The article opens with a fair observation: the Right is in disarray. The populist revolution that began with Trump has evolved into something far less centralized and far more combustible. Libertarians, nationalists, traditional conservatives, and financial dissidents are no longer loosely allied under one “big tent”—they’re breaking off, building silos, and refusing to compromise.
That’s not just a political problem. It’s a structural rupture, and SchiffGold is right to note it. But they fail to ask why this fracture is happening now.
Spoiler: It’s not just social media algorithms or personality clashes. It’s economic collapse, institutional rot, and widespread betrayal from the very organizations we were told to trust.
Another solid point from SchiffGold: social media is polarizing the Right—and not in a healthy way. Algorithms feed people more of what they already believe, giving each faction the illusion of majority support and moral clarity. It breeds absolutism, not strategy.
Fair enough. But let’s be honest—the old gatekeepers earned their irrelevance. Conservative media, legacy think tanks, and D.C. institutions spent decades selling free trade, forever wars, and globalism wrapped in red, white, and blue. The internet didn’t break the Right. It simply revealed how broken it already was.
You can’t blame people for tuning out institutions when those institutions actively ignored the warning signs of banking instability, currency debasement, and elite consolidation.
Let’s talk about the nostalgia baked into this article. SchiffGold longs for the days of Reagan-style unity—when libertarians, hawks, and moral traditionalists rallied around shared principles. But here’s the problem: those principles were either co-opted or hollowed out by the very system they were supposed to challenge.
The idea that we can return to some golden age of conservative unity is not just naïve—it’s dangerous. The “institutions” being praised in this article are the same ones that paved the way to our current economic death spiral.
SchiffGold paints populism as a kind of ideological cancer—rooted in the whims of the people, lacking in structure, and fundamentally destabilizing. But that’s a gross oversimplification.
Yes, populism can be messy. It can be short-sighted. But it’s not irrational. It’s a reaction to betrayal.
Populism is what happens when institutions abandon the people.
It’s not the threat. It’s the symptom of collapse.
Here's the elephant in the room: our economic and monetary system is imploding.
This article talks about political division as if it’s an abstract intellectual problem. It’s not. It’s about resources, security, and survival.
And yet the article doesn’t mention a single one of these factors. Not once.
That omission isn’t just academic—it’s fatal. Because you can’t understand the division on the Right without understanding the destruction of economic sovereignty at its root.
One of the article’s biggest fallacies is the idea that institutions must be preserved for their own sake. That’s the wrong framework.
Institutions are only worth defending if they serve the people. When they become tools of control, surveillance, or corruption, they deserve to be dismantled and replaced—not revered.
The Fed is an institution.
So is the IMF.
So is the Department of the Treasury.
And they’ve all played a role in building a financial architecture that’s:
This is why I’ll take imperfect populism over polished institutionalism any day of the week—because one may break the system, but the other is already suffocating you inside it.
The divide on the Right is real. Populism is volatile. Unity won’t come easy. But trying to “restore” Reagan-era coalitions won’t solve anything if the foundations are already compromised.
Instead of idolizing the past, we need to build new structures—ones rooted in sovereignty, decentralization, and personal responsibility.
So yes, the Right is divided. But the answer isn’t a return to broken institutions.
The answer is to build something stronger, before the system we were taught to trust collapses under its own weight.
This isn’t theory—it’s your financial future at stake.
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Populism isn’t the threat.
CBDCs, collapsing banks, and centralized power are.
Know the difference—and act accordingly.
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