Tag Archives: Weimar Germany

Pecunia Radix Malorum Est: Debt, Collapse, and Scapegoats from Weimar to the Age of AI

This essay traces the fragile roots of the Western debt crisis from the collapse of the Gold Standard to today’s unrestrained borrowing. It recalls how Weimar Germany’s monetary collapse bred scapegoats and extremism, and warns that similar patterns echo in modern populism. The choice ahead is stark: repeat history’s destructive reset through conflict, or seek renewal — perhaps with AI — under human moral oversight.