ankurvyas.com
  • Home
  • Speaking engagement
  • The Destiny of America
  • In Eurasia: There's Russia
In Eurasia: There's Russia (and then there's everybody else)
Table of ContentsIntroductionChapter 1 To compete globallyChapter 2 Drivers of the economyChapter 3 Mutual respect from AV and fighting stalkersChapter 4 God doesn’t have an e-mail addressChapter 5 Difference between some Americans and some RussiansChapter 6 Iran is more important than you thinkChapter 7 The past relationship with India doesn't define developmentChapter 8 The relationship with China is just like themChapter 9 Counter-terrorismChapter 10 If we must dwell, then we shall also live and foreseeChapter 11 Taking care of business
In the 21st century, security will have the following parameters:Independent technology.Military capability.Economic strength.Political will.People's acknowledgment of authority.Social stability.Cultural influence.Lead by honorable action.Judged by honorable outcomes.
Chapter 1: To compete globally
To compete globally, nations will need the following fields, independent: Operating system(s), microprocessor chip(s), database designs, nanogear killing machines, nanoscanning machines, secure landlines, information integrity, actionable intelligence.
Operating system(s) & microprocessor chip(s) - I wrote a book in 2022, though I could have in 2004, called India by 2100: Independent and International. You can purchase the book here:
https://store.pothi.com/book/ankur-v-vyas-india-2100-independent-and-international/You can also e-mail: ankur.vyas1@gmail.com or chakubuwithcherry@ipaanipuri.com
Database design: For consultation, you can e-mail at the addresses above.
Nanogear killing machines & nanoscanning machines: no idea. I know what I don't know how to design.
Secure landlines: up to each individual nation.
Information integrity & actionable intelligence: up to each nation.
I will, nonetheless, describe the way I think nanotechnology works.
Nanogears
In English, there’s nanogear, which implies positive things. Actually, nanogear machines can be used with deadly force by your untrained and unseen visual sources on soldiers, politicians, and living/non-living materials. It can also be used covertly in the form of heart attacks, cancer, you name it.
Nanogear technology can be used (c)overtly. When nanogear technology is on/in the bodies of soldiers guarding nuclear weapons, defence/defense strategists can very quickly realize why they would want to ensure second-strike capability. (For American readers, defense is spelled defence in Russia).
Don’t even need to scale the walls or pierce the bunker. That’s why there needs to be physical resets. When a soldier doesn’t reset the gear/timer then you have to launch because the soldiers are dead.
Countermeasure: Put nanogear in people through water supply and economic food supply chains if it is in the interest to do so.
Nanoscans
If every word is unique, then every brain signal to say the word is unique, just like every telephone number is unique, which means it is possible to remotely pick up each unique signal within nanoseconds and relay them immediately or in the future and use the signals to undermine.
There are ways to test. Have you ever thought of something, didn’t say it out loud, and there was a reaction to it?
So you can now start understanding “defense” lines that would start with: nanogear technology on/in bodies, visual scanning of brain-waves, hearing devices, undermining those who don’t have hearing devices, relaying their thoughts in real-time or in the future, sometimes the signals will tell the truth, sometimes the signals will lie.
Chapter 2 Drivers of an economy
I am not sure why the U.S. elite screwed the Russian economy in the 1990s. Did they think Russia wasn’t going to survive, and, in fact, years later, thrive, and just like America, live forever? I am not sure they thought everything through then.
For Western readers who do not know, what happened was after December 1991, the U.S. was unrivalled militarily and economically. So when the Russian economy collapsed after 1991, “special” financial consultants were sent to Russia to “help” it transition to a “capitalism-oriented” economy and, boy, did they ever “help” it. They f - - - - d the economy so badly that basic staples (economic term for food) like bread, well the prices skyrocketed. So if you think American “elites” are angels, they aren’t.
When an economy takes a turn for the worse, people tend to first stop making payments on their cars, and then they move into smaller homes or apartments. They can always take public transportation and they can always live in a smaller place. They cannot live without food.
Food supply and basic commodities and goods need to be secured first, then worry about people being able to afford a car or a home. That’s why bread was targeted in the 1990s. It happened very quickly because they didn’t want to give time to Russian authorities to think. I would say they wouldn’t have been too successful in recruiting Russians to work for them at this time because of the little bit of nihilism in the viewpoint of Russians.
Generally basic foods tend to increase variably. If in energy-rich countries, energy is produced cheaply through various sources, then the cost of food and end-product of grain costs can possibly be reduced, then selling electronics like a mini-baker which can bake bread can be cheaper for individuals to make.
The cost of variables can, not necessarily have, to be subsidized. Might the suggestion be to research the electrical oil-powered overhead of greenhouses growing vegetables. I am not sure if it is a good idea but there are always unique ways to solve issues.
What is really needed is a very solid understanding of the economy and what the underlying fundamentals and flows of money are. That requires information. Solid information. As does intelligence. It’s more difficult to get all the data to do intelligent analysis, which is susceptible to error (e.g. Russian economic surveys) and then through time, with errors, get wrong data. Accurate information. Why?
Secure the sources of information and data and one will realize two things: learning the factors that by and large affect the economy because that’s where the information is coming from and learning how valuable those sources, let’s say energy, is to Russia.
An important thing then is to ensure the information is solid, secure, reliable and action-worthy. Confirm/verify and loyalist-enabled redundancy of sources of solid information leads to better accuracy. Just as in intelligence.
One of the ways to understand what creates the most changes in an economy is essentially A/B, you know, price testing.
It's actually very easy because all you have to do is for example when there is a building, you know, plan, then after it is built, understand what was the logical flow of thinking, the mistakes, the right decisions. You have to know what the condition of the local economy was before it was built. It is the baseline. The non-variable.
When the building is built, how does it influence the local economy, all the variables. Build one building, then build to scale. It isn’t wise to go gung ho.
The Russian rouble is used to build the infrastructure. Just as government central banks have currency baskets, the rouble isn’t the only currency that can finance development. The reason to have solid information inside independent technological systems is because data can be changed which is deception and to be guided in the wrong direction and that's why the economic decisions have to be on paper. Until independent technology systems are in place.
Never get into political and ideological battles with economic democracies who have never cared about communism or capitalism.
Education in dealing with financial conditions goes hand-in-hand with economic development. Financial education and management. If you give billions of U.S. dollars to idiots, it doesn’t mean the idiot will know how to spend it.
Different national and regional stages of the economy with different consumer spending profiles require different economic models that are integrated into a national framework of economic policy decision-making. Repeat 112x. Without faltering. Make no mistake. By now, you should have a better idea of whose writing you’re reading. 😀
To order the entire paperback:
1st step:Venmo : https://account.venmo.com/u/literacy $28.00CashApp : https://cash.app/$literacyandknowledge $28.00
To order an e-book in PDF format:1st step:Venmo : https://account.venmo.com/u/literacy $11.00CashApp : https://cash.app/$literacyandknowledge $11.00
2nd step:Email me: ankur.vyas1@gmail.com or [1] (717) 203 8110

We use cookies to enable essential functionality on our website, and analyze website traffic. By clicking Accept you consent to our use of cookies. Read about how we use cookies.

Your Cookie Settings

We use cookies to enable essential functionality on our website, and analyze website traffic. Read about how we use cookies.

Cookie Categories
Essential

These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our websites. You cannot refuse these cookies without impacting how our websites function. You can block or delete them by changing your browser settings, as described under the heading "Managing cookies" in the Privacy and Cookies Policy.

Analytics

These cookies collect information that is used in aggregate form to help us understand how our websites are being used or how effective our marketing campaigns are.