The Federal Reserve’s power to print unlimited dollars, especially in a crisis, gives the United States massive leverage over the global payments system.
This isn’t just about stabilizing markets.
It tilts the entire playing field in favour of U.S. banks and the American financial empire.
Former Federal Reserve chair Alan Greenspan once made it easy to understand: “The United States can never default — because it can always print money.”
But look around today: Washington’s colossal miscalculation, which I was vocal about as it transpired, was weaponizing the dollar at extreme lengths and the global banking rails through extreme sanctions.
The result?
Nations are finding workarounds: Gold, local currency trade, and alternative systems.
The trend is undeniable: De-dollarization is here.
You know it’s here when tariffs are being threatened on countries who actively seek to undermine the dollar.
Foreign central banks are quietly shrinking their exposure to U.S. assets.
The dollar’s reserve currency status is a privilege, NOT an entitlement.
Empires before America held this crown.
History shows they rarely keep it forever. I am not saying that will happen anytime soon, but it is an indisputable fact.
The Fed didn’t just support the system.
It enabled reckless borrowing, decades of easy money, and the biggest asset bubbles in modern history.
If you think the fiscal mess is separate from the Fed, think again.
It’s the central bank that signals to the government that it can spend what it doesn’t have.
Now, the trap is set: Higher rates mean billions more to service the debt.
Each dollar of interest crowds out America’s credibility as a steward of fiscal discipline.
This slow-brewing storm is now surfacing for all to see.
Outside the BOX thinking is what the United States desperately needs right now.
