Paid MediaIEU Package – 05.2026.
Systemic Turbulence. The Transformation of Personality and the System
10 lectures on the Basic Law of Political Economy
A crisis does not begin on the day when the news starts writing about it. It begins earlier: in people’s behavior, in the way they buy, postpone decisions, save money, change habits and stop spending on things they used to spend on before.
This package is for those who need to learn how to see a crisis in advance, not only when prices have already risen, demand has already fallen, money has already run out, and decisions have already become too expensive.
For whom
For people who make real decisions: work, income, rent, loans, business, relocation, purchases, expenses and personal financial stability.
For entrepreneurs, self-employed people and small business owners who depend on customer demand and need to understand why the buyer has become more cautious, why sales have declined, why people choose cheaper options, think longer before paying and postpone purchases.
For state economists, analysts, municipal and public administration specialists who work with budgets, expenses, demand, population behavior, regional economy and social pressure. The package helps to see a crisis not only through late statistics, but earlier: through changes in people’s behavior, falling consumption, rising mandatory expenses, declining trust and the narrowing of choice within society.
What is inside
10 lectures in PDF format. An analysis of the chain from the internal state of a person to behavior, choice, demand and the movement of money within the system.
- Systemic turbulence as the new norm
- Why a crisis begins before it becomes visible
- Personality as the first point of systemic change
- How people’s behavior changes the movement of the system
- Why choice becomes defensive under conditions of turbulence
- How turbulence changes demand: from development to security
- Why money moves from development into protection during turbulence
- Why power often intensifies systemic turbulence
- Money after demand: why the direction of money creates the future form of the system
- How the Basic Law of Political Economy explains systemic turbulence
In addition to the package, there are 2 extra documents:
- Introduction to the lecture package
- Author’s digression / personal story
No academic language. No empty theory. Only an analysis of how a crisis appears in real life before it becomes official news.
Total word count: 50,000+
Lecture language: English
Goal
To teach you to see systemic turbulence before a visible crisis: not through late numbers and official signs, but through changes in personality, behavior, choice, demand and the movement of money. This will help you recognize the approach of a crisis in advance, understand its internal logic and successfully overcome it.
Price
Until May 31, 2026: access through the current subscription — 9.99 € / Subscribe
MediaIEU Archive — 12.99 € / Buy from the Archive
By making a payment, you confirm your agreement with the document
“Terms for Subscription Registration, Payment and Receipt of MediaIEU Digital Lecture Packages”.
Additional information
Format: PDF / ZIP archive
Delivery: by email after payment within 24 hours
Assignment
After studying the 10 lectures in this package, you will be able to correctly analyze these situations and determine exactly where systemic turbulence begins: in personality, behavior, choice, demand, money, the direction of money or the form of the system. The tasks below show how the Basic Law of Political Economy is applied not as an abstract theory, but as a tool for analyzing ordinary life situations.
The tasks are based on simple life situations: expenses, purchases, decisions of power, business behavior, changes in demand and the movement of money. They help check how the Basic Law of Political Economy works in practice.
The tasks are published without the correct answers. Full answers, explanations and analysis through the chain are included in the paid lecture package.
Task 1. John went to the cinema
John was going to the cinema, but before buying the ticket he started calculating: the ticket, transport, food, a drink and the way back. In the end, he stayed at home and watched a film online.
Question:
Where does systemic turbulence begin in this situation?
Answer options:
- In the ticket price, because the ticket became the main expense.
- In John’s behavior, because he did not go to the cinema.
- In the change in John’s internal attitude toward expenses, because ordinary leisure began to be perceived as a risk.
- In the cinema, because it lost one customer.
Task 2. The state introduced a new excise duty
The state introduced a new excise duty on sweet drinks. A bottle used to cost 1.20 €, and after the excise duty it started to cost 1.55 €. The buyer used to buy this drink several times a week, but now buys it less often or chooses a cheaper alternative.
