The “End of History” Illusion
Like Midas, Our Rulers Want to Monetise Everything They Touch—and Kill IT

I am old enough to remember the fall of the Berlin Wall, and the wave of excitement it unleashed. With the Soviet Union consigned to the history books, the world was going to become a better, safer place.
Liberals crowed that the West’s superior, democratic values had won out. Intellectuals like Francis Fukuyama wrote about the “end of history”: the triumph of free-market capitalism and a resolution of ideological struggle.
Nearly half a century on, the celebratory mood of that time looks not just misplaced but positively deluded.
The end of the Cold War brought not a peace dividend. Rather, it unleashed a surfeit of greed and hubris.
With the fear of mutually assured destruction behind it, the United States unveiled a new doctrine: “full-spectrum global dominance,” militarily and economically.
Fukayama’s vision of a world rallying to capitalism’s side ignored the fact that capitalism isn’t just a neutral, disinterested idea that everyone can subscribe to on equal terms.
It has a physical form too. Giant corporations that seek monopolistic control over other countries' resources. And a gargantuan war machine headquartered in the US, but with 800 bases around the globe, that is ready to crush those who stand in the way of ever-greater wealth accumulation by a tiny elite of billionaires.
There could be no end of history because capitalism’s billionaire stewards are never satiated. They are driven to constantly entrench and expand their control, to amass more wealth, to buy more influence in our pretend-democracies, to be more ruthless against anyone or anything that threatens their dominance.
Fukayama forgot that capitalism isn’t socialism. It doesn’t seek the best for everyone. It doesn’t want to share the wealth. It doesn’t prioritise dignity over profit. Its lifeblood is exploitation—of individuals and of entire peoples.
Fukuyama forgot that capitalism without constraints would produce resistance.
War and profit are intimately tied together. The billionaires cannot secure their profits without war, or the threat of it—whether it is against workers at home or against other nations abroad.
The “end of history” has brought not a unity of interests, and end to struggle, but ever greater polarisation between the haves and have-nots, between powerful nations and weak ones.
War drums sound ever more loudly across the globe. Ask Venezuelans, Cubans, Greenlanders, Ukrainians, Russians, Palestinians, Lebanese, Iranians how the “end of history” is working out for them.
Ask Europeans and Americans too, now permanently mired in the politics of austerity. Ever more workers have been forced into the gig economy, with zero-hours contracts. And that is before an AI “revolution” makes swathes of jobs redundant.
The ever-growing arrogance of the Epstein class, however, is catching up with it. A mood of unrest is beginning to find its voice, recognising that we are already deep in a class war.
Meanwhile, Iran—by refusing to submit to US and Israeli aggression, and in realising its power to throttle global oil supplies—has shown that full-spectrum dominance was never as complete as the “masters of the universe” assumed. It has an Achilles' heel, after all.
The truth is we should all have been terrified by the idea that our leaders might assume and behave as if history had come to an end.
In practice, it could mean only an end to constraints on capitalism—an end to any humanising limits on its reach, on its ambitions, on its cruelty.
Like King Midas, the Epstein class expected to monetise everything it touched. And like King Midas, hubris will be its downfall.
There are constraints, both immediate and long term, that even the billionaires cannot overcome.
A finite planet, with finite resources, cannot be plundered indefinitely. A delicately balanced biosphere, which evolved over billions of years to the point where it became compatible with higher life forms, cannot be abused, filled with our toxic detritus, forever.
Similarly, countries and peoples cannot be humiliated, turned into objects ripe for exploitation and humiliation, year after year, decade after decade, without a reckoning eventually.
The “end of history,” as Fukuyama should have foreseen, could lead to only one destination: enslavement. The end of struggle, the end of freedom. Only the colonial arrogance of the West could imagine that others would submit to such a fate.
In Gaza, in Lebanon, in Iran, we see peoples refusing—however imperfectly, however violently—to submit to their enslavement. In the West, with our colonial arrogance undimmed, we call it “terrorism.” We call any solidarity with it “hate.” We send our own truth-tellers to prison as criminals.
The genocidal abuse of peoples in Gaza and Lebanon—the chief victims of the “end of history”—serves as a reminder to westerners of what the system that triumphed nearly half a century ago is really about. What it requires. Where it is heading.
