The U.S. economy has been artificially propped up for decades through money printing, low interest rates, and unsustainable government spending. The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet exploded to $9 trillion, and the national debt now surpasses $34 trillion—a number that no one in Washington seems to care about.
Despite the media’s rosy reports of “growth,” this house of cards is one stiff breeze away from collapse. Now, Harry Dent is sounding the alarm: mass deportations of working immigrants could accelerate that crash, shaving 1–1.5% off GDP and pushing the U.S. into recession.
But let’s pause for a moment. Is that really the root of the problem? Or is it just a convenient narrative to distract from the real cause of economic instability—the Federal Reserve’s reckless monetary policies and the government’s addiction to cheap debt?
Dent argues that deporting millions of undocumented workers could push an overstimulated economy over the edge. The logic is simple: fewer workers mean fewer consumers, less productivity, and a contraction in GDP. But if we’re being honest, this isn’t about immigration—it’s about decades of economic mismanagement.
The Federal Reserve, through relentless money printing, has debased the dollar by over 97% since Nixon took the U.S. off the gold standard in 1971. Inflation isn’t just about rising prices; it’s about your purchasing power being systematically stolen.
Think about it: if immigration were the true issue, why has Europe, with its open-border policies, been flirting with recession for years? Why did Japan, with its low immigration rates, manage to avoid a total collapse despite economic stagnation? The truth is that the real enemy of economic stability isn’t border policy—it’s fiat currency and central bank manipulation.
Dent predicts a major crash in 2025, and while immigration policy might be a catalyst, it’s not the cause. The real drivers of the next economic meltdown are:
The real crisis won’t be triggered by deporting workers—it will be triggered by the end of the debt-based financial system as we know it. And the media? They’ll look for a scapegoat. Trump’s immigration policy will be their easy target, distracting the public from the real con.
Regardless of who sits in the White House, the playbook remains the same: centralized control, financial repression, and wealth erosion. But you don’t have to be a victim.
Blaming Trump’s immigration policy for the next recession is just another sleight of hand. The real problem is the broken monetary system, and until we return to sound money principles, we’ll continue living through one economic crisis after another.
The question isn’t whether the system will collapse—it’s whether you’ll be prepared when it does.
Want to know how to protect your savings before the next crash?
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