Capitalism was never chosen by the people—it was imposed by oligarchs through force, enclosure, and dependency. From feudal serfdom to modern branding, it converts human effort into performance and funnels recognition upward. Vietnam, though pressured into this system, still retains deep cultural structures rooted in form, not spectacle. This essay explores how Vietnam can protect and modernize its traditional foundations to resist collapse—and lead the way toward a post-capitalist, form-based society.

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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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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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