Crypto Is the Final Threat to 300 Years of Control

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By cristian
Estimated reading: 5mins

We're suddenly witnessing a sharp rise in tension across the world. But what’s more important than the headlines is what sits beneath them.

At times, it feels less like geopolitics and more like rival mafia families wrestling for control of territory, money flows, and influence. The post-war British system — built on financial dominance, shipping lanes, legal frameworks, and narrative control — is visibly under strain.

The United States, for perhaps the first time since inheriting that system, appears to be breaking free of it rather than enforcing it on behalf of others.

This isn’t about personalities. But figures like Donald Trump symbolize something important: a rejection of financialised extraction in favor of productive development. Whether one likes him or not is beside the point. What matters is that the underlying system he challenges is showing its age.

And, more importantly, its fragility.

The British Model: Control Without Production

The British imperial model was never primarily about production. It was about control.

Control of shipping lanes.
Control of trade routes.
Control of payment rails.
Control of legal systems.

And, critically, control of information.

Even today, the legacy institutions of that system dominate global finance, insurance, arbitration, media, and banking infrastructure. Wealth is not created so much as extracted, recycled through intermediaries, and defended by narrative.

This is why control of media has always been central. If you control the story, you control consent. If you control consent, you can justify almost anything — wars, austerity, surveillance, monetary debasement.

But that control is slipping.

Old Maps, Old Truths

I was recently in Vietnam, in Ho Chi Minh City, staying in a building that displayed colonial-era maps of Indochina. They were French maps — and they were revealing.

What stood out wasn’t the borders, but the routes. Sea lanes. Ports. River systems. Chokepoints. The infrastructure of extraction was mapped with obsessive precision. And what struck me most was how many of those same locations remain flashpoints today.

Nothing has changed — except the language used to justify control.

The struggle has always been about logistics, resources, and flows. And today, information and capital flows have joined shipping lanes as the most valuable terrain.

Narrative Is the Final Battleground

If shipping lanes were the arteries of empire, narrative is the nervous system.

This is why the real cracks in the system are showing up not in trade statistics, but in media control. Social platforms have shattered the monopoly that traditional media once enjoyed. Legacy outlets no longer shape opinion — they react to it.

And the response from governments has been telling.

Police arrests in the UK over social media posts.
Australia banning social media access for under-16s.
Constant calls for “misinformation” regulation that somehow always targets dissent, never power.

These are not public safety measures. They are attempts to reassert narrative dominance.

Ironically, every attempt to clamp down only exposes the desperation behind it — and those exposures happen on the very platforms authorities want to restrict.

Extraction Is Failing. And People Know It.

As a lowly commoner, I feel this desperation clearly. The system no longer convinces — it coerces.

The past few years have accelerated the awakening. The Covid response, sold as science but enforced through fear. The blind rush into a “green agenda” that prioritised virtue signalling over engineering reality. The endless division along racial and identity lines. The constant effort to keep people fighting each other rather than questioning the structure above them.

None of this has made life better. None of it has increased resilience. And people know it.

The extraction model is failing because it produces nothing durable. It consumes trust, stability, and social cohesion — and eventually, there’s nothing left to extract.

Why Crypto Terrifies the Old System

This is where crypto enters the story — not as speculation, but as architecture.

Crypto threatens the old system because it removes gatekeepers.

It allows value to move without permission.
It enables ownership without intermediaries.
It creates financial infrastructure that doesn’t rely on banks, clearing houses, or legacy settlement rails.
It weakens the ability of states and institutions to quietly debase, freeze, censor, or reallocate capital.

Most importantly, it makes self-sovereignty practical, not theoretical.

That is why crypto is attacked relentlessly — not because it’s dangerous, but because it’s uncontrollable.

A system built on extraction cannot survive a technology built on opt-out.

Ukraine, Europe, and the Cost of Prolonging Control

The European Union’s reluctance to meaningfully push for an end to the war in Ukraine fits this pattern. Prolonged conflict preserves dependency — on energy flows, defense contracts, debt issuance, and political alignment.

Peace reduces leverage.

War sustains it.

This is not a moral judgement — it is a structural one. Systems behave according to incentives, not ideals.

A Fragile Hope for the Next Generation

At times, the scale of it all feels overwhelming. But when I step back, I find hope — not in governments, but in systems that reduce reliance on them.

I hope my children and grandchildren inherit a world where productivity matters more than financial engineering. Where sovereignty is personal, not granted. Where prosperity is built, not extracted.

History suggests humans have a talent for drifting back into conflict. EM Burlingame touches on this recurring impulse — the psychological forces that pull societies toward war and destruction. Ancient stories capture it symbolically: Eve tempting Adam, desire overriding reason.

Perhaps this time we can resist.

Perhaps decentralized systems — economic, informational, and social — give us a chance to choose differently.

Not eternal peace. Not utopia.

But maybe — finally — a period of genuine prosperity, autonomy, and calm.

And that alone would be a revolution.

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Disclaimer:Please note that nothing on this website constitutes financial advice. Whilst every effort has been made to ensure that the information provided on this website is accurate, individuals must not rely on this information to make a financial or investment decision. Before making any decision, we strongly recommend you consult a qualified professional who should take into account your specific investment objectives, financial situation and individual needs.

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cristian

Cristian is the CEO and Co-Founder of Liquid Loans. A former partner in an international accounting firm, Cristian brings this wealth of experience to build and provide thought leadership in the blockchain and DeFi space.

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