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The Architecture of the Inside Track: How Information Arbitrage, Institutionalized Proximity, and Controlled Outrage Sustain the Modern Financial Order

  From J.P. Morgan’s Preferred Lists to Digital Public Infrastructure—Tracing the Unbroken Line of State-Sponsored Wealth   Across centuries and continents, the intersection of political proximity and private profit has remained the most reliable engine of wealth accumulation. This article traces the evolution of information arbitrage from the United States’ “crash-and-burn” scandals and Britain’s “gentlemanly” concessions to the institutionalized networks of Japan, Italy, France, Germany, and Canada. Rather than operating as market anomalies, these practices function as structural features of modern capitalism, sustained by a sophisticated architecture of narrative control, regulatory capture, and ideological masking. Media ecosystems absorb systemic failures into controlled outrage cycles, while economic theory legitimizes asymmetry as efficiency. Yet, as digital infrastructures mature, a new frontier emerges: sovereign data stacks promise to dismantle the invisible gr...

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