2029: Post-MAGA Global Financial Market Crash
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In 2029: The Post-MAGA Global Financial Market Crash, pastor, Veteran, hypnotic-trance therapist, and Christian finance coach Aaron M. Montague spins a prophetic, laugh-out-loud, uncomfortably plausible novel about what happens when:The world decides the "crazy years" are over,The markets disagree,and the African Diaspora quietly refuses to die broke one more time.This is not dry economics. This is church-basement prophecy meets Wall Street plumbing, with a side of West Philly humor and diaspora receipts.WHAT YOU'LL FIND INSIDEA Crash That Feels Too Real A slow-burn, global market unraveling where "safe-ish" funds gate, "stable" coins wobble, and a Half-Bailout keeps the pipes from freezing-but can't fix the story.The West Philadelphia Billionaires Society (WPBS) A not-so-ridiculous idea born in a church basement: one million everyday people each investing a little, every day, to buy laundromats, land, clinics, corner stores, and credit unions-together.The Diaspora Mesh Ghana, Jamaica, Nigeria, London, Toronto, Philly and beyond: a global web of aunties, bus drivers, coders, nurses, and shopkeepers who turn remittances into community-owned assets instead of just receipts.Real-World Blueprints in Disguise Under the fiction, you'll recognize echoes of actual worker cooperatives, community land trusts, Black credit unions, CDFIs, and the long, unfinished story of Greenwood / "Black Wall Street."Faith, Humor, and Hard Questions Scripture in the boardroom. Jokes in the budget meeting. Prayer in the underwriting. And a repeated, uncomfortable question: "Who actually owns anything when the music stops?"
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In 2029: The Post-MAGA Global Financial Market Crash, pastor, Veteran, hypnotic-trance therapist, and Christian finance coach Aaron M. Montague spins a prophetic, laugh-out-loud, uncomfortably plausible novel about what happens when:The world decides the "crazy years" are over,The markets disagree,and the African Diaspora quietly refuses to die broke one more time.This is not dry economics. This is church-basement prophecy meets Wall Street plumbing, with a side of West Philly humor and diaspora receipts.WHAT YOU'LL FIND INSIDEA Crash That Feels Too Real A slow-burn, global market unraveling where "safe-ish" funds gate, "stable" coins wobble, and a Half-Bailout keeps the pipes from freezing-but can't fix the story.The West Philadelphia Billionaires Society (WPBS) A not-so-ridiculous idea born in a church basement: one million everyday people each investing a little, every day, to buy laundromats, land, clinics, corner stores, and credit unions-together.The Diaspora Mesh Ghana, Jamaica, Nigeria, London, Toronto, Philly and beyond: a global web of aunties, bus drivers, coders, nurses, and shopkeepers who turn remittances into community-owned assets instead of just receipts.Real-World Blueprints in Disguise Under the fiction, you'll recognize echoes of actual worker cooperatives, community land trusts, Black credit unions, CDFIs, and the long, unfinished story of Greenwood / "Black Wall Street."Faith, Humor, and Hard Questions Scripture in the boardroom. Jokes in the budget meeting. Prayer in the underwriting. And a repeated, uncomfortable question: "Who actually owns anything when the music stops?"
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