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Global Nomad

@fitnfun007

Life is the Dancer and you are the Dance !!!!

In your mind Katılım Ekim 2019
1.4K Takip Edilen84 Takipçiler
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Prof. Krishnamurthy V Subramanian
Did you know that the U.S. defaulted on its sovereign obligations in 1971 when it unilaterally reneged on dollar-gold convertibility. Russia defaulted in 1998 and 2022. Argentina: 9 times since independence. Pakistan: required IMF bailouts 23 times. Greece defaulted in 2012. And India? Zero defaults. Not even in 1991! Yet Western investors classify India as "emerging risk" and call U.S. Treasuries the "risk-free rate." This isn't risk analysis. This is cognitive bias a la Daniel Kahneman's book "Thinking, Fast and Slow". Humans systematically overweight culturally proximate information while underweighting statistical patterns that don't fit our mental models. Western strategic planners trust Western partners not because the data supports it, but because the cultural markers feel familiar. Three facts that challenge everything about how we assess partnership risk: FACT 1: Across 5,000 years of recorded history, India has rarely waged wars of territorial conquest. Not in 3000 BCE when the Indus Valley Civilization had technological superiority. Not in 1000 CE when Indian mathematics and metallurgy exceeded Europe by centuries. Not in 2026 when it possesses nuclear weapons and the world's 4th-largest military. Not in 2047 when it projects to be a top-two economy. Compare: China (annexed Tibet 1950, 14 territorial disputes, South China Sea expansion). Russia (Georgia 2008, Crimea 2014, Ukraine 2022). Europe (500 years of colonial conquest across three continents). U.S. (military interventions in 20+ countries since 1945). This pattern is observable strategic behavior anchored in the Arthashastra, Kautilya's 2,300-year-old treatise arguing that short-term territorial expansion undermines the systemic conditions for sustained prosperity. The concept of "mandala" (circle of states) recognizes that each power's long-term interest depends on system equilibrium. FACT 2: India has never defaulted on debt, treaties, or security guarantees since independence in 1947. The most revealing test: 1991 balance of payments crisis. Reserves fell to $1.2 billion = just three weeks of imports. Default appeared certain. Instead, India implemented painful reforms, honored every obligation. India didn't use political costs as an excuse to default. Commitments were kept. This behavior isn't accidental. It's anchored in the Sanskrit concept of ṛṇānubandhaḥ, that obligations are metaphysically binding across time. The Mahabharata established 2,000 years ago that rulers who break commitments violate cosmic order and create systemic instability. Philosophy became institutional architecture: investment-grade credit through multiple crises, $600B forex reserves (6th globally), zero defaults on government securities across 77 years. FACT 3: During COVID-19, India exported 300 million vaccine doses to 110 countries while its own vaccination was incomplete. 96 countries received doses free through "Vaccine Maitri." Meanwhile: U.S. ordered 1.2 billion doses for 330 million people (4x population). EU ordered 4.6 billion for 450 million (10x population). Canada ordered 400 million for 38 million people (10x population). Western nations didn't begin international distribution until domestic targets were substantially met. The distinction? India's Economic Survey 2020-21 quoted Sanskrit: "āpadā hi prāṇa rakṣā hi dharmasya prathama aṅkuraḥ" (in calamity, protecting life is the first duty). Not Indian life. Life in general. This aligns with Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam (the world as one family), not as rhetoric but as policy. India supplies 60% of global vaccines and 20% of generic medicines normally, maintained production during its own constraints, built digital public infrastructure (UPI processes more transactions than all nations combined) and offers it open-source to developing countries. WHY THIS MATTERS NOW: Every CFO, sovereign wealth fund, and policymaker is asking: "Who can we depend on for the next 50 years?" Ukraine shattered the illusion that economic integration prevents aggression. COVID exposed single-source dependencies. Taiwan reveals semiconductor concentration risk. The global economy is re-optimizing from efficiency to trust. But here's where Kahneman's research becomes critical: most strategic planners are making decisions using "System 1" thinking (fast, intuitive, pattern-matching based on cultural familiarity) rather than "System 2" thinking (slow, analytical, data-driven assessment of long-horizon behavioral patterns). The result? Systematic mispricing of partnership risk. Strategic planners face a choice: - China: manufacturing efficiency + demonstrated willingness to weaponize interdependence (sanctions on South Korea over THAAD, Australia over COVID inquiry, Lithuania over Taiwan, Belt & Road debt traps in 60+ countries) - Russia: resource access + repeated weaponization (invaded Ukraine despite economic integration, cut gas to freeze European cities) - U.S.: innovation + extraterritorial enforcement (billions in fines on European banks for transactions legal in Europe, CLOUD Act overrides local privacy laws, "America First" tariffs hit Canada, Mexico, EU alongside rivals) - India: 5,000-year track record of territorial restraint + zero defaults + systemic thinking during crises + challenges (infrastructure gaps, bureaucratic complexity, uneven state capacity). The question isn't perfection. It is: which risk profile aligns with 50-year partnership objectives when analyzed through System 2 rather than System 1 thinking? THE UNCOMFORTABLE TRUTH: If India's pattern suggests lower long-duration risk, why is trust in India still "emerging"? Kahneman would predict exactly this outcome. Three cognitive biases at work: 1. **Availability bias:** We assess risk based on vivid, recent, culturally proximate information. NATO expansion incorporated Poland, Czech Republic, Hungary rapidly because they registered as "European." India's democracy, rule of law, English-language business environment gets discounted because cultural markers differ. 2. **Confirmation bias:** Western institutions have decades of frameworks built around current partnerships. New data contradicting established models gets filtered out rather than integrated. 3. **Status quo bias:** Existing relationships are comfortable. The U.S.-Europe alliance, U.S.-Japan partnership, Five Eyes intelligence sharing operate with established protocols. Structural change requires crisis-level disruption to overcome inertia. The crisis arrived. For boards evaluating long-term partnerships—semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, digital infrastructure, maritime security, critical minerals—India presents a risk profile worth systematic, System 2 analysis. Because of demonstrated behavior across sufficient time horizons to be statistically meaningful. In an era of fragmentation, weaponized interdependence, and trust deficits, historical patterns become predictive indicators. Kahneman spent decades showing that intuitive judgments systematically diverge from statistical reality. Strategic partnership assessment is no exception. The question is: Are we assessing risk based on data, or based on what feels familiar? In the 21st century, power matters. But trust may matter more. And trust should be measured by track record, not by cultural proximity.
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Global Nomad@fitnfun007·
UAE has left OPEC so that it can maximise its revenues to try and mitigate the losses that it’s making on account of non-arrival of tourists. That is the reason why Iran has been attacking the UAE recently
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Megh Updates 🚨™
Megh Updates 🚨™@MeghUpdates·
Sonam Zomba does it again! 🙌🔥 Indian start from Arunachal submits Brazil's Maristela Alves by armbar in Round 2 to defend her MFN Strawweight World Title at MFN 18. India's MMA queen keeps shining!🇮🇳
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Richard
Richard@ricwe123·
So here we have an Israeli settler running over two Palestinian girls while they were on their way to school, just for fun......
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Global Nomad@fitnfun007·
@_rawnreal Awesome video and you are feeling jealous 😂😂😂😂😂
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Maryam 🇵🇰
Maryam 🇵🇰@_rawnreal·
She always embarrasses Pakistan sometimes with her bikini pics and sometimes with her wannabe Indian sarees. Pakistanis wearing sarees is the worst thing to happen.
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Kanwal Sibal
Kanwal Sibal@KanwalSibal·
“While the surviving IRGC Leaders are trapped like drowning rats in a sewage pipe,” Is this hate filled language fit for someone holding such a high position? It also goes far beyond financial matters. The sense of exasperation in it is striking.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent@SecScottBessent

