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Fed Insider Admits It: The World Is Ditching the Dollar and Dumping U.S. Debt

EDITOR'S NOTES

When a Federal Reserve mouthpiece like Neel Kashkari starts publicly acknowledging that investors are bailing on U.S. assets, it’s not just noise—it’s the canary in the coal mine singing its death song. Rising bond yields and a falling dollar aren’t just economic trivia—they’re blood on the walls of a system that’s losing global trust. The world’s turning its back on the so-called “safe haven” of U.S. markets, and for good reason. The empire is rotting from within. The fiat system is cracking. And those in charge are more worried about PR than fixing anything real. Time to wake up.

The Fed’s Fractured Fairy Tale

Neel Kashkari, the Minneapolis Fed’s poster boy for “don’t panic but do worry,” went on CNBC this week to calmly tell us that the global investment community is ghosting America.

What tipped him off? Treasury yields are spiking while the U.S. dollar is sliding—two signals that investors aren’t just jittery, they’re jumping ship. “Normally, when you see big tariff increases, I would have expected the dollar to go up,” Kashkari confessed. “The fact that the dollar is going down at the same time… lends some more credibility to the story of investor preferences shifting.”

Translation: the world’s faith in U.S. economic leadership is eroding. Fast.

A Bond Market on Fire

The 10-year Treasury yield—essentially the temperature gauge of long-term trust in U.S. debt—has shot up after President Trump announced another round of economic grenade-lobbing: a 10% across-the-board tariff on trading partners. He later softened the language, but the damage was done.

Meanwhile, the dollar’s down over 3% against a global basket of currencies. That’s not a hiccup. That’s the early signs of a run on U.S. assets. When America’s supposed “safe haven” status starts getting side-eyed by foreign investors, you’re not looking at a correction—you’re staring at the first cracks of collapse.

America Is No Longer the Safe Bet

Kashkari tried to spin it as economics 101: “If the trade deficit is going down, maybe it’s because investors don’t think America’s the most attractive place to park their cash anymore.”

Exactly. But let’s not pretend that’s just a harmless shift in preferences. That’s capital flight, and it means that the global elite no longer trusts Uncle Sam to protect their wealth. Tariff tantrums, ballooning debt, and endless money printing have made the dollar look like a joke in bad taste.

The Calm Before the Real Panic

Kashkari claims he sees “stresses” in the market but no “significant dislocations.” That’s Fed-speak for: “We see the iceberg, but we’re still doing ballroom dancing on the Titanic.” He’s not even a voting member of the Fed this year, yet he’s already toeing the line on “anchoring inflation expectations” and waiting for “clarity” on trade policy. Good luck with that while Rome burns.

They’ll stall, delay, and obfuscate until the floor drops out, and then they’ll blame “unforeseen circumstances.” But make no mistake: the exodus has already begun.

What You Should Be Doing Right Now

You can’t stop a broken empire from collapsing—but you can get out of its blast radius. The system is flashing red, the insiders are hedging, and the dollar is circling the drain. Don’t be the last one holding the bag.

Call to Action:
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