> “President Trump is up against an entire world economic establishment.”
Specifically. he’s up against those that can ‘print’ ‘money’ at will, i.e. central bankers. By ‘print’ is meant input digits at a computer and send the digits to selected bank account groups worldwide. By ‘money’ is meant a dilution unit of fundamental money.
I’ve not been a proponent of gold because, in the final analysis, it’s just a yellow metal with no inherent value other than psychological. But if it can bring down central bankers, then I back it 1000%.
It’s important to understand that a bank is a person. This person has a hierarchy of employees that occupy buildings and carry out tasks but the bank is a person and all such persons know each other at the top of their food chain.
Central bankers can buy what they need because of their ability to create fungible dilution units that are made ‘legal’. They have bought entire countries and political establishments.
Some say taking down the central bankers is anti-capitalistic. No, it’s not. Capitalism is not banking although the bankers have for over a century worked to make banking and capitalism appear synonymous.
Capitalism is a process of organizing assets and labor to produce goods and services. It can exist without money but money, real money is a measure of performance that accompanies capital processes. So capitalism and money are closely linked but need not be. Capitalism can be as simple as a few people bringing land, seed, plows, work to produce a crop for distribution. The ensuing trade can be apples for oranges but money is a convenient medium of exchange. Money can be gold, tobacco leaves, pearls or puka shells.
From the Constitution, Article 1, Section 8, Congress shall have “Power To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures” and from Section 10, “No State shall make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts”.
So Congress is not required to use gold or silver in minting coin or currency, but the states may make gold or silver a means of legally satisfying debts.
Where the disconnect exists today in the roles played by Congress and the Federal Reserve is how the Fed is printing dilution off books away from the purview of Congress. This dilution is sometimes called ‘dark money’ because it is kept secret. This is how globalists control markets and how they buy intel operatives to be their spies and enforcers. Taking them out is not a blow against capitalism, it is a blow against those who would control and distort the value of our trade.
I am surprised you didn't include the hundreds of comments.
;-)