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A respected and powerful Wall Street businessman wouldn't be suspected of fraud unless you knew the math. The speaker, who has taken calculus, linear algebra, and statistics courses, claims it took him five minutes to recognize the fraud. He then spent almost four hours using mathematical modeling to prove it.

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The speaker discusses how hitting the wealthy ruling class in their brokerage accounts is more effective than in their bank accounts. They highlight how the stock market impacts everyone, not just investors, and how regular people are using market mechanics against corrupt institutions like GameStop. The speaker emphasizes the divide between regular investors seeking justice and the bankers, politicians, and regulators profiting off manipulation. They caution against media portrayals of investors as greedy, urging people to see through the facade and resist returning to a system that benefits the elite.

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The speaker discusses the concept of naked short selling in the stock market, where shares are sold that don't actually exist. They explain how this practice is used by big institutions and how it contributed to the GameStop situation in 2021. The speaker also highlights a pattern where failing companies are targeted by short sellers until they go bankrupt. They mention the role of consultancy firms and the potential profit for short sellers in these situations. The speaker then explains the concept of a short squeeze and how it affected GameStop. They suggest that short sellers are still trapped and unable to buy back the stock. The speaker concludes by mentioning the interconnectedness of the market and the creation of shares out of nothing.

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The US financial situation has some symptoms that are difficult to diagnose. Many believe the problem is high taxes, and while US taxes are indeed very high, that's not the core issue. The real problem is that even with high taxes, they aren't truly funding the government. Instead, the government is financed by treasury bonds, largely bought by the Federal Reserve. The Fed buys these by printing money, backed by the treasury bonds themselves. Essentially, the government is financed by printing money out of thin air. One might ask, if the government can print unlimited money, why collect taxes at all? The shocking answer is that high taxes exist to maintain the illusion that you are funding the government, which you are actually not.

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Speaker 0 argues that there is a shift toward bankers increasingly controlling both monetary and fiscal policy, describing it as a "financial coup d'etat." They claim that for centuries there has been a balance of power between the people's representatives who control fiscal policy (taxation) and bankers who control monetary policy. According to Speaker 0, bankers have decided to use digital technology to assert control over both sides of government policy, leveraging CBDCs (central bank digital currencies), stablecoins, and asset tokens as programmable money. They assert that this move is underway and cite Davos as evidence, noting that Larry Fink, the acting co-chair of the World Economic Forum, is aggressively promoting the idea of moving the entire financial system into a digital control grid. The speaker contends that the descriptions of the bankers’ intentions are becoming very open and explicit, and that the result would be the abolition or collapse of the republic in favor of a system where bankers control both monetary and fiscal policy. The speaker questions whether legislative representatives would remain in any executive or ceremonial role, describing the future as fluid and capable of many directions. They emphasize that the transition has been very incremental for decades, facilitated by the federal government not running its financial statements and operations in accordance with the law and not disclosing them properly. This, they claim, has allowed the shift to occur with the public largely unaware or complacent. Speaker 0 notes that many Americans have accepted the current system because they benefit from it in the short term—“as long as I get my check, I’m okay with the system as it is.” They frame this acceptance as part of the reason the changes have progressed with limited public pushback. In sum, the speaker contends that the bankers are moving to extend control from monetary policy into fiscal policy through digital technologies and programmable money, a process they describe as a quiet, long-running coup that could redefine the balance of power in government.

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The financial system is the main problem, creating debt and control. Mortgages symbolize this control, where banks own your home until paid off. The system benefits a small group who manipulate finance to gain power. Money is used to buy influence and control everything.

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Banks create money out of nothing and lend it at interest, a legal form of fraud. The banking lobby blames inflation on high wages and speculation, not on the money creation by banks. This practice leads to economic problems that cannot be solved.

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The banking system in the United States relies solely on public confidence, which is based on the soundness of the product, not marketing. Confidence is crucial because the banking system does not actually have the money it appears to.

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The financial system is the main source of control in the world. It doesn't matter who we think runs the world, what matters is the mechanism used to exert control, which is finance. Finance is designed to put people in debt and enslave them. For example, a mortgage is a death grip because it means you don't really own your house, the bank does. Even if you own your house outright, the government can still tax you and take it away if you can't pay. This system gives a small group of individuals infinite power and they have used their money to buy everything and everyone they can.

