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The Story of Money
Structure
before-money
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Barter and Gift Economies
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Why Barter Broke Down
first-money-mesopotamia-china
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The Shekel — Money in Mesopotamia
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Cowrie Shells — China's First Currency
coined-money-greek-roman
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Lydia — The First Coins
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The Greek Drachma — Money and Empire
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The Roman Denarius and the Art of Debasement
islamic-and-silk-road-era
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The Dinar and Dirham — Islamic Monetary Power
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The Silk Road and Multi-Currency Trade
paper-money-china-to-europe
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Flying Money — China Invents Paper Currency
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The Mongol Empire and Forced Paper Currency
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Europe Discovers Banknotes
age-of-empires-monetary-power
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The Spanish Silver Real — First Global Currency
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The Dutch Guilder — The First Reserve Currency
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The British Pound — Money and Empire
gold-standard-era
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The Rise of the Gold Standard
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World Wars and the Collapse of Gold
bretton-woods-usd-hegemony
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Bretton Woods — The Dollar Takes the Throne
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The Nixon Shock — The End of Gold
fiat-era-and-trust
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What Is Fiat Money?
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When Fiat Fails — Inflation Crises Around the World
digital-money
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Credit Cards and SWIFT — Money Goes Digital
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Mobile Payments and the Fintech Revolution
blockchain-and-crypto
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Why Bitcoin Was Born
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How Blockchain Works
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Money Reimagined — Where Does It Go From Here?
Flow Structure
When Fiat Fails — Inflation Crises Around the World
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Mobile Payments and the Fintech Revolution
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Credit Cards and SWIFT — Money Goes Digital
#credit-card
#swift
#digital-money
#banking
#payments
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2026-04-01 03:12:09
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# Credit Cards and SWIFT — Money Goes Digital Money didn't wait for the internet to go digital. The process started in the 1950s. In 1950, **Diners Club** issued the first charge card — a small cardboard card that let you pay at restaurants and settle the bill at month's end. By 1958, Bank of America had launched the **BankAmericard** (later renamed Visa). Mastercard followed. The concept was radical: you didn't need cash to buy something. You could spend now and pay later. But the real infrastructure beneath credit cards was invisible: vast **interbank networks** that reconciled transactions between thousands of institutions, settling who owed what to whom, overnight, across borders. > 💡 In plain terms > A credit card transaction looks instant to you. But behind that tap of your card is a chain of messages between your bank, the merchant's bank, the card network (Visa/Mastercard), and multiple clearinghouses — all happening in under a second. The money itself doesn't move instantly; the *instructions* do. The actual settlement can take days. In 1973, banks from 11 countries created **SWIFT** — the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication. SWIFT is essentially a secure messaging system for banks: it lets financial institutions around the world send payment instructions to each other in a standardized format. Today it handles over 40 million messages per day. > ⚡ Why It Works > SWIFT and the card networks showed that money doesn't need to be physically moved — just information about money does. This was a profound shift. It also concentrated enormous power in the hands of a few institutions. Being cut off from SWIFT (as Russia discovered after 2022) is the financial equivalent of being unplugged from the global economy. That kind of centralized power is exactly what the next generation of money would try to dismantle.
When Fiat Fails — Inflation Crises Around the World
Mobile Payments and the Fintech Revolution
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