The Dangerous Breeding Ground of Societal Instability History shows that a society's stability hinges on its young men. When a demographic of young males lacks economic or romantic pathways, instability follows. This pattern drove the collapse of Weimar Germany and continues to fuel volatility across modern crisis zones. The most volatile element in any society is a young man who is lonely, broke, and stripped of purpose. The Great Generational Wealth Transfer Scott Galloway warns that current economic structures act as a giant vacuum, pulling capital away from the young to secure the old. This "vampire generation" has engineered a system of unprecedented asset appreciation paired with historically low tax burdens for themselves. Government spending reflects this imbalance. Today, 40% of all federal outlays benefit citizens over the age of 65, a figure projected to hit 50% within a decade. Tax Codes Built for the Installed Class Our current tax architecture protects existing assets while heavily taxing active labor. Consider the Social Security payroll tax. It caps out at $160,000, meaning a mid-level employee pays the exact same flat amount as a multi-millionaire executive. Meanwhile, the code heavily subsidizes mortgage interest and capital gains. These policies disproportionately reward older asset holders while forcing young, rent-paying earners to bear the brunt of funding the state. The Crisis of Male Economic Viability This fiscal squeeze directly damages the male psyche. Society continues to evaluate men primarily on their economic viability and provider status. Stripping young men of their financial on-ramps to the middle class creates a destructive spiral. When economic viability vanishes, romantic opportunities evaporate. This double rejection breeds deep anxiety, depression, and social alienation, turning a generation into a ticking demographic time bomb.
Weimar Germany
Locations
Jun 2026 • 1 videos
High activity month for Weimar Germany. The Prof G Pod – Scott Galloway among the most active voices, with 1 videos across 1 sources.
Jun 2026
- Jun 28, 2026