『Harder to Fool』のカバーアート

Harder to Fool

Harder to Fool

著者: Elias T. Xenos JD MBA
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概要

This podcast isn’t a manifesto, and it doesn’t offer a single grand theory to explain modern life. It’s closer to an almanac: a collection of observations, warnings, and hard-earned patterns—many of them unfashionable—meant to be consulted, not blindly accepted.

Modern American life is saturated with advice but starved of wisdom. Institutions that once filtered nonsense now produce it at scale. Narratives are sold as facts, incentives are disguised as morality, and skepticism is increasingly treated as a character flaw. This podcast is an attempt to clear some of that fog.

Episodes range across politics, economics, careers, money, institutional decay, and the quiet mechanics of everyday scams. They aren’t united by ideology, but by method—an insistence on incentives, tradeoffs, and first principles. Whenever possible, the question is simple: Who benefits if I believe this?

Much of today’s public discourse is performative. Politics is framed as existential theater while becoming less relevant to daily life. Economics is discussed in moral abstractions rather than incentive structures. Career advice celebrates passion while ignoring leverage. Personal finance is reduced to spreadsheets that miss the point. What ties it all together is the same pattern: decision-makers insulated from consequences.

This podcast starts there.

There are no calls for mass awakening or political movements. History suggests those rarely work. What does work is individual clarity—the ability to see how systems actually function, anticipate where costs will be shifted, and position yourself accordingly.

That may sound cynical. It isn’t. It’s pragmatic.

If this show succeeds, it won’t make you angrier or more righteous. It will make you harder to fool.

And in modern American life, that’s a form of independence.

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Sonex Media, LLC
個人的成功 出世 就職活動 経済学 自己啓発
エピソード
  • The Quiet Criminalization of Ordinary Life
    2026/02/15

    Why do more aspects of everyday life seem to be drifting toward criminalization? In this episode, we challenge the comforting myth that the past was simply more tolerant. Instead, we explore a harder truth: law often expands not because morality changes, but because enforcement technology advances. When surveillance becomes cheap, automated, and continuous, the question shifts from “Should this be illegal?” to “Why not enforce it, now that we can?”

    From data-integration platforms used by federal agencies to real-time license plate tracking, we examine how modern surveillance infrastructure reshapes criminal liability—and how private-sector incentives accelerate the process. As enforcement capability grows, discretion shrinks, and “practical innocence” becomes harder to maintain.

    This episode explores the quiet ratchet of technological power, the industrialization of suspicion, and the unsettling reality that the ability to enforce a rule is increasingly mistaken for a justification to create one.

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    10 分
  • Higher Education and the Cost of Easy Money
    2026/01/25

    College tuition didn’t spiral out of control by accident. This episode examines how unlimited access to subsidized money, non-dischargeable student loans, and administrative bloat turned higher education into one of the most profitable—and least disciplined—industries in America. From the Bennett Hypothesis to the explosion of bureaucracy and low-value degrees, the discussion argues that the crisis in higher education isn’t about learning or compassion, but about incentives—and why prices will keep rising until those incentives change.

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    8 分
  • The Business of Illness
    2026/01/25

    Healthcare in America isn’t broken—it’s perfectly aligned with the incentives that govern it. This episode examines how scale, insurance design, and cultural expectations have transformed medicine into a system where costs rise invisibly, accountability dissolves, and intermediaries thrive. From Medicare’s role as a dominant buyer to the psychological separation between patients and prices, the conversation explores why reform is endlessly discussed yet rarely achieved—and why the system continues to serve those closest to the money far better than the people who fund it.

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    7 分
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