Jack Mallers
Policy Is The Plot: Why Bitcoin Thrives In Financial Respression
TL;DR
- Current economic trends, driven by dollar debasement and fiscal dominance, are deliberate policy choices creating a polarized economy that crushes the middle class.
- Bitcoin is positioned as the necessary exit door against this systemic monetary decay, offering a bottom-up opportunity to outperform inflation.
- The speaker argues for viewing Bitcoin not merely as a hedge, but as a generational replacement and superior alternative to failing fiat systems and traditional gold reserves.
Summary
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQXc0-B4Qvw | Duration: 49 min
â—† The Policy Plot: Understanding Economic Debasement
The host argues that current economic conditions are not a crisis but rather intentional policy, specifically the debasement of the US dollar. This weakening is facilitated by allowing global yields to rise relative to strong US interest rates, which diminishes the dollar's role as a world reserve asset. Domestic evidence of stress includes companies like Sherwin Williams suspending employee benefits due to soft sales and economic headwinds.
The speaker posits that this environment has created two distinct economies: a thriving Wall Street class benefiting from high debt yields and ownership of scarce assets like Bitcoin and gold, and a struggling middle and lower class. Inflation caused by dollar debasement disproportionately harms those without these scarce assets, leading to increasing societal division and wealth disparity.
â–¶ The Fiat Regime's Toll on the Middle Class
The fiat regime has decimated the middle class by creating a two-tiered economy where only asset holders benefit from currency debasement. Economic policies prioritize being a world reserve currency, which exports jobs and creates deep division between the wealthy minority and the struggling majority. Consumer sentiment data confirms severe economic pain for Americans, with readings below those of the 2008 financial crisis due to stagflation.
Bitcoin is presented as the universal exit door because it is a scarce asset that cannot be printed or diluted by the government. The massive governmental deficits are intentional policy decisions aimed at debasing the dollar through inflation. When liquidity floods the market, capital will flow into assets like Bitcoin as traditional bonds fail due to negative real rates.
★ Bitcoin vs. Traditional Assets & The Global Shift
The speaker argues that Bitcoin has significantly outperformed traditional assets like gold and the stock market since 2020, positioning it as a superior form of digital gold. He advises investors to make substantial allocations to Bitcoin rather than relying on conventional hedging strategies.
Asset Performance Thesis
| Asset | Role in Economy | Thesis/Outlook |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | Superior Digital Gold / Store of Value | Outperforming traditional assets since 2020; essential replacement for failing fiat system. |
| Gold | Traditional Hedge / Store of Value | Outperformed by Bitcoin since 2020, but still relevant in the global shift. |
| Stock Market | Traditional Capital Allocation | Underperforming relative to Bitcoin since 2020. |
â–º The Future of Finance: Actionable Insights
The speaker maintains a highly bullish stance on Bitcoin, predicting it will surpass gold as the superior store of value. He argues that government policy debases the dollar through inflation, making Bitcoin the essential exit door from this economic system.
Action Recommendations & Platform Updates
- Make substantial allocations to Bitcoin rather than relying on conventional hedging strategies.
- Utilize the platform Strike, which has introduced major updates by eliminating direct deposit fees and allowing users to receive a percentage of their paycheck in Bitcoin.
- Take advantage of the new features: no-fee Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) and unlimited free onchain withdrawals.
- Leverage the partnership with BitKey, enabling automated transfers from the payment system directly into cold storage hardware wallets for maximum security.
The speaker also noted that his company's treasury is currently hovering around five billion dollars.
â—† Search for the alpha
The core thesis driving capital allocation is a fundamental rejection of fiat currency stability, viewing government debt and inflation as intentional mechanisms of wealth transfer from the middle class to asset holders. This mandates a structural rotation away from traditional financial instruments toward scarce digital assets positioned to survive monetary debasement.
- Capital Rotation: Substantial allocations should be made to Bitcoin, which is viewed not merely as a hedge but as a necessary replacement for the failing fiat system and superior to gold as a store of value.
- Regime Change Catalyst: The inevitable collapse/debasement of the US dollar due to massive governmental deficits and intentional inflation policy (the "fiat regime") justifies this aggressive rotation.
- Thematic Position: Bitcoin is positioned as the universal exit door from the debasing fiat system, outperforming traditional assets like gold and the stock market since 2020.
