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America Has Been Demoted (Part One)
America's position as the world's sole superpower was never earned — it was inherited from the collapse of its rivals. Now the vacancy is being filled. In this talk, Shahid Bolsen walks through the structural evidence of America's demotion from global superpower…
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America Has Been Demoted (Part Two)
The multipolar transition is real. But the window it has opened will not stay open, and who builds what inside that window determines everything. In Part 2, Shahid Bolsen breaks down what Muslim-majority countries and the Global South actually need to do…
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Full lecture:
https://youtu.be/qocvSB48lK4?si=u5Y1AhCXmKJnkQ6L
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America Has Been Demoted (Full Lecture)
America's position as the world's sole superpower was never earned — it was inherited from the collapse of its rivals. Now the vacancy is being filled. In this talk, Shahid Bolsen walks through the structural evidence of America's demotion from global superpower…
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SECTION ONE: HOW AMERICA GOT HERE
Default dominance and the vacancy argument
1. The lecture opens with the gold medal analogy. What is the point being made, and why does it matter for how we understand American power?
2. What are the three phases of American ascendancy described in the lecture? Summarize what happened in each phase and what the lecture says about it.
3. The lecture says America lost fifty percent of its share of global GDP during the Cold War — against an economically and technologically inferior rival. What does that tell us about how dominant America actually was even at its strongest?
4. Who coined the phrase "the unipolar moment" and what did it actually mean?
5. The lecture says the demotion is "already structurally complete" and that what we are watching now is "just the institutional and narrative catchup." What does that mean in practice?
The evidence: GDP, dollar, military, diplomacy
7. What happened to the dollar's share of global foreign exchange reserves between 2000 and 2024, and why did the trajectory sharpen after 2022? What was the specific decision that caused that acceleration?
8. What are CIPS and the mBridge project, and what is their strategic significance?
9. What was the significance of Saudi Arabia pricing a portion of its oil sales in yuan in 2023?
10. The lecture says the US defense budget is "a money laundering device," not a metric of military capability. Explain that argument in your own words and give the analogy used to illustrate it.
11. China brokered the Saudi-Iran normalization in 2023. The lecture says "Uncle Sam wasn't in the room." Why is that significant, and what does it represent structurally?
SECTION TWO: WHAT IS HAPPENING INSIDE AMERICA
State capture and the OCGFC
12. The lecture says the US has been "captured" as a state. What does captured mean in the technical sense used in the lecture? What are the mechanisms through which capture operates?
13. The lecture says: "Ask not what your shareholders can do for you. Ask what you can do for your shareholders." What is the point being made here about how the captured American state actually functions?
14. Describe the two primary factions within the OCGFC. What are their revenue models, and why are their interests fundamentally different from each other?
15. The anational OCGFC grew out of financialization and globalization. The lecture says: "The nation no longer serves their interest — the booster rocket has become dead weight and they want to jettison it." Explain what that means and what repositioning looks like in practice.
16. What is the Mar-a-Lago Accord framework and why does the lecture say it is not nationalist economic policy but anationalist? Walk through each element: dollar devaluation, institutional retreat, security burden redistribution.
17. The nationalistic OCGFC is shifting its profit center toward the domestic security economy. What does that include, and why does it require what the lecture calls "permanent insecurity"?
18. The lecture says the nationalistic OCGFC has no interest in a negotiated settlement in Ukraine. Why not? What is their optimal outcome and why?
19. Why can the nationalistic OCGFC not "go too rogue"? What constrains it, and who sets the ceiling?
20. Apply that ceiling argument to the current American attacks on Iran. What does the lecture say will and will not be permitted, and why?
21. The lecture distinguishes between what American power can achieve (constrained externally) and what it is permitted to attempt (constrained internally). Explain both constraints and how they interact.
Default dominance and the vacancy argument
1. The lecture opens with the gold medal analogy. What is the point being made, and why does it matter for how we understand American power?
2. What are the three phases of American ascendancy described in the lecture? Summarize what happened in each phase and what the lecture says about it.
3. The lecture says America lost fifty percent of its share of global GDP during the Cold War — against an economically and technologically inferior rival. What does that tell us about how dominant America actually was even at its strongest?
4. Who coined the phrase "the unipolar moment" and what did it actually mean?
5. The lecture says the demotion is "already structurally complete" and that what we are watching now is "just the institutional and narrative catchup." What does that mean in practice?
The evidence: GDP, dollar, military, diplomacy
7. What happened to the dollar's share of global foreign exchange reserves between 2000 and 2024, and why did the trajectory sharpen after 2022? What was the specific decision that caused that acceleration?
