Trump’s Money Master
November 26, 2024
DONALD TRUMP’S choice for Treasury secretary is Scott Bessent, a hedge fund manager who has grown extremely wealthy in the big casino or shark tank that is our financial system. According to Trump, Bessent will “make America rich again, prosperous again, affordable again, and, most importantly, great again.” That many Americans might believe this statement shows the depth of financial illiteracy that grips the nation.
If Bessent secures you cheaper gas for a few years, he will do it only by fiddling with a game rigged to dispossess the great mass of people over time and to so embed every nation in debt that a world government appears to be the only conceivable solution. That Bessent is also “married” to a man not only exposes Trump’s anti-family values for what they are, but illustrates how culture and finance converge.
See my previous post on The Money Masters, a documentary which provides a quick introduction, and see the many great articles on economics compiled by the Australian League of Rights. As I said,
If most Americans understood the basics of our monetary system, they would rise up as one — left and right, black and white, Christian and non-Christian — to overturn it and take the power of money creation out of private hands. Most don’t understand it because important details are never mentioned in the media or in schools. Bill Still’s 1996 documentary The Money Masters: How International Bankers Gained Control of America is an outstanding introduction. It can be viewed in its entirety here. A transcript is available here. From the opening:
“Since the turn of the century, there has occurred throughout the world a major increase in debt and a major decline in the freedom of individuals, and of states, to conduct their own affairs. To restore a condition of widespread, modest wealth is therefore essential to regaining and preserving our freedom.”
As a commenter pointed out here, the present system upends the balance of nature itself.
Both the financial system and same-sex “marriage” are opposed to the welfare of children and to the needs of future generations. “[O]ur money system is an engine of destruction, liquidating both nature and history. ‘Using things up’ might be another term of usury – leaving nothing for the future,” as Caryl Johnston put it.
Jesus drove the moneychangers out of the temple for very good reason. Same-sex unions are similarly sterile, not capable of producing life, deliberately oppressing children by depriving those conceived through surrogates of one of their parents and rendering a culture increasingly impotent through demographic suicide. Children are treated like pets, not human beings with primal needs for both parents. Today, the rainbow is a symbol of tyranny. Those ensnared in the trap of homosexuality are useful pawns.
Trump’s choice for Treasury Secretary makes perfect sense.
— Comments —
Robert Manning writes:
I often use as my favorite personal example of the loss of purchasing power, the house that I grew up in. A small two-bed, one-bath row-house 15 minutes south of DC. I loved it. My dad purchased it new in 1945 for $6500. It last sold February 2021 for $675,000. The current Zestimate is $735,100.
They added a bathroom in the basement, so it’s now a 13 foot wide, 22 feet deep 2-bed, 2-bath flat-roof row house. The coal furnace is now a modern heat pump. It now has Less storage space.
It’s the same house dressed up inside the same tiny space. Most of the vehicles at the curb outside are longer than the width of the houses. 10’x10′ patches of grass front and rear. Living the dream?
That house has not grown in value, certainly not more than 100 times. The purchasing power of the dollar has shriveled to less than one copper penny. Who even stoops to pick up a penny?
Our houses are relentlessly chasing the dollar.
People love RE appreciation when they cash out, then they have to buy it back forever after.
Most seem clueless or indifferent about what is actually happening to our money.
It’s a fiscal policy race on a hamster wheel.
Laura writes:
The problem of this relentless inflation and the inability of families now to live on one income has already been solved by, among others, Clifford Hugh Douglas, the Scottish engineer who invented Social Credit (not the Chinese, Communist variety.)
But this news has largely been withheld from the public by the media, which is controlled by financial interests.