Since 2020, the Federal Reserve expanded its balance sheet by more than $4 trillion at its peak, while cumulative consumer inflation exceeded 20%, according to Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. This Federal Reserve power scandal is not about one chairman’s misconduct but about a system designed to concentrate monetary authority, shield elites from accountability, and quietly transfer wealth from wage earners to asset holders under the guise of “stability.”
A criminal probe against Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has triggered exactly the response you'd expect from the Beltway establishment: panic, pearl-clutching, and a full-throated defense of one of the most dangerous men in modern American history. Powell’s defenders aren't just trying to protect a man—they’re shielding the core institution of elite power. Because if Powell falls, so does the myth of Fed “independence,” and with it, the illusion that our monetary system isn’t one giant controlled demolition of the American middle class.
The so-called indictment over misstatements related to building renovations? A smokescreen. What’s really happening is a war over who gets to steer the Titanic while it's sinking. Trump’s team wants a different hand on the wheel, but the ship’s course—debt, inflation, centralization—is locked in either way.
For over a century, the Federal Reserve has operated as an unelected fourth branch of government, but without the hassle of elections, oversight, or responsibility. The idea that it’s independent is a lie repeated so often it’s become sacred doctrine in D.C.—and Powell is its high priest.
But here’s the truth: the Fed isn’t independent from politics. It’s independent from voters. It’s independent from accountability. It’s independent from the consequences of the carnage it inflicts on working-class families every single day.
What Powell and his allies are really defending is a central bank that:
Powell is not a victim. He’s the executioner. And D.C. is lining up to build him a statue.
Here’s where the narrative takes a sharp turn. Trump’s battle with Powell isn’t about reform—it’s about control. In both of his terms, Trump pushed for lower interest rates, more liquidity, and easier money. That’s the same monetary Kool-Aid the Fed’s been force-feeding the economy since 2008.
Let’s not pretend Trump is a hard-money populist. He’s a real estate guy—cheap credit is his lifeblood. And while his instincts on fighting the Fed are right, the goal shouldn’t be to bend the Fed to your will. The goal should be to end it.
Because loose money isn’t just an economic problem. It’s a cultural one. Easy credit props up Wall Street, destroys savings, and erodes the value of honest labor. It’s the invisible hand that exported your job, priced you out of a home, and pushed your kids toward nihilism.
And yes—Trump bears blame here. His own economic policy often mimicked the Fed's worst instincts.
The real story unfolding isn’t about Powell—it’s about the Senate. This is where meaningful reform goes to die. Every time a movement bubbles up to audit the Fed or rein it in, the Senate steps in like the Praetorian Guard, defending their sacred technocracy.
Tom Tillis, a Republican, was first out of the gate vowing to block future Fed nominees. More will follow, cloaking their betrayal in the language of “institutional integrity” while ignoring the real crimes of the Fed:
The Senate’s loyalty isn’t to the Constitution. It’s to the dollar cartel. These people don’t care who sets policy—just so long as it’s not you.
We need to drop the idea that Powell is failing. He’s not failing—he’s succeeding brilliantly at exactly what the Federal Reserve was designed to do: consolidate wealth, insulate government from accountability, and grease the wheels of empire.
Think of Powell as a janitor mopping up the mess made by every Congress that overspends and every president that overreaches. Only he’s not cleaning it—he’s painting over it, covering the rot with cheap money and complex schemes.
In return, he gets media praise, political protection, and zero risk of prison time. Meanwhile, the average American sees:
The moment Trump moved against Powell, the knives came out. Not for Powell—but for the people trying to take his power away.
The backlash isn’t about protecting the rule of law. It’s about protecting the rules of the game—where the Fed is judge, jury, and executioner of economic life, and no one outside the beltway gets a vote.
Why is Powell canonized like a saint?
They fear populism not because it’s chaotic—but because it threatens to expose the con.
Make no mistake—the criminal probe won’t weaken the Fed. It’ll strengthen it.
That’s the sick irony here. Investigating Powell won’t bring transparency or accountability. It’ll simply drive institutionalists to close ranks tighter around their favorite money printer.
What’s coming is worse:
Unless there’s a complete, public repudiation of the central bank model, the next collapse will be engineered, not accidental.
Let’s say it loud and clear: Jerome Powell isn’t the problem. The Federal Reserve is the problem.
This institution has failed every mission it’s ever been given—except the one it was really built for: insulating government debt expansion and inflating away fiscal responsibility. You cannot audit your way out of this. You cannot regulate it. You cannot steer it in a better direction.
You must abolish it.
Until then, every “reform” is just rearranging the deck chairs on a ship that’s already halfway underwater. The public needs to wake up to the reality that the Fed doesn’t serve them—it rules them.
And as long as it exists, it will keep choosing Wall Street over your paycheck, globalization over your job, and collapse over accountability.
Gold nearing $4,850 isn’t scaring off the world’s biggest players—it’s attracting them. BRICS nations are…
Politicians are once again selling certainty in a system built on chaos. With gas prices…
Gold just plunged more than 20% at a time when global tensions, tariffs, and economic…
Over a million bank accounts compromised in a single year isn’t just another cybersecurity headline—it’s…
Washington thought it was negotiating peace. Turns out, it may have been negotiating with middlemen…
While headlines fixate on missiles, ceasefires, and diplomatic theatrics, the real story is unfolding beneath…
This website uses cookies.
Read More