"The Society that separates its Scholars from its Warriors, will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools." Thucydides

PURPOSE: Become the Scholar Warrior for your Goals

Improve Every Single Day!

Improve Yourself 1% a Day = 3600%+ in a Year

Thought-Technique-Strategy of the Week:

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Create Your Powerful Identity

Let's say you wish to excel in the art of painting. Or open your own woodworking business. Or become a Filmmaker which I did many years ago. The key is to utilize a Powerful Identity in reframing your Focus. Let's stick with painter for the moment.

Use the words: "I am a painter." The powerful use of the "I am..." phrase welds this new outlook to you mentally, intellectually but, more importantly, emotionally. Why emotionally? When you talk about painting (or any very exciting goal), then you can feel the electrical excitement within your body and Being.

"Being" is the act of existing within this newly embraced identity. Then you grow and become.

READ THE MAIN ARTICLE HERE

7 Actions To Change Your Life

Percentages & the Future

What is the 5/25/70% imbalance and its meaning for America?

April 25, 20263 min read

In today’s context (mid-2020s), these 5/25/70% percentages explains tensions around BRICS, Saudi oil deals in non-dollars, China’s yuan internationalization, and U.S. efforts to defend dollar supremacy.

Whether the U.S. can keep the ~5/25/70 imbalance going determines if the “empire” phase extends or ends — exactly as the statement warns. It’s a concise way of saying: reserve-currency status isn’t just economics; it’s the hidden glue of geopolitical power. Lose it, and the fall accelerates. Questions abound about about the petrodollar system, Iraqi oil trading, and how empires enforce dollar dominance (e.g., historical cases like Saddam Hussein switching to euros). World currency control acts as a subtle but powerful mechanism that sustains (or dooms) empires.

The ~5/25/70 thresholds are the core reason most empires eventually decline — failing to maintain them is “only a matter of time.”

What Are the ~5/25/70 Thresholds?

This is shorthand for a classic geopolitical-economic observation about currency hegemony (when one nation’s currency becomes the world’s dominant reserve, trade, and financial currency). It highlights the extreme disproportion that gives the issuing empire outsized power:

~5%: The empire’s share of world population (the U.S. is currently ~4.2–5%).
~25%: The empire’s share of world GDP (or economic output/resources; the U.S. has hovered around 25–26% nominal GDP for decades).
~70% (or higher historically): The dominant currency’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves, trade invoicing, or cross-border financial flows (USD reserves peaked near 70%+ in the early 2000s and were even higher in some metrics like FX transactions).


A tiny slice of humanity, with only about a quarter of global economic output, somehow controls the vast majority of the world’s money. This is not natural market outcome alone — it’s sustained by geopolitics, military power, alliances, and network effects (everyone uses it because everyone else uses it).

How This Relates to Geopolitics and Currency DominationCurrency domination (today, the U.S. dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”) is a force multiplier for empire: Financing power without immediate pain: The issuing country can run large deficits, print money that foreigners happily hold, and borrow cheaply. This funds massive military spending and global projection of power.


Sanctions as a weapon: Control the currency = control access to the global financial system (SWIFT, dollar clearing, etc.). The U.S. has weaponized this against Russia, Iran, etc., without firing a shot. Petrodollar and commodity links: Much of the world’s oil, commodities, and trade are priced/invoiced in dollars. This creates constant demand for USD (recycling “petrodollars” back into U.S. Treasuries). Self-reinforcing cycle: High GDP share + military alliances + currency dominance create a feedback loop. Challengers (e.g., China’s yuan push, BRICS de-dollarization efforts) threaten to break it.


Historical parallels are clear: The British pound lost dominance as the UK’s GDP share shrank post-WWII; the Dutch guilder before that. Empires that lose currency hegemony see their “free lunch” end — deficits become painful, military overstretch unsustainable, and influence erodes.Why This Is “Arguably the Main Reason” Empires “Mostly” FallThe commenter argues this is the real structural vulnerability, more than just military defeat or internal decay:As long as the thresholds hold (tiny population + solid GDP share + overwhelming currency control), the empire can punch far above its weight.


