The Consequence Gap

(Tom: One of the daily email newsletters I read is the Daily Reckoning from Paradigm Press Group. I don’t ever see myself investing in American stocks or investigating which third world country would be the safest haven in a global apocalypse but the newsletters provide a window for me into a whole other world. This one was a corker so I am sharing it whole with you.)

July 16, 2026
Sean Ring

Dear Reader,

Michel de Montaigne once said he’d rather keep company with peasants than professors.

Montaigne said the peasants had not been “educated sufficiently to reason incorrectly.”

He wasn’t in awe of ignorance. He was diagnosing something worse: a kind of education that trains sharp minds to be wrong with great confidence, at great length, and in great comfort.

You already suspect this about the experts running your country. Montaigne just gave you the receipts he wrote 450 years ago.

The Original Anti-Expert

In Montaigne’s France, “education” meant years of Latin drills, logic puzzles, and formal debate. A young man could leave that system able to argue any side of any question. He could quote Aquinas, Cicero, or Augustine at dinner and win the room.

But he often couldn’t grow a potato. (As a Gen Xer, I sympathize. I couldn’t build anything without IKEA instructions before I owned a house.)

Montaigne thought this was backward. He argued learning should build judgment, not just vocabulary. An education that produces confident talkers without sound judgment is a dangerous failure. (If only he could see today’s Federal Reserve Board!)

Plain ignorance is easy to fix. Polished error isn’t, because it comes wrapped in credentials, initials, and a job title.

The peasants around him weren’t wiser men. They were simply men whose mistakes cost them something immediately. Misjudge the weather, lose the crop. Misjudge the soil, go hungry. Their thinking received immediate, brutal, random feedback.

The scholars in their robes got applause instead.

Why Some Reasoning Gets Corrected, and Some Doesn’t

As Thomas Sowell once said, “It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong.” My God, that man is a national treasure.

The great British conservative statesman Edmund Burke lamented, “But the age of chivalry is gone. That of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded; and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever.”

Luckily, old Edmund didn’t live long enough to see what British, French, and German politicians are doing to their countries.

Though they, and Montaigne, lived hundreds of years apart, all of them are talking about the Consequence Gap. That’s simply the difference between where someone makes a decision and the cost of being wrong. Close the gap, and bad reasoning gets punished fast. Widen it, and bad reasoning can survive indefinitely, dressed up as expertise.

The farmer has no Consequence Gap. A trader has none (unless he’s The Donald’s buddy, of course). The small-business owner, pricing inventory amid an inflationary mess, has none either. Their P&L is the teacher, and it doesn’t grade on a curve.

Now look at the people setting your monetary policy, health guidance, or economic statistics. Their Consequence Gap is enormous. When they’re wrong, they don’t go hungry. They go on television and explain that the shock was “unprecedented.”

In March 2021, the Fed said inflation would peak near 2.4% and fade quietly. By June 2022, it hit a 40-year high of 9.1%. No one at the Fed took a pay cut, let alone got tarred and feathered.

When the Ruler Becomes the Target

There’s a second trick hiding inside the first, and it’s one every reader of this newsletter has felt in their grocery bill.

Economists invented the CPI to approximate a real thing: the general debasement of money. But once CPI became the official target, officials began managing the number rather than the underlying reality. A war spikes oil prices, and suddenly that’s labeled “inflation,” even though no one printed a dollar to cause it. GDP works the same way. Government spends on a bridge to nowhere, GDP rises, and somebody calls it “growth.”

The ruler stopped measuring the terrain and became the terrain. The people managing the statistics never have to live with what the statistics hide.

A Very Old Word for the Cure

Thomas Aquinas called the solution to this problem “prudence.” He defined it as the virtue of applying right reason to actual choices, not just winning an abstract argument. Aquinas deliberately separated prudence from cleverness. A man can be clever and still choose badly. Prudence is what closes the gap between knowing and doing well.

Montaigne’s scholars had cleverness. Whatever their limits, his peasant friends had something closer to prudence, because reality forced it on them daily.

If there’s no consequence, there’s no correction. No iteration. It’s the same idea in three different centuries and three different vocabularies, and all three point at the same truth.

Watch the Hips, Not the Lips

Before you believe a forecast, ask what the forecaster will pay if he’s wrong. If the answer is “nothing,” discount it heavily. Listen to people whose own money and reputation are on the line.

