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The argument that "the economy" is not a natural force like weather, but a human-constructed game with invented rules, players (households, firms), and scores (GDP, money). Concepts like "inflation," "unemployment," and "the market" are models we built; they then take on a life of their own and shape our behavior, but they began as ideas, not laws of physics.
*Example: "A 'recession' is two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth. GDP itself is a constructed metric invented in the 1930s. The Theory of Constructed Economics shows that the terrifying, objective-sounding force that 'causes' layoffs is actually a story we tell ourselves using numbers we invented. We built the game, forgot we built it, and now tremble at its rules."*
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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The idea that your wallet is a primary tool for steering behavior. It examines how access to resources, job markets, debt, and consumer culture dictates your life choices and keeps you invested in the status quo. Control is achieved by making your survival and social worth dependent on playing by the system's economic rules.
Theory of Economic Social Control Example: The crushing weight of student loans and mortgage debt. This isn't just personal finance; it's a potent form of economic social control. Needing to make huge monthly payments makes you far less likely to risk your stable job by striking, protesting, or starting a radical business. It funnels you into a compliant, productive life path by leveraging your economic vulnerability.
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal February 7, 2026
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The study of how human psychology shapes and is shaped by the systems that produce, distribute, and consume goods and services. Economics traditionally assumed rational actors maximizing utility; psychology reveals that humans are predictably irrational—loss-averse, status-conscious, prone to herding, and terrible at probability. The psychology of economical systems explains bubbles (herd behavior, overconfidence), crashes (panic, loss aversion), inequality (status seeking, positional goods), and the persistence of poverty (scarcity mindset, cognitive load). It also examines how economic systems shape psychology in return—creating desires we didn't know we had, defining success in narrow terms, making us feel like winners or losers based on arbitrary metrics.
Example: "She studied the psychology of economical systems during the housing bubble, watching otherwise rational people make obviously terrible decisions. It wasn't stupidity; it was psychology—herd behavior, overconfidence, the thrill of the gamble. The system encouraged it, exploited it, and collapsed when the psychology inevitably turned. The next bubble was already forming."
by Dumu The Void February 16, 2026
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Critical Theory of Economics

The application of Critical Theory to economics as a whole—examining how economic knowledge is produced, whose interests it serves, and how it might be transformed. Critical Theory of Economics asks: How has economics justified capitalism? Why are certain assumptions (rationality, equilibrium, efficiency) treated as universal? What would economics look like if it prioritized human needs over market outcomes? Drawing on Marxist, feminist, and ecological economics, it insists that economics is never neutral—it's always political. The question is which politics it serves.
"Economics says markets allocate resources efficiently. Critical Theory of Economics asks: efficiently for whom? At what cost? Markets produce winners and losers—economics that ignores that is ideology. Critical theory demands an economics that studies power, that centers human flourishing, that imagines alternatives. Not just describing how the economy works, but asking how it could work differently."
by Abzugal Nammugal Enkigal March 4, 2026
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A Generative Reparations Economy directs wealth, labor, and resources toward repairing historical and ecological harm while creating dignified livelihoods through community stewardship and cooperative ownership.

Instead of extracting value, the model circulates value.

The Core Economic Loop:

1. Repair
-restore waterways
-clean public natural spaces
-recover discarded materials

2. Creation
-transform recovered materials into art of useful goods
-provide ecological restoration services
-host educational workshops

3. Circulation
-sell goods and services
-reinvest revenue into worker wages and community funds
-expand restoration projects

This creates a living economic cycle of repair.

Repair the land.
Pay the people.
Circulate the care.
As capitalism continues to cause harm, navigating the late stages require innovative and creative solutions to support people, the earth and peace to navigate the transitons. The Generative Reparations Economic Model offers a pathway, paradigm and praxis for navigating social, cultural, consciousness and environmental shifts.
by New Earth Ambassador414 March 13, 2026
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Critical Theory of Economics

A framework that turns critical theory's tools onto the discipline of economics itself—examining how economics as a field produces knowledge, serves power, and shapes reality. The critical theory of economics asks not just about economic phenomena but about economics: who gets to be an economist, what counts as economic knowledge, how economic models shape the reality they claim to describe, how the discipline's pretensions to science mask its service to power. It draws on history of economic thought, sociology of knowledge, and critical theory to understand economics not as a neutral science but as a social practice with political effects—a way of making worlds, not just describing them.
Example: "Her book showed how economic models don't just describe markets—they create them, training people to behave as the models predict. Critical Theory of Economics: turning critique from the economy to economics itself."
by Dumu The Void March 14, 2026
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Healing Centric Economies

🌿 Healing-Centric Economies
New Earth Codes for Regenerative Exchange and Soul-Aligned Prosperity

Definition:
A Healing-Centric Economy is a post-patriarchal, post-extractional system of exchange rooted in the frequency of regeneration, reciprocity, and relational wealth.
It redefines prosperity as the well-being of people, planet, and spirit, rather than accumulation of profit or power.
Every transaction, trade, or offering in a Healing-Centric Economy is designed to restore energy, repair harm, and recalibrate balance — not exploit or deplete.

Ethical Mandate

A Healing-Centric Economy refuses to replicate the trauma of capitalism.
It decentralizes power, honors diversity, and transforms commerce into care.
It is economic alchemy — turning scarcity consciousness into sovereign sufficiency.

Affirmation / Manifestor

“I circulate my gifts through sacred reciprocity.
My work is a healing frequency.
Abundance is the pulse of the Earth moving through me.”
She left Wall Street to start a Healing-Centric Economy café where you can pay with gratitude, crystals, or community care credits.” ☀️💚

Healing Centric Economies are the path of the future of a world where our collective liberation is realized.
by New Earth Ambassador414 November 10, 2025
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