When they slip — relative GDP decline (rise of China/others), de-dollarization (even gradual), or loss of trust in the currency — the whole system unravels. Military power depends on economic/financial power. Lose the currency “control mechanism” and the ability to fund the empire cheaply collapses.
It’s “only a matter of time” because history shows no empire maintains these thresholds forever. Economic gravity (rising challengers, overextension, domestic mismanagement) eventually erodes them.

monetary policyeconomicspercentages
blog author image

Michael Mandaville

Michael is a writer, filmmaker and dedicated World War II historian who studies martial arts, action films and is learning more about VFX every single darn day. Oh and a Scholar Warrior

Back to Blog
Percentages & the Future

What is the 5/25/70% imbalance and its meaning for America?

April 25, 20263 min read

In today’s context (mid-2020s), these 5/25/70% percentages explains tensions around BRICS, Saudi oil deals in non-dollars, China’s yuan internationalization, and U.S. efforts to defend dollar supremacy.

Whether the U.S. can keep the ~5/25/70 imbalance going determines if the “empire” phase extends or ends — exactly as the statement warns. It’s a concise way of saying: reserve-currency status isn’t just economics; it’s the hidden glue of geopolitical power. Lose it, and the fall accelerates. Questions abound about about the petrodollar system, Iraqi oil trading, and how empires enforce dollar dominance (e.g., historical cases like Saddam Hussein switching to euros). World currency control acts as a subtle but powerful mechanism that sustains (or dooms) empires.

The ~5/25/70 thresholds are the core reason most empires eventually decline — failing to maintain them is “only a matter of time.”

What Are the ~5/25/70 Thresholds?

This is shorthand for a classic geopolitical-economic observation about currency hegemony (when one nation’s currency becomes the world’s dominant reserve, trade, and financial currency). It highlights the extreme disproportion that gives the issuing empire outsized power:

~5%: The empire’s share of world population (the U.S. is currently ~4.2–5%).
~25%: The empire’s share of world GDP (or economic output/resources; the U.S. has hovered around 25–26% nominal GDP for decades).
~70% (or higher historically): The dominant currency’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves, trade invoicing, or cross-border financial flows (USD reserves peaked near 70%+ in the early 2000s and were even higher in some metrics like FX transactions).


A tiny slice of humanity, with only about a quarter of global economic output, somehow controls the vast majority of the world’s money. This is not natural market outcome alone — it’s sustained by geopolitics, military power, alliances, and network effects (everyone uses it because everyone else uses it).

How This Relates to Geopolitics and Currency DominationCurrency domination (today, the U.S. dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”) is a force multiplier for empire: Financing power without immediate pain: The issuing country can run large deficits, print money that foreigners happily hold, and borrow cheaply. This funds massive military spending and global projection of power.


Sanctions as a weapon: Control the currency = control access to the global financial system (SWIFT, dollar clearing, etc.). The U.S. has weaponized this against Russia, Iran, etc., without firing a shot. Petrodollar and commodity links: Much of the world’s oil, commodities, and trade are priced/invoiced in dollars. This creates constant demand for USD (recycling “petrodollars” back into U.S. Treasuries). Self-reinforcing cycle: High GDP share + military alliances + currency dominance create a feedback loop. Challengers (e.g., China’s yuan push, BRICS de-dollarization efforts) threaten to break it.


Historical parallels are clear: The British pound lost dominance as the UK’s GDP share shrank post-WWII; the Dutch guilder before that. Empires that lose currency hegemony see their “free lunch” end — deficits become painful, military overstretch unsustainable, and influence erodes.Why This Is “Arguably the Main Reason” Empires “Mostly” FallThe commenter argues this is the real structural vulnerability, more than just military defeat or internal decay:As long as the thresholds hold (tiny population + solid GDP share + overwhelming currency control), the empire can punch far above its weight.


When they slip — relative GDP decline (rise of China/others), de-dollarization (even gradual), or loss of trust in the currency — the whole system unravels. Military power depends on economic/financial power. Lose the currency “control mechanism” and the ability to fund the empire cheaply collapses.
It’s “only a matter of time” because history shows no empire maintains these thresholds forever. Economic gravity (rising challengers, overextension, domestic mismanagement) eventually erodes them.

monetary policyeconomicspercentages
blog author image

Michael Mandaville

Michael is a writer, filmmaker and dedicated World War II historian who studies martial arts, action films and is learning more about VFX every single darn day. Oh and a Scholar Warrior

Back to Blog
Percentages & the Future

What is the 5/25/70% imbalance and its meaning for America?

