"Gold shall destroy FED.Q"
(media.greatawakening.win)
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"As I have said many times, this is not talking about the Federal Reserve.
It doesn’t say, ‘Gold shall destroy THE Fed.’
It says:
Gold shall destroy FED.
That’s an acronym for this:
Foreign Exchange Department for COMMERCIAL BANKS. The Rothschilds were behind the US getting rid of the gold standard in 1971, which made the global reserve currency a fiat currency backed by nothing. At that moment, the Rothschilds had full control of the printing of currency and issuance of debt. Our debt has done nothing but grow ever since, now sitting at almost 32 trillion dollars and counting."
RE: https://badlands.substack.com/p/master-and-commander
Good call. I always thought it mean Federal Reserve.
So how shall gold destroy FED? What happens to the price of gold and silver?
If it ruins the rothchild banking plans amd control then it killed the fed too. Good enough for me.
That substack is probably one of the best, well-written posts of recent times. It's very well laid out.
What I want to know is how did India come up with ten billion bucks to purchase that gold? Are they buying that much gold every month? And if so, why are they burdening their population with that expenditure? Wow, 120+ billion bucks per year going to buy gold, instead of giving their citizens a tax break. Will this save their rupee or is it in the crapper like the US dollar?
If theybhold thengold they hold the true wealth. The paper isnt the moneyi
^^^^^ THIS (I think, need to edit dude)
How much will gold me worth? I asked my coin guy and he said, "Well we would have to get rid of all our debt first, but I think about $17k per oz."
I laughed when he said get rid of all of our debt, due to executive orders Trump wrote dealing with canceling debt with nations and taking assets.
The $17k was just the Q on top!
But really, how much is an oz going to be worth? Please speculate!
That makes sense.
Metals are a value store, not an investment. I've heard that a lot. But you just made me really understand it.
Thank you.
1oz = 1 custom suit and shoes.
I don't know, seems like a lot for some swim trunks and flip flops.
I like the way you think.
Yes. Since the Roman Empire and long before, an ounce of gold has been roughly the amount needed to outfit oneself with a quality suit of clothes and footwear.
Talk about a stable form of money!
Various factors (especially today) have gold (and silver) moving up and down somewhat in market value, but NEVER to zero or even near that.
What's coming for precious metals will include currency tied directly to gold and/or silver and/or other commodities. The more directly and the more easily exchanged FOR metal or other commodities the better.
World population is far above what it was when America began minting 1-oz $20 coins, and many things people buy today did not exist (or were even imagined) back in the 1700s and 1800s. Those will be factors, to what extent I don't know, but the old FIAT dollar price will be staggeringly high because a staggering number of those fake dollars have already been created and billions more are being generated daily.
The market value of gold -- how much gold it takes to purchase a defined item or items at retail, for example -- will be more in line with the historic value, meaning one ounce of gold will be a large but not overwhelming amount of money; more than you'd likely use at the grocery store but appropriate for large purchases. That's my belief, at any rate.
Very unlike EVERY fiat currency in history, which has typically been over-printed or otherwise devalued -- eventually into nothingness.
Gold is a standard. The closest we have to a zero for economics. It suffers no loss (decay, rust, etc) and yields no gain. OR close enough. For an investment to be profitable it must beat gold. Inflation allows for the operation of cash furnaces, businesses that produce losses yet are profitable.
Dollars wouldn't be worthless they'd be backed by gold. It would indicate an inflated supply which will be brought waybdown when fiat is removed from the game board.
Hopefully a ton of Vatican gold.
What about silver and the thought that it is extremely undervalued