The rise in gold and silver prices is not due to increased demand or a lack of supply, but due to the deterioration of the global financial and monetary system based on the dollar as a reserve currency.
When Washington buys the world with the press of a button.
The title may be exaggerated, but unfortunately, it's just a reality. Imagine that the United States could buy everything the Gulf states own, and what their land holds of gold, oil, and minerals, with just a press of a button on a keyboard in Washington.
For more than half a century, the world has treated a piece of paper printed by the U.S. government as real money. A paper without gold backing, no intrinsic value, only what trust in the issuing state grants it. However, this acceptance is no longer self-evident in a world that has radically changed, where the balance of power and economy has shifted.
This may seem like a scene from a science fiction movie or an economic nightmare, but in reality, it is a reality that the world has lived since the dollar became the global reserve currency after World War II, and then detached from gold in 1971, becoming paper that derives its value from trust in Washington, not from its gold or silver backing.
Over time, the United States has excessively misused this unique advantage. Instead of the dollar being a tool to facilitate trade, it has become a tool for domination, printing trillions to finance deficits, purchase resources, and pay for oil, minerals, and goods from everywhere without any real counterpart in production or effort.
While the rest of the world is forced to work and export only to obtain dollars, so they can import or pay off their debts denominated in it, thus, those who own the printing machine own the world today.
The true value of any currency should be measured by what nations produce, not by what banks print. When money becomes ink on paper, economic justice loses its meaning. Therefore, the question today is no longer: How much dollar reserves do you have? But rather the real question is: How long will we accept a piece of paper printed effortlessly in Washington as if it were real wealth?
It is not financial genius; rather, it is monetary domination that has made the world sell its real production for unbacked paper. It is time for the world to realize that those who own the printer own the world.
The time has come to say to the dollar what was said to every empire that reached its peak and then vanished:
You have taken more than you deserve, and the time for change has come.
