One of the hallmarks emerging from this second Trump Administration is that almost everything that was once thought to be impossible is starting to happen or has already been accomplished in just the first six months.
For example…
President Trump will never come back after 2020 and win in 2024. WRONG!
No one can eliminate the Department of Education, not even Reagan could do it. WRONG!
Trump will never end the Iran/Israel war. WRONG!
Trump will never end the Congo and Rawanda war. WRONG!
If Trump wins, China will invade Taiwan. WRONG!
Trump’s tariffs will crash the economy! WRONG!
Trump’s trade deals will crash the economy! WRONG!
No one could ever completely dismantle and shut off USAID. WRONG!
The Big, Beautiful Bill will never pass. WRONG!
I could go on and on and on, but you get the idea.
Certainly not everything is done yet, and there is still much work to go (and 3 and 1/2 years to do it in), and two of the biggest prizes that still remain are: (1) Shutting down the IRS, and (2) Ending the Fed.
They kind of go hand in hand, and I believe by the end of President Trump’s second term he will have accomplished both.
It’s already started for those who have eyes to see, and now I want to focus specifically on the second one: Ending the Fed.
People called me crazy for saying that, but now?
Now it’s front page news on CNBC!
Watch this short clip as current Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was asked on CNBC about whether he could serve as both Fed Chair and Treasury Secretary at the same time.
Spoiler alert: he didn’t say no!
Backup here if needed:
Think that’s just crazy talk?
You’d be wrong.
It’s not at all without precedent, happening many times in the past:
- William Gibbs McAdoo (1913–1918)
- Carter Glass (1918–1920)
- David F. Houston (1920–1921)
- Andrew W. Mellon (1921–1932)
- Ogden L. Mills (1932–1933)
- William H. Woodin (1933–1934)
- Henry Morgenthau Jr. (1934–1935, for the dual role until August 23, 1935).
To be fair, the reason for this overlap between 1913 and 1935 is because the Federal Reserve was founded in 1913 and was initially tied to the Treasury, not independent of it.
So what’s the point?
The point is, it’s not at all unprecedented to consider either (1) merging the Fed back under the Treasury, which would be a huge positive step forward towards removing the unchecked power of the private Federal Reserve Bank, or (2) ending the Fed altogether and going back to a pre-1913 world which functioned just fine.
To wrap this all up, I turned to ChatGPT to ask what would happen to the balance of power between the unelected, unaccountable, private Federal Reserve Banking system and the Executive Branch (Trump), and here’s what it told me:
Sounds good to me, let’s make it happen!
For more on the scam of Central Banks, read this:
read this: