The Federal Reserve—the almighty wizard behind the curtain—has been inflating our money supply, engineering boom-bust cycles, and bailing out its cronies for over a century. And now, thanks to growing calls for an audit and a public finally waking from its trance, there’s blood in the water.
But let’s get one thing straight: auditing the Fed isn’t the endgame. It’s the first shot fired. The real victory comes when we rip this cancer out root and stem.
Here’s how we torch it without lighting the whole house on fire.
The Federal Reserve’s power lies in its monopoly on monetary policy. Repeal the Federal Reserve Act, end its ability to conjure dollars out of nothing, and slam the vault shut. From now on, no more artificial interest rates, no more QE infinity, no more secret bailouts.
This move alone would be an earthquake under Wall Street’s feet.
The Fed’s books are choked with $6.8 trillion in assets, mostly U.S. Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities—the exact garbage that detonated the economy in 2008. We don’t sell them. We lock them down and let them rot. Every Treasury and mortgage-backed security has an expiration date. Let time eat them away.
In 30 years, the Fed’s power base will decay like an abandoned corpse.
Anything that doesn’t have an end date—corporate debt, federal agency paper, obscure junk—gets sold off over a few years. It’s a slow bleed, not a slash, designed to keep the market from panicking. But make no mistake: this is a controlled demolition.
Strip it of its legal armor and throw it into the free market like every other institution. Let it survive—if it can—on reputation alone. No more privileged access to regulatory loopholes. No more government guarantees. Just a has-been cartel begging for relevance.
If it survives, fine. If it dies, even better.
When the Fed fails (and it will), the big banks can build their own infrastructure for interbank lending. Private solutions will emerge—faster, leaner, and unshackled by bureaucracy. Maybe they’ll prop up a new central body. Maybe they won’t. Either way, we won't care, because the Fed will be gone.
Let’s not forget: the Fed printed $8.9 trillion to go shopping for U.S. debt. Today it still holds $5 trillion of that national IOU, which means the federal government is addicted to its own enabler. Kill the Fed, and Washington loses its piggy bank. Suddenly, spending without consequence becomes a thing of the past.
Good.
The beauty of this plan is that it's a slow, quiet death. Debt expires, assets vanish, and the Fed’s footprint shrinks every year. No “quantitative tightening,” no shock therapy. Just nature taking its course.
In the first year alone, the Fed’s balance sheet would drop 10%. After that, a smooth 3.1% average annual decline. Death by a thousand paper cuts.
Banks won’t sit on reserves earning 4.4% from a dying beast. Once the Fed stops paying out, that cash flows back into the real economy—businesses, startups, people. It might nudge inflation. It might spark growth. But either way, it’s money returning to the people, not hoarded in the bowels of the banking cartel.
That’s not instability. That’s economic detox.
What would life look like after the Fed?
We’d finally be free from the iron grip of centralized control—no more FedNow pipelines tracking your every transaction, no more phantom inflation stealing your wealth while the talking heads on CNBC smile and nod.
If you value your freedom, it's time to stop playing defense. The blueprint is here. The war has begun.
Download Bill Brocius' “Seven Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure” and take your financial future into your own hands—before they take it for you.
Stay sharp. Stay sovereign.
—Derek Wolfe
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