Powell's Prophecy: Supply Shocks, Higher Rates, and the Fed’s Quiet War on Your Wallet
Federal Reserve boss Jerome “Too Late” Powell has once again graced us with a glimpse into the cartel’s next phase of economic manipulation. Speaking at the Fed’s own Thomas Laubach Research Conference — a gathering more reminiscent of a high priest conclave than a public institution — Powell hinted that the era of low, stable interest rates is fading fast. Why? Because he claims we're entering a time of more frequent "supply shocks."
Let’s decode that. When the Fed says “supply shock,” they mean the kind of man-made crises we’ve seen repeatedly over the past decade — from the 2008 collapse, to COVID lockdowns, to geopolitical theater that mysteriously disrupts energy and food supplies right when the system is already wobbling.
“Higher real rates may reflect the possibility that inflation could be more volatile,” Powell says, as if inflation is some spontaneous act of nature rather than a direct result of central bank policy and legislative overspending. The Fed’s “solution”? Keep interest rates high, suppress lending, stall small business growth, and tighten the economic noose around the necks of everyday Americans.
Oh, and don’t forget: these same policy tools just so happen to funnel wealth into the vaults of their cronies in high finance.
The Real Message Behind the Curtain
Powell claims they’re “well above the lower bound,” referencing the Fed’s current rate range of 4.25% to 4.5%. What he doesn't mention is that every time rates rise, debt servicing costs for the U.S. government soar. That means more borrowing, more money printing, and more inflation — the very beast they pretend to slay. It's a rigged game.
The Fed’s true fear? That they’ll lose control of expectations. The “anchor” Powell speaks of — keeping inflation expectations tethered to 2% — is just a euphemism for keeping the populace docile while the ship sinks. They don’t want you questioning fiat. They don’t want you hoarding gold, crypto, or bartering. They want you locked into their brittle framework, where your savings erode slowly enough for you not to panic — but surely enough for you to never gain ground.
Powell’s nostalgic reverence for the Great Moderation and the so-called prosperity it birthed skips one crucial fact: it was a debt-fueled illusion propped up by deregulated credit markets and derivatives so toxic they nearly vaporized the economy in 2008.
Controlled Collapse: A Feature, Not a Bug
COVID, Powell reminds us, was a “shock.” But was it? Or was it a stress test for just how far centralized control could go under the guise of safety? Entire economies were paused. Trillions were printed. And surprise — inflation soared. Now the Fed pretends it was caught off guard.
Let’s not be naïve. These aren’t policy missteps. They’re precision operations. Central planners engineer crises, then swoop in as saviors. The supply shocks? They’re not accidents. They’re the breadcrumbs in a trail toward a fully surveilled, programmable digital currency future — a future where FedNow and CBDCs replace cash, and every transaction is subject to scrutiny, approval, and cancellation.
Take Action Before the Next Shock Hits
Powell’s comments aren't forecasts — they’re warnings dressed up as policy. The system isn’t just fragile. It’s weaponized. And every move they make is about consolidating more power at your expense.
Download “Seven Steps to Protect Yourself from Bank Failure” by Bill Brocius right now before the next engineered crisis knocks on your door. Protect your assets, shield your privacy, and prepare for a future where the Fed won’t just set interest rates — they’ll set your limits.
Stay awake. Stay free.
— Derek Wolfe



