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Speaker 0 describes Lord Evelyn Rothschild as extraordinarily rich and powerful, claiming that historically the Rothschild wealth was hidden in underground vaults and that their secret financial records were never audited or accounted for. He asserts researchers estimate their wealth at close to $500,000,000,000,000, more than half the wealth of the entire world, noting possessions such as castles, palace mansions, wineries, race horses, and exotic resorts, and that the Rothschilds bought Reuters in the eighteen hundreds, which then bought the Associated Press. He claims they have controlling interest in three major television networks and can easily avoid media tangents since they own it. He says they owned and operated England’s Royal Mint, continue to be the gold agent for the Bank of England, which they also direct, and control the LBMA (London Bullion Market Association), where 30 to 42,000,000 ounces of gold worth over $11,000,000,000 are traded daily, earning millions weekly on transaction fees. He asserts they fix the world price of gold daily and profit from its ups and downs, and over centuries have amassed trillions in gold bullion in subterranean vaults, cornering the world’s gold supply. He claims they own controlling interest in Royal Dutch Shell and operate phony charities and offshore banking services where the wealth of the black nobility in The Vatican is hidden in secret accounts at Rothschild Swiss banks, trusts, and holding companies. He mentions Alba Lynn Rothschild as looking like a harmless gray-haired old man, but says to “make no mistake about it.” He concludes that Rothschilds and their ancestors have handpicked presidents, crashed stock markets, bankrupted nations, orchestrated wars, and sponsored mass murder and impoverishment of millions, and that the wealth hoarded by this one family alone could feed, clothe, and shelter every human being on earth. Speaker 1 reframes the Rothschilds as the head of the snake, locating their headquarters within a one-mile square in the City of London as the center of their banking dynasty that owns money supplied through central banks of almost every nation. He recalls a November 1910 secret meeting on Jekyll Island among seven of the world’s richest Jewish men to establish a central bank called the Federal Reserve Bank, naming Nelson Aldrich and Frank Vanderlip (representing the Rockefeller financial empire), Henry P. Davison, Charles Norton, and Benjamin Strong (representing JP Morgan), and Paul Warburg (representing the Rothschild dynasty of Europe). He mentions powerful men who opposed the Federal Reserve, including Benjamin Guggenheim, Isidore Strauss, and Jacob Astor, who reportedly died in the Titanic sinking. He states that by April 1912 opposition to the Federal Reserve was eliminated, and on 12/23/1913 the president signed a bill establishing the privately owned Federal Reserve System in the United States. He quotes Woodrow Wilson: “I’m a most unhappy man. I’ve unwittingly ruined my country,” and notes that a great industrial nation became controlled by its system of credit, with growth in the hands of a few men. He claims Jewish bankers and rabbis celebrated the Federal Reserve Act, and quotes Charles August Lindbergh criticizing the system as private, for profit, and not federal or reserves, with debt-based finance. He asserts that the Fed system enslaves to protect its monopoly over credit and that the Fed’s money-creating tricks enable big brother government to borrow endlessly; the Fed is controlled by Jews, Rothschild, Warburg, and Schiff, and that every Federal Reserve chairman since 1980 has been Jewish (Burns, Volker, Greenspan, Bernanke, and Yellen). He claims the “house of Rothschild” owns 57% of the stock of the privately held Federal Reserve Bank. Speaker 2 asks about the proper relationship between a Fed chairman and a U.S. president. Speaker 3 states that the Federal Reserve is an independent agency, meaning there is no other government agency overrule actions taken. Speaker 1 quotes Harold Grellis Rosenthal: “our power has been created through the manipulation of the national monetary system,” asserting that the Federal Reserve System is owned by “us” even though the name implies a government institution. He alleges a long-standing plan to confiscate gold and silver and replace them with worthless paper, claiming Jews promoted both sides of issues while the goyim fail to see who is behind the scenes, and accusing Jews of parasitically consuming production while producers receive less.

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"the dollars, days as the reserve currency are numbered." "we shortened that number ourselves with a self inflicted wound when Biden announced those crippling sanctions or hope they were intended to be crippling against, Russia." This sent "a strong message to the world that you don't want to hold dollars, that you don't wanna have the US dollar and US treasuries as your reserves because, you know, you run the risk of being punished by the US government." "And so we told the world, get rid of dollars and buy gold, and that's exactly what they've been doing." "That's why the of gold is at an all time record high, you know, despite the fact that retail investors have been selling gold all year." "Gold keeps going up, setting one record after another." "Gold is on pace for its best year since 1979." "That is not a coincidence."

