The Republic's Conscience — Editi...

The Republic's Conscience — Edition 20: The Doctrine of Monetary Source Confusion — Part XI.

The Whitepaper by Nicolin Decker

Episode notes

In this eleventh edition of The Republic’s Conscience in The Doctrine of Monetary Source Confusion (MSC) series, Nicolin Decker advances the doctrine into governance—examining how financial systems are classified in law and why classification alone does not fully explain how those systems are experienced in practice.

The episode establishes that the United States regulates financial systems through a classification-based framework. Assets are defined by legal identity—as securities, commodities, or payment instruments—and from those classifications jurisdiction and oversight are assigned. This structure prioritizes clarity, consistency, and enforceability.

From this foundation, the episode identifies a central observation: the regulatory architecture determines what a system is in law, but not explicitly how it is ex ... 

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Keywords
The United States Congress, Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS), RAND Corporation The Brookings Institution, Georgetown University, Yale Law School, Harvard Law School, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Congressional R