I watched the entire video. It tried to weave a new narrative out of some tidbits here and there, and claimed it was going to reveal that there were "patriots" involved with the Federal Reserve...but never revealed them, or what they were doing.
Alan Greenspan a good guy? Not buying it.
I am about as close an expert there is on gold deposits of the world. I have been a recreational miner for forty years, and financed my own expeditions to various locations to recover gold. In my research I have NEVER heard about a vast amount of gold being discovered or mined in the Grand Canyon. There were limited attempts to mine gold there, but the values are too low for it to be economically feasible. The copper and uranium deposts are far more valuable, but the Federal government never "shut down" any mining because they were afraid of it causing a global finance catastrophe. https://www.silverdoctors.com/gold/gold-news/setting-the-record-straight-there-are-not-1-million-tons-of-gold-in-the-grand-canyon/
Finally, the video ends discussing "food insecurity," and how a large percentage of people here in the U.S. are skipping meals because food has gotten too expensive. Most of the data cited are from West Virginia, Virginia, and Ohio. Those states have been heavily impacted by the loss of coal mining jobs. I'd like to see those same statistics reporting how many of those families own a flat screen TV. The problem is not mostly food insecurity here in the U.S., nor can the U.S. be compared with Sri Lanka, which the video tries to do. The problem is rampant consumerism and lack of discipline. Does inflation play a role? Of course. But given the video's attempt at sensationalism, I won't give this the benefit of the doubt.
I watched the entire video. It tried to weave a new narrative out of some tidbits here and there, and claimed it was going to reveal that there were "patriots" involved with the Federal Reserve...but never revealed them, or what they were doing.
Alan Greenspan a good guy? Not buying it.
I am about as close an expert there is on gold deposits of the world. I have been a recreational miner for forty years, and financed my own expeditions to various locations to recover gold. In my research I have NEVER heard about a vast amount of gold being discovered or mined in the Grand Canyon. There were limited attempts to mine gold there, but the values are too low for it to be economically feasible. The copper and uranium deposts are far more valuable, but the Federal government never "shut down" any mining because they were afraid of it causing a global finance catastrophe. https://www.silverdoctors.com/gold/gold-news/setting-the-record-straight-there-are-not-1-million-tons-of-gold-in-the-grand-canyon/
Finally, the video ends discussing "food insecurity," and how a large percentage of people here in the U.S. are skipping meals because food has gotten too expensive. Most of the data cited are from West Virginia, Virginia, and Ohio. Those states have been heavily impacted by the loss of coal mining jobs. I'd like to see those same statistics reporting how many of those families own a flat screen TV. The problem is not mostly food insecurity here in the U.S., nor can the U.S. be compared with Sri Lanka, which the video tries to do. The problem is rampant consumerism and lack of discipline. Does inflation play a role? Of course. But given the video's attempt at sensationalism, I won't give this the benefit of the doubt.
You need a summary.
Otherwise, low effort post.
It does not say, but it sounds like Mark Dice is doing the commentary.