Just go back to needing futures to actually be fulfilled in kind.
And maybe limit/outlaw complex financial products.
These would be a solid start to fixing the issue of the unsustainable, and irrational, not to mention unconstructive economic growth of the last 60 years.
Establishes procedure, and there are different rules on what can be done with it (the government doesn't really care, as Snowdon and Manning showed us, but if it can be brought to court and maybe historically it can be shown to be a difference).
Also, there's the convenience for those implementing it. If it's more of a faff for them, it's more likely to fail.
But convenience is always a powerful compulsion, which is why it's leaned on and used a lot.
Sixth Tone is not a "no name magazine", it's the English language publication of one of the largest online news publications in Shanghai.
Its a contender for best English language publication in China, and a good source of investigative (well, as much as you can get in the PRC now 财新 has been nutuered) journalism. It still gets to do more critical stories when they're small scale and frame it as a problem government will find a way to solve.
Probably the italicising of "sovereign", and the way you seem to be conflating zionism with banking.
The IDF, and Israeli government is ethnically cleansing Palestine. They have nothing to do with the banking system or how you share money though. So it looks like you're spouting antisemitic and far right gook.
The Scar, China Meiville - It's an epic journey and the clear best, in my opinion, of the Bas Lag novels. It has such weight and magic to the journey. Mystery too. It's a book that leaves you feeling like you want to feel more.
The Wild Girls, Ursula K Le Guin - a tale so emotional that I was broken for two days after reading it. Couldn't bring myself to read, or really do much except think about what I'd read.
Its about a slaving raid on a village near a city state, family, love, and gender.
The Talking Parcel - I don't think I've found anyone else who's seen this. Girl finds a singing parcel washed up on the beach, opens it up and a parrot comes out and leads her to a magical world that's been conquered by cockatrices. She and the parrot need to save the land, and go on a magical quest.
Had it on video, taped off of the TV. Watched it regularly in childhood. Also episodes 1-3 of Terrahawks.
Israel exists due to US support for Heganah and similar groups, and global guilt following the public awareness of the Holocaust.
Britain being defeated would probably led to a loss of empire, and with Palestine outside British control the "memo to aid in creation of a Jewish state" would cease, there'd still be Jewish terrorists groups, but it'd go very differently without US power projection and Nazi sphere of influence.
How about Churchill was forced from government along with Chamberlain after the catastrophe in Norway at the start of the war, and doesn't end up Prime Minister?
But they didn't even follow the scientific method or produce decent data.
We know perhaps marginally more from them, but the poor note taking and lack of systemisation make both Mengele's, and Japan's Unit 731, "experiments" close to useless.
And that's disregarding all the ethical issues that modern non-fascist people of ethics have.
Think I teared up at another film recently, but can't recall what it was. Sorry. That's one I watched I know got me weeping, though. I'll cry over anything intergenerational these days.
Also in part as the PRC won't let the RoC change it's name as it sees that as a declaration of independence.
Alas, the DDP can't even change the name of the RoC's national airline without risking a war.