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Speaker 0 believes Trump is a "dumb guy." Speaker 1 asks if the feeling towards Trump is neutral. Speaker 0 says she wants to be remembered in history as someone who held the line against Trump and helped the economy. When Trump was president and wanted to stimulate the economy, she started raising rates, doing the opposite of what Trump wanted. The feeling is that they don't want Trump in the government.

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The video argues that a “new world order” is unfolding in real time, signaling the start of a “great reset.” The host points to events from the past Friday as evidence: 3,000,000 Epstein files released, the biggest one-day drop in the history of the precious metals market, and a large arbitrage developing among Chinese, London, and US precious metals markets. Gold is described as the indicator that a full-blown reset is upon us, with attention drawn to pathways like the US’s approach to Iran and the Epstein files, while claiming a broader resetting dynamic is at work. Context for the moment centers on Friday’s nomination of Kevin Warsh (referred to as Kevin Walsh in the transcript) as the new Fed chairman. The host notes baggage around Warsh, including his appearance in Epstein files, but emphasizes his views: Warsh “hates stimulus money,” “hates quantitative easing,” and “voted against it,” believing it pushes inflation higher. He is said to have shifted on interest rates, from believing higher interest rates were good for the dollar to a different stance, and he allegedly favors slashing the Fed’s balance sheet to lower rates. The implication is that the nomination marks a shift toward a new dollar era and a shift away from a strong USD, which the host frames as a response to concerns about the US owning precious metals and controlling energy markets. The host ties these changes to a new petrodollar era, arguing that the United States, now the largest producer of oil and natural gas, has moved the petrodollar structure away from Saudi Arabia and toward the US. This trifecta—new dollar policy from the Fed, a drop in the precious metals market driven by speculators, and US control over energy policy—constitutes a “reset.” The video asserts that the traditional petrodollar system, once led by OPEC, has shifted, reducing outside leverage over Washington in energy matters. The host also claims a debate over foreign influence in the Middle East and calls for ending involvement in regional wars and bringing troops home, while criticizing mainstream outlets and certain political figures. Four main points are then presented as the crux of the reset: 1) Trump desires a weaker US dollar and is pursuing greater domestic manufacturing to compete with China and India, including the aim to export more and import less; the host frames this as a deliberate strategic shift rather than inflationary debasement. 2) The end of the Fed’s independence, with a collaboration era between the Treasury and the Fed, led by figures like Scott Pissent and Warsh, suggesting much lower interest rates and a shift of debt ownership back to American hands, with foreigners potentially selling US Treasuries. 3) Energy wars are emerging, with the US drilling and producing more oil and natural gas than Russia and Saudi Arabia combined, changing the energy dynamic with China, which remains a large importer of oil and vulnerable to such shifts. 4) Sustaining public support for volatility, with Trump’s team allegedly aiming to declare a housing emergency to lower rates, discourage Wall Street from buying single-family homes, implement tariff dividends to Americans, deliver veterans’ checks, and lower inflation and gas prices in the lead-up to midterms. The host contrasts reactions within the Trump-supporting and anti-Trump camps, asserting the reset is underway regardless of opinion. A sponsor segment then pivots to copper, arguing that copper demand is surging due to global competition for materials, and highlighting Giant Mining Corporation (ticker: BFGFF) as a primary copper idea tied to the Majuba Hill Copper Project in Nevada, noting its favorable infrastructure, past production, and strategic importance to American copper independence. The segment cites executive actions and tariff movements, including a 50% tariff on semi-finished copper products effective August 1, 2025, positioning copper as central to the new industrial reality. The host reiterates Giant Mining as the foremost copper idea and invites viewers to conduct their own research.

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The speaker argues that "the dollars, days as the reserve currency are numbered" and claims this was worsened by "a self inflicted wound when Biden announced those crippling sanctions or hope they were intended to be crippling against, Russia." This, they say, sent a strong message that "you don't want to hold dollars, that you don't wanna have the US dollar and US treasuries as your reserves because, you know, you run the risk of being punished by the US government." "If you do something that the US government doesn't approve of, you could be sanctioned, and you may lose, those reserves at a time when you really need them." Consequently, "And so we told the world, get rid of dollars and buy gold, and that's exactly what they've been doing." They note "that's why the of gold is at an all time record high, you know, despite the fact that retail investors have been selling gold all year." "Gold keeps going up, setting one record after another." "Gold is on pace for its best year since 1979." "That is not a coincidence."

