Introduction
In 2020, the world was hit by what was described as a global pandemic. But behind the headlines, lockdowns, and panic, something far more consequential was unfolding—an engineered crisis that served as cover for a massive power shift in global finance. At the center of that shift was President Donald J. Trump, who used the chaos not just to respond to COVID-19, but to cripple the true seat of economic control in America: the Federal Reserve.
The Perfect Cover: A Manufactured Crisis
COVID-19 created the perfect storm. Fear paralyzed the public. Governments worldwide enacted sweeping emergency powers. Big Pharma cashed in with rushed vaccines. Meanwhile, trillions of dollars were created out of thin air. The average citizen saw stimulus checks and mandates. But few noticed the deeper move: the merging of the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury under Trump’s watch.
The Setup: CARES Act and Treasury-Fed Fusion
Under the CARES Act, the Treasury handed over $454 billion to the Fed to support emergency lending. The Fed, in turn, leveraged this to backstop trillions in loans to corporations, states, and banks. On paper, this was economic stimulus. In reality, it marked the beginning of the Fed losing its independence. For the first time, monetary policy and fiscal policy were effectively merged—with the Treasury calling the shots.
The Kill Shot: Trump’s Quiet Coup
While the media focused on daily case counts and vaccine rollouts, Trump orchestrated a deeper war—one against the private central banking system itself. By tying the Fed's emergency powers to Treasury capital, Trump put the Fed in a chokehold. They could create money, but only with Treasury approval. That flipped over a century of monetary control.
And while many blamed Trump for his vaccine support, it’s possible he allowed Operation Warp Speed to go forward not to help Big Pharma, but to keep the public distracted while he executed the financial reset.
Aftermath: A Hollowed-Out Fed
Fast forward to 2025, and the Fed still exists—but it's a shadow of its former self. Its credibility is damaged, its independence compromised, and its tools less effective. Meanwhile, populist movements, state-level resistance to the IRS, and discussions of eliminating federal income taxes are gaining traction.
Conclusion
COVID-19 was never just a health crisis. It was a battlefield. And while many players made power grabs for control, Trump may have been the only one who used the chaos to dismantle the real engine of global control: the Federal Reserve. He didn’t just survive the deep state attack—he flipped the board.
It doesn't. At least not yet. I am convinced that Trump is moving rapidly to replace the crumbling world monetary system, which historically needs a "reset" every 40 to 50 years or so. We're overdue.
Doing this on his terms involves taking down the Fed, the tax scam, and all the private parasites, er... bankers who profit by it. I don't know exactly what it is going to look like, but you can bet that at the core it involves bitcoin. Bitcoin is going to be the backing value with stable/alt-coins tied to USD being, if Trump gets his way, the currency of world.
What about gold and silver?
I do not see any signs as to how either plays into Trump's plans. Doesn't mean that there they aren't a part of it, though. I know the central bankers want to "revalue gold," which I presume means give it a higher price so as to offset much of the debt they have created over the last 50 years, and keep their game going.
The threats of a Fort Know audit combined with the news and rumors of gold leaving the London exchange makes me think the gold is not presently there, however. What does this mean? I don't know. But I don't think we're going back to gold, which bankers hate. I've actually rolled a good size gold Roth IRA over to bitcoin.
The stable coins, probably. The bitcoin, no, not yet, though countries, institutions and billionaires are starting to take it seriously. Today you can buy BTC, but when the ghouls step in, you won't be able to buy any, you will have to earn it.
Right now you can become a Satoshi millionaire by buying $850 of bitcoin. There are 100 million Sats per BTC, making for 2.1 quadrillion Satoshis. There will only ever be 21 million BTC. If spread evenly over the Earth that would be less than 300 hundred thousand Sats per person. By getting a million now, you will have over 3x what anyone else would have. Of course, with the big boys starting to buy, many people are going to end up with zero.