8. What are CIPS and the mBridge project, and what is their strategic significance?
9. What was the significance of Saudi Arabia pricing a portion of its oil sales in yuan in 2023?
10. The lecture says the US defense budget is "a money laundering device," not a metric of military capability. Explain that argument in your own words and give the analogy used to illustrate it.
11. China brokered the Saudi-Iran normalization in 2023. The lecture says "Uncle Sam wasn't in the room." Why is that significant, and what does it represent structurally?
SECTION TWO: WHAT IS HAPPENING INSIDE AMERICA
State capture and the OCGFC
12. The lecture says the US has been "captured" as a state. What does captured mean in the technical sense used in the lecture? What are the mechanisms through which capture operates?
13. The lecture says: "Ask not what your shareholders can do for you. Ask what you can do for your shareholders." What is the point being made here about how the captured American state actually functions?
14. Describe the two primary factions within the OCGFC. What are their revenue models, and why are their interests fundamentally different from each other?
15. The anational OCGFC grew out of financialization and globalization. The lecture says: "The nation no longer serves their interest — the booster rocket has become dead weight and they want to jettison it." Explain what that means and what repositioning looks like in practice.
16. What is the Mar-a-Lago Accord framework and why does the lecture say it is not nationalist economic policy but anationalist? Walk through each element: dollar devaluation, institutional retreat, security burden redistribution.
17. The nationalistic OCGFC is shifting its profit center toward the domestic security economy. What does that include, and why does it require what the lecture calls "permanent insecurity"?
18. The lecture says the nationalistic OCGFC has no interest in a negotiated settlement in Ukraine. Why not? What is their optimal outcome and why?
19. Why can the nationalistic OCGFC not "go too rogue"? What constrains it, and who sets the ceiling?
20. Apply that ceiling argument to the current American attacks on Iran. What does the lecture say will and will not be permitted, and why?
21. The lecture distinguishes between what American power can achieve (constrained externally) and what it is permitted to attempt (constrained internally). Explain both constraints and how they interact.
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SECTION THREE: THE TRANSITION WINDOW AND ITS RISKS
22. The lecture warns that the danger of the multipolar transition is not that it fails, but that it succeeds on terms preset by anational capital. What would that look like? The lecture gives three specific examples — what are they?
23. The lecture closes Part One with this: "The demotion of America is not a victory for us in and of itself." Explain why not, and what the lecture says determines whether it becomes a genuine gain.
24. The lecture uses the boot analogy: "The demotion of America is the removal of a boot from our necks. But once that boot has been lifted, that's when you have to show." What does the lecture say you have to show? And what replaces the boot if you don't?
SECTION FOUR: WHAT TO ACTUALLY DO
External positioning: the corridor problem
25. What is the corridor of permissible aggression, and what determines whether a country sits inside it or outside it? The lecture says it's not just military weakness that makes a country vulnerable — what else does it identify?
26. The lecture uses Saudi Vision 2030 as an example. What does it say Vision 2030 actually is, beyond an economic development program?
27. What is the difference between strategic leverage and dependency, according to the lecture? The lecture says there is only one thing that determines which side of that line you are on — what is it?
28. The lecture uses the analogy of ships turning off their transmitters in the Strait of Hormuz. What point is being made? What does that analogy say about the choices available to Global South and Muslim-majority countries?
29. The lecture says: "America is an extortion racket. Everything is transactional." What does that mean for how our countries need to engage with the current reality?
The Gulf, the conflicts, and the vacuum argument
30. The lecture acknowledges Gulf involvement in Sudan, Libya, and Somalia is not always clean, and that some of it genuinely deserves criticism. But it then makes a structural argument for why imperfect Gulf engagement is still preferable to non-engagement. What is that argument?
31. The lecture says your sincerity does not change your function. Explain that claim. What is the distinction being drawn between intention and effect?
Internal transformation: state, professional class, regional cohesion
32. What does "non-bypassable state authority over the private sector" mean? The lecture is careful to say this is not necessarily nationalization — so what is it?
33. How does the collaborator class form? What are the specific conditions that produce it?
34. The lecture says the professional class most Muslim-majority and Global South countries currently produce is "trained to serve the global economy as it currently exists." Explain the difference between that orientation and the orientation needed.
35. The lecture says: "You cannot build sovereign institutions with people whose minds are not sovereign." What does it mean for a mind to be captured? And what does it mean for a mind to be sovereign?
36. What is the weak link in collective sovereignty, and why does fracturing cohesion consistently work as a tool against regional blocs?
