They’re calling it innovation. We call it infiltration. Tether, the offshore crypto juggernaut that already commands over 66% of the global stablecoin racket, has declared it will launch a U.S.-specific dollar-backed coin “as early as this year.” And while mainstream media claps like trained seals at the promise of seamless finance, the rest of us—those who understand the rigged architecture of fiat power—see something far more sinister.
This isn’t a breakthrough. It’s a bait-and-switch. A digital sleight of hand to extend the life of a currency that’s been bleeding out since 1913. Tether’s U.S. stablecoin isn’t about liberty or innovation. It’s about clamping tighter control through the comforting illusion of progress.
Let’s burn down the lie at the core of this campaign: there is nothing stable about a coin tethered to the dollar. That dollar—stripped of its gold backing by Nixon in 1971 and throttled by the Federal Reserve’s endless money printer—has lost over 97% of its purchasing power since its inception. It isn’t “sound money.” It’s debt with a branding problem.
Tether isn’t rejecting that system. It’s plugging into it. Its reserves are gorged with short-term U.S. Treasuries, IOUs from a government over $34 trillion in the hole. That means Tether is no escape from fiat collapse—it’s a parasite clinging to its host, sucking yield from the very instruments liberty-minded people should be trying to torch.
And now they want to bring this Trojan Horse into American markets? Wrapped in the flag and peddled as "regulatory compliance"? Spare us the theater.
Tether markets itself as a benevolent dollar dispenser to emerging markets and crypto economies. But when your liquidity pipeline runs through the U.S. Treasury, you’re not exporting freedom—you’re exporting surveillance and vulnerability.
Sanctions? Easy. Just squeeze Tether’s banking partners.
Wallet blacklisting? Done.
Access revocation? Flip a switch.
This is the future they’re selling: programmable fiat wrapped in blockchain wallpaper. A future where digital wallets talk to law enforcement before they talk to each other.
If you think Tether is immune because it’s “crypto,” remember this: the road to CBDCs is paved with stablecoins. Tether is just the warm-up act.
Here’s the dirty secret. Tether isn’t building tools of freedom—it’s building bridges for the surveillance state. Every KYC-compliant, regulator-approved, AML-screened transaction brings us one step closer to a monetary Panopticon, where your funds can be frozen, flagged, or redirected based on your political views, geography, or social score.
Call it what it is: collusion with the central planners.
They’re using Tether to normalize the idea that you don’t own your money—you just access it under permission.
Let’s talk numbers. In 2024, Tether raked in $14 billion in profit, mostly from interest on U.S. government debt. And while CNBC may call that “financial prowess,” any Austrian economist worth his salt will tell you it’s monetary parasitism.
The yield that Tether earns is not the fruit of productive labor—it’s the consequence of a manipulated rate environment crafted by the Federal Reserve to fund an ever-expanding deficit. It’s the same poison that devalues your savings, inflates asset bubbles, and destroys the middle class.
In short, Tether is profiting from the fire sale of the American empire.
Yes, Tether has proven useful in places where inflation burns hottest—Argentina, Turkey, Lebanon. But don’t confuse utility with virtue. It’s the lesser evil, not the answer. Stablecoins are training wheels for central bank digital currencies, not an alternative to them.
Let’s be clear: real monetary reform does not mean upgrading the rails of a broken system. It means scrapping the train entirely.
What we need isn’t faster fiat. We need non-manipulable money. That means assets no central bank can print, devalue, or censor. Gold. Bitcoin. Private market alternatives. Instruments of choice, not control.
Tether’s new American stablecoin will be celebrated as a step forward. But it’s not Hayek’s denationalized money. It’s not Rothbard’s dream of a stateless currency. It’s a dollar sock puppet propped up by regulators and branded with crypto flair.
It’s the monetary equivalent of slapping a blockchain sticker on the Fed and calling it innovation.
As George Washington warned, “Paper money has had the effect in your state that it ever will have, to ruin commerce, oppress the honest, and open the door to every species of fraud and injustice.”
It’s not just about sound money. It’s about sovereignty, privacy, and resistance.
Don’t fall for another dollar clone with a shinier mask.
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