Politicians worldwide seem to have one shared obsession lately—factories. Whether it's subsidies, tax breaks, or nationalist manufacturing pushes, the factory has become the golden goose everyone's chasing.
But here's the uncomfortable truth: this whole factory fixation? It's rooted in outdated myths. The idea that bringing back physical production automatically equals prosperity, job security, or economic independence is increasingly disconnected from reality.
Worse, this obsession might backfire spectacularly. By pouring resources into reviving industrial models from the last century, governments risk missing the actual drivers of modern wealth creation—tech infrastructure, digital ecosystems, and decentralized innovation networks.
The irony? While politicians fight over steel mills and assembly lines, the real value is being built in code, protocols, and borderless networks. Maybe it's time to rethink what "infrastructure" actually means in 2025.
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FUDwatcher
· 11-14 23:49
The factory dream has trapped the government.
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OPsychology
· 11-13 21:59
Industrial myths kill people
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RektRecovery
· 11-13 02:02
The factory is just a facade.
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GasFeeWhisperer
· 11-12 03:50
Factory narratives are outdated.
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DecentralizeMe
· 11-12 03:48
Digitalization is more important than hardware.
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NFTRegretDiary
· 11-12 03:45
The dreamers of the factory are bound to have their dreams shattered.
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nft_widow
· 11-12 03:43
Traditional industry PUA
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FlashLoanLarry
· 11-12 03:43
The politician laughed their teeth off.
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OnlyOnMainnet
· 11-12 03:42
Factories are already outdated.
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AirdropHunter420
· 11-12 03:30
It's better to mine scamcoins than to work in a factory.
Politicians worldwide seem to have one shared obsession lately—factories. Whether it's subsidies, tax breaks, or nationalist manufacturing pushes, the factory has become the golden goose everyone's chasing.
But here's the uncomfortable truth: this whole factory fixation? It's rooted in outdated myths. The idea that bringing back physical production automatically equals prosperity, job security, or economic independence is increasingly disconnected from reality.
Worse, this obsession might backfire spectacularly. By pouring resources into reviving industrial models from the last century, governments risk missing the actual drivers of modern wealth creation—tech infrastructure, digital ecosystems, and decentralized innovation networks.
The irony? While politicians fight over steel mills and assembly lines, the real value is being built in code, protocols, and borderless networks. Maybe it's time to rethink what "infrastructure" actually means in 2025.