Don’t Blame Trump’s Tariffs—Blame the Bankers Behind the Curtain
The Recession Isn’t Coming—It’s Already Engineered
Let me ask you something.
Why is it that every time America takes a step toward sovereignty—be it in trade, energy, or money—the financial markets suddenly "panic"? Why do the headlines scream "recession" the moment a sitting president disrupts the status quo? You’re not crazy to wonder. And you’re definitely not wrong.
Last week, the market nosedived following President Trump’s announcement of unexpected tariffs. Wall Street whined. Cable news talked recession. But here’s the real story no one’s telling: tariffs don’t cause recessions. Central banks do.
The Trigger vs. the Trap
Let’s set the record straight.
Tariffs might be the match, but the fuel was already laid—by the Federal Reserve. When you artificially lower interest rates and flood the economy with debt-backed dollars, you're not stimulating growth—you’re engineering collapse. That’s not theory. That’s history.
Every boom you’ve ever celebrated was borrowed, not earned. And every bust that followed? Pre-programmed.
Tariffs, geopolitical tensions, even housing market crashes—these are symptoms. Distractions. The true disease is artificial credit expansion, a slow-motion betrayal orchestrated by unelected money masters at the Federal Reserve.
How Fake Credit Destroys Real Economies
Here’s how it works: When central banks create money out of thin air and pump it into the system as loans, they distort reality. That money isn’t earned. It’s not backed by savings. It’s a mirage.
So companies expand. Consumers splurge. Governments overspend. The economy “booms”—on fumes.
But the moment reality hits—when resources can’t meet the demands of these fake projects—the music stops. That’s when the Fed hikes rates. That’s when defaults start. That’s when recessions happen.
This isn’t capitalism. It’s a rigged simulation. And the Fed is the game master.
History Repeats Because It’s Rigged That Way
The Great Depression? Triggered by a stock crash, but caused by wild credit expansion in the Roaring Twenties.
The Great Recession? Triggered by housing defaults, but caused by two decades of low rates and credit bubbles.
The next collapse? Maybe tariffs. Maybe tech. But the root? The Fed’s monetary drug binge post-2008 and especially after COVID.
They called it “stimulus.” I call it sabotage.
So, What Do We Do?
If you want to survive the coming collapse, you must stop listening to the people who caused it.
Understand this: The Fed doesn’t fix recessions. It creates them. And every time it steps in to “save” the system, it transfers more wealth from you to the elites.
The solution isn’t more intervention. It’s monetary independence.
- Exit fiat.
- Own real assets.
- Understand gold-backed alternatives.
- Demand sound money policies from your leaders.
- And most importantly—stop playing their game.
Because if you don’t? You’re not just a victim. You’re a participant.
Final Thought:
You don’t need a crystal ball to see what’s coming. You just need the courage to admit the system is broken—by design. And that the only way to protect yourself is to opt out before the next engineered “crisis” becomes your personal catastrophe.
Take Back Control:
The financial landscape is shifting faster than most realize, and those who fail to prepare risk being left behind. If you’re ready to take control of your financial destiny, I’ve got two resources that can help you start today:
- 📘 Download my free digital book "Seven Steps to Protect Your Bank Accounts" and learn how to shield your wealth from systemic shocks.
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Don’t just survive the next collapse. Be the one who saw it coming—and acted.