- Time Horizon/Invalidation: The speaker predicts that the dollar will ultimately collapse against Bitcoin, implying a long-term, structural shift in global reserve systems (supported by BRICS nations building neutral rails).
| Asset | Signal | Reading |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | Strong Buy / Essential Allocation | Superior store of value; replacement for failing fiat. |
| Gold | Secondary/Outperformed | Less superior than Bitcoin in the current environment. |
â–º Chapter Summaries
Part 1 (0:00)
The host argues that current economic conditions are not a crisis but rather intentional policy, specifically the debasement of the US dollar. This weakening is facilitated by allowing global yields to rise relative to strong US interest rates, which diminishes the dollar's role as a world reserve asset. Domestic evidence of stress includes companies like Sherwin Williams suspending employee benefits due to soft sales and economic headwinds. The speaker posits that this environment has created two distinct economies: a thriving Wall Street class benefiting from high debt yields and ownership of scarce assets like Bitcoin and gold, and a struggling middle and lower class. Inflation caused by dollar debasement disproportionately harms those without these scarce assets, leading to increasing societal division and wealth disparity.
Part 2 (15:00)
The fiat regime has decimated the middle class by creating a two-tiered economy where only asset holders benefit from currency debasement. Economic policies prioritize being a world reserve currency, which exports jobs and creates deep division between the wealthy minority and the struggling majority. Consumer sentiment data confirms severe economic pain for Americans, with readings below those of the 2008 financial crisis due to stagflation. Bitcoin is presented as the universal exit door because it is a scarce asset that cannot be printed or diluted by the government. The massive governmental deficits are intentional policy decisions aimed at debasing the dollar through inflation. When liquidity floods the market, capital will flow into assets like Bitcoin as traditional bonds fail due to negative real rates.
Part 3 (30:00)
The speaker argues that Bitcoin has significantly outperformed traditional assets like gold and the stock market since 2020, positioning it as a superior form of digital gold. He advises investors to make substantial allocations to Bitcoin rather than relying on conventional hedging strategies. The chapter critiques the US government's inability to fix its massive national debt, concluding that currency debasement through inflation is inevitable. Furthermore, BRICS nations are actively building neutral reserve systems using gold-backed rails, signaling a global shift away from reliance on the dollar and US debt. Bitcoin is presented not merely as a hedge but as a necessary replacement for the failing fiat system in this multipolar world. The speaker predicts that just as emerging market currencies collapse against the dollar, the dollar itself will ultimately collapse against Bitcoin.
Part 4 (45:00)
The speaker maintains a highly bullish stance on Bitcoin, predicting it will surpass gold as the superior store of value. He argues that government policy debases the dollar through inflation, making Bitcoin the essential exit door from this economic system. Regarding his company, Strike has introduced major updates by eliminating direct deposit fees and allowing users to receive a percentage of their paycheck in Bitcoin. The platform now offers no-fee Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) and unlimited free onchain withdrawals. Furthermore, Strike partners with BitKey, enabling automated transfers from the payment system directly into cold storage hardware wallets. The speaker also noted that his company's treasury is currently hovering around five billion dollars.
Generated with algorithm jack-strike-watch-v1 · model google/gemma-4-e4b · 2026-07-02T11:16:16Z
Transcript
â—† Strike / Visa watch
Exact transcript excerpts most relevant to a potential Strike card, Visa relationship, or adjacent payments product discussion.
- The excerpts below are the closest transcript matches to Strike / Visa / card-related product discussion.
47:35 · Supporting context
[47:35] tutorials and videos on my Twitter
[47:37] online, but the TLDDR is you can now do
[47:41] direct deposit, get paid in Bitcoin on
[47:42] Strike. You can do DCA no fee with
[47:46] strike and then you can auto withdraw to
[47:48] your bit key whatever and whenever you
[47:50] want for free literally for free. So
[47:55] pretty cool feature. I'm super proud of
[47:56] it. I think we at Strike it's the most
[47:59] userfriendly cheapest way to get Bitcoin
[48:02] cold storage or just to get Bitcoin at
[48:04] all. And then for 21,
46:42 · Supporting context
[46:42] people like, I only I don't want 100% in
[46:43] Bitcoin. I want 10%. Okay, cool. You can
[46:46] set whatever you want. Your paycheck
[46:47] comes into Strike. You can pay bills
[46:49] from Strike with your cash or your
[46:51] Bitcoin. So some people do 10% 90% 50/50
[46:54] zero 100. I do zero 100 and I finance
[46:57] myself by borrowing against my Bitcoin
[46:59] but I get my paycheck in Bitcoin 100% no
[47:03] longer fees on that. So Strike now has
[47:05] no fee DCA no fee direct deposit get
[47:08] paid in Bitcoin and we also have free
[47:11] onchain withdrawals unlimited. So you
[0:04] the Jack Malers Show. I am your host,
[0:07] Jack, and you are listening to what I
[0:10] like to call Mailbag Monday, episode 83.
