Sunday, May 24, 2026

Part 1 - Pulling Back the Curtain On Oz


Pablo Torres Finds Out - Oz Pearlman

No notes needed, but I’m going to do it despite no notes needed.  But first let’s do a trip along the highway of confirmation bias and the belief in things that aren’t real.

It’s generally socially acceptable to start kids right away into religion.  There are good messages and long lasting values in religion.  Way down the highway there is extremism.  Go ahead and allow yourself a mental image regarding fanatics using passenger planes as bombs if you need an example.  This is a far cry from reading the bible before bedtime for comfort.  Or even doing a gematria synchronicity decode as an exercise in self spirituality.

There’s a major branch along the confirmation bias highway called Economics.  Eventually, many brains even give up entirely on the religious road and develop an identity solely based on their economic and political beliefs.  Yes, those are tied together whether we like it or not.  Regarding U.S. propaganda, there is a belief that capitalism is the one and only path to enlightenment.  The political part is reduced to a false binary option only, far too often.  Left vs. Right.  No nuance.  No context.  And by golly your belief in the wrong side means you have the audacity to ruin the welfare of others that do not share your belief.

Well, bad news sunshine.  Instead of talking through things and teaching reasonable not black or white compromises you get constant failure to address anything.  And now you feel safe not believing in Santa Claus or Jesus because now you have computers, math, and technology that makes you feel invulnerable to confirmation bias criticism.  So let’s put some shade on the sunshine and show how math destroys the foundation of capitalism.  The myth of infinite growth.

Imagine if you can or get paper and pen out and draw it.  An equilateral triangle.  Now that there are three sides we get our first shape, because two sides are still just a line or two lines intersecting with no area.  No add a side and you’ve got a square, a fancy name for an equilateral rectangle.  Add another side.  An equilateral pentagon.  Then hexagon, heptagon, octagon, etc….   As the number of equilateral sides increased you get something that approaches a circle.  Congratulations, you are starting to grasp how calculus is what I call math saying “fuck you” to people who insist you can’t do math with infinity or dividing by zero.  You don’t ever reach either extreme, you just get so close.  And although you could draw a pretty respectable square or equilateral triangle, the more sides you have drawn freehand, the harder it’s going to get to draw.  Send me your best freehand drawing of an equilateral polygon with 1 billion sides.  You don’t need to hit infinite number of sides to be a problem in regards to reality.

Sane economists will acknowledge how pure capitalism with true infinite growth as just some sort of ideal.  And politically/economically your black and white choice is capitalism versus communism.  (Spice things up with some disingenuous fascism and socialism references, too.). Here in the States:  Communism = Evil/bad/destructive.  Capitalism = Patriotic/good/sexy.  Why not at least strive for being on the right side instead of settling for the compromise?  No Octagon for you, go for that perfect circle to pull up your bootstraps.

Mankind has already existed long enough for banking to debunk itself.  Our friends making AI let us know that the first prototype of a bank existed a long, long time ago.


 


So let’s pretend our ancient protobankers had one smart ass among the lot of him.  He sets himself down and one day thinks, “Ya know, I really want to be the first Rothschild.  How do I make generational wealth without actually doing something resembling real work?”

The answer is (and reality is this way now), how do I make an insane amount of income on passive income.  Just the appreciation of a modest amount of compound interest over a long time.  The following calculation does not approach the result that “infinity” would.  But it shows the thorough impracticality of someone investing the equivalent of just $1 at a modest 3% for the 4000 years since our first passive income earner let his $1 ride every year until today.


Built into finance and investment lingo are cutesy phrases like “correction” and “Bear market”.  These address the immediate concerns of anxious investors scared of losing their <cough> <cough> hard earned passive income.  But a short term politically motivated pep talk is all that’s needed.  The entire fantasy that a long term modest 3% earnings rate can create more wealth than could possibly exist.  That fantasy makes the Santa Claus story look pretty good in comparison, because grown ass adults actually believe that everyone can just pick themselves up by their own bootstraps and with minimal effort become the next Elon Musk.  With or without being a total douchebag, just the money part.

If it were that easy, we would be living the Star Trek utopian pipe dream, all loving each other.  But of course the same holds true for communism.  Actually sharing everything equally… totally impractical.  Too often capitalism versus communism gets no more than third grade insult level dialogue.  No nonagons for either of you.  It’s easier ad hominem attack when you don’t understand capitalism.  It’s supposed to work this way:  The market moves funds towards investment in useful stuff to make sure useful stuff gets down.  Checking my notes….lets see the appendices…nope…citations…nope…social media……uh nope.  Nowhere can I find that Zuckerberg, Musk, Bezos, Buffet, Trump, etc… hoarding cash in an insane pissing contest moves money towards useful stuff.  Go ahead and type up your angry comment about SpaceX and AI so I can tell you about the upcoming “correction”.

No, what the Epstein class has learned is that in order to avoid wars redistributing wealth, bubbles bursting and just “shit happening” over time - it doesn’t have to be infinity or even four thousand years.  You’ve got to change the $1 or the 3% rate needs to be higher to get those sweet, “I’m a thoroughly corrupt billionaire more interested in exploitation and attention than benefitting society” accolades.  Trying to get the interest rate up is pretty tough, too.  That means you pretty much need to start with more than $1 to invest.  A lot more.  You need to hoard millions before you can even start to think of investing that into billions.  The difference between a million dollars is roughly, er…one billion dollars.  So better make it in steps.  Millions turns to ten millions, tens of millions to hundreds.  Hundreds of millions to billions.  All not invested in anything useful, just sitting on a balance sheet other than the occasional deduction for doing unspeakable things that lawyers bought and paid for will take care of.

Keep that in mind as part two goes into the gullibility of the target audience for Oz Pearlman.  It’s really the same kind of gullibility from the early days of gematria.  (Gosh I miss those days). Someone pretends to have a super power which is actually just a cheat and con job.


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