But more dangerously for the billionaires, the resistance to that abuse, the struggle against subjugation, against being disappeared, reminds western publics that enslavement is not inevitable, that dignity might still be possible, that another way can, at the very least, be imagined.
Struggle must continue because submission is death.
That is the message from Gaza and Lebanon. It is the reason our rulers are so desperate to crush any sense of hope. They need us to believe that history came to an end in 1991. Because otherwise, their days are numbered.



On May 25 the Pope put out his first Encyclical speaking out about the dignity of the human being and the dangers of AI related to that. Since the methods of control that empires have used to dominate populations are subsumed under the system of money, I keep pointing the focus back to that.
"Another major challenge posed by these emerging systems is that of bias, which leads to acquiring and transmitting an altered perception of reality. AI models are shaped by the worldview of those who build them and can, in turn, impose these ways of thinking by reproducing the stereotypes and prejudices present in the data they draw on." - Pope Leo XIV 🕊️
AI models are promoting monetary and economic illiteracy unless corrected.
Crypto is a thing that one must obtain outside their otherwise autonomous capacity. Money is not a resource at all. That is the core illiteracy that people struggle with. Holding back genuine economic activity waiting for the appearance, capture, issuance, etc. of abstract units to record that activity is like waiting for some of the inches to be made available so that you can measure the length of boards to build something.
It is the doing that is real, and the tool called money is simply counting or tracking or accounting for the doing of The People.
So long as people think that money is a thing that is either issued by some private entity or dug up out of the ground or mined as bits by some meaningless computer program they will miss the point that They Themselves Are The Creators Of Money By Virtue Of Their Own Doing. Private control of the currency that subjugates the Doing Of The People to some entity outside of themselves - much like the "corporate conglomerates" that many speak about that actually do the very buying of control by way of their largest corporations: Banks! - is the very antithesis of Free Enterprise i.e. Work, Labor, Initiative, Enterprise That Is Not Controlled But Is Actually Freely chosen, initiated by a truly Free Sovereign individual or group! Looked at from this angle one cannot hold to be an equally valid enterprise in a social order any activity that limits and or controls all the rest: i.e. banking that lends into existence the entire money supply at interest and controls the government such that no literate and legitimate understanding of money itself has, so far, been freely chosen or used by the people.
Remaining within the framework of the conceptual error leaves people thinking that they must contend with others in ways that can only bring more and greater cycles of conflict.
The very conceptual subjugation of the full capacity of a society to an illiterate preoccupation with the preliminary acquisition of an abstract acCouting unit (or a particular trade good, digital or real) is a mistake of monumental proportions that even the best intentions cannot overcome while not correcting it.
Imagine the healing of a world that comes from the leadership of a country that recognizes and abandons the ages long conceptual error of attempting to attach the features of a fungible commodity to their 'unit of measure' in their production of, exchange of, and record keeping about 'value.' The leadership of every country must have its sights on what the Real Value is: the resources and labor and innovation and creativity and capacity of its land and people.
But can that full capacity manifest when the means by which the bookkeeping about their own economic activity holds an abstract Unit of AcCount - Money - to also BE an item of value akin to and/or equal, even superior to, their own capacity and to the very natural resources of the land?
What has been 'the solution' in the past has always been the creation - Poof! - of a newly declared unit OF Value that is just as illiterate as all that have preceded.
And so long as people believe in this fantasy they will subjugate and sacrifice all that is real to this insane illiteracy.
AI models are promoting monetary and economic illiteracy unless corrected.
It does not have to be like this.
Here is a conversation with the IA, Grok, that addresses the question:
https://grok.com/share/c2hhcmQtMg%3D%3D_6ed64a55-dd77-4dd5-832e-2fbadea4c532
As you follow the presentation using the AI Grok you will see that the instructions given to the AI, to take advantage of the programming of the AI to be able to follow logical and provable analytical rigor, means that the AI itself concludes that ALL the so called 'higher ups' are proved to be full of nonsense, by the very AI they so highly tout!
If you do not want to use the AI conversation then you yourself take on the same instruction given to the AI and address the human leading the conversation directly. The foregoing inquiry is very directly tied to science and math and first principles logic. It is supposed to be these means by which decision making gets done...Right? So, the use of the AI is to remain within those constraints of analysis that all too often are ignored by most humans that have preconceptions that are actually wrong.