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So, Maxine Waters is worried about Elon Musk accessing the Fed's systems and data, especially after what happened with the Treasury and CFPB. She feels the privacy of Americans is at stake. It's ridiculous because Waters doesn't even understand the Federal Reserve is a private entity. Powell won't engage with her concerns. The Fed does what it wants, irrespective of Trump. But we can revoke their charter. They better capitulate because we're going to nationalize that bank. The Rothschilds won't control the Fed anymore. This is a real war, like 1776 part two. Also, check out the Alexshowstore.com for hats, tactical daggers and coins. They fund the second American revolution. Attack rapidly, ruthlessly, viciously without risk. However tired and hungry you may be, the enemy will be more tired, more hungry. Keep punching.

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Donald Trump believes the American economy is reaching a point of decline, anticipating its fall in the coming months. This decline will lead to the end of dollar hegemony and U.S. hegemony, which the speaker supports.

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Together because they are completely interlinked. Epstein is linked with Howard Lutnick, our commerce secretary whose firm manages the treasuries that back tether, the largest stable coin. And Brock Pierce, who was Epstein's crypto adviser, who was a cofounder of Tether and was the head of the Bitcoin Foundation before it collapsed, and then MIT took over the developers is right in the middle of this. So in essence, the endgame of this is what they have figured out as a way to have a backdoor CBDC where they specifically profit. I'm starting to call this now the creature from Epstein's Island because in the end, what are we getting out of this? We have something called USAT, which is the new official stable coin that complies with the genius act. So we have a situation where it's a digital token backed by fiat, backed by treasuries that can be programmed, tracked, and censored. And the biggest financial beneficiary is Howard Lutnick's firm. They managed to create so think about it this way. He's managed to create a central bank digital currency where only one firm profits from all of the fees for managing the treasuries. This is the biggest financial heist probably in human history. And it is connected directly to Epstein and Brock Pierce and the hijacking of Bitcoin. That's how they're linked. Now, do I think were they playing five d chess and this is what they thought was gonna happen? I don't know. May be if so, it's very clever or were they opportunistic about it? But make no mistake about it. These government regulated stablecoins are backdoor CBDCs in not in the sense that they're issued by the central bank, but in the sense that they are controlled and surveilled by the government and tracked by the government, which after all is the thing that people are worried about with CBDCs. The concern isn't really so much about the central bank. Of course, the central bank is complete unnecessary third party, but financial surveillance comes from Congress. All of the bank secrecy laws, all of the tracking and the suspicious activity reports, this is Congress. This is not the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve does not initiate any of that. So this is in many respects worse than the creature from Jackal Island. This is worse than the creation of the Federal Reserve itself because what it's done is created a digital dollar where one political member of a cabinet, his family and his company is the biggest single beneficiary. One of the things that came out of the Epstein file is Lutnick's claim that he was disgusted by Epstein and had nothing to do with him after 2006. The emails show Lutnick emailing Epstein coordinating to visit Epstein on Epstein's Island with his yacht and with his family. There's another email showing Lutnick contributing $50,000 to an event that Epstein was running. Lutnick flat out lied, and I will have to check whether that was under oath about his relationship and association with Epstein. He was a next door neighbor of Epstein and bought his house from Epstein. The connections here are overwhelming. It's so much data to map that I'm using AI to start making initial connections, then humans correct. How do these pieces fit from a timetable perspective? This is game changing. Epstein's hijacking of Bitcoin has not been widely acknowledged, and some Bitcoin Maxis resist this information. I urge people to do their own research, not to rely on spin. Look into Epstein's emails via Jmail and other sources. The information is out there, including the Epstein files, and the article I wrote for Brownstone at brownstone.org with screenshots of emails. Do your research. Don't accept a single influencer's take. Epstein literally funded changing the Bitcoin protocol to make it digital gold, yet there is no indication he actually held Bitcoin. This warrants investigation. Roger Ver, once a prominent Bitcoin advocate, has described hijacking in his own book, and his later treatment suggests suppression. The broader point is that there are deeply interwoven connections among Epstein, Lutnick, Pierce, Tether, and the Bitcoin ecosystem, with implications for who profits and how governance and surveillance could unfold.

