Shownotes
Shareholder charters legally force companies to prioritize quarterly stock prices over mission — and Chris Remboldt says that's the engine behind a generation priced out of owning anything. Post-money isn't a utopia pitch: it's a recognition that real wealth is time, energy, and atoms. Chris tells Jerremy Alexander Newsome and Dave Conley that a stay-at-home mom can now ship a product with AI that used to require a 10-person tech company. The old deal isn't dead. It's sick.
Timestamps:
- (00:00) The old American deal is cracking – AI is repricing work faster than policy can follow
- (01:57) Ripped out the plumber's work – what building a house taught Chris about real agency
- (04:29) Who goes post-money first – homeschool families vs. the credential system
- (08:15) "Millennials are like people.zip" – apartments, shrinkflation, and the shareholder trap
- (10:53) Lawsuits force companies backward – why charters legally prevent long-term thinking
- (13:25) Real wealth is atoms – why money becomes the wrong unit of account
- (15:08) The nanotech nobody's talking about – the breakthrough that makes things weird
- (18:07) The zero-start problem – why "make money with AI" is the one strategy that doesn't work
- (20:30) Meal prep to app to TikTok – how one stay-at-home mom built a product
- (23:05) The tools are ready – but the one-paycheck crowd didn't get the memo
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