Divide and conquer is the oldest playbook in history.
Keep them fighting each other so they never look up.
Race against race.
Left against right.
Red against blue.
Vaxxed against unvaxxed.
Citizen against immigrant.
Every year a new fight.
Every fight perfectly timed.
And while you're arguing with your neighbor — the Fed printed $8 trillion. Interest on the national debt now exceeds the defense budget. The top 1% own more wealth than the bottom 90% combined.
Nobody is talking about that on CNN.
Nobody is talking about that on Fox.
Because both channels are owned by the same class of people who benefit from you never asking fiscal questions.
They don't want you asking:
Why does the dollar lose value every year?
Who benefits when the Fed prints money?
Why were banks bailed out but not people?
Why has productivity gone up for 50 years but wages stayed flat?
Those are the questions that actually matter.
Instead they give you:
Trump versus Biden.
Gay marriage versus abortion.
Masks versus no masks.
A new culture war every cycle.
Perfectly engineered outrage.
Professionally managed distraction.
The Romans called it bread and circuses.
Keep the population fed and entertained and they will never organize against you.
America got Netflix and Twitter.
Same strategy. Better technology.
The real policy happens while you're watching the fight.
Fiscal policy. Monetary policy. The Fed. The Treasury. The debt ceiling. The petrodollar. Jekyll Island.
That's where the game is actually played.
Read The Creature from Jekyll Island by G. Edward Griffin.
Then turn off the news.
🟠 S.A.B. | Sovereign Press
Sovereign Press
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.S.A.B. | Sovereign Press
Author of The Modern Sovereign Series. Five books on Bitcoin, sovereignty, money, body, mind, spirit, and the exit from a system designed to extract from you.
The words will travel farther than I can. They will last longer than I will.
Bitcoin. Self custody. Sovereign living.
The enemy isn't red. The enemy isn't blue.
The enemy has a balance sheet.
While you argue with your neighbor about Democrats and Republicans, the Federal Reserve has been quietly running the longest wealth transfer in American history.
No election. No vote. No accountability.
Jekyll Island. 1910.
A group of the most powerful bankers in America met in secret on a private island off the coast of Georgia. No press. No public. Fake names used to board the train.
They wrote the blueprint for the Federal Reserve System.
It was published in G. Edward Griffin's The Creature from Jekyll Island.
Read it.
What came out of that island was a mechanism to privatize profit and socialize loss. Banks take the upside. You absorb the crash. Every bailout since 1913 traces back to that architecture.
2008 — Banks blow up the economy with fraudulent mortgage securities. Executives keep bonuses. You lost your house.
2020 — Fed prints $4 trillion in months. Asset prices recover in weeks. Your grocery bill recovered never.
2023 — Silicon Valley Bank fails. FDIC backstops deposits above the insured limit for venture capitalists. Your small business gets nothing.
This isn't Democrat policy.
This isn't Republican policy.
This is Fed policy.
And the Fed answers to neither party.
It answers to the banks that own it.
The left blames capitalism.
The right blames socialism.
Neither one will say the name of the building on Constitution Avenue.
They don't want you reading Jekyll Island.
They don't want you understanding how money is created.
They don't want you asking why the dollar has lost 97% of its purchasing power since 1913.
The red team and blue team are the same jersey in different colors.
The Fed is the franchise owner.
You are not a player.
You are the revenue.
Until you're not.
Read The Creature from Jekyll Island by G. Edward Griffin.
Then decide who the real enemy is.
🟠 S.A.B. | Sovereign Press
How the petrodollar enslaved America
Petrodollar suppressed rates → artificially cheap borrowing → US ran deficits it otherwise couldn't afford → debt compounded for decades → now the debt load is so large that organic buyers can't absorb it at rates the US can actually service → Fed steps in as buyer of last resort → QE becomes permanent → Fed balance sheet expands toward owning the majority of US sovereign debt.
The deeper problem:
When the Fed buys Treasuries it creates new dollars to do it. So the mechanism for keeping rates low becomes money creation. Which is inflation. Which erodes the purchasing power of every dollar in circulation. The cost gets distributed silently across everyone who holds dollars — including foreign nations. It's a default in slow motion rather than a formal one.
The logical endpoint:
If the Fed becomes the dominant or sole buyer of US debt, you no longer have a real bond market. You have a government financing itself through its own central bank. That's the textbook definition of monetizing the debt. Every country that's done this at scale has faced a currency crisis eventually.
What this means practically:
The petrodollar gave the US fifty years of borrowed time. That time was used to accumulate obligations that now require either: permanent Fed monetization, restructuring, inflation, or some combination of all three.
Bitcoin sits outside that entire system. Fixed supply. No buyer of last resort. No monetization mechanism. That's not a coincidence — it's the architectural answer to exactly what you just described.
"The entire Federal Reserve System is a fraud — not in the legal sense, perhaps, but in the sense that it does not do what it claims to do. It does not stabilize the economy. It does not protect the dollar. It does not serve the public interest. What it does — systematically, reliably, by design — is transfer wealth from the productive class to the financial class."