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The speaker believes Trump is a "crazy person." They feel that someone wants to be remembered in history as holding the line against Trump. When Trump was president and wanted to stimulate the economy, this person allegedly raised interest rates and did the opposite of what Trump wanted. The speaker concludes that "we don't want Trump to be in the clean government."

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Speaker 0 argues that Venezuela may not want to ally with this Western form of economic exchange, noting they have tried to join BRICS twice but were vetoed by neighboring Brazil. They describe Venezuela as one of the few countries not controlled by private equity oligarchs and central banksters, and say Venezuela pushed back on a monetary exchange that relies on high-interest promissory notes back to Rothschild Boulevard, like Saddam Hussein, Bashar al-Assad, and Muammar Gaddafi. They claim Maduro has effectively been kidnapped, and that Trump said, “kidnapped is fine.” The question is how such events can be real and presented as beneficial to Americans, asserting that economically, there is no benefit to the average citizen or to national security, and that it puts the United States in more imminent, grave danger as the U.S. “agitates around the world,” including in relation to Israel’s enemies. Speaker 1 adds that there will be a political and economic reset, suggesting that silver and gold are at record highs and that gold and silver have tripled historically in short periods, leading to a system reset of sorts. They say Venezuela’s attempts to join the system were to be part of a new framework that Russia, China, Iran and BRICS were trying to create, which would go against the dollar as the global reserve currency and directly affect the U.S. economy. They ask whether this should change. Speaker 0 elaborates that the issue is about flipping countries into the same central banker–controlled monetary exchange system. Speaker 1 notes that Trump, from day one, warned that if you mess with the U.S. dollar or trade outside of the dollar, the U.S. will punish you via sanctions or strikes, and that this is what has been happening. They discuss the possibility that if the system resets and a combination of gold, silver, and possibly crypto or other minerals backs a new dollar or digital currency emerges, the entire game could reset and eliminate these types of issues. In such a scenario, countries might have a looser ability to choose or replace the type of system their country is under.

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Speaker 1 stated that Jerome Powell is too late and slow, and that he is not happy with him. Speaker 1 claims he has let Powell know this. Speaker 1 believes that if he wanted Powell out, Powell would be out of his position very fast.

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Trump is not loyal to the United States and does not like the country, its laws, constitution, or people, calling them names. He has affection for dictators and authoritarianism. According to the speaker, the U.S. is in the midst of a collapse, politically and in the markets. The speaker believes Trump sees himself going down and will try to take the whole country with him. The speaker believes Trump wants to hurt the country and will try anything he can to help himself.

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The US dollar's dominance is being challenged by countries like Iran, Libya, and China who are bypassing it in trade. Gold is being used as an alternative currency, with countries like Germany and Venezuela repatriating their gold reserves. The Federal Reserve's increasing currency printing is seen as a threat to the dollar's stability. These actions are seen as accelerating the demise of the dollar standard, signaling a need for change soon.

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Powell: "no. I will not. The law says that, the president can't fire me." The discussion points to "a higher law, the supreme law of the land"—the "US constitution," which "never gave any authority to the federal government to create a monopoly central bank that can manipulate interest rates and counterfeit money." "Counterfeiting is a crime." "The issue is the existence of the Federal Reserve." Speaker 1 adds: "They're to continue to mess around with that, but your point is perfect," noting "arbitrary laws that they write that do not follow the rules of the constitution or natural law" and that "the constitutional restraint against, you know, a central bank, there's no authority for that, is one thing that they totally ignore." They call the Fed "a cartel of the biggest banks" with "a government privilege," and argue that "as long as the Fed does exist, we can't have a genuinely free society, free economic life." They warn, "if the central bank is permitted to permit money at will ... the value of the currency is going to go down and prices will go up." The goal is "sound money for freedom."

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Fed Chair Powell stated he wouldn't resign if asked by President Trump, citing legal protections. However, the real issue is the existence of the Federal Reserve, which many believe operates outside constitutional authority. The Fed prioritizes its own survival and that of major banks, undermining a genuinely free society. For true economic freedom, sound money is essential. Education is key to helping the public understand these issues, as seen with other political matters. If the central bank continues to create money at will, currency value will decline, leading to rising prices. The founders understood that true wealth comes from productivity, not money creation. Emphasizing freedom can maximize productivity and prosperity.

