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I’ve cued this up to the 10 min mark, because the 5 min conclusion is downright powerful. From the beginning, however, this dude from Lost Art Ranch, Wyoming is talking about the value of information in your head and the ability to prosper without the use of technology. I don’t think he meant to swerve away from the AI invasion, but his points are all the more important with the velocity of the surveillance state growing out of control in a matter of months, not years.
Most people don’t realize it, but there’s a hidden battle going on over who controls America’s money and who actually benefits from it. Promethean Action describes this as a clash between a system that puts American workers first and a global financial system that has long benefited international banks over everyday people. Think of it like a game where the rules were written overseas to benefit someone else, Trump’s America First agenda is about rewriting those rules for you. Rather than just talking about bringing jobs back, the administration is now directing real money toward rebuilding American factories and manufacturing.…
The video’s biggest idea is actually the simplest one: the best way to grow the economy without making everything more expensive is to invent better ways of doing things. The presenter argues that scientific discovery and human creativity are the true engines of growth that don’t cause inflation. When we build smarter technology, develop better farming techniques, or create more efficient energy, we can produce more for less, meaning your dollar stretches further without the government having to choose between your job and your grocery bill
Rather than just fiddling with interest rates, the video shows there’s a push to actually fund the rebuilding of American industry, factories, equipment, and manufacturing jobs. Government-backed institutions are being used to direct money toward reindustrialization and advanced manufacturing. In plain terms, this is about bringing back the kind of good-paying, hands-on jobs that once powered the American middle class; the jobs that built cars, tools, and infrastructure right here at home.
In the past, the Federal Reserve would make big announcements about the future of the economy, and banks, investors, and even regular lenders would scramble to react, often making your car loans, mortgages, and credit card rates more expensive in the process. Warsh is now saying the Fed should watch what’s actually happening in the real world before making decisions, rather than steering markets with predictions. For you, this could mean fewer wild swings in interest rates that make it harder to afford a home or pay down debt.
For a long time, the people in charge of America’s money supply believed that if too many people had jobs, prices would automatically go up, so they would deliberately slow down the economy to keep workers from having too much power. New Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh is breaking from this thinking, arguing that a strong economy, affordable prices, and plenty of jobs can all exist at the same time. Think of it this way: the old rule was like a doctor who kept you just sick enough so you wouldn’t “overdo it”, and Warsh just threw that rulebook out.
Barbara Boyd argues that outgoing DNI Tulsi Gabbard’s recent document releases reveal a global, US-funded biolab network centered on Dr. Anthony Fauci, traced back to January 2014—the same start date cited in Joe Biden’s pardons of Hunter Biden and Fauci. She claims Obama’s 2014 gain-of-function ban pushed the research overseas, with NIH funding routed through EcoHealth Alliance to Wuhan, while Pentagon-backed contractors—especially Metabiota—expanded work in Ukraine after the Maidan coup. Boyd highlights a May 2020 Lawrence Livermore assessment describing Wuhan as fitting criteria for an accidental release of an engineered coronavirus, and alleges Fauci steered Biden-era COVID origins reviews toward…