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The stock market is like a big casino run by people in suits on Wall Street. It's all about algorithms, not company values. Greed drives everyone to make money, rigging the game against the little guy. Bitcoin is just a quick way to make money. Whether you're a fat cat on Wall Street or a regular person trading at home, we all want money. Don't let one person rig the game for others.

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Banks create money out of nothing and lend it at interest, which is legal but akin to counterfeiting or cooking the books. The banking lobby avoids changing the system by blaming inflation on high wages or housing speculation, not acknowledging the root cause of money creation by banks.

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The speaker believes that the financial system is the main source of control in the world. They argue that finance is used to enslave people, citing mortgages as an example. They claim that a small group of individuals who control finance have an infinite supply of money and can buy anything and anyone. They criticize the system for rewarding immoral behavior and suggest taking back control of money issuance to benefit the people. They believe that by changing this one thing, all other problems can be solved and everyone can live in abundance. They mention John F. Kennedy's attempt to issue United States notes and emphasize the power of understanding and changing the financial system for a better future.

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Speaker 0: So who are the people that actually get to be inflation? Well, they're the ones that are climbing up the network. They're the compromised ones. Why? What do they get? They get 0% money. The most corrupt money in the world is quantitative easing. Right? You essentially get the banks to buy the government's debt, and then central banks, put it on their balance sheet. So this is just pure corruption. This is below interest money. What about the banks? They get to create it for free. You know, they actually get to create it. They get a thousand decks on you you're paying 10%. They get they get to lever that up a 100 times. They get a thousand percent. And remember, this is all a debt based Ponzi scheme. The money to pay the interest doesn't exist, so you gotta find another person to take on the debt. You're either if you have a positive money in your in your bank balance, it's because somebody else is in debt. The money doesn't exist unless somebody else is in debt, and the money to pay the interest doesn't exist. So we create this economic environment where your money is continually being debased, and then you need to speculate in order to beat inflation. Now if you do a bit of speculation and you just invest some of your money in stocks, what happens? You're suddenly like, I don't know what stock to buy. I'm I'm not a professional trader. So there's a company out there, BlackRock, that will just buy all the stocks for me, and I just can give them a £100 a month or something. And, now I don't need to figure out what stock to buy. Okay. So now BlackRock is taking everyone's investment money that can't be bothered to figure out what stock through ETFs and index ones. Then they're taking everyone's pension. Then they're taking everyone's insurance contributions because you're trying to hedge some of the risk. And then when you get your house, you have to have insurance. And so where did BlackRock and all the asset managers in this financial industrial complex get all the money? It's your money. You paid for it. So then what do they do? Well, the banks create all of these. They they create new money every time they issue a mortgage. And then they say, do you know what? I don't even wanna take the risk of these mortgages anymore. What if can I just package it up and give it to someone else? So Larry Fink says, yeah. I've got all this money. All these people are putting these pension money in. Why don't we create something called a mortgage backed security? Let's package up all of these mortgages. Just put them into one product. And then what I can do is we can slap a credit rating on it. And if everyone complies, then they get this credit rating. Credit rating is not it's about compliance with the network. So now you've got all the banks are creating the money, and then they create these mortgage backed securities that allows them to control effectively all the real estate and transfer it. But who do they sell it to? They sell it to you. And so they created the money. They created the mortgage backed security, and then they sold it to your pension. So you paid for the very system for them to get the 0% money in the first place, and they're charging a fee for it. And what else do they get? They get a board seat on every company.

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It supposedly takes 100 hours to understand Bitcoin, and many people don't want to invest that much time. They think something must be wrong with Bitcoin if it requires that much effort. People are used to making investment decisions quickly, unlike the time it takes to earn money. The speaker suggests that if you spend 9,000 hours making money, you should spend 100 hours learning how to keep it, implying that understanding Bitcoin is crucial for protecting one's investments.

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The most important thing in the stock market is to know what you own. Many people own stocks without being able to explain why in under two minutes. If you can't explain to a 10-year-old why you own a stock, you shouldn't own it. An example of a bad stock is a company that makes a one megabit SRAM CMOS bipolar risk floating point data IO array processor with an optimizing compiler, a 16 dual port memory, a double diffused metal oxide semiconductor monolithic logic chip with a plasma matrix vacuum fluorescent display. It has a 16 bit dual memory, a Unix operating system for whetstone megaflop polysilicon emitter, a high bandwidth, six gigahertz double metalization communication protocol and asynchronous backward compatibility peripheral bus architecture for wave interleave memory a token ring interchange backplane and it does in fifteen nanoseconds of capability. If you own something like that, you will never make money because someone will come along with more or less wet stones or a bigger or smaller mega flop, and you won't know what happened.

