Global geopolitics

Decoding Power. Defying Narratives.


TRUMP Proves The Financial System Is A Ponzi Scheme

The USD, Stock & Crypto Markets Are Nothing But Pyramid Schemes

The stock market is nothing but a scam, gambling away people’s lives with zero remorse.

On April 9, 2025, former U.S. President Donald Trump reignited controversy and suspicion over market manipulation when he posted on Truth Social, “THIS IS A GREAT TIME TO BUY STOCKS!!!” Mere hours later, he abruptly paused most of his newly imposed tariffs, initially introduced on April 2 and branded as “Liberation Day”, which had caused the U.S. stock market to plunge by over $2 trillion. The pause, which temporarily capped tariffs at 10% for 90 days (excluding China, which remained at a steep 145%), immediately reversed the market’s trajectory, sparking an unprecedented $4 trillion surge within 10 minutes. While some investors saw enormous gains by acting on Trump’s timely message, critics such as Senator Adam Schiff accused the former president of market manipulation and insider behavior, hinting at a coordinated pump-and-dump scheme to benefit political allies or major financial interests. Although Trump’s team dismissed the backlash, claiming he was simply trying to boost public morale, the timing raised deeper concerns about how high-level officials can influence, and potentially rig, markets in plain sight, further illustrating the systemic vulnerabilities in a financial structure already dominated by elite control and insider privilege.

The global financial system, as it stands today, is fundamentally structured to transfer wealth from the masses to a small elite. What masquerades as a free market economy based on merit, risk, and reward is, in truth, a highly centralized, manipulated Ponzi scheme, maintained by central banks, government policy, and private financial empires. At the heart of this system lies fiat currency, chiefly the U.S. dollar, a currency with no intrinsic value, printed at will, and weaponized to serve the interests of the financial aristocracy. As the U.S. dollar teeters under the weight of its own excess, even the top financiers, such as BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, have begun floating alternatives like Bitcoin. However, this shift appears less about economic reform and more about positioning the same elite to dominate whatever replaces the existing monetary order.

The U.S. dollar, once tethered to gold, gained its status as the world’s reserve currency through the Bretton Woods agreement. That agreement, however, was dismantled in 1971 when President Richard Nixon removed the dollar from the gold standard. This seismic shift was not a neutral economic move, it was orchestrated with the blessing and backing of major banking families and financial institutions, notably the Rothschilds, whose influence on global central banking is deeply embedded. The result was the advent of fiat currency: paper money backed not by physical commodities but by political will and perceived trust. This change allowed for unlimited currency creation, an open faucet of money which could be directed toward bailouts, military expenditures, and speculative ventures, all underwritten by the debt burden placed squarely on the shoulders of the public.

Fractional reserve banking further accelerated this problem. Under this model, banks are only required to hold a fraction of their depositors’ money in reserve, allowing them to lend out multiples of what they actually possess. This debt-based system ensures that money is perpetually borrowed into existence, meaning interest must always be repaid on newly created currency, a mechanism that guarantees inflation, perpetual debt cycles, and the erosion of purchasing power for ordinary people. When central banks print trillions of dollars to “stimulate” the economy or rescue failing corporations, that money doesn’t trickle down to the average worker. It inflates asset prices, enriches CEOs, and leaves the general population with higher costs and stagnant wages. This is not capitalism; it’s systematic wealth transfer.

It’s no coincidence that Larry Fink, the CEO of BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, has now warned that the U.S. dollar could lose its global reserve status to Bitcoin. BlackRock is the third largest holder of Bitcoin, and Fink’s statements appear timed to enhance their market position. It’s a classic strategy: accumulate early, drive public sentiment, and profit from the resulting price surge. But more crucially, it signals that even the ruling financial class is preparing for a post-dollar world. Their solution isn’t freedom or financial democracy, it’s control through a new form of digital finance.

Bitcoin, unlike fiat currency, is capped at 21 million coins. This scarcity gives it stability and protection against inflationary abuse. However, the interest of major institutions in Bitcoin raises concerns that its original decentralized ethos could be undermined. If Bitcoin becomes another tool of the financial elite, centralized through ETFs, custodial services, and government-regulated exchanges, it could end up perpetuating the same inequalities it was created to resist.

Furthermore, the push toward digital currency by central banks, a project often referred to as Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), poses an even greater threat to financial liberty. Unlike Bitcoin, CBDCs can be programmed, tracked, and controlled. The prospect of a single, global digital currency linked to biometric ID or embedded implants, as some speculative models suggest, would erase any notion of anonymity or freedom in financial transactions. This dystopian possibility is no longer confined to conspiracy, it is being trialed and implemented in phases across several countries.

In the end, the pattern remains unchanged: a manipulated collapse of trust in the current system to justify the implementation of a new one, once again controlled by the same elite entities. The fiat Ponzi scheme, built on inflation and debt, is nearing its breaking point. But the solution being offered is not decentralisation or equity, it’s another trap, dressed as progress. The only way to escape this cycle is through transparency, decentralisation, and financial systems with hard limits, systems that operate beyond the grasp of centralized manipulation. Until then, the wealth of nations will continue to be siphoned off by the few, while the many pay the price.

( Main video is courtesy of Mama Schwab Parody)

@GGTvStreams



Leave a comment