April 25, 20263 min read

In today’s context (mid-2020s), these 5/25/70% percentages explains tensions around BRICS, Saudi oil deals in non-dollars, China’s yuan internationalization, and U.S. efforts to defend dollar supremacy.

Whether the U.S. can keep the ~5/25/70 imbalance going determines if the “empire” phase extends or ends — exactly as the statement warns. It’s a concise way of saying: reserve-currency status isn’t just economics; it’s the hidden glue of geopolitical power. Lose it, and the fall accelerates. Questions abound about about the petrodollar system, Iraqi oil trading, and how empires enforce dollar dominance (e.g., historical cases like Saddam Hussein switching to euros). World currency control acts as a subtle but powerful mechanism that sustains (or dooms) empires.

The ~5/25/70 thresholds are the core reason most empires eventually decline — failing to maintain them is “only a matter of time.”

What Are the ~5/25/70 Thresholds?

This is shorthand for a classic geopolitical-economic observation about currency hegemony (when one nation’s currency becomes the world’s dominant reserve, trade, and financial currency). It highlights the extreme disproportion that gives the issuing empire outsized power:

~5%: The empire’s share of world population (the U.S. is currently ~4.2–5%).
~25%: The empire’s share of world GDP (or economic output/resources; the U.S. has hovered around 25–26% nominal GDP for decades).
~70% (or higher historically): The dominant currency’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves, trade invoicing, or cross-border financial flows (USD reserves peaked near 70%+ in the early 2000s and were even higher in some metrics like FX transactions).


A tiny slice of humanity, with only about a quarter of global economic output, somehow controls the vast majority of the world’s money. This is not natural market outcome alone — it’s sustained by geopolitics, military power, alliances, and network effects (everyone uses it because everyone else uses it).

How This Relates to Geopolitics and Currency DominationCurrency domination (today, the U.S. dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”) is a force multiplier for empire: Financing power without immediate pain: The issuing country can run large deficits, print money that foreigners happily hold, and borrow cheaply. This funds massive military spending and global projection of power.


Sanctions as a weapon: Control the currency = control access to the global financial system (SWIFT, dollar clearing, etc.). The U.S. has weaponized this against Russia, Iran, etc., without firing a shot. Petrodollar and commodity links: Much of the world’s oil, commodities, and trade are priced/invoiced in dollars. This creates constant demand for USD (recycling “petrodollars” back into U.S. Treasuries). Self-reinforcing cycle: High GDP share + military alliances + currency dominance create a feedback loop. Challengers (e.g., China’s yuan push, BRICS de-dollarization efforts) threaten to break it.


Historical parallels are clear: The British pound lost dominance as the UK’s GDP share shrank post-WWII; the Dutch guilder before that. Empires that lose currency hegemony see their “free lunch” end — deficits become painful, military overstretch unsustainable, and influence erodes.Why This Is “Arguably the Main Reason” Empires “Mostly” FallThe commenter argues this is the real structural vulnerability, more than just military defeat or internal decay:As long as the thresholds hold (tiny population + solid GDP share + overwhelming currency control), the empire can punch far above its weight.


When they slip — relative GDP decline (rise of China/others), de-dollarization (even gradual), or loss of trust in the currency — the whole system unravels. Military power depends on economic/financial power. Lose the currency “control mechanism” and the ability to fund the empire cheaply collapses.
It’s “only a matter of time” because history shows no empire maintains these thresholds forever. Economic gravity (rising challengers, overextension, domestic mismanagement) eventually erodes them.

monetary policyeconomicspercentages
blog author image

Michael Mandaville

Michael is a writer, filmmaker and dedicated World War II historian who studies martial arts, action films and is learning more about VFX every single darn day. Oh and a Scholar Warrior

Back to Blog
Percentages & the Future

What is the 5/25/70% imbalance and its meaning for America?

April 25, 20263 min read

In today’s context (mid-2020s), these 5/25/70% percentages explains tensions around BRICS, Saudi oil deals in non-dollars, China’s yuan internationalization, and U.S. efforts to defend dollar supremacy.

