Although the economy has hundreds of indicators, yesterday the TikTok algorithm (this will be funny by the end of the article, what I’m writing) presented me with a certain novelty that has gone unnoticed in traditional economic indexes.
And there’s everything: the Big Mac Index, which talks about purchasing power; government bonds, which say a lot about investor confidence in different countries; inflation, which measures the loss of purchasing power. I could spend the entire article talking about that, but there is a subtle indicator mentioned in that video—one that has been anticipating something deeper for a while now: distrust in the system.
Meet the 1984 Index.
For those unfamiliar with this masterpiece of literature, Eric Blair (or George Orwell, for the boys) wrote a novel called 1984, once one of the coldest yet most horrifying descriptions of how totalitarianism works. If you keep reading, there will be spoilers—consider yourself warned.
So, the 1984 Index appears during major political crises, as sales of this book skyrocket.
Edward Snowden reveals CIA surveillance programs to the world. Year 2013: book sales jump 7000%.
Donald Trump takes office in 2017: sales go through the roof.
Russia–Ukraine War (2022): in Russia, sales of this great book surge again.
It goes without saying that behind these events, financial markets collapsed or showed signs of deterioration—effects we’re still seeing today in some cases, like the Russia–Ukraine war. What happened? Did everyone suddenly become literary? Did people regain the habit of reading?
Unfortunately, no. People need to understand what’s going on.
And 1984 is a basic manual for interpretation.
Let me explain.
When institutions begin to strain, language changes. Doublespeak appears.
- We no longer talk about inflation, but about “quantitative easing,” so we can buy more things—right?
- I don’t know why people say they’re being watched when companies are just “improving the user experience.” And yes, it requires certain “new personal features,” similar to Room 101.
- And I understand even less how people say they’re being censored when what we’re really doing is “content moderation.” It’s all for the children, right?
It’s not that Orwell had a vision of the future. If you look closely, we’re talking about patterns: organized power, manipulated language, and truth stretched out to be negotiated. That’s why when the world doesn’t understand what’s happening, we return to this literary classic.
So what is the 1984 Index?So what is the 1984 Index?
No idea. I literally “saw it on TikTok”. But since I should take responsibility for what I write, let’s define it like this:
A cultural indicator that measures the rise of systemic distrust through the consumption of narratives against totalitarian control.
We can go further and use trends like searches for “Orwell” or “Big Brother,” polarized discourse, or loss of collective control. To be clear, it’s not that the system collapses when this index rises—it’s that people begin to suspect something is wrong. And here we could make a mistake: put on a tinfoil hat and dismiss it as a conspiracy theory. I wish it were that simple, but the truth goes beyond that.
Theories linking the CIA or figures like Soros or Epstein to Bitcoin control say more about the level of distrust than about reality itself. We’re not even talking about alternatives.
Room 101Room 101
Although I’ve already mentioned it, for me Room 101 represents the evolution of what was in the book:
Algorithms anticipating behavior
Platforms shaping your content to their liking
Narratives competing for your attention
Truth may not be imposed, but you can be saturated. And that’s where Bitcoin emerges as a response.
Orwell described a totalitarian system; Bitcoin proposes a verification system.
- In 1984, history is rewritten. Bitcoin is immutable.
- In 1984, language is manipulated. Bitcoin is open, transparent, and auditable by everyone.
- In 1984, the individual doesn’t exist—only observation and control. Bitcoin allows you to be sovereign.
So is Bitcoin perfect? No.
What it does is change the equation. Because now we have a critical mass of people who question, seek alternatives, and want to exit the system… in theory. But few take action.
If you own Bitcoin, you are part of that minority.
Closing…Closing…
I don’t know if Orwell was right, honestly. Whether the system is fair or not isn’t even relevant today.
Let’s ask a simpler question:
What do you do when you no longer trust?
That moment has either arrived or will arrive. The 1984 Index doesn’t appear in official reports. And yet culture brings it back again and again—in every totalitarian discourse, in every feeling that something doesn’t add up.
It’s time to stop ignoring the signs and start building a way out. Bitcoin invites you to truly think—not as an opportunity, but as a response.
The rest is in your hands.
Fantastic novel! Have sales risen with the most recent war?
"War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength."
wait, is it a real index? like someone computes a numerical value and publishes it every year?
#1286364
#1463015
One of my favorite authors and one of the few physical books I own along with neuromancer by gibson
Hate speech is new speak
Undocumented immigrant is new speak
Sanctuary City or state
Vulnerable groups
Unhoused
I belive trump crazy