Question:
What is the first systemic impact on personality here?
Answer options:
- The drink itself became worse.
- The form of the system changed the price through a decision of power.
- The buyer suddenly lost interest in the drink.
- The shop placed the product on the shelf incorrectly.
Task 3. The package became smaller
A shop sells a product in a 900 g package instead of the previous 1 kg package. The price on the shelf looks almost the same. Buyers notice that there is less product, but still continue buying it.
Question:
What does this situation show?
Answer options:
- Buyers are completely satisfied with the new volume.
- The producer changed the package by accident.
- Buyers accepted a new compromise, and behavior began to get used to a smaller norm.
- Demand has not changed in any way, because the product remained on the shelf.
Task 4. An Italian item and a no-brand replacement
The buyer wanted an original Italian item: quality, material, style, origin and the feeling of a real product. But the buyer purchased a no-brand mass replacement because it was cheaper and put less pressure on the budget.
Question:
What changed first here?
Answer options:
- The desire disappeared.
- Quality stopped mattering.
- The choice became defensive, although the desire remained the same.
- The buyer no longer understands the difference between items.
Task 5. A family postponed apartment renovation
A family planned a full apartment renovation: the floor, kitchen, lighting, doors and walls. After prices increased, they decided to replace only the tap and sockets and repair the washing machine. The full renovation was postponed indefinitely.
Question:
How did demand change?
Answer options:
- Demand disappeared completely.
- Demand moved from improving the home to keeping the home in working condition.
- The family no longer needed renovation.
- The construction market received the same demand as before.
Task 6. An entrepreneur did not open a second location
The owner of a café planned to open a second location. After conversations about new inspections, rising rent and a falling average bill, he gave up expansion and kept the money in reserve.
Question:
Where did the money go?
Answer options:
- Into business development.
- Into business protection.
- Into customer demand.
- Into the owner’s status.
Task 7. The authorities declared stability
The authorities declare that the situation is under control. But entrepreneurs do not expand, families postpone large purchases, people keep money closer, and business does not take on new obligations.
Question:
Why does official stability not remove turbulence?
Answer options:
- People did not hear the statement of the authorities.
- People react not only to words, but also to their own feeling of risk and to the form of the system.
- Business is always against the authorities.
- Families simply stopped buying for no reason.
Task 8. Money appeared in the city
100 million euros appeared in the city. One option is to direct them into technical education, roads, workshops, small business and energy efficiency. Another option is to direct them into status objects, reports, administrative strengthening and control.
Question:
Why is one amount of money not enough to understand the future of the city?
Answer options:
- Because 100 million euros is always too little.
- Because not only the amount matters, but also the direction of money.
- Because money does not influence the system.
- Because the city will not change anyway.
Task 9. A person replaced buying a new phone with repair
A person wanted to buy a new phone, but decided to replace the battery and screen of the old one. A year later, the person again postponed buying a new device and continued repairing the old one.
Question:
What does the repetition of this decision show?
Answer options:
- Demand for new phones increased.
- The person completely gave up communication.
- Demand for renewal turns into demand for extending the service life.
- Repair has nothing to do with turbulence.
Task 10. The full circle of the system
In a country, people became more cautious, business stopped expanding, demand shifted toward safety, and money began to move into protection, rent and control. After some time, the form of the system became even more rigid, expensive and unpredictable. After that, people became even more cautious.
Question:
What mechanism is shown here?
Answer options:
- Only a fall in income.
- Only a business mistake.
- The full circle of the Basic Law of Political Economy: personality creates the movement of money, money creates the form of the system, and the form of the system again puts pressure on personality.
- An ordinary random coincidence of events.
Until 31 May 2026: access through the current subscription 9.99 € / Subscribe
MediaIEU Archive: 12.99 € / Buy from Archive
By making a payment, you confirm your agreement with the document
“Terms for Subscription Registration, Payment and Receipt of MediaIEU Digital Lecture Packages”.
