Gold Telegraph
@GoldTelegraph
THE CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER WANTS TO REDUCE THE DOMINANCE OF THE US DOLLAR…
In 2019, long before becoming a key figure in Canadian politics, Mark Carney delivered a little-noticed but deeply consequential speech, one that offered a glimpse into his broader geopolitical vision.
Then, serving as Governor of the Bank of England, Carney proposed replacing the U.S. dollar’s decades-long reign as the world’s reserve currency.
His solution?
A global digital currency, which he termed a “Synthetic Hegemonic Currency” backed by a coordinated alliance of central banks and powered by emerging digital infrastructure.
The proposal raised eyebrows, signalling a radical reordering of the global monetary system, one that could erode U.S. financial influence and reshape the foundations of international trade.
Now, with Carney as Canada’s Prime Minister and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) gaining momentum globally, his blueprint is no longer theoretical.
It’s becoming political.
Opposition leader @PierrePoilievre has vowed to block the implementation of CBDCs in Canada, framing the debate as one not just about currency but sovereignty, privacy, and the future of financial freedom.
And the signals from the top are becoming harder to ignore.
Just days ago, Canada’s Prime Minister declared the end of the country’s traditionally close relationship with the United States, a historic and symbolic fracture between two longtime allies.
Even more bizarrely, he described Canada as “the most European nation” outside of Europe, a strange and telling remark that hints at a deeper reimagining of the country’s identity and geopolitical alignment.
Meanwhile, the European Central Bank is racing to end its digital currency’s “testing” phase by the end of 2025, aiming to make the digital euro a reality.
Taken together, it paints a striking picture:
While BRICS nations are openly working to dismantle the dollar’s global dominance, a quieter and arguably more unsettling movement is brewing within the West itself:
From Frankfurt to Ottawa, unelected technocrats and globally-minded elites are laying the groundwork for a new monetary order… not to defend the dollar, but to disrupt it.
What began as an abstract idea floated by Carney is rapidly materializing into policy, with digital currencies as the spearhead.
The question is no longer if the global financial system will be transformed but who will control what rises in its place.
Perhaps most striking of all:
America’s adversaries and now slowly its allies are moving to undermine the dollar’s dominance.
This shift introduces deep uncertainty and may help explain why gold is breaking records in fiat currencies across the globe.
Lots of new articles are coming shortly.
Hold on tight…