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Iran

One Week of War VS What It Could Have Built

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One week of war costs $12 billion.
But what does that actually mean?

It means the equivalent of 600,000 American households’ yearly taxes.
It means resources that could have built homes, hospitals, schools…
fed millions…
and improved lives.

Instead, they are spent on destruction.

This video breaks down the real opportunity cost of war—not in abstract billions, but in tangible human outcomes.

Because this is not just about war.
It is about how money is used, who controls it, and who it truly serves.

What is driving US policy on Iran: Is it Israel or something else?

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Who or what is driving US policy on Iran, Russia, or China?  

Is it Israel, Netanyahu, Epstein or something else?  

We explore the structure between energy, trade and money, its impact on the world, and how we can change outcomes.  

The Architecture of Power and Money series explores global events not just at the surface level — wars, politics, and headlines — but at the deeper structural level:

Energy.
Trade.
Money.

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What the Iran-US War Reveals: Oil, War and the Real Fight for Money

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We start a new series of videos called The Architecture of Power & Money. This is the first episode in the series. What the Iran-US War Reveals: Oil, War & The Real Fight For  Money.

What is the Iran war really about?

Most explanations focus on territory, security, or ideology.
But beneath the surface, there may be a deeper structure at play—one tied to money, trade, and control.

In this first episode of The Architecture of Power and Money, we examine:

Iran currency collapses - What works when money stops working? BTC, Gold or the real Bitcoin, BSV?

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Today, Iran’s national currency — the rial — has effectively stopped working.

Markets froze, prices became meaningless, savings evaporated, and ordinary people were left paying the price for political and monetary failure. This isn’t just another headline. It’s what happens when money is tightly bound to politics, sanctions, and central control.

In this video, I look at Iran’s currency collapse and ask a simple, practical question:

What actually works when money stops working?

I compare the usual alternatives people turn to in moments like this: