Econ Circus

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Econ Circus

Econ Circus

@EconCircus

CPA, CA, Master of Arts in Austrian Economics

Toronto, Ontario Katılım Mayıs 2019
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Mises Institute
Mises Institute@mises·
Nearly one in five US tax dollars now go to paying interest on the federal debt. Debt and spending are set to surge even more as war costs mount and interest rates rise. | @ryanmcmaken mises.org/mises-wire/fed…
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Leading Report
Leading Report@LeadingReport·
Tenth person linked to top-secret U.S. nuclear research has disappeared without a trace, per Daily Mail.
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Mises Institute
Mises Institute@mises·
How does one act counterculturally and rebel against dependency? How do young people learn to act wisely without examples? Knowing how to see through inflation culture is a necessary skill for a freer and more peaceful tomorrow. | @DrJeffDegner mises.org/misesian/cause…
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Mises Media
Mises Media@mises_media·
Imagine two economies with no government. One has bare-handed workers. The other has factories, forklifts, and oil rigs. Both have zero net financial assets—same accounting. Wildly different wealth. @BobMurphyEcon dismantles MMT's favorite trick. #HAPod
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P.S. I Love ME
P.S. I Love ME@ps_ilove_me·
🚨In 1990s, Stanford researcher Dr. Robert Sapolsky discovered something that should have broken the internet by now. He was studying dopamine pathways in primates and found that the brain doesn't just adapt to repeated stimulation. It actively fights back. When you flood dopamine receptors consistently, the brain deploys what neuroscientists call "opponent processes." For every artificial high you create, your nervous system generates an equal and opposite neurochemical low. Not eventually. Immediately. The system is designed to maintain balance, so it starts producing compounds that directly counteract dopamine while you're still experiencing the dopamine hit. This means every notification, every scroll, every digital reward doesn't just give you a high followed by a return to baseline. It gives you a high followed by a crash below baseline. You end up in neurochemical debt. Tech companies never publicized this research. They probably never read it. They were too busy discovering that variable ratio reinforcement schedules could keep users engaged for hours. They built addictive systems by accident, then refined them into addiction machines once they realized what they'd stumbled onto. Your phone delivers an average of 80 dopamine hits per day. Your ancestors got maybe 5. Each hit triggers opponent processes that create a corresponding low. By the end of a typical day of normal phone usage, your baseline dopamine is running in negative territory. You feel flat, restless, vaguely unsatisfied, and hungry for stimulation because your brain chemistry is literally below zero. You think you're bored. You're chemically depressed by artificial highs. The opponent process theory explains why nothing feels interesting anymore. Your brain isn't broken. It's precisely calibrated to maintain neurochemical balance, and you keep throwing that balance off with artificial intensity. Every Instagram hit requires an equal Instagram crash. Every TikTok high gets paid for with a TikTok low. Every notification rush gets balanced with notification emptiness. Your reward system is running a neurochemical deficit that grows larger every day. Sapolsky's research revealed something even more disturbing: opponent processes don't just create temporary lows. They become permanent changes to your baseline dopamine production. Chronic overstimulation doesn't just make you tolerant to digital rewards. It makes you insensitive to natural rewards. The sunset that would have captivated your great-grandfather becomes invisible to you not because sunsets got worse, but because your dopamine system needs intensity levels that sunsets can't provide. A good conversation becomes boring not because conversations got less interesting, but because your brain requires the rapid-fire stimulation of social media to register engagement. You've accidentally trained your reward system to ignore everything that isn't artificially amplified. This connects to research from Dr. Anna Lembke at Stanford, who found that people who undergo complete digital fasting for just 30 days show measurable increases in dopamine receptor density. Their brains literally regrow sensitivity to natural rewards. Food tastes better. Music sounds more complex. Social interactions become genuinely engaging again. But there's a catch that nobody talks about: the first two weeks of dopamine detox feel like clinical depression. Your brain has been chemically dependent on artificial stimulation for years. Removing that stimulation creates actual withdrawal symptoms. Restlessness, anxiety, inability to focus, emotional flatness, and desperate cravings for digital input. Most people interpret these symptoms as evidence that they need their phones. Actually, they're evidence that they've been neurochemically dependent on their phones without realizing it. The withdrawal period isn't a bug. It's proof the reset is working. What happens after week three is remarkable. Colors become more vivid. Conversations become genuinely absorbing. Simple pleasures like hot coffee or cool air become satisfying in ways you forgot were possible. Your brain rediscovers that reality contains enough complexity and beauty to hold your attention without artificial amplification. You don't need more interesting content. You need more sensitive reward systems. The solution isn't better apps or more engaging entertainment. The solution is restoring your brain's factory settings for what constitutes a worthwhile experience. Sapolsky's opponent process research suggests this can happen faster than anyone expected. Every day you don't artificially spike your dopamine, your baseline moves a little higher. Every natural reward you pay attention to rebuilds receptor density. Every moment of boredom you endure without reaching for stimulation strengthens your capacity for sustained focus. Ancient humans lived in a world that provided exactly the right amount of stimulation to keep their reward systems healthy. Enough challenge to stay engaged, enough calm to stay balanced, enough novelty to stay curious, enough routine to stay stable. We built a world that provides 10 times too much stimulation and wonder why nothing feels rewarding anymore. Your brain is not the problem. Your environment is the problem. Change the environment, and the brain heals itself automatically.
P.S. I Love ME tweet media
Darshak Rana ⚡️@thedarshakrana

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The Coastal Journal
The Coastal Journal@1CoastalJournal·
🚨FED NEWS: QE NEW HIGH IN 26 $6.69 Trillion💵 🖨️ •Fed QE Now 📈 $170 Billion in 4 months •Fed Balance Sheet approaching $7 trillion again Link: open.substack.com/pub/coastaljou…
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Mandy Arthur
Mandy Arthur@mandyarthur·
Hi @Grok, is Israel spraying chemical agents over green areas in Lebanon and Syria to eradicate plant life? Be concise.
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Mises Media
Mises Media@mises_media·
Every time the Fed prints money, the first people to spend it get richer, and by the time it reaches you, your dollars buy less. @BobMurphyEcon explains the Cantillon effect: the hidden engine of inequality that no progressive wants to talk about. #HAPod
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Brian Albrecht
Brian Albrecht@BrianCAlbrecht·
Excited about this new, highly personal paper
Brian Albrecht tweet media
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Polymarket
Polymarket@Polymarket·
JUST IN: Rep. Tim Burchett says if people saw what he has seen with regard to aliens, "it would've set the earth on fire”
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Mises Institute
Mises Institute@mises·
The process of naturalization is a government-created "right" with no basis in property rights. In other words, there is no libertarian case for birthright citizenship. | @ryanmcmaken mises.org/mises-wire/the…
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