Understanding that financial power in your 50s and 60s amplifies your values—for good or ill—and requires deliberate ethical intention.
Zera Yacob recognized that power—intellectual, social, economic—carries moral weight. In your pre-retirement years, if you have accumulated resources, you possess a form of power. Money amplifies whatever values guide it. If your values are justice, dignity, and reason, your financial choices can advance these. If your values are hidden and unexamined, money amplifies unconscious patterns—fear, ego, extraction. The pre-retirement decade is a hinge moment: you have enough power to direct resources meaningfully, and enough time remaining to witness the consequences. Will you use financial power to support what you claim to believe? Will your investments, spending, and giving align with rational principles about dignity and justice? Or will you leave that alignment to chance? Yacob's insistence on reason as the path to freedom and dignity applies here: conscious, examined use of financial power is a form of freedom and a moral necessity.
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