Unity: the hard kind
37. The lecture distinguishes between "soft and squishy unity" and real unity. What is the distinction? Why does real unity "cost you something"?
38. The lecture says: "The fortress you are protecting is not any particular government, not any particular leader, not any particular policy. The fortress is the possibility of genuine sovereignty itself." Explain what that means in your own words.
39. The lecture closes with the salah analogy: shoulder to shoulder, foot to foot, no gaps in the saf. Why does it end there? What is the connection between the discipline of the prayer row and the political argument being made?
APPLIED ANALYSIS
40. Use the frameworks from the lecture to answer these questions. There are no single correct answers — the goal is rigorous application.
22. The lecture warns that the danger of the multipolar transition is not that it fails, but that it succeeds on terms preset by anational capital. What would that look like? The lecture gives three specific examples — what are they?
23. The lecture closes Part One with this: "The demotion of America is not a victory for us in and of itself." Explain why not, and what the lecture says determines whether it becomes a genuine gain.
24. The lecture uses the boot analogy: "The demotion of America is the removal of a boot from our necks. But once that boot has been lifted, that's when you have to show." What does the lecture say you have to show? And what replaces the boot if you don't?
SECTION FOUR: WHAT TO ACTUALLY DO
External positioning: the corridor problem
25. What is the corridor of permissible aggression, and what determines whether a country sits inside it or outside it? The lecture says it's not just military weakness that makes a country vulnerable — what else does it identify?
26. The lecture uses Saudi Vision 2030 as an example. What does it say Vision 2030 actually is, beyond an economic development program?
27. What is the difference between strategic leverage and dependency, according to the lecture? The lecture says there is only one thing that determines which side of that line you are on — what is it?
28. The lecture uses the analogy of ships turning off their transmitters in the Strait of Hormuz. What point is being made? What does that analogy say about the choices available to Global South and Muslim-majority countries?
29. The lecture says: "America is an extortion racket. Everything is transactional." What does that mean for how our countries need to engage with the current reality?
The Gulf, the conflicts, and the vacuum argument
30. The lecture acknowledges Gulf involvement in Sudan, Libya, and Somalia is not always clean, and that some of it genuinely deserves criticism. But it then makes a structural argument for why imperfect Gulf engagement is still preferable to non-engagement. What is that argument?
31. The lecture says your sincerity does not change your function. Explain that claim. What is the distinction being drawn between intention and effect?
Internal transformation: state, professional class, regional cohesion
32. What does "non-bypassable state authority over the private sector" mean? The lecture is careful to say this is not necessarily nationalization — so what is it?
33. How does the collaborator class form? What are the specific conditions that produce it?
34. The lecture says the professional class most Muslim-majority and Global South countries currently produce is "trained to serve the global economy as it currently exists." Explain the difference between that orientation and the orientation needed.
35. The lecture says: "You cannot build sovereign institutions with people whose minds are not sovereign." What does it mean for a mind to be captured? And what does it mean for a mind to be sovereign?
36. What is the weak link in collective sovereignty, and why does fracturing cohesion consistently work as a tool against regional blocs?
Unity: the hard kind
37. The lecture distinguishes between "soft and squishy unity" and real unity. What is the distinction? Why does real unity "cost you something"?
38. The lecture says: "The fortress you are protecting is not any particular government, not any particular leader, not any particular policy. The fortress is the possibility of genuine sovereignty itself." Explain what that means in your own words.
39. The lecture closes with the salah analogy: shoulder to shoulder, foot to foot, no gaps in the saf. Why does it end there? What is the connection between the discipline of the prayer row and the political argument being made?
APPLIED ANALYSIS
40. Use the frameworks from the lecture to answer these questions. There are no single correct answers — the goal is rigorous application.
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41. Identify a country you believe currently sits inside the corridor of permissible aggression. What is the evidence? Does it have any countervailing relationships with anational capital, and are they sufficient?
42. The lecture says American policy that looks incoherent is actually the two private-sector factions operating within a nested hierarchy. Take a current American foreign policy situation and read it through that lens. What does each faction want? Where is the ceiling?
43. Apply the vacuum argument to a specific conflict involving Gulf states that you have had strong views about. Does the argument change your evaluation? If not, why not?
44. The lecture says the professional class needs to be rooted in an indigenous ethical and epistemological framework alongside genuine technical expertise. What institutions would need to exist to produce that kind of person in a country you know well?
45. The lecture says the anational OCGFC is "quite comfortable working with the collaborator class in a multipolar world." Give three examples of what that collaboration might look like in your own region.
