Top 3 Outcomes As The Elites Try To Reset The International Monetary System

Elites Try To Reset the International Monetary SystemNick Giambruno – It’s self-evident the fiat currency system centered on the US dollar is self-destructing at an alarming rate.

After more than 50 years, it’s long past the end of its shelf-life, like a carton of spoiled milk.

Even the elites running the system can see that and are openly talking about what they’d like to see come next.

That’s why there’s all this talk about a “reset” as the current international monetary system falters. Continue reading

How Democracy Empowers Central Banking

How Democracy Empowers Central BankingPaul Rosenberg – It has been dawning upon the people of the West that central banking cartels have been draining away their wealth. That’s a significant movement forward, and not one I want to interrupt. And so I’ll ask you to use this information sparingly (presuming you agree with it); people can absorb only so much at once; beyond that they resent the teller.

The central issue here is that central banks were made practical only by the modern version of democracy. Given that “democracy” is a sacred dogma these days, that message can be a hard fit.

Nonetheless, the fact is that central banking, and giant banks in general, were impractical until democracy was instituted. Continue reading

Trump and Pompeo Confirm Our Way Forward [Video]

treasonAlexandra Bruce – If you haven’t gotten it yet, this election and everything that we’ve been seeing for the past 4 years is not really about Trump. It’s about the central banking cabal aka the Globalists and Trump’s disruption of their stranglehold on the US.

On Monday, we saw Boris Johnson congratulate Biden’s presidential win – and in the same breath, he said he looked forward to working together on “Climate Change”.

Climate Change is code for the “Great Reset”, “Green New Deal”, “Agenda 21”, “New World Order”, etc. It is the Globalists’ scheme to impose the China Model of total censorship, social credit, vaccine passports, digital currency and the taxation of all corporations to finance so-called “green” energy initiatives that cannot replace fossil fuels. Continue reading

The Two Crypto Economies

Crypto Paul Rosenberg – Bitcoin has always been hard to understand. Even Satoshi, its author, complained about that. The problem isn’t so much its complexity, but its newness – there’s really almost nothing to compare it to.

Having nothing to compare to is also a problem related to the prices of Bitcoin and the other cryptos. We’ve never seen currencies start from nothing and grow into serious players. We’ve always had silver and gold, at least in the background, but more or less all other currencies (certainly in our time) have been imposed by force.

Bitcoin, unless I’m forgetting something, is the first independent, world-recognized currency to pop up in a long, long time. And because of that, understanding its price is complicated.

The Two Economies

The key to understanding the price of cryptos is realizing that there are two separate crypto economies: the speculative and the commercial. These two economies are currently bumping into each other and occasionally running over each other… sometimes synergistically and sometimes antagonistically. Continue reading

2019: Fragmented, Unevenly Distributed, Asymmetric, Opaque

inflationCharles Hugh Smith – Here are the key dynamics of 2019: fragmented, unevenly distributed, asymmetric, opaque. Want to know what’s happening with inflation, deflation, recession, populism, etc.?

It depends on what you own, when you own it, where you own it and its relative scarcity and stability–assuming you have trustworthy information on its scarcity and stability.

By ownership I mean all forms of capital: cash, tools, skills, social capital, trust in institutions, etc. Whatever forms of capital you own, the returns on that capital and its relative stability depend on the specifics of context and timing.

Will there be deflation or inflation? The right question is: Will there be deflation or inflation in my household?. In a rapidly fragmenting economy and society characterized by opacity, asymmetric information and unevenly distributed results, generalizations are intrinsically misleading / false. The only possible answers arise in a carefully limited context: my household, my neighborhood, my industry, my company, etc. Continue reading