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There are members of Congress who have become strangely wealthy, accumulating, for example, $20 million while earning $200,000 a year. It is unclear how this is possible. The goal is to figure out how this happens and stop it.

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The speaker claims that high taxes are not the core financial problem in the United States. They argue that taxes don't truly fund the government, which is instead financed by treasury bonds purchased by the Federal Reserve. The Fed buys these bonds by printing money, which is backed by the bonds themselves. Taxes exist, according to the speaker, to maintain the illusion of government funding. The speaker contends that the government is funded by printing money backed by paper, creating a bubble. If the public were to realize this, confidence in the dollar would collapse, potentially leading to the fall of Western civilization. The speaker urges the next president to implement necessary policy and structural changes to avoid this outcome.

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A man questions a judge about how banks supposedly operate with borrowed funds. He presents a scenario: “I gave you the equivalent of $200,000. You returned the funds back to me, and I have to repay you $200,000 plus interest. Do you think I’m stupid?” He asserts that banks and Congress allow practices where banks breach written agreements, use false or misleading advertising, act without written permission or the borrower’s knowledge, and transfer actual cash value from the borrower to the bank, then return it as a loan. The man asks if, in this system, the borrower’s actual cash value funds the bank loan check and how the bank then uses those funds. The other participant, identified as a borrower in the discussion, responds that the borrower “got a check in the house.” The man pushes: is it true the actual cash value funding the loan check came directly from the borrower and that the bank received the funds from the borrower “for free”? He states, “No equal consideration. They got it from you for free,” and presses that the bank’s policy is to transfer the borrower’s cash value from the check to themselves and keep the money as the bank’s property, which they then loan out back to the borrower as if they own it and loan their own money. The other participant answers affirmatively, though notes not being present at the time to know the borrower’s intent. The man asks further: if a lender loans a borrower $10,000 and the borrower refuses to repay, is the lender damaged? The reply: yes, the lender is damaged if the loan isn’t repaid. He asks whether the bank’s practice is to take the borrower’s actual cash value, use it to fund the bank loan check, and never return it to the borrower. The response: the bank returns the funds, but as a loan to the borrower. The man clarifies: was the cash value returned as the bank loan to the borrower or as return of the money the bank took? Answer: as a loan. The man concludes, “So how did the bank get the borrower’s money for free? … It doesn’t make any sense.” A narrator then frames the scene: a man discussing banking with a judge, summarizing the exchange about funding checks with the borrower’s name, and the judge’s reaction that “all the banks are doing this” and that Congress allows it. The narrator describes the process in which you apply for a loan, a check with your name is issued, the bank takes it, and then “gives it back to you as a loan plus interest,” sourced from your own funds. He asserts there is no equal consideration and suggests people don’t understand truth in lending. The speaker claims that if the public understood the financial system, there would be a revolution, but people prefer to “dance.”

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The biggest hidden secret of money is that the modern banking system allows a few to plunder many through a scam. Currency is created faster than trees can grow, but most people don't understand how. Modern societies create currency similarly, and the US dollar is the majority of the world's currency, so the United States will be used as an example. It begins when a politician says, "Vote for me."

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High taxes in the U.S. are often blamed for financial issues, but the real problem lies in how the government is funded. While taxes are high, they don't truly finance the government. Instead, the government relies on treasury bonds, primarily purchased by the Federal Reserve, which prints money to buy them. This creates an illusion of funding through taxes, but in reality, the government is financed by money printed out of thin air. If people understood this, confidence in the dollar could collapse, leading to severe consequences for Western civilization. Urgent policy changes are needed to prevent a financial crisis similar to past mistakes. There’s still time to act before the situation worsens.

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The financial system is seen as the main problem, with finance meant to enslave through debt like mortgages. Even if you buy a house, the bank technically owns it. This system benefits a small group controlling everything with money.

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The biggest hidden secret of money is that so few plunder so many through the biggest scam in history. The modern banking system creates currency faster than trees can grow. Most people don't understand how currency is created because economists and bankers make it seem too complex. Every modern society creates currency similarly, but the US will be used as an example since the US dollar is the majority of the world's currency. It starts when a politician says vote for me.

