Phrase applied to people who have the financial capacity to move away from most, if not all, major social issues while leaving everyone poorer than them to actually try and solve them, who then believe that every other human being on the planet has the same ability to "Just Move" away from whatever issue is making headlines at the time. Similar to "First World Problems".
Do you have "Just Move" Money?
- Excerpt from YouTube comment on Trump's Second Term: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
- Excerpt from YouTube comment on Trump's Second Term: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver
by Definitely_Not_A_Book_Reader June 30, 2024
Get the "Just Move" Money mug.I got like hella money is a meme where the embarrassed emoji dances
You show this to someone when you see it in a video
Or when you have a ton of money and someone else is poor
You show this to someone when you see it in a video
Or when you have a ton of money and someone else is poor
by Meme yapper January 15, 2026
Get the I got like hella money mug.Related Words
I got like hella money is a meme where the embarrassed emoji dances
You show this to someone when you see it in a video
Or when you have a ton of money and someone else is poor
You show this to someone when you see it in a video
Or when you have a ton of money and someone else is poor
by Meme yapper January 15, 2026
Get the I got like hella money mug.The problem of its intrinsic valuelessness. Money is a collective hallucination with no inherent worth (a paper dollar, a digital bit). Its value derives solely from the shared belief that others will accept it for goods and services. The hard problem is maintaining this fragile consensus, especially as money becomes increasingly abstracted (from gold to paper to digits to cryptocurrencies). The entire global economy rests on a confidence game. If that faith evaporates, the "value" vanishes instantly, revealing money as a pure social construct of trust—the most powerful and volatile fiction ever created.
Example: A central bank performs "quantitative easing"—it creates billions of dollars by electronically altering numbers in bank accounts. No new goods or services exist, but the money supply grows. If people believe this new money is "real," inflation may be controlled. If they lose faith, hyperinflation ensues. The hard problem: Money's value isn't in the paper or the number; it's in the shared psychology of a population. It's a story we all tell each other, and the economy is the act of everyone continuing to believe the plot. It works until, suddenly, it doesn't. Hard Problem of Money.
by Enkigal January 24, 2026
Get the Hard Problem of Money mug.The principle that money has no intrinsic value; its worth is a 100% collective agreement. A dollar bill is just fancy paper. Its power to command goods, labor, and loyalty comes solely from our shared trust in the system behind it—the government that issues it, the banks that manage it, and the community that accepts it. Money is a social technology, a ledger of trust made physical, and if that trust evaporates, it reverts to its material worth: zero.
Example: "I tried to buy coffee with a $20 bill from a board game. The barista rejected it, demonstrating the Theory of Constructed Money. My Monopoly money and the U.S. tender were equally green pieces of paper. The only difference was the collective faith in the U.S. Treasury's story. His faith was in the Federal Reserve's fiction, not the one from Parker Brothers."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
Get the Theory of Constructed Money mug.Rainbow Dash after she married Prince Little Money or L Money and became his number one rider to make him cum big steamy loads reverse cowgirl style lots of neighs hot steamy sloppy toppy anytime anywhere as long as Turbo ain't watching.
by PrinceLittleMoney January 31, 2026
Get the Miss Rainbow Money mug.The study of how humans think about, feel about, and behave with money—a substance that has no intrinsic value but shapes almost every aspect of our lives. Money is a psychological phenomenon: it's worth only what we agree it's worth, yet we kill for it, die for it, organize our entire lives around it. The psychology of money examines why we're never satisfied (hedonic adaptation), why we make irrational financial decisions (loss aversion, mental accounting), why money doesn't buy happiness (beyond a point), and why the pursuit of money can become a psychological disorder (workaholism, greed, miserliness). It also examines the deep emotional meanings money carries—security, status, freedom, love, power—that have little to do with what money can actually buy.
Example: "He studied the psychology of money after winning the lottery and feeling nothing. The money hadn't changed him because his psychology hadn't changed—he still felt insecure, still compared himself to others, still wanted more. The problem wasn't his bank account; it was his relationship with money. Therapy helped more than the millions had."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
Get the Psychology of Money mug.