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The fate of America's economy has been determined by a senior Obama administration official who stated, "We're just going to kill the dollar." This single sentence explains the entire economic agenda domestically and globally, rendering all other questions irrelevant. It implies a significant shift in economic policy.

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The Federal Reserve is independent, so no other government agency can override its actions. As long as there is no interference from the administration or congress, the relationship between the Fed chair and the president doesn't really matter.

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Donald Trump’s second term is accelerating the US dollar’s downfall and could reshape the global monetary system in a manner reminiscent of Nixon’s 1971 move ending the Bretton Woods era, according to Guangzhou, chief economist at Bank of China’s investment arm. Trump’s aggressive tariffs rolled out in April are rattling global trade and finance to their core, with Guangzhou drawing a chilling parallel to the Nixon shock. The dollar’s grip on global reserves has fallen to a thirty-year low of 56.32% in Q2, down 1.47 percentage points. Nations are ditching US assets in droves, with net purchases plunging 94.4% to a mere $510,000,000, based on US Treasury data. Guangzhou notes that Trump’s war on the Fed’s independence is eroding confidence in US policy, making this meltdown dwarf the chaos of the 1970s. For China, this scenario presents prime timing to influence the currency landscape. Guangzhou urges Beijing to turbocharge the yuan’s global rise by expanding financial clout. The proposed path includes swinging open financial gates, syncing with international norms, unleashing innovative yuan tools, and supercharging Shanghai and Hong Kong as powerhouse hubs. As the dollar fades, the yuan could rise, potentially ushering in a multipolar currency showdown. If you’re craving razor-sharp geopolitical breakdowns like this, subscribe to New Rules Geopolitics to stay on top of global trends.

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Jeff: Gold is not a monetary instrument the way people often think. It’s actually easy to understand once you move away from the idea that gold is tied to dollar inflation. Gold is simply a portfolio asset, a store of value, and the preeminent safe haven store value. Gold doesn’t compete with the dollar; it competes with the stock market or risky credit markets. The notion of “de-dollarization” largely comes from political context rather than monetary mechanics. Mario: So gold prices rising—how should we think about that trade? Jeff: Gold tends to go up when people are concerned about risky assets because it’s a safe haven. It performed poorly as an inflation hedge in 2021–2022 when the economy seemed to recover and policymakers seemed to have hit the right policy mix. Now, with conditions leaning toward an economic downturn and “Nvidia AI stocks” looking bubbly, gold has revived as a safe haven. The last two months reflect the factors I’ve cited being priced into the gold market. Mario: People talk about the death of the US dollar. Is gold not tied to that? Jeff: They’ve been talking about de-dollarization for twenty years. The dollar remains dominant because there is no replacement for its functions; replacing it would be like recreating the Internet from scratch. The Eurodollar system grew because it could meet many needs in a flexible way, including for asset-holders who want to keep things in US-dollar terms. If you’re trying to hide assets, you keep them in US-dollar terms, and there are places to do so. Mario: The dollar’s share of foreign reserves has fallen from 72% to 58% in recent years. Doesn’t that show a shift away from the dollar? Jeff: That drop isn’t necessarily meaningful for reserve mechanics. What matters is the level of settlement and payments, which are still 90% in US dollars. The yuan is rising in FX settlements, but it’s not replacing the dollar; it’s competing with other currencies on the other side of the dollar. The dollar is as dominant as ever, and there’s no easy replacement because you’d have to replace all its functions. Replacing the dollar network would be like recreating the Internet—massive, complex, and gradual. Mario: What about the Eurodollar market itself? How big is it? Jeff: Nobody knows. It’s offshore, regulatory offshore, with little reporting; it’s a black hole. Eurodollars are “numbers on a screen,” ledger money, not physical dollars. The Eurodollar system lets money move quickly worldwide through bank-ledger networks, integrating various ledgers. It’s the global settlement mechanism, and its size is effectively unknowable, yet it’s the currency the world uses. Mario: Why do central banks buy gold now, especially China? Jeff: Gold is a portfolio asset, a diversification tool. Central banks must diversify reserves; they still need some US Treasuries for the eurodollar system, but gold helps balance risk. In China’s case, gold supports yuan stability and diversifies reserves beyond US assets. Mario: What happens if a conflict with China disrupts the system? What replaces the dollar or the eurodollar plumbing? Jeff: It’s the great unknown. If there’s a real shooting war, China could be cut off by many, and the dollar system would shrink to those willing to participate. The eurodollar would strengthen as a settlement medium, though with a smaller global footprint. The idea of replacing the eurodollar with a Chinese-led system is unlikely; gold’s role in cross-border settlement remains limited, and gold alone isn’t a reliable settlement instrument. Mario: Is China building a “gold corridor” to decouple from the dollar? Jeff: The gold corridor theory reflects ongoing speculation. There have been many schemes—Petro-dollar, digital currencies, Belt and Road—that have not proven game-changing in defeating the dollar system. Gold in that context is not a robust settlement mechanism across geographies; the eurodollar system arose to move away from gold settlement. Mario: Why are people hoarding gold? How does the US debt situation affect the dollar’s safety? Jeff: US debt is a concern, but safety and liquidity demand still drives demand for government debt, not gold. Gold is safe but illiquid as collateral; liquidity is why Treasuries remain central. The debt grows, but the treasury market has remained robust because it’s the deepest market and the safest liquid asset. The larger risk lies in the federal government's expanding footprint and the potential debt trap, where stimulus doesn’t spur growth and leads to rising debt. Mario: What about Bitcoin as a store of value? And how about Russia? Jeff: Bitcoin behaves like a Nasdaq stock—more of a store of value tied to tech equities than a broad currency. It’s not likely to become a widespread medium of exchange. Russia remains connected to the US system; it’s less about the Russian economy collapsing and more about how energy and sanctions interact. The eurodollar system has kept Russia afloat through channels like the UAE, and it’s unlikely that Russia’s fate hinges on a single currency shift. Mario: Will the US empire fall or evolve into a multipolar world? Jeff: Likely a multipolar world, not a complete fall of the US empire. I’m long-term optimistic on the US and global economy. The eurodollar system could slowly be replaced by private digital currencies, with stablecoins evolving toward independence. The transition would be gradual, with multiple private digital currencies emerging, while the eurodollar would persist in a rump form if needed.

