Good, I’ll come back to you in a couple of hours then.

Tauri

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Kind-1 (TextNote)

2026-05-13T15:23:57Z

↳ Reply to OceanSlim (npub1zmc6qyqdfnllhnzzxr5wpepfpnzcf8q6m3jdveflmgruqvd3qa9sjv7f60)

Please do. I'll let you know if they're in my personal library. I have a lot of PDF and epubs that are not there. But I do lean into more of the ana...

Good, I’ll come back to you in a couple of hours then.

There is no such thing as pure economics. That’s Keynesian nonsense. Economics is a social…err, “science” for lack of a better word — that studies human action, and human action is not uniform. That’s why I keep cringing when I see someone say “free market will fix this” or “Ocean will go out of business because no one will leave money on the table.” It sure has lots of common ground with philosophy. Also history and anthropology. Mises is amazing when giving examples of human action from the history of humankind. It gives you a ton of perspective on why certain people act like psychopaths when faced with certain choices, restrictions, or opportunities. Markets are rarely sane because markets are made of humans, and humans often don’t act rationally or logically the way theories dictate. Knots is a collection of humans, therefore they are part of the market the same as the Ord retards and anyone in between. Their choices shape sentiment, opportunities, and risk tolerance. Even if they don’t throw money left and right, their stance and actions create perception and surely influence to a degree how other humans engage with the market. /end rant

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  "content": "Good, I’ll come back to you in a couple of hours then.\n\nThere is no such thing as pure economics. That’s Keynesian nonsense. Economics is a social…err, “science” for lack of a better word — that studies human action, and human action is not uniform. That’s why I keep cringing when I see someone say “free market will fix this” or “Ocean will go out of business because no one will leave money on the table.” It sure has lots of common ground with philosophy. Also history and anthropology. Mises is amazing when giving examples of human action from the history of humankind. It gives you a ton of perspective on why certain people act like psychopaths when faced with certain choices, restrictions, or opportunities. Markets are rarely sane because markets are made of humans, and humans often don’t act rationally or logically the way theories dictate. Knots is a collection of humans, therefore they are part of the market the same as the Ord retards and anyone in between. Their choices shape sentiment, opportunities, and risk tolerance. Even if they don’t throw money left and right, their stance and actions create perception and surely influence to a degree how other humans engage with the market. /end rant ",
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