Watch what insiders and institutions actually do with their capital, not what they say in a press conference. As an old trader friend of mine once told me, “Watch the hips, not the lips.”

And keep your own decisions sized so that if you’re wrong, you feel it fast enough to learn from it. That discomfort is the whole point. Master that discomfort. It’s what keeps your reasoning honest.

Wrap Up

Montaigne’s peasants never held a press conference explaining an “impossible choice.” They didn’t need to. Reality graded their homework the same week they turned it in.

Our modern experts are educated enough to reason beautifully and wrong enough to keep doing it, because the bill never lands on their desk. It lands on yours, in your grocery bill, your savings account, and your retirement statement.

You already sensed the credentials were a smokescreen. Now you’ve got 450 years of philosophy, a Catholic saint, and modern traders all agreeing with you.

That’s not cynicism. That’s just paying attention.

All the best,
Sean Ring

Sean Ring
Contributing Editor, The Morning Reckoning
feedback@dailyreckoning.com
X (formerly Twitter): @seaniechaos

Bret On Redirection

Bret On Redirection

Bret Weinstein said something that won’t leave my head:
For the first time in 300,000 years of human evolution, we removed the cost from the single biggest reward nature ever invented — sex and pair-bonding.

Reliable birth control + abortion = you can now cash the evolutionary lottery ticket without paying the 20-year mortgage of pregnancy, diapers, sleepless nights, and college funds.

Result? An entire generation of 18–35-year-olds walking around with the energy, libido, hormones, and protective instincts that evolution spent millions of years calibrating for child-rearing… but with zero actual children. That energy didn’t disappear. It got redirected.

Heather Heying’s observation is brutal: young women especially began treating ideologies the exact way evolution wired them to treat babies. Climate change, social justice, whatever the cause of the month is — it gets defended with literal mama-bear ferocity, the same neurochemistry that once guarded a toddler from predators now guards an abstract idea from wrong think.

And now Elon is promising the second shoe is about to drop: AI-driven abundance will make money as “free” as sex became in the 1970s. Both of evolution’s primary carrots — mating and resource acquisition suddenly cost almost nothing.

Weinstein’s ice-cold question: When producing and protecting actual children is no longer the central organizing principle of adult life… and when creating wealth is no longer required for status, security, or attracting a mate…What is left to give a human life direction, meaning, and structure?

Are we about to become a species that invents bigger and bigger dragons to slay just to feel alive? Or do we drift into total listlessness? This 3:52 clip is genuinely haunting.

Watch it all the way through, then tell me — honestly — does this explain the absolute intensity we’re seeing in culture right now, or is Bret completely missing something?

View the video:  https://x.com/Bitcoin_Teddy/status/2077512782430486720?s=20

The World Gets Better…

Just listened to a story. It had the following lines:

His daughter had once asked him why people should clean up messes they did not make.
He told her, “Because the world gets better when someone chooses to.”

(I usually pick up a dozen or more pieces of rubbish to and from the park when I do my endurance workouts so this really struck home with me as it perfectly mirrors my take on the subject.)

And if you want the basic philosophical principle, check out www.bringorder.info )

Chia – Not Just For The Gut

Chia - Not Just For The Gut

For decades, chia has been sold to us as a simple bowel cleanser for constipation. But the reality is deeper and more technical. It’s not just fiber; it’s high-precision fuel. While the industry bombards you with synthetic, oxidized omega-3 supplements, this tiny seed holds the secret to igniting your neurons and dissolving brain fog.

Don’t just sprinkle it on your yogurt. To release the magic molecule, take two tablespoons of black chia seeds and lightly grind them with a mortar and pestle or coffee grinder just before using; oxygen is the enemy of their oils. Pour the powder into half a glass of warm, never boiling, water, and add three drops of fresh lemon juice. Let the mixture sit for exactly twelve minutes until a thick, translucent gel forms. Stir with a wooden spoon so as not to disturb the compounds and drink it in three long sips, chewing the gel so that salivary enzymes begin activation before it reaches your stomach.

You’ll feel unusual clarity within 20 minutes; it’s alpha-linolenic acid crossing the blood-brain barrier to nourish your neurons. That signal of cognitive awakening indicates that your cell membranes are repairing themselves from within. It’s not a stimulant like coffee; it’s pure neuronal architecture. Your mind no longer rests; it now operates at maximum frequency without the traditional energy crash.

