WAH! He attacked MMT.
A deliciously volatile premise — a Chinese asset posing as an Asimov‑style psychohistorian. It practically begs for a thriller that oscillates between intellectual seduction and geopolitical dread. A man (or woman) presents themselves to the West as a brilliant, eccentric mathematician in the Hari Seldon mold — a visionary who claims to have developed a predictive science of mass behavior. Think: equations, trendlines, elegant inevitabilities. They’re embraced by think tanks, governments, and tech elites hungry for certainty. But the “psychohistorian” is actually a deep-cover Chinese intelligence asset whose real mission is to shape Western decision‑making by feeding it a seductive but subtly warped model of the future. The twist: They’re not just lying. They’re brilliant enough that their model almost works. That “almost” is where the thriller lives. Psychohistory is the perfect cover. A psychohistorian is expected to be: - cryptic - aloof ...