December Retail Sales Collapse

Holiday Retail Sales Collapse Exposes Cracks in the Consumer Economy—and Signals a Dangerous Shift Toward Digital Currency Control

EDITOR'S NOTES

December’s flatline in retail sales wasn’t just a disappointing holiday season—it was a warning shot. As inflation eats away at real wages and middle-class spending power vanishes, the government is quietly preparing its solution: a digitized, programmable financial cage. This article breaks down what the latest data really means, how the FedNow system and CBDCs are being positioned as “fixes,” and why now is the time to take control of your financial future—before that choice is taken from you.

December Retail Sales Flatline: The Illusion of Economic Strength Shattered

The numbers don’t lie. Retail sales in December were flat—0.0% growth—despite the biggest consumer push of the year: the holidays. Economists expected a modest 0.4% bump, and even that low bar wasn’t cleared. In fact, once you strip out volatile sectors like autos, sales were still unchanged.

This isn’t just a one-off blip. It’s a systemic signal that the consumer engine driving America’s economy is running on fumes.

  • Annual retail sales grew 2.4%, but inflation rose 2.7%—so real consumer spending power actually declined.
  • Big-ticket sectors like furniture, clothing, and electronics all posted significant drops.
  • Even online sales, the supposed savior of retail, eked out a pathetic 0.1% gain.
  • Only building materials and garden supplies grew (up 1.2%)—not exactly a sign of roaring demand.

This weak performance misses expectations across the board and contradicts the narrative that the economy is resilient. The truth is, it’s only “resilient” for the top earners.

The “K-Shaped Economy” Is No Conspiracy—It’s the Plan

Even establishment economists are using the phrase now: K-shaped economy. It’s a tidy way of saying the rich are getting richer, while the rest of us get crushed under debt, inflation, and rising surveillance.

  • Higher-end consumers kept spending in 2025, bolstered by asset bubbles, tax shelters, and insider access.
  • Middle- and lower-income Americans—the majority—pulled back hard. Tariffs on goods, higher interest rates, and stagnating wages have them tapped out.

This isn’t just economic inequality—it’s the foundation for programmable money.

When the working class can no longer spend, governments step in with a “solution”: programmable Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) and systems like FedNow that allow them to control when, how, and where money is spent. This is not a hypothetical. It’s already happening in pilot programs across the globe.

Why Weak Retail Data Fuels the Push for CBDCs

Here’s how the playbook works:

  1. Let the economy decline for average people.
  2. Blame “external factors” like weather, tariffs, or supply chains.
  3. Propose a high-tech, centralized solution: digital dollars that can be distributed quickly via FedNow, with strings attached.

And those strings? They're transaction limits, spending restrictions, and expiration dates. This is not science fiction—these features are already being discussed openly by central banks and policymakers as “tools” to stimulate or curb demand.

With consumer spending falling short, watch how quickly the calls grow louder for a digital dollar to “help” those who are struggling. But this won’t be help. It will be handcuffs.

The FedNow Trojan Horse

The FedNow payment system, marketed as a faster and more convenient way to send money, is the infrastructure for CBDC enforcement. Once enough of the economy is wired into FedNow, it becomes trivial to:

  • Track every transaction in real time
  • Deny payments to unapproved merchants
  • Restrict funds based on social behavior
  • Tax or fine instantly without due process

The collapse in retail spending will accelerate this rollout. Expect more stimulus campaigns—but only through controlled, monitored digital rails.

Slowing Wage Growth and Fragile Employment Are the Tipping Point

The article also reports that wage growth slowed to its lowest pace since Q3 2020, and job growth is now crawling at sub-55,000 monthly gains. That's not just a red flag—it’s a trap being set.

Once workers are desperate enough, they’ll accept any “solution” the government offers—especially if it comes with free money. But remember: free is never free in a surveillance economy.

This Is Not a Drill—It’s the Beginning of a Cashless Cage

Retail data like this is a barometer of economic health, and right now, the storm clouds are building. What looks like consumer fatigue is really a collapse in real-world purchasing power—a collapse that will be used to justify full-blown digital control of your money.

The question isn’t if a cashless society is coming. It’s how fast you’ll be pushed into it and whether you’ll be ready.

Act Before the Reset: Download the Digital Dollar Reset Guide

If you’ve read this far, you know something’s wrong. You’ve seen the cracks forming in the financial system, and you understand that CBDCs and FedNow are not about convenience—they’re about control.

The Digital Dollar Reset Guide, written by my associate Bill Brocius, is the most important document you can read right now. It outlines:

  • How CBDCs will be rolled out in the name of "economic recovery"
  • How FedNow is already being embedded into our financial lives
  • What steps you must take now to protect your privacy and sovereignty

This isn’t optional reading. It’s required intelligence for those who refuse to become collateral damage in the government's monetary overhaul.

Download the guide here before it's too late:
Get the Digital Dollar Reset Guide

The collapse is already underway. Don’t wait for the lights to go out. Prepare now—or pay the price later.