[0:15] For those listening, nothing changes.
[0:17] For those watching this on their own
[0:19] time, nothing changes. For those of you
[0:21] that join me live, um I'm obviously not
[0:23] in my empty closet. I'm not in Chicago.
[0:26] I'm on the other side of the world. And
[0:28] so for time zone reasons and all sorts
[0:30] of stuff, I had to pre-record this one.
[0:33] Let's see, what time is it? It is
[0:36] 9:21 a.m. in Chicago as I'm talking to
[0:39] you guys right now. So recording it in
[0:42] the morning of US hours. I will upload
[0:45] it as it premieres as if it were a
[0:48] normal live stream. But for those that
[0:50] join live that enjoy the live sessions,
[0:52] I apologize for that. So, this will be a
[0:54] normal episode, one long rant from me, a
[0:57] little update on striking 21 and uh no
[1:00] Q&A today because uh I'm hanging out
[1:02] alone on this balcony uh behind or in
[1:05] front of, excuse me, the seat. Cool.
[1:08] Okay. Um without further ado, let's get
[1:11] started. Ladies and gentlemen, I'm
[1:13] talking to you guys at a Bitcoin price
[1:14] of 114,820.
[1:19] That puts Bitcoin's market cap at $2.29
[1:21] 29 trillion US.
[1:24] Our all-time high remains at $124,400.
[1:29] That was set on August 14th, 2025, so
[1:33] about a month ago. We're currently 7 and
[1:36] a half%ish
[1:37] off of that all-time high. Uh I find it
[1:42] a little funny the price action, you
[1:45] know, Bitcoin's made higher highs in the
[1:47] month of August and lower lows in the
[1:49] month of August. September so far looks
[1:51] generally pretty good. This time last
[1:53] year, the Bitcoin price was about half
[1:56] or a little less than what it is today.
[1:58] So, Bitcoin's up about 100% since this
[2:01] point last year
[2:03] and everyone's pissed and everyone's
[2:05] freaking out. Um, just a reminder, stay
[2:08] humble, stack sats. It's the best
[2:10] performing asset in the world that you
[2:12] own. Patience is virtue. And, uh, touch
[2:15] some grass, touch the sea behind me. I
[2:19] mean, this thing is a monster. I think
[2:21] we're gonna have a massive Q4, which
[2:23] I'll get into in a second. But, uh, I
[2:25] don't know. Every time I start these
[2:27] episodes, I start with what the price
[2:29] is, and people are so wound up. And the
[2:32] price I'm reading looks pretty good.
[2:35] $115,000 Bitcoin. I'll take it. Uh, for
[2:39] those of you that time stamp in block
[2:41] height, I respect the [ __ ] out of you.
[2:43] It's amazing. I'm talking to you guys at
[2:45] Bitcoin block height 914,813.
[2:51] Awesome. Okay, the title of my rant
[2:54] today is policy is the plot why Bitcoin
[2:58] thrives in financial repression.
[3:01] So the theme for today is that we're
[3:04] seeing a lot of things that are
[3:05] weakening the dollar. We're seeing a lot
[3:07] of policy that plans to debase the
[3:10] dollar, debase our debt. And often times
[3:13] people are viewing this as a crisis, as
[3:17] a mistake, as something that needs to be
[3:19] fixed. And I think we've finally reached
[3:22] the point in our fiscal journey as the
[3:25] United States of America, as the Federal
[3:26] Reserve, as the fiat regime as we know
[3:28] it, where that's actually policy. That's
[3:31] why it's policy is the plot. Is that a
[3:33] weaker dollar? People should get used to
[3:35] that.
[3:37] A fiscal dominant Federal Reserve.
[3:39] People should get used to that. Debasing
[3:42] the debt, people should get used to
[3:43] that. Neutral reserve assets being
[3:47] remonetized in gold or monetized in
[3:51] Bitcoin. People should start getting
[3:53] used to that. And I think Bitcoin is
[3:55] going to really, really thrive, not only
[3:57] in the long term, but I expect a really
[4:00] bullish Bitcoin Q4 for a lot of reasons.
