Crime Against Humanity: the Ripple Effect of Inflation, 3

This then has obvious repercussions on the quality of our lives, which is but another of the infinite cases of damages that should be double−counted, one for the damage and one for the missed benefit: harmful, poor, non−ethical products instead of needed, useful and ethical ones; and their accumulation that forms the panorama of our lives. This is quite a study in itself, and here I can only point you in that direction: please spend some time and attention observing, understanding and conceiving some of the infinite ways and cases of a bad product ousting a good one. Roughly, they fall into many categories; for instance, you may have resources allocated to producing less products for the few instead of more products for the many, damaging products instead of helpful products, poor products instead of reliable products, useless products instead of useful products, coarse products instead of refined products, etc. And not forgetting how progressive suffocation drowns people into a spiral of wars among the poor in which every attempt to solve a trouble creates further troubles.
Not to mention the basic that the debtor is somewhat owned by the creditor to a certain degree, and the ripple effect also consists of the fact that the moneypulators buy or finance chosen A, which in turn buys or finances chosen B, which in turn… thus building a chain of creditors and debtors whose shape is that of a pyramid, isn’t it?

And then you have the time factor. A specific additional dynamic factor also known as Cantillon Effect, by the name of the economist who pointed it out first.
The ripple effect we’re observing here is motion, and motion is change over time. And the mechanisms mentioned above only make a generic distinction between the “chosen” and the rest, while actually not all “chosen” are equal, but some are “more chosen than others”.
As the ripple passes from chosen hand to chosen hand, the common average consideration of the value of money decreases due to the effects of the ripple itself. Some call them early receivers and late receivers, and the early receivers are those “more equal than others”: the sooner they’re touched by the ripple the better, because the less time there was for the decline in the consideration of value of money as the ripple advances creating inflation. On the contrary, the later they’re touched the worse, because the more time there was for that decline to take its course.