On paper, the Federal Reserve has a “dual mandate”—to maintain stable prices and maximize employment. Sounds noble. But in practice, it's a rigged game. You can't print your way to both goals. Every time they juice the economy with lower rates to "help workers," they light a fire under prices. It’s basic cause and effect: flood the system with cheap money, and the value of that money goes down.
And yet, despite that basic economic reality, the Fed is expected to cut rates again. Why? Because the labor market looks soft, and there's a conveniently timed government shutdown that’s delaying the data that could challenge that narrative. How convenient.
They're playing chicken with inflation—again.
The Consumer Price Index sits at 3% year-over-year, and they want you to believe that’s good news. But the CPI is a rigged metric that underweights real-world expenses like food, energy, and housing—the things people actually buy. Meanwhile, Americans are racking up record credit card debt just to survive. That’s not recovery. That’s a slow-motion collapse.
The idea that they can "stimulate" the economy with rate cuts while inflation stays magically tame is the biggest lie in modern finance. Every dollar they inject into the system reduces your purchasing power. That’s not a bug—it’s the design.
Here’s the part the media won’t tell you: the rate cuts aren’t for you. They’re for the government.
With over $38 trillion in debt, Washington simply can’t afford high interest rates. Servicing the debt already costs over $1 trillion per year. If rates stay elevated, the Treasury burns down in real time. So the Fed steps in—not to save jobs, but to save the state.
Think about it: if interest rates were a free market mechanism, they'd reflect real risk. But in this rigged casino, the house can't afford market rates. So they manipulate them.
And how is the Treasury handling this mess? By borrowing short-term, rolling over debt every few months, and praying rates fall. That’s not policy. That’s a junkie trying to float another loan before the last one explodes.
Every rate cut is advertised as stimulus. But what it really does is punish savers, reward borrowers, and hand Wall Street another windfall. It’s redistribution in reverse—stealing from the bottom to pad the portfolios of the elite.
The government borrows like a drunken sailor. The Fed buys the debt. And you pay the inflation tax, whether you voted for it or not. That’s how modern monetary authoritarianism works.
And when this debt-fueled high finally crashes? You won’t see a bailout. You’ll see capital controls, frozen bank accounts, and the warm embrace of digital currency surveillance.
Now they’re floating the idea of replacing Fed Chair Jerome Powell with Kevin Warsh. Big deal. One bureaucrat swaps chairs with another. The system remains the same. The real problem isn’t who’s steering the ship—it’s that the ship was built to sink.
They’ll pretend this is about restoring confidence. But it’s just optics. The mission remains unchanged: protect the empire, sacrifice the people.
Let’s strip away the academic jargon. What the Fed is really doing is enforcing economic obedience. You’re not supposed to save. You’re supposed to borrow, spend, and stay dependent. That’s how they keep the game going.
They destroy your purchasing power, trap you in a cycle of debt, and then claim they’re helping you. It’s Orwellian, it’s sinister, and worst of all—it’s accepted.
If you think this ends with a soft landing, you haven’t been paying attention. This is the prelude to a controlled collapse. Digital currency. Financial surveillance. Bail-ins. You’ll own nothing, and you’ll be told you’re lucky.
Don’t wait for the collapse to figure out how to survive it.
It’s your lifeline. Take it now—before the system clamps down.
I’ve been around the hacker world long enough to recognize the difference between a random…
The war with Iran isn’t just a geopolitical story—it’s an economic one that’s already hitting…
For decades, policymakers assured the public that globalization made the world more stable, more resilient,…
The headlines keep promising that the Federal Reserve will eventually step in and ease the…
Washington is burning through roughly $1 billion per day in the war with Iran—and that…
Gold is holding firm above $5,100 even as fresh U.S. economic data paints a confusing…
This website uses cookies.
Read More