While the surviving IRGC Leaders are trapped like drowning rats in a sewage pipe, Iran’s creaking oil industry is starting to shut in production thanks to the U.S. BLOCKADE. Pumping will soon collapse. GASOLINE SHORTAGES IN IRAN NEXT!

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Defender of the Republic 🇺🇸
Defender of the Republic 🇺🇸@realdefender45·
Is Laura Loomer okay with @POTUS talking about India this way after she was incentivized to promote tourism for them?
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Global Nomad
Global Nomad@fitnfun007·
@DecentGuyLive @thewirepak And you call yourself a Decent Guy 😂😂😂 We were customers and are still potential customers for Iranian Oil. It is not in their interest to harm us.
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Decent Guy
Decent Guy@DecentGuyLive·
@thewirepak As i Pakistani, i don't share the same sentiments as expressed by this man. We support IRGC's decision to target Indian ships. If there is any Irani reading this, plz note that this man is a businessman who wants to do business with UAE and India. He does not represent Pakistanis
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Ali K.Chishti Official
Ali K.Chishti Official@thewirepak·
As a Pakistani, I strongly condemn the IRCG's attack on the Indian merchant ship in the Strait of Hormuz even after it was given clearance to proceed. Discounting the cheap antics and theatre by Indians, firing on a civilian vessel that received permission crosses a red line. Maritime security and the safety of innocent seafarers must be respected, regardless of regional tensions. No excuses for endangering lives at sea. Such reckless actions harm everyone navigating international waters.
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Nury Vittachi
Nury Vittachi@NuryVittachi·
BOOKMARK, COPY OR DOWNLOAD THIS. Every time someone says “but the Iranians massacred 30,000 or 50,000 of their own peaceful protesters”, just share these 10 facts and/or the video. 1. In early January, Mossad and CIA assets armed radical opposition members in Iran to undertake an armed insurrection in which 3,000 people (on all sides) lost their lives. There’s plenty of video evidence for that. 2. That was turned into a fake massacre story of 30,000 or 50,000 or 70,000 victims, by so called “activist groups”, widely quoted, as fact, by the western mainstream media—although no evidence was provided. A simple investigation shows that every single one of these groups can be traced back to the US or its “five eyes” partners, the UK and Canada. 3. The western mainstream started pushing the fake story by quoting from a group called Human Rights in Iran, which is not in Iran—it’s from Virginia, home of the CIA, and is financed by the NED, the CIA’s soft-power spin off. 4. The fake news was backed up by a group called the Center for Human Rights in Iran, which is also NOT in Iran, and is also in the US. 5. Another group, Iran International, can be traced back to the UK. 6. Then there was the International Center for Human Rights, which turned out to be in Canada. 7. Still other sources backing the fake massacre turned out to be supporters of America’s Reza Pahlava (Juan Guaido II), such as the one quoted by Time magazine. 8. The most quoted person on western mainstream television is Masih Alinejad, who said “millions” were massacred. She worked for many years as a full-time anti-Iran propagandist, with financing from the NED and a salary from Voice of America. 9. The fake tale was further pushed by the Bouramond Center for Human Rights, another group financed by the NED, and 10. Tavaana, started by the US State Department and financed by USAID, a notorious group that disguises CIA politicking as aid. Those are the facts. Now here’s the key question: why does every western mainstream media group, not most, but… Every. Single. One. hide the above facts from their audiences? Delete the western mainstream media. Find out the truth for yourself.
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Reuters
Reuters@Reuters·
Members of Iran’s Jewish community gathered at Yusef Abad Synagogue for prayers, saying the war should not be framed as a conflict against Jewish people
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