Another awesome lore video as always! Keep up the great work :)
@toddebert62767 ай бұрын
My friend and I are just getting into Infinity so I really appreciate these videos.
@thesmilyguyguy97995 ай бұрын
If You Want More Infinity Lore Go WarLore He Has A LoT Of Lore Vids ON This Gmae
@LooneyPoliticsTunes7 ай бұрын
I’d like to know what’s on the food menu for the lower classes. When you say the food is basic just how basic ? But actually sounds like a good system. Technically this is what we wanted to do hear in the uk 🇬🇧 but things always go wrong
@waardlafrance1107 ай бұрын
The iota scarcity model is described as something dual that acts in mirror and parallel between the economy of abundance and the economy of scarcity (quasi scarcity). In principle, such models could only coexist in a dual way in situational circumstances and limited to a micro economic level, and in principle when they are the prevailing macro model they are a solo executing model, here it's in dual and throughout the sphere, it would be quite baroque if we dug into the actual functioning, because for example I doubt that corporations could have the accumulation of financial resources to exist in such an economy. As for the economic influx of resources from space colonization, in principle, although there is a cost to extract (rockets/vessels to send, fuel, drones, analysis, etc.), resource levels in space are such that this should have an equally significant deflationary effect. For example, in 2023, around 3,000 tonnes of gold were mined on Earth. In space, we don't have any figures, as we don't have any space mining probes, but it's obvious that we could have a much larger stock, say 10,000 times greater than in 2023, this would mean that the rate per tonne of gold, which is around 56 million, would only be worth 5,600 dollars. Of course, this would have massive repercussions (countries like those in Africa would no longer have any interest in mining and would therefore be deprived of the income from this resource), Then there would be repercussions on the financial system, including the savings invested in it), and such a price would also mean that consumption would explode, so the price could go back up, but not to its previous level, when it was still scarce. So, a priori, massive space colonization such as that taking place in the sphere should have a massive deflationary effect on raw materials prices. However, there's an equally massive birth rate boom via artificial wombs, and according to the logic of the jdr book, this seems to balance out the whole model, which is why there's a constant need to colonize, and why this generates such high margins that it allows corporations to make the amounts of money they need to reach their full size. Otherwise, we'd be in a Star Trek-style world with a maximum of small corporations, as the need for something bigger isn't necessary or even really possible.