Water: The Quiet Commodity

Water rarely announces itself as a crisis. It arrives reliably, flows invisibly, and disappears politely down drains. It does not flash headlines or spike dashboards. When it works, it is not noticed. When it begins to fail, it does so gradually enough to be explained away. This discretion has been extremely helpful. For a long …

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Shortages, Now With Premium Tiers

Shortages are no longer what they used to be. Once, a shortage implied absence. Something was gone. Shelves were empty. Deliveries failed. The explanation, while unsatisfying, was at least straightforward. There was not enough to go around. This model has been improved. Today’s shortages are curated. Goods exist. Supply chains function. Warehouses hum quietly in …

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Global Systems Continue to Function, Impressively So

Global systems responsible for food, energy, and material distribution remain operational. They are performing exactly as designed. This is not a criticism. It is an observation worth appreciating. At present, the world produces more food, more energy, and more material wealth than at any previous point in its history. Supply chains span continents with remarkable …

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Housing as a Scarcity Machine

Housing is frequently described as scarce. This is an understandable mistake. Scarcity suggests absence. Housing, by contrast, is everywhere. It rises in clean lines and reassuring materials. It is photographed at sunset. It is toured virtually. It is listed, relisted, bundled, leveraged, and celebrated as evidence of economic vitality. What it is not, consistently, is …

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