Whether the U.S. can keep the ~5/25/70 imbalance going determines if the “empire” phase extends or ends — exactly as the statement warns. It’s a concise way of saying: reserve-currency status isn’t just economics; it’s the hidden glue of geopolitical power. Lose it, and the fall accelerates. Questions abound about about the petrodollar system, Iraqi oil trading, and how empires enforce dollar dominance (e.g., historical cases like Saddam Hussein switching to euros). World currency control acts as a subtle but powerful mechanism that sustains (or dooms) empires.

The ~5/25/70 thresholds are the core reason most empires eventually decline — failing to maintain them is “only a matter of time.”

What Are the ~5/25/70 Thresholds?

This is shorthand for a classic geopolitical-economic observation about currency hegemony (when one nation’s currency becomes the world’s dominant reserve, trade, and financial currency). It highlights the extreme disproportion that gives the issuing empire outsized power:

~5%: The empire’s share of world population (the U.S. is currently ~4.2–5%).
~25%: The empire’s share of world GDP (or economic output/resources; the U.S. has hovered around 25–26% nominal GDP for decades).
~70% (or higher historically): The dominant currency’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves, trade invoicing, or cross-border financial flows (USD reserves peaked near 70%+ in the early 2000s and were even higher in some metrics like FX transactions).


A tiny slice of humanity, with only about a quarter of global economic output, somehow controls the vast majority of the world’s money. This is not natural market outcome alone — it’s sustained by geopolitics, military power, alliances, and network effects (everyone uses it because everyone else uses it).

How This Relates to Geopolitics and Currency DominationCurrency domination (today, the U.S. dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”) is a force multiplier for empire: Financing power without immediate pain: The issuing country can run large deficits, print money that foreigners happily hold, and borrow cheaply. This funds massive military spending and global projection of power.


Sanctions as a weapon: Control the currency = control access to the global financial system (SWIFT, dollar clearing, etc.). The U.S. has weaponized this against Russia, Iran, etc., without firing a shot. Petrodollar and commodity links: Much of the world’s oil, commodities, and trade are priced/invoiced in dollars. This creates constant demand for USD (recycling “petrodollars” back into U.S. Treasuries). Self-reinforcing cycle: High GDP share + military alliances + currency dominance create a feedback loop. Challengers (e.g., China’s yuan push, BRICS de-dollarization efforts) threaten to break it.


Historical parallels are clear: The British pound lost dominance as the UK’s GDP share shrank post-WWII; the Dutch guilder before that. Empires that lose currency hegemony see their “free lunch” end — deficits become painful, military overstretch unsustainable, and influence erodes.Why This Is “Arguably the Main Reason” Empires “Mostly” FallThe commenter argues this is the real structural vulnerability, more than just military defeat or internal decay:As long as the thresholds hold (tiny population + solid GDP share + overwhelming currency control), the empire can punch far above its weight.


When they slip — relative GDP decline (rise of China/others), de-dollarization (even gradual), or loss of trust in the currency — the whole system unravels. Military power depends on economic/financial power. Lose the currency “control mechanism” and the ability to fund the empire cheaply collapses.
It’s “only a matter of time” because history shows no empire maintains these thresholds forever. Economic gravity (rising challengers, overextension, domestic mismanagement) eventually erodes them.

monetary policyeconomicspercentages
blog author image

Michael Mandaville

Michael is a writer, filmmaker and dedicated World War II historian who studies martial arts, action films and is learning more about VFX every single darn day. Oh and a Scholar Warrior

Back to Blog
Percentages & the Future

What is the 5/25/70% imbalance and its meaning for America?

April 25, 20263 min read

In today’s context (mid-2020s), these 5/25/70% percentages explains tensions around BRICS, Saudi oil deals in non-dollars, China’s yuan internationalization, and U.S. efforts to defend dollar supremacy.

Whether the U.S. can keep the ~5/25/70 imbalance going determines if the “empire” phase extends or ends — exactly as the statement warns. It’s a concise way of saying: reserve-currency status isn’t just economics; it’s the hidden glue of geopolitical power. Lose it, and the fall accelerates. Questions abound about about the petrodollar system, Iraqi oil trading, and how empires enforce dollar dominance (e.g., historical cases like Saddam Hussein switching to euros). World currency control acts as a subtle but powerful mechanism that sustains (or dooms) empires.