The Interest Trap. The government must pay interest on the bonds it sold. But the money to pay that interest was never created — only the principal was. To pay interest, the government must borrow more. The debt grows perpetually. There is no mathematical exit. The system requires continuous expansion to avoid collapse.
America holding some Bitcoin as a seized-asset reserve is theater. Performative. It doesn't threaten the system.
America anchoring to Bitcoin would mean voluntarily dismantling the exorbitant privilege that allows it to consume more than it produces, fund its military, and run $7 billion in new debt every single day.
No empire has ever voluntarily surrendered that.
The Triffin Dilemma doesn't get solved. It gets escaped — by individuals, not nations.
That's the lane. That's why the sovereign individual thesis exists.
Bitcoin is not a solution in search of a problem. It is a solution to a problem 5,000 years in the making.
Gresham's Law
"Bad money drives out good." This law, attributed to Sir Thomas Gresham (1519–1579), describes what happens when two currencies circulate simultaneously but one is legally declared equal to the other despite being intrinsically inferior.
People will spend the inferior money (bad) and hoard the superior money (good). The result: only bad money circulates; good money disappears from circulation.
The Bitcoin solution
Bitcoin has no central point of money creation. New coins are issued to miners — those who expend real computational energy — and immediately enter the market. There is no privileged class that receives money before prices adjust. The Cantillon Effect is eliminated by design.
Every time you hear "quantitative easing," translate: wealth transfer from people who work and save to people who own assets and are close to the money printer.
The Cantillon Effect
Richard Cantillon (1680–1734) identified a phenomenon so important it bears his name 300 years later. The insight: new money does not enter the economy uniformly. It enters at specific points, and those closest to those entry points benefit at the expense of everyone else.
Under a central bank regime, new money is created through: (1) government spending, (2) bank lending, (3) asset purchases (QE). The first recipients — banks, large corporations, government contractors, asset holders — get to spend this money at existing prices. By the time the money reaches workers and savers, prices have already risen. They are made poorer.
This is not accidental. This is structural. Monetary expansion is a mechanism of upward wealth redistribution, dressed in the language of economic stimulus.
When you run a Bitcoin full node, you are doing what no citizen could do against Jekyll Island — you are personally verifying that the rules have not been broken, that no new coins have been created outside the protocol, that the money supply is exactly what it is supposed to be. The node is the audit the Fed never allowed.
Reform is not possible within the system — the cartel controls the regulatory and legislative process
Collapse is possible — the debt spiral has a mathematical limit, though the timeline is unknowable
Rejection requires understanding — which requires education — which requires books like this one
The alternative monetary system Griffin gestures toward is commodity-backed money; he did not live to see Bitcoin
Griffin's final prescription: audit the Fed, abolish the Fed, return to commodity money — in that order
La reforma no es posible dentro del sistema: el cártel controla el proceso regulatorio y legislativo
El colapso es posible: la espiral de la deuda tiene un límite matemático, aunque la línea de tiempo es incognoscible
El rechazo requiere comprensión, que requiere educación, que requiere libros como este.
El sistema monetario alternativo que Griffin señala es el dinero respaldado por productos básicos; no vivió para ver Bitcoin
La última receta de Griffin: auditar la Fed, abolir la Fed, volver al dinero de las mercancías - en ese orden
Griffin ends with a clear-eyed assessment: the Federal Reserve cannot be reformed because those who benefit from it control the political system that would need to reform it. The only realistic paths are collapse (the system eventually implodes under its own debt) or conscious rejection by enough people who understand what it is. Education, he argues, is the prerequisite for change. You cannot fix what you cannot name.
Bitcoin's monetary policy is not set by a committee. There is no FOMC. There is no chairman. The issuance schedule was determined in 2009 and is enforced by every node in the network simultaneously. No political appointment can change it. No emergency session can accelerate it. The contrast with the FOMC's immense, unaccountable power over global economic conditions is absolute.
Bitcoin cannot be created to finance war. The 21 million cap holds regardless of geopolitical pressure. Governments that want to fund wars with Bitcoin must raise the Bitcoin through taxation or bond issuance — visible, honest processes. The hidden inflation tax that makes perpetual warfare financially painless is eliminated. This is not a minor feature. It may be the most consequential political property of a Bitcoin standard.
The Bitcoin Blocksize War (2015–2017) is the closest modern parallel — an attempt by well-funded interests to change Bitcoin's rules while framing the change as user benefit. Users ran their nodes. The attempt failed. Unlike 1913, there was no legislature to capture, no president to sign a bill. The code is the constitution. It cannot be lobbied.
Bitcoin was designed in the open. The whitepaper was public. The code was open source. The genesis block is readable by anyone. There are no secret meetings, no founding cartel, no beneficiary class. The contrast with Jekyll Island could not be more total.
the Federal Reserve System is not a government agency created to serve the public — it is a banking cartel created to serve its member banks, and its design guarantees the outcome we observe: perpetual inflation, recurring crises, and the transfer of wealth from savers and workers to financial institutions and governments.
"The Federal Reserve is not federal. It has no reserves. And it is not a bank in any sense that ordinary people would recognize. It is a cartel — created in secret by the most powerful banking families in the world — whose purpose is to privatize the profits of money creation and socialize the losses. Everything else in American monetary history is commentary on this fact."