
Macro Voices MacroVoices #516 Craig Tindale: Critical Materials, A Strategic Analysis
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Jan 22, 2026 Craig Tindale, a private investor and writer specializing in critical materials, unpacks the geopolitical dilemmas of supply chains, highlighting China's near-total control over metal processing. He discusses how this dominance puts the West at risk and examines the potential consequences of shortages in essential materials like copper and scandium. Tindale also explores innovative developments in e-waste recycling and the need for government-backed funding to revitalize domestic production. This engaging conversation sheds light on the fragile balance of global resources.
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Material Control Is National Security
- Western financial power separated from physical-material control creates strategic vulnerability.
- Craig Tindale argues manufacturing and material sovereignty are preconditions for lasting liberty and geopolitical independence.
Midstream, Not Mines, Is The Choke Point
- China controls 50–98% of refining and midstream processing across many critical metals.
- Losing access to Chinese refining would sharply constrain Western defense and electrification plans.
1914 Zinc Crisis As Historical Parallel
- In 1914 Germany centralized refining and offtakes and Allied munitions ran short.
- Tindale uses this historic zinc/refining example to show how midstream control can decide wartime outcomes.