The ~5/25/70 thresholds are the core reason most empires eventually decline — failing to maintain them is “only a matter of time.”

What Are the ~5/25/70 Thresholds?

This is shorthand for a classic geopolitical-economic observation about currency hegemony (when one nation’s currency becomes the world’s dominant reserve, trade, and financial currency). It highlights the extreme disproportion that gives the issuing empire outsized power:

~5%: The empire’s share of world population (the U.S. is currently ~4.2–5%).
~25%: The empire’s share of world GDP (or economic output/resources; the U.S. has hovered around 25–26% nominal GDP for decades).
~70% (or higher historically): The dominant currency’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves, trade invoicing, or cross-border financial flows (USD reserves peaked near 70%+ in the early 2000s and were even higher in some metrics like FX transactions).


A tiny slice of humanity, with only about a quarter of global economic output, somehow controls the vast majority of the world’s money. This is not natural market outcome alone — it’s sustained by geopolitics, military power, alliances, and network effects (everyone uses it because everyone else uses it).

How This Relates to Geopolitics and Currency DominationCurrency domination (today, the U.S. dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”) is a force multiplier for empire: Financing power without immediate pain: The issuing country can run large deficits, print money that foreigners happily hold, and borrow cheaply. This funds massive military spending and global projection of power.


Sanctions as a weapon: Control the currency = control access to the global financial system (SWIFT, dollar clearing, etc.). The U.S. has weaponized this against Russia, Iran, etc., without firing a shot. Petrodollar and commodity links: Much of the world’s oil, commodities, and trade are priced/invoiced in dollars. This creates constant demand for USD (recycling “petrodollars” back into U.S. Treasuries). Self-reinforcing cycle: High GDP share + military alliances + currency dominance create a feedback loop. Challengers (e.g., China’s yuan push, BRICS de-dollarization efforts) threaten to break it.


Historical parallels are clear: The British pound lost dominance as the UK’s GDP share shrank post-WWII; the Dutch guilder before that. Empires that lose currency hegemony see their “free lunch” end — deficits become painful, military overstretch unsustainable, and influence erodes.Why This Is “Arguably the Main Reason” Empires “Mostly” FallThe commenter argues this is the real structural vulnerability, more than just military defeat or internal decay:As long as the thresholds hold (tiny population + solid GDP share + overwhelming currency control), the empire can punch far above its weight.


When they slip — relative GDP decline (rise of China/others), de-dollarization (even gradual), or loss of trust in the currency — the whole system unravels. Military power depends on economic/financial power. Lose the currency “control mechanism” and the ability to fund the empire cheaply collapses.
It’s “only a matter of time” because history shows no empire maintains these thresholds forever. Economic gravity (rising challengers, overextension, domestic mismanagement) eventually erodes them.

monetary policyeconomicspercentages
blog author image

Michael Mandaville

Michael is a writer, filmmaker and dedicated World War II historian who studies martial arts, action films and is learning more about VFX every single darn day. Oh and a Scholar Warrior

Back to Blog
Percentages & the Future

What is the 5/25/70% imbalance and its meaning for America?

April 25, 20263 min read

In today’s context (mid-2020s), these 5/25/70% percentages explains tensions around BRICS, Saudi oil deals in non-dollars, China’s yuan internationalization, and U.S. efforts to defend dollar supremacy.

Whether the U.S. can keep the ~5/25/70 imbalance going determines if the “empire” phase extends or ends — exactly as the statement warns. It’s a concise way of saying: reserve-currency status isn’t just economics; it’s the hidden glue of geopolitical power. Lose it, and the fall accelerates. Questions abound about about the petrodollar system, Iraqi oil trading, and how empires enforce dollar dominance (e.g., historical cases like Saddam Hussein switching to euros). World currency control acts as a subtle but powerful mechanism that sustains (or dooms) empires.

The ~5/25/70 thresholds are the core reason most empires eventually decline — failing to maintain them is “only a matter of time.”

What Are the ~5/25/70 Thresholds?

