The video correctly identifies that treating basic survival as a luxury market creates a dangerous lack of national resilience. It is a sharp critique of an ideology that values profit margins over the fundamental stability of its citizens.
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The Most Dangerous Weakness In AmericaAdded:
You know, there is something fundamentally broken about the way the United States treats the basic necessities of life.
Most Americans feel this every day, but I think they don't really know how to put it into words. I'm talking about those things that are critical to survival in the United States.
Because in this country we treat things like that no differently than say a a a Netflix subscription.
it. We treat it no differently when you talk about gas prices, electricity prices, other utility prices, natural gas, food, health insurance, I don't know, prescription drugs, housing.
These are not optional products. These are survival systems.
Yet in the United States, they're often governed with the same philosophy as I said, like Netflix, a streaming service, or maybe designer clothes. Let the market decide.
Let prices float. And if people can't afford it, that's just unfortunate.
That's not resilience.
That's negligence.
Think about what happens every time there's a global disruption. A war breaks out overseas. Refineries go offline. A drought hits agriculture. A hurricane hits the Gulf Coast.
Immediately, Americans are thrown into financial panic.
Gas prices spike.
Utility bills spike. Grocery costs explode.
Insurance premiums double.
Families have to start choosing what bills to pay.
And our government acts like this is some unavoidable force of nature.
But other countries don't operate this way.
A lot of other countries have or treat critical necessities as sort of a strategic national priority.
They have price stabilization systems, you know, state-owned utilities, strong u consumer protections.
They have reserve capacity requirements.
direct intervention mechanisms because they recognize something very basic.
If a population cannot reliably afford those essentials needed for survival, the entire country can become unstable.
Yeah.
that this isn't anything that should even be considered to be controversial.
But in America, we've developed this almost, I don't know, sort of ideological refusal to distinguish between necessities and luxuries.
We regulate a lot of these things about like we regulate Netflix.
We should regulate, you know, insulin, electricity, heating cost more because people absolutely can suffer or die when those become unaffordable.
But somehow we've sort of flipped the script, for lack of a better term, and we're all seeing the consequences. And you know what I'm talking about.
Take gas prices.
I mean, you know, the modern America economy is completely dependent on affordable fuel. We built this country where we basically force the vast majority of it to drive long distances.
So the United States depends on affordable fuel because of that and not just for driving to work but for you know the distribution of food, farming, uh emergency services, construction, manufacturing, freight supply chains. Fuel prices are critical to our economy.
They affect everything in the economy.
And yet we have almost no consumer protections against all of this price volatility.
When oil markets spike, as they often do, as they often do, Americans are just simply expected to absorb the hit.
Take a family making 50 grand a year and suddenly you got another three or $400 a month payment with the increase in your fuel cost.
and then however much more the groceries go up.
And no, that's not a word that no one's hardly ever used. That's a word we use every day.
This system we have is not a resilient system. It's exposed, I think, is a good term. And the same thing applies to electricity. United States has some of the most advanced technology and wealth in human history.
Yet, millions of people in this country live in fear of opening their electric bill, especially during extreme weather months.
In some states, a heat wave or a cold snap can literally be financially devastating to a working family. It electricity is not some luxury anymore.
It's not 1940.
You cannot function in modern society without power, refrigeration, heating, cooling.
internet access, uh, medical devices, communications.
You can't even apply for a job anymore.
You can't get an education anymore.
Modern life depends on electricity. It is a necessity for survival.
Yet prices in many areas still operate under systems where consumers shoulder massive amounts of volatility and infrastructure failure while companies maintain guaranteed profits.
Another example of survival treated like a discretionary service.
And healthc care is probably easily the clearest example of all when it comes to these things. The United States spends more money per person on health care than any country on the planet.
Yet millions of us don't have insurance. Even ones that do are literally terrified of getting sick.
People stay at jobs they hate because they're afraid to lose insurance.
Families are rationing medication.
Medical debt destroys credit scores and bankrupts people all across this country every year.
And somehow like we think that's normal.
Somehow that's normal.
Imagine explaining to someone from another time or another era that the richest country in the world, people that live in the richest country in the world, if they get cancer, it's likely to financially ruin the entire family, even with insurance.
That's not just a policy issue.
That is a structural failure and a moral failure at that food prices. Americans constantly told that rising food prices are just what do they say? Market the market or market dynamics.
Food is not discretionary consumption.
I'm talking about the basics, right? Of course, some food is, but I'm talking about survival here.
A nation that cannot maintain access to somewhat affordable food, especially during a crisis, if a nation can't do that, then that nation is very vulnerable by definition.
And what's really incredible about that is that I think, you know, policy makers and politicians, people in Washington DC, they often talk about national security.
They they talk about it endlessly while ignoring systems that are failing Americans every day.
Systems that they depend on to survive.
Aircraft carriers matter more.
Energy security matters more. Military strength matters more. National stability also depends on whether families can afford to eat, can afford to buy gas to get to work, can afford their medicine, can afford to turn their lights on.
Because economic insecurity becomes, I hate to say it, political instability.
When people feel permanently exposed to a lot of risk, when every single problem or crisis threatens their basic ability to pay for just the things they need, any trust that might be left in institutions just completely collapses.
People stop believing that the system works for them in any way. And can you blame them?
Can you blame them?
The average American family has almost no insulation from any type of disruption. a few months of high inflation or a health emergency or, you know, even a six-month spike in fuel cost can erase years of financial progress.
When that is the situation, you have an incredibly fragile society and fragility becomes dangerous in a world that is entering an era of constant shock, constant war, constant energy disruptions, uh cyber attacks, extreme weather, geopolitical instability.
Almost forgot that one.
But no, this idea that purely free market pricing alone can protect these critical survival systems during this period of time in our history is unbelievably unrealistic.
That doesn't mean that government should control every aspect of the economy.
That's not what I'm saying. It doesn't mean that, you know, innovation and competition are bad.
That's not what I'm saying. But a functioning government should recognize the difference between luxury or discretionary consumption and critical infrastructure for human survival.
And there should be an entirely different philosophy governing those necessities.
That's what I'm saying.
How do we prevent catastrophic utility prices? You know, how do we ensure people have access to food and fuel? How do we reduce people being vulnerable to bankruptcy due to medical bills?
How do we keep ordinary people from being crushed every time anything happens? Because right now the answer is ah the markets will sort it out.
The markets will figure it out.
Yeah. Let's let's leave that to the corporations who are tied to all of those services and and are always demanding record profits. That perception is, I don't know, corrosive, nuts.
Look, failure to protect things that are critical to survival or essentials eventually becomes a democracy problem. A strong country is not just one with a strong military or a GDP that hits a certain number. A strong country is one where ordinary people can survive uh through periods of instability without financial collapse.
That is the baseline definition of national resilience.
And the United States falls very short when it comes to that ideal because we built this system where we built a system where some of the most important parts of human survival are treated as I said no differently than a Netflix subscription.
And that I believe is one of the greatest strategic mistakes that this country has ever made.
Folks, if you haven't had a chance, uh, check out the American Power podcast.
New episode drops today.
New episode drops today. You find it on Apple, Spotify, anywhere you can download your podcast. Otherwise, let me know your thoughts in the comments section. Please like, follow, share, and share. Please support my channel. Well, I appreciate you guys so much.
You guys have a great week.
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