Here’s something most Americans were never taught clearly:
The Federal Reserve is not America’s first central bank. It’s the third.
The First Bank of the United States lost its charter in 1811. The Second Bank was dismantled after Andrew Jackson’s war against what he saw as elite financial control. The Federal Reserve, created in 1913, is the latest version.
After decades in finance, one pattern stands out to me: every central bank in American history was born during a crisis, and every one eventually faced serious public backlash. That’s not ideology — it’s historical record.
Look at the timing:
Central banks don’t emerge during calm periods. They’re created when the system is under stress.
Fast forward to 2008. We didn’t create a new central bank — we dramatically expanded the one we had. Zero interest rates, quantitative easing, massive bond-buying, and emergency lending facilities transformed the Fed from a background institution into the dominant force in financial markets.
History shows that when power expands during crisis, it rarely returns to its original size.
Recent commentary suggesting the Fed risks losing public trust echoes criticisms that go all the way back to Andrew Jackson.
Jackson believed the Second Bank favored wealthy eastern interests over working Americans. Today, many people feel something similar:
Whether you support the Fed or not, one fact is undeniable: since 1913, the U.S. dollar has lost over 95% of its purchasing power.
If your grandfather could buy something for $1 that now costs $25 or $30, that tells you something about long-term currency durability.
Fiat currency behaves like a car driven off the lot — it steadily depreciates over time. Gold and silver don’t promise yield; they offer preservation. That distinction matters more than ever.
Central banks do more than set interest rates. They influence credit expansion, asset bubbles, liquidity cycles, and ultimately the price of money itself.
When credit is easy, asset prices surge. When liquidity tightens, weaknesses are exposed. We saw it in 2008, again in 2020, and we’re seeing strains today in banking, commercial real estate, and sovereign debt.
When confidence in financial institutions weakens, people naturally look for ways to reduce exposure to systemic risk. That’s not radical — it’s responsible.
After the Second Bank expired in 1836, the United States entered the Free Banking Era. It wasn’t perfect, but the economy expanded rapidly. Railroads were built, agriculture accelerated, industry grew, and the country expanded westward.
For much of that period, prices declined, meaning purchasing power rose as productivity improved.
Today, deflation is treated as inherently dangerous. But historically, falling prices driven by productivity gains were not always destructive. The point isn’t to abolish central banking tomorrow — it’s to remember that alternative monetary systems have existed, and growth did not depend solely on centralized control.
Over the past 15 years, the Federal Reserve has significantly expanded its influence:
At the same time, conversations around more centralized and digital monetary systems are growing. As monetary power becomes more concentrated, transparency and accountability become increasingly important.
Money isn’t just economic. It’s political. And who controls it matters.
This isn’t about fear — it’s about pattern recognition.
I grew up in a working-class family. We didn’t debate monetary frameworks; we talked about making ends meet. Over the years, I’ve learned that when governments expand debt, dilute currency, and stretch financial systems, hard assets quietly regain relevance.
Gold and silver have survived empires, wars, currency resets, bank failures, and political upheaval. Not because they’re exciting, but because they’re durable. They don’t depend on policy committees or counterparty trust. They simply hold value over time.
You don’t need to predict the collapse of the Federal Reserve to justify owning precious metals.
You only need to recognize that:
History shows monetary systems evolve — sometimes gradually, sometimes abruptly. When they do, those holding tangible assets often weather the transition more smoothly than those relying solely on paper promises.
America’s first two central banks ended amid controversy and political resistance. The third now faces growing scrutiny, expanded authority, and questions about long-term trust.
That doesn’t guarantee failure. But it does suggest we’re in another pivotal chapter of monetary history.
If there’s one lesson I’ve learned in decades of watching markets, it’s this: protect yourself before the system forces you to react.
If you’re serious about staying ahead of monetary shifts and strengthening your financial position, I encourage you to join our Dedollarize Inner Circle. Inside, we go deeper with strategic guidance on gold and silver, ongoing analysis, and clear direction in uncertain times.
The monetary system will continue to evolve. The real question is whether you’ll be positioned ahead of the shift — or scrambling after it.
I’d rather see you prepared.
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