Your post reminded me of Elon, Pieter. You are not related to him by the 
way?You mentioned freedom, opportunity, and innovation in the land of the free 
and the home of the brave. Innovation certainly thrives in raw, unchecked 
capitalism. It has a dark side though: on a global scale it causes inevitably 
the destruction of nature and natural ecosystems. The gigantic debt is a sign 
of impending collapse. There is a dark side of freedom too. Donald Trump 
embodies this dark side of freedom: the freedom to lie, to deceive and to 
betray, to grift and to cheat. The freedom to be mean and cruel, to be vicious 
and malicious. The only thing he is good at is marketing of himself, and 
marketing can be considered in my opinion as the art of lying. Or what else is 
a fast food chain doing that spends millions on ads which convince people how 
good their products are by showing happy and healthy people consuming their 
products.If you think of the classic "Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" story from 
Scottish writer Robert Louis Stevenson then Mr. Trump is perhaps the Mr. Hyde 
of America. Incidentally there is a nice new biography from Robert L. Stevenson 
and his American wife named "A Wilder Shore: The Romantic Odyssey of Fanny and 
Robert Louis Stevenson" by Camille 
Perihttps://lareviewofbooks.org/article/falling-in-love-with-fanny-and-robert-louis-stevenson/-J.
-------- Original message --------From: Pieter Steenekamp 
<[email protected]> Date: 6/19/25  7:26 AM  (GMT+01:00) To: The Friday 
Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]> Subject: [FRIAM] A 
Simple Look at the U.S. Debt and Deficit I want to share a few thoughts about 
the United States. I’m not a supporter of Donald Trump, but I am a big 
supporter of the United States as a country. I admire the ideas of freedom, 
opportunity, and innovation that the U.S. represents. It honestly makes me a 
little sad that Americans don’t seem to elect better leaders. Out of all the 
smart and capable people in that country, surely they can find someone more 
inspiring and responsible. But I suppose that’s how democracy works—people 
choose, and sometimes the results aren’t great.Even with leadership that I 
don’t always agree with, I still think the U.S. is doing well overall. I 
believe the U.S. is still the best hope we have for a country that can lead the 
world in a positive direction. And to me, that leadership matters a 
lot—especially because I wouldn’t want to see a country like China, which 
doesn’t value individual freedom or human rights, becoming the world’s main 
superpower. Europe is important too, but I don't think it's strong enough on 
its own to lead the free world. Maybe India could grow into that role someday, 
but right now, the U.S. is still our best hope.That’s why I get concerned when 
I look at the U.S. government’s spending habits. Right now, they are spending 
much more than they earn in taxes, year after year. Over time, those deficits 
pile up into debt—a very large amount of money that the country owes.You might 
think: “Come on, the U.S. is too powerful to fail.” But that’s not how money 
works. Even big, powerful countries can run into serious problems if they don’t 
manage their finances well. And while I don’t believe the U.S. is in danger of 
a crash tomorrow, it’s clear that the growing debt and constant deficits are 
becoming a real problem.Lynn Alden said it well in her latest newsletter 
(https://www.lynalden.com/june-2025-newsletter/ ):"We’re not at the point where 
the debt or deficits are going to cause a massive train wreck any time soon. 
However, we are well into the era where the deficits do matter and have 
consequences."In other words: No need to panic yet—but we can’t ignore the 
problem either.If the U.S. wants to keep leading the world—and I hope it 
does—it needs to start taking its finances more seriously. The country is not 
“too big to fail.” And if it does stumble, the world could be left without 
strong and fair leadership. That’s a risk none of us should take lightly.
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