This is shorthand for a classic geopolitical-economic observation about currency hegemony (when one nation’s currency becomes the world’s dominant reserve, trade, and financial currency). It highlights the extreme disproportion that gives the issuing empire outsized power:

~5%: The empire’s share of world population (the U.S. is currently ~4.2–5%).
~25%: The empire’s share of world GDP (or economic output/resources; the U.S. has hovered around 25–26% nominal GDP for decades).
~70% (or higher historically): The dominant currency’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves, trade invoicing, or cross-border financial flows (USD reserves peaked near 70%+ in the early 2000s and were even higher in some metrics like FX transactions).


A tiny slice of humanity, with only about a quarter of global economic output, somehow controls the vast majority of the world’s money. This is not natural market outcome alone — it’s sustained by geopolitics, military power, alliances, and network effects (everyone uses it because everyone else uses it).

How This Relates to Geopolitics and Currency DominationCurrency domination (today, the U.S. dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”) is a force multiplier for empire: Financing power without immediate pain: The issuing country can run large deficits, print money that foreigners happily hold, and borrow cheaply. This funds massive military spending and global projection of power.


Sanctions as a weapon: Control the currency = control access to the global financial system (SWIFT, dollar clearing, etc.). The U.S. has weaponized this against Russia, Iran, etc., without firing a shot. Petrodollar and commodity links: Much of the world’s oil, commodities, and trade are priced/invoiced in dollars. This creates constant demand for USD (recycling “petrodollars” back into U.S. Treasuries). Self-reinforcing cycle: High GDP share + military alliances + currency dominance create a feedback loop. Challengers (e.g., China’s yuan push, BRICS de-dollarization efforts) threaten to break it.


Historical parallels are clear: The British pound lost dominance as the UK’s GDP share shrank post-WWII; the Dutch guilder before that. Empires that lose currency hegemony see their “free lunch” end — deficits become painful, military overstretch unsustainable, and influence erodes.Why This Is “Arguably the Main Reason” Empires “Mostly” FallThe commenter argues this is the real structural vulnerability, more than just military defeat or internal decay:As long as the thresholds hold (tiny population + solid GDP share + overwhelming currency control), the empire can punch far above its weight.


When they slip — relative GDP decline (rise of China/others), de-dollarization (even gradual), or loss of trust in the currency — the whole system unravels. Military power depends on economic/financial power. Lose the currency “control mechanism” and the ability to fund the empire cheaply collapses.
It’s “only a matter of time” because history shows no empire maintains these thresholds forever. Economic gravity (rising challengers, overextension, domestic mismanagement) eventually erodes them.

monetary policyeconomicspercentages
blog author image

Michael Mandaville

Michael is a writer, filmmaker and dedicated World War II historian who studies martial arts, action films and is learning more about VFX every single darn day. Oh and a Scholar Warrior

Back to Blog
Percentages & the Future

What is the 5/25/70% imbalance and its meaning for America?

April 25, 20263 min read

In today’s context (mid-2020s), these 5/25/70% percentages explains tensions around BRICS, Saudi oil deals in non-dollars, China’s yuan internationalization, and U.S. efforts to defend dollar supremacy.

Whether the U.S. can keep the ~5/25/70 imbalance going determines if the “empire” phase extends or ends — exactly as the statement warns. It’s a concise way of saying: reserve-currency status isn’t just economics; it’s the hidden glue of geopolitical power. Lose it, and the fall accelerates. Questions abound about about the petrodollar system, Iraqi oil trading, and how empires enforce dollar dominance (e.g., historical cases like Saddam Hussein switching to euros). World currency control acts as a subtle but powerful mechanism that sustains (or dooms) empires.

The ~5/25/70 thresholds are the core reason most empires eventually decline — failing to maintain them is “only a matter of time.”

What Are the ~5/25/70 Thresholds?

This is shorthand for a classic geopolitical-economic observation about currency hegemony (when one nation’s currency becomes the world’s dominant reserve, trade, and financial currency). It highlights the extreme disproportion that gives the issuing empire outsized power:

~5%: The empire’s share of world population (the U.S. is currently ~4.2–5%).
~25%: The empire’s share of world GDP (or economic output/resources; the U.S. has hovered around 25–26% nominal GDP for decades).
~70% (or higher historically): The dominant currency’s share of global foreign-exchange reserves, trade invoicing, or cross-border financial flows (USD reserves peaked near 70%+ in the early 2000s and were even higher in some metrics like FX transactions).