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London and Wall Street are in a total panic today because their era of free money for the elites is over. Kevin Warsh is president Trump's new pick for the Fed, and this is about much more than interest rates. It marks the beginning of what president Trump is calling a Republican new deal. Their proposal was to raise taxes very substantially. And our proposal, which is in the great, big, beautiful new deal. It's a new deal in its own way. It's a republican version of the new deal. Right behind you is a nice picture of FDR. This is a much better deal than the FDR deal. Warsh didn’t just accept the nomination; he declared war on the globalist economic model. He explicitly said that the Fed must abandon the dogma that paying workers causes inflation. He’s calling out the real culprit, money printing and Wall Street bailouts. This follows Ambassador Jamieson Greer’s shockwave speech in Davos last week, where he dusted off Alexander Hamilton to tell the elites, your system is over. Susan Kokinda explains that since the mid 1970s she’s tracked the war between the American system and the British empire. The show will cover why the globalists fear a Republican new deal, and what the real content of president Trump’s Republican new deal is. Mainstream media coverage of Warsh has been restrained, but The Atlantic Council worries that Warsh and treasury secretary Besant are in sync in their attacks on how the Fed has saved Wall Street at the expense of Main Street. The Atlantic Council’s lead international economist says Walsh believes the Fed has distorted the healthy functioning of the US economy through injections of money into the market, helped assets on Wall Street at the expense of Main Street, and taken on the role of implementing fiscal policy. Treasury secretary Besant agrees with that assessment. CNBC headlines also frame Warsh as touting regime change at the Fed. The CFR and Mark Carney offer mixed responses, with some consoling that Warsh won’t revolutionize the Fed, while others praise him. The key is not just interest rates in isolation. The CNBC headline’s other part notes a partnership with the treasury. Warsh has stated in 2010 that the Fed’s financial stability responsibilities should not give license to central bankers to be emergency capital providers; capital allocation should reside with the fiscal authority and its fiscal agent, the Department of Treasury. This frames the fight as two centuries of struggle between the American system of Alexander Hamilton and the British imperial system. Prominent Davos moments included Trump and Commerce Secretary Lutnick telling elites that globalism had failed; Scott Beson’s takedowns of Gavin Newsom; and Jameson Greer’s Hamiltonian economic system speech, which quotes Hamilton’s 1791 Report on Manufacturers advocating tariffs and subsidies to incentivize industrialization to promote an America competitive with foreign producers. Greer’s speech is framed as the resurrection of the American system. Trump’s cabinet meeting is presented as focusing on workers, production, and Main Street, with tariffs and deregulation fueling manufacturing restarts. John Deere announced two new large plants in Indiana and North Carolina; one will build excavating equipment, relocating from Japan due to tariffs. A graphite processing plant in New York is described as the first in seventy years. Secretary Beson claims the US produced more steel than Japan for the first time in twenty-six years, driven by tariffs; there are other factory restarts and a supposed “golden age” for the economy. The narrative concludes that the empire fears an American system revival and that the fight is out in the open. The modern British empire is panicking because the fight is visible, with globalists asserting Main Street, not Wall Street. The piece frames Warsh’s nomination as a declaration of war on the Wall Street bailout machine and a direct challenge to decades of central banking independence, with Davos heralding the Hamiltonian revival and Trump’s Republican new deal delivering production for workers, not bailouts for banks.

