The Alchemist’s Ledger: Why Hard Work is a Fairy Tale
There is a brutal honesty in the words attributed to Wu Xiaoling that strips away the romantic varnish of "success." In this hierarchy of wealth, the elite don't earn money; they manifest it through the dark arts of proximity to power. Whether it’s printing it via privilege, distributing it via status, or borrowing it from banks with no intention of repayment, the conclusion is the same: the wealth of the few is a tax on the exhaustion of the many. This is why the "Naked Ape" at the bottom of the pyramid can work until his bones ache and still find his savings evaporated by the silent thief called inflation.
Biologically, we are wired to respond to incentives. If the environment rewards hunting, we hunt. If it rewards sycophancy and back-door deals, we evolve into political parasites. The current economic "food chain" is distorted. In a natural state, an animal that fails to produce value starves. In our artificial financial ecosystem, the "apex predators" are those who have mastered the art of leveraging "bad debt"—which is really just a polite term for stealing from the future.
Historically, this is the classic "Rent-Seeking" behavior that has toppled empires. When the path to riches shifts from innovation (creating a bigger pie) to extraction (taking a bigger slice of an existing pie through privilege), a society enters a death spiral. Hard work becomes a sucker’s game. The "dark side" of human nature ensures that those close to the printing press will always convince themselves they "earned" what they simply seized.
Inflation isn’t a natural phenomenon like rain; it’s a transfer of energy. It’s the process of sucking the life force out of a laborer’s paycheck to subsidize the bad debt of a billionaire. We aren't taught this in textbooks because the schoolhouse is often funded by the very mint that’s devaluing the currency. In the end, the "bad debt" of the rich is the "unpaid labor" of the poor.