Fuel wars: Was it legal?
In a shortage, do suppliers have the right to allocate supply purely based on profit and contracts, even when it foreseeably causes widespread economic harm to dependent users?
LOCKED CONTENT
0:00 / 42:15
Comments & discussion
Discussion for Sage members only. Be the first to start the breakdown...
What actually happened
During a declared fuel shortage, major suppliers prioritised large, contracted customers and allowed them to bulk buy and stockpile, while cutting off independents and farmers who rely on regular supply.
​
They allocated scarce supply in a way that caused predictable harm to a vulnerable group.
​
Do farmers have a legal case?
GEN-Z AND THE DEBT CYCLE
Traditional banking failed. Now, debt is the new weapon of mass influence. We follow the flow of trillions to reveal who actually owns the 21st century and which nations are currently held in checkmate by the global credit trap.
STATUS: LOCKED
What’s actually happening
Think of international debt as a long leash. When a country can't pay back a high-interest loan, they often have to trade control over their natural resources, energy grids, or strategic ports instead. It's not just about money; it's about shifting the ownership of physical power through digital ledgers.
05: The Social Contract
Next Up
Comments & discussion
Discussion area (Join the conversation)...
42:15 / 1:05:00
UP NEXT
Comments & discussion
Jackson Reed • 15 mins ago
The Sage Mode breakdown is exactly what I needed. High contrast layout makes the complex points pop. No gatekeeping here.
Maria Chen • 2 hours ago
Love the plain English summaries. This update turns complex series into cinematic masterclasses. Great for watching on mobile during my commute.