46. The lecture says fracturing cohesion is the standard tool and it is "applied consistently everywhere because it consistently works." Identify a current example of this tool being applied against a Muslim-majority country or Global South regional bloc.
KEY TERMS — Define and Apply
47. Every member should be able to define each of these terms clearly, explain why the distinction matters, and give a real-world example.
48. Victory by default
49. The unipolar moment
50. OCGFC
51. Anational OCGFC (A-OCGFC)
52. Nationalistic OCGFC (N-OCGFC)
53. State capture
54. Controlled demolition
55. The corridor of permissible aggression
56. The transition window
57. Non-bypassable state authority
58. The collaborator / comprador class
59. The vacuum argument
60. The epistemological trap
61. Collective sovereignty
62. Epistemological sovereignty
https://youtu.be/qocvSB48lK4?si=u5Y1AhCXmKJnkQ6L
42. The lecture says American policy that looks incoherent is actually the two private-sector factions operating within a nested hierarchy. Take a current American foreign policy situation and read it through that lens. What does each faction want? Where is the ceiling?
43. Apply the vacuum argument to a specific conflict involving Gulf states that you have had strong views about. Does the argument change your evaluation? If not, why not?
44. The lecture says the professional class needs to be rooted in an indigenous ethical and epistemological framework alongside genuine technical expertise. What institutions would need to exist to produce that kind of person in a country you know well?
45. The lecture says the anational OCGFC is "quite comfortable working with the collaborator class in a multipolar world." Give three examples of what that collaboration might look like in your own region.
46. The lecture says fracturing cohesion is the standard tool and it is "applied consistently everywhere because it consistently works." Identify a current example of this tool being applied against a Muslim-majority country or Global South regional bloc.
KEY TERMS — Define and Apply
47. Every member should be able to define each of these terms clearly, explain why the distinction matters, and give a real-world example.
48. Victory by default
49. The unipolar moment
50. OCGFC
51. Anational OCGFC (A-OCGFC)
52. Nationalistic OCGFC (N-OCGFC)
53. State capture
54. Controlled demolition
55. The corridor of permissible aggression
56. The transition window
57. Non-bypassable state authority
58. The collaborator / comprador class
59. The vacuum argument
60. The epistemological trap
61. Collective sovereignty
62. Epistemological sovereignty
https://youtu.be/qocvSB48lK4?si=u5Y1AhCXmKJnkQ6L
YouTube
America Has Been Demoted (Full Lecture)
America's position as the world's sole superpower was never earned — it was inherited from the collapse of its rivals. Now the vacancy is being filled. In this talk, Shahid Bolsen walks through the structural evidence of America's demotion from global superpower…
❤38
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IRAN: Even the Guilty Can Be Wronged
Shahid Bolsen breaks down the US-Israel war on Iran in three unsparing parts.
First: the law. The February 2026 strikes — and the decades of assassinations, sanctions, coups, and cyberattacks that preceded them — are illegal under any honest reading of international…
First: the law. The February 2026 strikes — and the decades of assassinations, sanctions, coups, and cyberattacks that preceded them — are illegal under any honest reading of international…
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You Are the Territory Where You Live | The Greater Jihad Ep. 6
Most people treat knowledge the way they treat social media — reactive, on-demand, assembled to win arguments and perform intelligence. Shahid Bolsen breaks down why this approach produces nothing but a clash of googlers, and what an organized, sovereign…
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'Eid Message to the Devil | The Greater Jihad Ep.7
Most Muslims come out of Eid feeling a little anxious. The chains are off. Shaytan is back. But Shahid Bolsen says you've got it completely backwards.
Shaytan didn't protect you during Ramadan. Ramadan protected him — from you.
In Episode 7 of the Greater…
Shaytan didn't protect you during Ramadan. Ramadan protected him — from you.
In Episode 7 of the Greater…
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The Middle Nation Sovereignty Framework: How the Global South Breaks Free (Part One)
This is the first installment of what will be an ongoing series discussing economic sovereignty policies across the Global South.
In this introductory episode, Shahid Bolsen breaks down the foundational framework for economic sovereignty in the Muslim world…
In this introductory episode, Shahid Bolsen breaks down the foundational framework for economic sovereignty in the Muslim world…
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Premiering in 30 minutes: Part Two
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The Middle Nation Sovereignty Framework Part Two: |Indonesia
Shahid Bolsen continues the Middle Nation sovereignty analysis of Indonesia — moving from the proof of concept to the full framework for what genuine economic independence actually requires.
Indonesia did something remarkable with nickel. But holding 62%…
Indonesia did something remarkable with nickel. But holding 62%…
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