Breaking Points

Dollar SLIDES As Trump FIRES FED In Power Grab
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Trump's push to reshape the Fed roils markets as he fires a Federal Reserve Board member, Lisa Cook, alleging deceitful conduct in a mortgage matter. The hosts say the firing appears to be a pretext to shift the central bank's direction, especially as Jerome Powell contemplates a future rate cut that previously boosted stocks while failing to calm currency moves. Cook says she has not been fired and will contest the decision in court, with the Supreme Court likely to weigh the president's power to remove Fed members for cause versus unilateral action. The discussion frames this as a potential end to Fed independence, a Trumpian power move meant to tilt the board toward his preferences. Beyond the immediate fight, the panel weighs the broader implications for monetary policy and democratic accountability, including how the departure could enable a more Powell-leaning or Trump-leaning board depending on appointments. They invoke the Carter/Volcker era as a cautionary tale about politically driven policy, arguing inflation today is largely supply-side and affected by tariffs and shocks; a pre-election rate cut could spark a market rally but risk renewed price pressures. The dollar's drop would raise import costs, while higher Treasury yields keep mortgage rates elevated. The hosts debate whether democratizing the Fed is desirable or dangerous, and whether the country should trust elected officials or technocrats to steer monetary policy, with Erdogan comparisons surfacing as a cautionary parallel.

Breaking Points

Markets PANIC As Trump Threatens Fed Chair w Prosecution
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The episode centers on a high-stakes clash between the presidency and financial authority as the hosts unpack fallout from a federal inquiry into the Fed chair and its implications for monetary-policy independence. They describe Trump’s push to exert political pressure and the DOJ subpoenas, framing Powell’s response as a test of the central bank’s autonomy amid political theater. The discussion links market volatility—futures slipping and safe-haven assets rising—to fears that political meddling could erode evidence-based policymaking. The hosts tease a forthcoming interview with Senator Chris Van Hollen, signaling a shift to legislative perspectives on these clashes and the mechanics of oversight, including who decides the Fed’s future leadership and how congressional dynamics could affect the agency’s credibility. They highlight the broader political economy at play: investors and Wall Street’s unease about interference, Republican skepticism about near-term inflation risk, and tension within party lines as committees weigh nominees for key posts. The conversation sharpens on practical consequences for everyday policy, from interest rates to budget commentary, and why voters should monitor how senior officials navigate pressure, independence, and accountability as leadership transitions loom.

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Trump Goes FULL XI? Floats NATIONALIZING War Machine
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A sharp pivot from finance to defense follows as Howard Lutnick argues the Intel deal could spiral into broader defense dynamics. The panel muses about government stakes in Palantir and Boeing, and asks where the line should be drawn when business with the United States shapes national security. They note Lockheed Martin’s defense revenue and debate how munition finance should be structured, while acknowledging Trump’s push toward a sovereign wealth fund and a new industrial policy framework. They describe how industrial policy questions widen into who benefits from wealth creation, contrasting Intel’s stock surge with a hollowed-out manufacturing base. Sorkin’s Palantir question is framed as a precursor to a broader strategy, and Lutnick pushes toward concrete policy dialogue. The discussion turns to China and the UK, asking whether nationalized steel or state-led procurement could defend domestic capabilities, and whether these moves amount to crony capitalism or genuine industrial policy. Beyond finance, governance is discussed as industrial policy intersects with Federal Reserve staffing. Trump’s push to replace Powell with pro-Trump doves and install new directors could redefine policy, while questions about Lisa Cook’s tenure and an FHFA records dispute spark debate on independence versus presidential authority. They reference unitary executive theory, the Supreme Court, and the tradition of appointing regulators, noting the court’s composition might shape whether such shifts are accepted or challenged.

