Trump Highlighting the 1870-1913 Era is a Profound Signal

Gold Telegraph 
@GoldTelegraph

Larry Fink thinks inflation could drive bond yields to 20-year highs and shock the market. If this happens, this would reduce demand for government bonds, forcing the Fed to scramble to support the Treasury market.

Talk about a perfect storm.

Gold = ZERO counterparty risk.

The World Economic Forum is warning that the economic cost of fragmentation can exceed the 2008 financial crisis and the C***D-19 pandemic.

Right on schedule. Goodbye, globalization.

Senate has confirmed Scott Bessent as the United States Treasury Secretary. Remember, Bessent sees a global economic reordering and said in early November; GOLD was his biggest position. Hold on…

“The incoming Treasury Secretary has voiced support for the U.S. issuing ultra-long-term bonds, a concept previously explored during the T******************n…”

Read:

BREAKING NEWS: THE UNITED STATES WILL PLACE TARIFFS ON STEEL, ALUMINUM, COPPER, AND THINGS THE COUNTRY NEEDS FOR MILITARY

Boom. Resource wars…

@ResourceWars_

Source:

The one thing I will say with absolute confidence: The T******************n understands gold and its potential role in the global economy. This is where things get very interesting.

Donald Trump has suggested replacing income tax with tariffs. The era he’s referring to… What didn’t exist back then? The Federal Reserve. And what system were we on? The gold standard.

The leader of the United States highlighting the 1870-1913 era as the richest period in American history is a profound signal.

During this time:

• No Federal Reserve
• America was on the classical gold standard
• Decentralized Banking
• A period of RESOURCE expansion