest article, Joel Bowman, our man on the scene in Buenos Aires, Argentina, updates us on the latest happenings with President Javier Milei’s ongoing experiment with libertarianism. After giving it a read, please head over to his website and subscribe to his newsletter so you can continue to follow what’s going on in real time. Continue reading

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Waiting for a Punchline that Never Comes

“When you masturbate with the hand of fate expect the worst because life is a JOKE!”

– Charlie Vurmin

(Artwork by Charlie Vurmin. Source: Institute of Sociometry)

Hard Luck Chuck

Some actions in life are so terrible they’re impossible to reverse. There are no second chances. There are no do overs. The wreckage is lasting.

Charles Twain Clemans, also known as Charlie Vurmin, was a disreputable early ’90s Pacific Beach punk in San Diego, California, and a member of the small-time beach gang, the P.B. Vurmin. Our circles briefly overlapped through the eclectic, and sometimes destructive world of skateboarding.

While sessioning a famous grade-school playground skate spot in suburban San Diego one afternoon, Chuck made a lasting impression on us, and everyone there – a large collection of skaters, punkers, and derelicts – by publicly defecating on the concrete embankment in broad daylight.

Socially deviant behavior. A guy running around with a few loose screws. What could possibly go wrong? Continue reading

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Laptop Class on Notice

Amazon was busy this week, sending out pink slips. When it’s all said and done, this massive round of layoffs could hit up to 30,000 employees. This amounts to about 10 percent of the entire corporate workforce.

The reduction in force (RIF) is expected to spread across several departments, including Human Resources, Cloud Computing (AWS), and Advertising. Moreover, this is Amazon’s largest RIF since 2022, which eliminated around 27,000 jobs.

The massive layoffs have several aims. First, to address the remaining excess of the pandemic hiring spree, when online shopping boomed and Amazon doubled its warehouse network. Second, CEO Andy Jassy says he wants to use Artificial Intelligence to “do more with less.”

In other words, these layoffs aren’t merely a reaction to typical economic headwinds – things like high prices or a slower market. Rather, they’re part of a structural shift for big corporations and will have permanent consequences for business, labor, and the economy. Continue reading

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