The curtain is being pulled back on what appears to be a deliberate, controlled demolition of Western economic power. This isn't conspiracy theory—it's documented history that mainstream sources won't connect for you.
When Richard Nixon opened China in 1972, it marked the beginning of a massive eastward transfer of wealth, technology, and manufacturing capacity. The following year saw the birth of the Trilateral Commission under Zbigniew Brzezinski, and by 1974, America ran its last trade surplus. These aren't coincidental events but calculated steps in reshaping the global economic order.
What we're witnessing with the recent "Liberation Day" tariff chaos isn't about rebuilding American manufacturing. It's about creating artificial tension with China—a nation we deliberately built into an economic superpower. The market whipsaw following tariff announcements and subsequent partial rollbacks benefits insiders while ordinary Americans watch their retirement accounts plummet.
The emergence of the term "China hawk" in political discourse is particularly telling. This manufactured enemy narrative serves multiple purposes: it provides scapegoats for economic failures, justifies military spending, and distracts from domestic problems. Meanwhile, China functions as the testing ground for social credit systems, CBDCs, and surveillance technologies that globalist technocrats hope to implement worldwide.
This episode also examines America's troubling history of false flags and manufactured conflicts—from the Spanish-American War to the Gulf of Tonkin incident—that have repeatedly drawn us into unnecessary wars. As tensions escalate around Taiwan and Iran, we must recognize these warning signs and understand that the same patterns are repeating.
Gold continues to perform exceptionally well amid this chaos—a signal that smart money recognizes the underlying instability of our financial system. Before choosing partisan teams or accepting mainstream narratives about our "enemies," ask yourself: who benefits from these manufactured conflicts, and what's their ultimate endgame?
When Richard Nixon opened China in 1972, it marked the beginning of a massive eastward transfer of wealth, technology, and manufacturing capacity. The following year saw the birth of the Trilateral Commission under Zbigniew Brzezinski, and by 1974, America ran its last trade surplus. These aren't coincidental events but calculated steps in reshaping the global economic order.
What we're witnessing with the recent "Liberation Day" tariff chaos isn't about rebuilding American manufacturing. It's about creating artificial tension with China—a nation we deliberately built into an economic superpower. The market whipsaw following tariff announcements and subsequent partial rollbacks benefits insiders while ordinary Americans watch their retirement accounts plummet.
The emergence of the term "China hawk" in political discourse is particularly telling. This manufactured enemy narrative serves multiple purposes: it provides scapegoats for economic failures, justifies military spending, and distracts from domestic problems. Meanwhile, China functions as the testing ground for social credit systems, CBDCs, and surveillance technologies that globalist technocrats hope to implement worldwide.
This episode also examines America's troubling history of false flags and manufactured conflicts—from the Spanish-American War to the Gulf of Tonkin incident—that have repeatedly drawn us into unnecessary wars. As tensions escalate around Taiwan and Iran, we must recognize these warning signs and understand that the same patterns are repeating.
Gold continues to perform exceptionally well amid this chaos—a signal that smart money recognizes the underlying instability of our financial system. Before choosing partisan teams or accepting mainstream narratives about our "enemies," ask yourself: who benefits from these manufactured conflicts, and what's their ultimate endgame?