
Why I Wrote And Just Released This Book – ‘The New Economics of Technocracy: You Will Own Nothing’

Key Takeaways
- •Tokenized assets replace traditional property ownership.
- •Stablecoins enable programmable money with revocable access.
- •Trump family’s World Liberty Financial profits from US Treasury‑backed stablecoin.
- •Board of Peace plans tokenized currency for post‑war Gaza.
- •BlackRock backs blockchain tokenization, reshaping global finance.
Pulse Analysis
The rise of programmable money and asset tokenization is redefining the very concept of ownership. S. Treasury securities, allow every transaction to be recorded on a blockchain and governed by code, turning cash into a set of conditional permissions. At the same time, real‑world assets—from office buildings to land parcels—are being sliced into digital fractions that trade on platforms owned by third‑party custodians.
Unlike a traditional deed, these asset tokens exist only as numbers on a ledger, meaning the holder’s rights can be altered or revoked without any court involvement. The speed of this transformation accelerated after the 2025 passage of the GENIUS Act, which gave the Trump‑family‑controlled World Liberty Financial a federal framework to issue the USD1 stablecoin. Within eighteen months the firm built a $13 billion ecosystem and secured a 75 percent share of token‑sale revenue, while a secret 49 percent stake was sold to the UAE’s National Security Advisor. In early 2026 the newly formed Board of Peace announced plans to deploy the same token as the monetary backbone for a reconstructed Gaza, effectively testing a sovereign‑scale, programmable economy under the auspices of a private consortium.
Major financial players are now embedding this infrastructure into mainstream markets. BlackRock’s BUIDL fund, the world’s largest tokenized Treasury vehicle, and Deloitte’s projection of $4 trillion in tokenized real estate by 2035 illustrate how institutional capital is shifting from brick‑and‑mortar ownership to liquid digital claims. This convergence raises profound regulatory and societal questions: who writes the smart‑contract rules, how can consumers protect themselves from revocable access, and what safeguards are needed to prevent a technocratic monopoly over wealth. Stakeholders—from policymakers to investors—must scrutinize the emerging legal framework before programmable tokens become the default medium of economic exchange.
Why I Wrote And Just Released This Book – ‘The New Economics of Technocracy: You Will Own Nothing’
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