Unlimited Hangout

Sanctions & the End of a Financial Era with John Titus
Guests: John Titus
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Since the Ukraine-Russia conflict began, major shifts in the international financial system have unfolded, with sanctions aimed at Russia seemingly rebounding off the ruble while inflicting greater pain on the West. This has fed questions about why a policy that appears punitive to one side ends up hurting the sanctioning side and has fueled talk of the dollar’s waning dominance and the possible demise of the petrodollar system, alongside a wider move toward a multipolar world order. Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) are advancing in both Ukraine and Russia and among their allies, framing a global control architecture that many see as a critical element of a broader digital governance regime. Whitney Webb and John Titus discuss how, on March 2, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, asked about China, Russia, and Pakistan moving away from the dollar, pivoted to the world reserve currency and the durability of the dollar, inflation, and the rule of law—points Titus argues reveal a scripted witness with a broader agenda about the dollar’s reserve status and the sustainability of US fiscal paths. Titus notes a shift in public officials, including Cabinet-level figures, acknowledging debt unsustainability, which he interprets as a signal that the days of US currency dominance may be numbered, given that the US debt path is already out of control. They examine what losing reserve currency status would mean at home: a large fraction of currency in circulation is overseas, and if dollars flow back to the US, inflation could surge. The conversation turns to the petrodollar system’s fragility as Saudi Arabia and the UAE push back on sanctions enforcement, with implications for the dollar’s hegemony. Russia’s strategy to accept payment for energy in rubles or via Gazprom Bank, and to require non-sanctioned banks, is presented as an actionable workaround that forces a reevaluation of Western sanctions’ effectiveness and Europe’s consequences, including higher energy prices and potential shortages. The Bear Stearns bailout and broader 2008 crisis are revisited, highlighting the distinction between official Treasury/TARP bailout narratives and what Titus calls the Fed’s real bailout and political cover. He argues the endgame is when the US borrows to pay interest on debt, including entitlements, creating an unsustainable trajectory that drives a multipolar challenge to US control. CBDCs are analyzed through questions of backing, issuer sovereignty, and settlement mechanisms. Titus argues the US CBDC would be issued by the private-leaning regional Federal Reserve banks, complicating governance and accountability, while Russia contemplates a digital ruble with programmable features and a two-tier system where the central bank maintains the ledger but commercial banks handle access. The broader framework includes debates about the World Economic Forum, the Bank for International Settlements, and the balance of power between public sovereigns and private financial interests, with the BIS and private banks often seen as critical sovereign-like actors. The discussion ends with a warning about the evolving digital-finance landscape, the risks of central bank digital currencies, and the importance of understanding who ultimately holds sovereign power in money issuance.

Breaking Points

SCOTUS Set To DEFEAT Trump FED Takeover
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Significant Supreme Court arguments centered on whether President Trump could remove Fed Governor Lisa Cook, a move the court appeared likely to block for now. The discussion examined the structure and independence of the Federal Reserve, the theory of cause-based removals, and how Congress designed independent agencies to resist political influence. The panel emphasized that the outcome could reshape presidential power, especially if a future administration seeks to deploy similar tactics against central-bank independence. Viewers heard skeptical questions about whether firing Cook would undermine the Fed’s credibility and whether the government’s reading of removal for cause holds up under constitutional scrutiny. Beyond the specific case, the hosts debated tariffs, executive power, and how courts have balanced or resisted presidential overreach. They contrasted historical policy choices from the Carter era with contemporary concerns about democratic accountability and economic policy’s consequences for ordinary Americans. The discussion also touched on the transatlantic influence of markets, the dollar’s global role, and how legal timelines shape significant economic decisions that affect mortgages, credit, and everyday borrowing.
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