The bioavailable food: Two tablespoons of freshly ground chia seeds mixed into a glass of goat’s milk kefir mid-morning. The acidic environment of the kefir enhances the bioavailability of lignans, allowing the antioxidants to reach the bloodstream more quickly. This protects your cerebral arteries from daily oxidative damage while optimizing your response to work-related stress.

The Natural Protocol
Apply a cold-pressed chia oil compress to the temples and base of the skull before a deep work session. Massage in slow, circular motions using your fingertips for three minutes to promote transdermal absorption of the fatty acids. The earthy aroma and lipid absorption help reduce muscle tension that blocks blood flow to the brain.

Shot Booster
A liquid concentrate of high-purity plant-based omega-3 extracted from Salvia hispanica mixed with 100ml of coconut water upon waking. The potassium in the coconut water acts as an electrolyte carrier, allowing the fatty acids to penetrate neuronal mitochondria more efficiently. Use it on an empty stomach to ensure there is no competitive interference from other dietary fats during the intestinal absorption process.

Marcinek K, Krejpcio Z. Annals
Panstwowego Zakladu Higieny. “Chia seeds (Salvia hispanica): health promoting properties and therapeutic applications – a review.” 2017.
PMID: 28646829.

George Ayittey on Socialism In Africa

George Ayittey

The reasoning in 1960 looked airtight. Colonialism had been run by Western capitalists. So capitalism was a tool of oppression. Socialism, its opposite, would be the path to liberation.

Kwame Nkrumah in Ghana, Julius Nyerere in Tanzania, Sékou Touré in Guinea, Mengistu Haile Mariam in Ethiopia, and Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe all reached the same conclusion through the same logic.

The logic was tidy. The results were catastrophic.

In Ghana, Nkrumah’s government built 64 state enterprises before his overthrow in February 1966. Only three or four were profitable.

By 1970, the Ghanaian state was setting prices on nearly 6,000 items across more than 700 product groups.

In Tanzania, Julius Nyerere called the program ujamaa, a Swahili word for familyhood.
By 1976, the state had relocated more than 11 million peasants into roughly 8,000 collective villages. Much of the relocation was done at gunpoint. Government bulldozers flattened old houses so families could not return.

Tanzania exported 540,000 tons of maize in 1970. By 1974 it was importing 300,000 tons.
Within a few years a country that had been able to feed itself was depending on Western grain shipments to survive.

Ayittey then asked the question he considered most important: how do the rich get rich in the United States compared to Africa?

In the United States, the wealthiest people are builders.

Elon Musk built Tesla and SpaceX. Jeff Bezos built Amazon. Roughly two thirds of American billionaires founded the company that made them rich.

In socialist-era Africa, the wealthiest people were heads of state and their ministers.
– Mobutu Sese Seko of Zaire (now the Democratic Republic of Congo): estimates of stolen wealth ranged from 1 to 5 billion dollars.
– Sani Abacha of Nigeria: around 5 billion.
– Ibrahim Babangida of Nigeria: roughly 12 billion.
– Hosni Mubarak of Egypt: estimates ran as high
as 40 billion.
– Muammar Gaddafi of Libya: estimates reached 200 billion.

Ayittey put it plainly. The combined net worth of every American president from George Washington through Barack Obama, all 43 of them, was about 2.7 billion dollars in 2010 figures.

Sani Abacha alone stole more than that in five years in office. African socialism built a ruling class that created nothing and extracted everything.

The argument Ayittey most wanted Africans to hear, and the one almost nobody quotes, is that socialism was never African. Pre-colonial Africa had open markets, long-distance trade, and private enterprise. Cloth-weaving, iron and gold smelting, regional commerce. Property was held by extended families and clans, not by the state. Nyerere and his peers took kinship-based property and relabeled it communism. They confused village solidarity with state ownership. They imported a nineteenth-century European industrial ideology and applied it to agricultural societies that already had functioning markets older than the modern European state. Shortages, political prisons, and a parasitic ruling class followed.

South Africa in 2026 is preparing the same policies. The Expropriation Act was signed in January 2025. The MK Party introduced a constitutional amendment bill this April to push land restitution claims back to 1652 and remove compensation from the property clause.

Zimbabwe ran this experiment in 2000. Tobacco export earnings fell from 600 million dollars to 175 million by 2009. Maize production did not return to pre-seizure levels until 2017.

Ayittey warned about this for thirty years. He died in January 2022. South Africa is doing it anyway.