A tiny slice of humanity, with only about a quarter of global economic output, somehow controls the vast majority of the world’s money. This is not natural market outcome alone — it’s sustained by geopolitics, military power, alliances, and network effects (everyone uses it because everyone else uses it).

How This Relates to Geopolitics and Currency DominationCurrency domination (today, the U.S. dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”) is a force multiplier for empire: Financing power without immediate pain: The issuing country can run large deficits, print money that foreigners happily hold, and borrow cheaply. This funds massive military spending and global projection of power.


Sanctions as a weapon: Control the currency = control access to the global financial system (SWIFT, dollar clearing, etc.). The U.S. has weaponized this against Russia, Iran, etc., without firing a shot. Petrodollar and commodity links: Much of the world’s oil, commodities, and trade are priced/invoiced in dollars. This creates constant demand for USD (recycling “petrodollars” back into U.S. Treasuries). Self-reinforcing cycle: High GDP share + military alliances + currency dominance create a feedback loop. Challengers (e.g., China’s yuan push, BRICS de-dollarization efforts) threaten to break it.


Historical parallels are clear: The British pound lost dominance as the UK’s GDP share shrank post-WWII; the Dutch guilder before that. Empires that lose currency hegemony see their “free lunch” end — deficits become painful, military overstretch unsustainable, and influence erodes.Why This Is “Arguably the Main Reason” Empires “Mostly” FallThe commenter argues this is the real structural vulnerability, more than just military defeat or internal decay:As long as the thresholds hold (tiny population + solid GDP share + overwhelming currency control), the empire can punch far above its weight.


When they slip — relative GDP decline (rise of China/others), de-dollarization (even gradual), or loss of trust in the currency — the whole system unravels. Military power depends on economic/financial power. Lose the currency “control mechanism” and the ability to fund the empire cheaply collapses.
It’s “only a matter of time” because history shows no empire maintains these thresholds forever. Economic gravity (rising challengers, overextension, domestic mismanagement) eventually erodes them.

monetary policyeconomicspercentages
blog author image

Michael Mandaville

Michael is a writer, filmmaker and dedicated World War II historian who studies martial arts, action films and is learning more about VFX every single darn day. Oh and a Scholar Warrior

Back to Blog

SCHOLAR WARRIOR WAY - COURSE

Scholar Warrior Way

Take Action to Transform Yourself

By taking the Scholar Warrior Way Course, you will get Michael's program for Self-Improvement in his pursuit of Creative Excellence in Writing, Filmmaking, Martial arts and his other pursuits from his major curious outlook. Here are the 7 Steps that he uses....

  • Powerful Why - the Key to Enthusiasm and Fulfillment

  • Scholar Warrior Identity - Embracing the new Mentality - now!

  • Your Morning Routine - Starting the day Right.

  • Brainstorming Your How - Strategy thinking and tactics

  • Create Your Own Systems - Become efficient with predictable results

  • Building Transforming Habits - Habit creates Destiny

  • The Art of Sleep - Long ignored but a necessary health break.

FAQS

What is The Purpose of the "ScholarWarriorWay" ?

By engaging in the mental perspective of the Scholar Warrior, you embrace two aspects of your life: The Scholar with a constant focus on self-development and self-improvement. The Warrior whereby you learn techniques about courage, action and derring-do to achieve your true authentic goals for a fulfilled life.

How much does Scholar Warrior Way cost?

The cost of could be absolutely no money if you just want to get on our newsletter to read the various articles on the website. If you want to take the courses on various levels, then you might spend $200-300 per year. Think of it this way: If you could improve yourself 100-200-300-1000-3600% in a single year, then how much is it worth? The price of two meals and drinks at a restaurant that you'll never remember? Make a better life choice.

How do I know I work with the ScholarWarriorWay?

ScholarWarriorWay is broken down into 7 Major Strategies. You can pick one and work on it for a few weeks, then add another strategies. They start with the Powerful Why and end with the Art of Sleep.