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To: smileyface; All

Make no mistake, Winning and saving the Republic is going to involve a VERY significant financial disconnect. Merely remediating the graft, fraud, and corruption in the system is going to chop 10’s of percent off GDP and involve some measurable deflation.

It will be globally across the board, there’s not going to be a “real” injury/insult to people who possess little to no debt and have secure tangible assets but “paper wealth” and numbers is probably going to take a beating. The usual suspects/guilty parties are going to take the brunt of this, but the MSM and the opposition forces are going to raise a hue and cry over this.

We’re looking at correcting TRILLIONS of dollars that have gone effectively produce nothing, nay, here in the USA it’s actually facilitated literally stripping us like a carcass of jobs and industries.

“To Big To Fail” WILL BE “Has Got To Fail” as part of the restoration.

Act accordingly, motivate friends/family/acquaintances, get out of or reduce debt. Use any means to sever or reduce dependance upon institutional crutches.


1,388 posted on 01/06/2026 10:26:48 AM PST by Axenolith (FREE [Insert land conquored/subjugated by islam]!!! Say NO to Caliphates!)
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To: All

Ran it:

Veracity Check and Refutation of the Claim

This page presents analysis (updated slightly for confirmed 2025 outcomes as of early 2026)

Analysis and Refutation of the Quoted Claim
Overview The quoted text is a speculative opinion, likely referring to the economic effects of aggressive efforts to cut U.S. government waste, fraud, and corruption—most plausibly tied to the Trump administration's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) initiatives led by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy in 2025.

While eliminating wasteful spending can cause short-term economic disruptions (government spending directly contributes to GDP calculations), the statement's claims are heavily exaggerated, alarmist, and not supported by economic evidence or observed outcomes from actual policy implementations.

As of early 2026, 2025 data confirms strong GDP growth (e.g., 4.3% annualized in Q3), rising federal spending (~$7 trillion), modest/ disputed DOGE savings, and no deflation.
GDP Impact:
Overstated Contraction
Proposals floated $2 trillion in annual cuts (roughly 7-8% of U.S. GDP or ~30% of federal spending). Economic models suggest this could reduce short-term GDP by several percentage points due to fiscal multipliers (e.g., reduced demand from cut programs). However, "chopping 10’s of percent off GDP" implies double-digit declines, which is unsubstantiated hyperbole.

Actual DOGE efforts focused on workforce reductions (the largest peacetime federal workforce cut on record) and targeted eliminations, but overall federal spending rose in 2025 to ~$7 trillion, with realized savings far below $2 trillion (many claims disputed or overstated) and no massive GDP contraction—in fact, the economy grew robustly (e.g., 4.3% in Q3 2025).

Long-term, many economists argue reducing wasteful spending frees resources for private sector growth, potentially boosting productivity and real incomes—contrary to the idea of permanent large-scale damage.
Deflation:
Unlikely and Not Evident
Large spending cuts could cause disinflation (slower price growth), but "measurable deflation" (falling prices economy-wide) is rare in modern economies with active central banks like the Federal Reserve, which would counter it via monetary policy.

No evidence links 2025 cuts to deflation; annual inflation ended around 2.7% with no periods of broad price declines. Reports emphasize disruptions (e.g., program delays, workforce cuts) over broad price declines.
Scope and
Distributional Effects
The claim of "globally across the board" effects lacks basis—DOGE was U.S.-specific, with indirect global ripple effects at most.

Impacts on "paper wealth" (e.g., stocks) vs. tangible assets/debt levels would depend on any recessionary pressure, but no severe downturn materialized primarily from these cuts.

"Guilty parties" bearing the brunt while sparing others is rhetorical; cuts affected broad programs, with mixed job/economic activity losses (hundreds of thousands of federal jobs cut, some private sector disruptions) but no systemic collapse.
Waste and
"Trillions Producing Nothing"
Significant waste exists (e.g., billions in improper payments or inefficient programs annually), and offshoring/deindustrialization involved policy failures over decades.

However, framing it as "trillions... facilitating stripping us like a carcass" oversimplifies complex factors (trade dynamics, automation, global competition) and exaggerates direct ties to fraud/corruption.
"Too Big To Fail"
Institutions
No evidenced policy under DOGE or the administration forced major financial institutions to fail as a "restoration" measure.
Personal Advice
and Overall Narrative
The advice to reduce debt and institutional dependence is reasonable personal finance wisdom amid uncertainty (debt burdens rise in slowdowns; tangibles can hedge volatility).

However, the overall narrative paints an apocalyptic yet necessary "correction" that evidence does not bear out—actual changes were disruptive but yielded modest/disputed savings without the predicted catastrophic pain or targeted justice.
Summary

This is ideological prediction, not verifiable fact. Economic debates on austerity show trade-offs (short-term pain possible, long-term gains debated), but the extremes here lack credible support. Confirmed 2025 outcomes show strong growth, no deflation, and limited net fiscal contraction.

1,412 posted on 01/06/2026 12:13:52 PM PST by foldspace
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To: Axenolith

Axenolith wrote:

“...Use any means to sever or reduce dependance upon institutional crutches.”

Buy land, houses, silver, gold?


1,423 posted on 01/06/2026 12:40:31 PM PST by WildHighlander57 ((the more you tighten your grip, the more star systems will slip through your fingers.) )
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To: All

American cheese contains an unlisted artificial rennet created by Pfizer:

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-15439443/cheese-Pfizers-ingredient-dairy-products.html

What could go wrong?


1,474 posted on 01/06/2026 4:23:21 PM PST by Melian (🟠✴️ Reminder: Memes are made to make you think or laugh. Verify for yourself before reposting. ✴️🟠)
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