n a world where labor remains trapped in linear exchange and capital accumulates without limit, Eidoism proposes a radical shift: dissolve monetary value, exit recognition-driven economies, and replace capital with structure. Through a crypto-based barter system powered by non-accumulative Form Credits, Eidoism enables a flow of goods and services based on necessity, not profit. This new economy is being prototyped in Vietnam, where simple, decentralized exchanges challenge the foundation of ownership, performance, and growth.

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Why are salaries systemically too low, even in essential jobs? The answer lies in a profit-driven economy where wages are not based on the real value of labor but on what can be withheld to maximize surplus. Employers reverse-engineer salaries to protect margins, while workers—trapped by survival needs and cultural obedience—lack the leverage to demand more. From an Eidoist perspective, this imbalance is not just economic but psychological: recognition replaces compensation, with praise, titles, and “team spirit” offered in place of structural fairness. True reform begins when labor is valued by the form it sustains—not by how well it performs in a hierarchy built on extraction and illusion.

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A Capitalist Imperative In capitalist economies, businesses are driven by the imperative to maximize profits. Investing in automation, such as humanoid robots, allows companies to reduce labor costs, increase efficiency, and minimize risks associated with human workers. This trend reflects a broader shift where capital increasingly replaces labor, not necessarily to benefit society at large, but to enhance returns on…

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De-dollarisation is more than a shift in global finance—it marks a deeper rebellion against the symbolic power of recognition. Eidoism, a philosophy that seeks to free individuals and systems from unconscious validation loops, sees in de-dollarisation a parallel movement: the refusal to define value through external status. As nations move away from the U.S. dollar, they also begin to exit a system built on visibility, hierarchy, and symbolic dominance. This essay explores how the unraveling of monetary hegemony opens the door to a post-recognition economy grounded in form, function, and autonomy.

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