Breaking Points

Saagar: Trump Most Pro DEGENERATE President Of ALL TIME
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A discussion centers on the Trump administration’s push to nationalize prediction markets under the guise of sports betting, a move the hosts argue would enrich the Trump family and a circle of tech and gambling executives. They critique the CFTC chair for attempting to preempt state regulation and argue that this constitutes regulatory capture, with state sovereignty at stake and potential conflicts of interest given ties to Kalshi, Poly Market, DraftKings, and FanDuel. The conversation highlights public safety concerns, pointing to examples of insider trading, high-stakes bets on life-and-death events, and the risk of exposing ordinary Americans to unchecked gambling through federal action that overrides state controls. They contrast the behavior with broader questions about how American markets are governed, calling out what they describe as gaslighting around the nature of these markets and stressing the need for robust safeguards and clear boundaries between gambling and derivatives discussions.

Conversations with Tyler

Matt Levine Live at Bloomberg HQ | Conversations with Tyler
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In this conversation, Tyler Cowen and Matt Levine discuss various aspects of derivatives markets, cryptocurrency, and financial regulation. Levine emphasizes that while derivatives markets are often cited as having a notional value exceeding a quadrillion dollars, the actual risk is more nuanced, focusing on risk exposures rather than sheer size. He expresses skepticism about the centralization of derivatives risk in clearinghouses, suggesting that they may introduce more moral hazard than traditional banks. The discussion shifts to cryptocurrency, where Levine notes that the market is immature compared to established derivatives markets. He proposes that Bitcoin's value might be better understood as a percentage of global financial wealth rather than through traditional currency models. Levine also speculates on Bitcoin's future as a store of value, suggesting that its first-mover advantage could entrench its position despite its lack of utility compared to other cryptocurrencies. Levine reflects on the current state of financial markets, noting low volatility and questioning whether this is due to smarter investors or a disconnect between asset prices and real-world events. He expresses concern about the implications of low-risk asset scarcity and the potential for systemic risks in the financial system. The conversation also touches on the role of financial journalists and the perception of finance as a specialized field, where understanding is limited to maintain a certain mystique. Levine concludes by acknowledging the complexities of financial regulation and the evolving landscape of banking and investment practices.

Philion

This Epstein Interview is a Disturbing Psyop..
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The episode examines a controversial two‑hour interview between Steve Bannon and Jeffrey Epstein, focusing on how the conversation is framed as a controlled PR piece to rehabilitate Epstein’s image and cast him as a masterful economist rather than a pedophile. The hosts unpack Epstein’s claims about the Santa Fe Institute, the Trilateral Commission, and his alleged talents in finance, arguing that the dialogue is shaped by a conscious effort to present him as a key thinker who understands complex systems. Throughout, the speakers call attention to the performative aspects of the interview, including staged questions, sidebar notes about the camera work, and the way Bannon steers Epstein toward explanatory analogies about banks, inflation, and monetary policy. The discussion also highlights the purported role of Epstein and Bannon in shaping public narratives, while noting the broader tension between complexity science, real-world financial crises, and the limitations of reducing intricate systems to neat, mathematics‑driven stories. The episode moves from Epstein’s reminiscences about his Wall Street ascent to a deep dive into how modern finance operates, with the participants dissecting concepts such as fractional reserves, derivatives, the housing market, and the 2008 crisis. The speakers critique the idea that a single mastermind could fully “understand” or predict markets, pointing out that complex systems resist simple explanations and that many events stem from interactions among banks, governments, and policy—rather than the genius of any one individual. Interwoven are debates about the credibility of Epstein’s intellect, the ethics of his alleged influence, and the ethical implications of monetizing or publicizing such dangerous knowledge, framed as a cautionary tale about how information can be weaponized for prestige, power, or financial gain. Toward the end, the hosts reflect on the epistemology of science and the limits of measurement when addressing life, consciousness, and the soul. They argue that even towering figures in mathematics and physics confront questions that defy quantification, suggesting a perennial tension between reductionist models and the messy realities of human experience. The discussion thus oscillates between critique of Epstein’s shtick and broader questions about how society should handle elite knowledge, media manipulation, and the ethics of funding research with morally ambiguous sources.
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