[4:02] So, first let's discuss policy as the
[4:05] plot. So, this tweet I thought was spot
[4:08] on the money. Wanted to open up the rant
[4:10] with it. It reads, "This is a real time
[4:13] Mara Lago accord in my view. The
[4:16] strategy of letting global yields rise
[4:18] relative to US yields is central to
[4:21] weakening the dollar. What some see as a
[4:23] market shift, I see as policy, a clear
[4:27] move toward dollar devaluation. the
[4:29] implications extend further, especially
[4:32] for emerging markets, which I believe
[4:34] stand to benefit significantly from this
[4:36] environment. So, for those that are
[4:39] longtime listeners, we've been saying
[4:41] this for as long as this show's been
[4:43] around. The only way out is through
[4:46] debasing the dollar. You cannot raise
[4:48] taxes. You have to tax the populace
[4:52] through inflation.
[4:54] And a sneaky way to devalue the dollar
[4:56] is to allow global yields to rise
[5:00] relative to US yields. Okay? When US
[5:03] yields are strong, the dollar is strong.
[5:06] When the US yields are lower, people
[5:08] will sell the dollar for the euro, for
[5:10] the Swiss Frank, for the Japanese yen,
[5:12] for the British pound if they're getting
[5:15] better fixed income yields. And so the
[5:18] US allowing global yields to rise
[5:22] relative to its own is a way to weaken
[5:26] the dollar. And I'm talking about uh
[5:28] Europe, so Germany, France, Australia,
[5:32] [ __ ] Japanese yield. So across the board
[5:36] and as the tweet said, I I fundamentally
[5:39] do not believe that this is a mistake. I
[5:43] don't think that this is a crisis, at
[5:45] least one that isn't known. This is
[5:47] policy. And policy meaning we're
[5:51] deciding to do this. The United States
[5:53] of America, we are allowing the dollar
[5:57] to get weak to lessen its role when it
[6:01] comes to world reserve. And we've talked
[6:03] about on the show plenty of times.
[6:05] There's a difference between the world
[6:06] reserve currency and world reserve
[6:08] assets.
[6:10] And the United States cares deeply about
[6:13] the dollar still being the unit of
[6:16] account, how we price things globally
[6:19] and the medium of exchange. They want
[6:21] oil trade in dollars, which we'll get to
[6:23] in a second. They like the fact that
[6:26] stable coins are pr proliferating
[6:27] throughout the world. They like that.
[6:30] But as far as world reserve asset,
[6:33] how people store and save wealth, time,
[6:37] energy
[6:39] in this fiat era, it's been the US
[6:41] dollar, it's been US treasuries.
[6:45] Those days are over and the United
[6:46] States is, you know, very slowly
[6:48] starting to admit that fate and this is
[6:51] becoming policy. So let's take a look at
[6:55] domestic stress cracks. So what's
[6:58] happening inside the United States of
[6:59] America? We're showing significant signs
[7:02] of trouble of stress. We are cracking
[7:05] internally and this is causing a lot of
[7:08] the policy that we're seeing. Sherwin
[7:11] Williams suspends 401k matching amid
[7:14] sales. So Sherwin Williams is an
[7:17] interesting company because it's
[7:18] unbreakable. At least it was perceived
[7:20] to be as such. super solid Midwestern
[7:26] business that has survived everything
[7:30] survi. It has not ever gone down without
[7:32] with a crisis. It's not overinded. It's
[7:35] not overleveraged. It's a very sound
[7:38] fundamental business.
[7:40] Now, the press release read or excuse
[7:42] me, the news article read, "Sherin
[7:44] Williams announced plans to temporarily
[7:46] suspend the company's matching
[7:47] contributions to employees 401k plans,
[7:50] citing weak sales amid economic and
[7:52] tariff headwinds. In an internal
[7:54] communication obtained by Cleveland.com,
[7:57] CEO Heidi G. Pets attributed the
[7:59] decision to several factors, including
[8:01] high mortgage rates and have pushed
[8:03] housing demand to near historic lows, an
[8:06] inflation that has reduced DIY demand
[8:08] for three consecutive years. Tariff
[8:12] policies have also decreased industrial
[8:14] demand and increased costs for the paint
[8:17] and coating manufacturer. pets lit
[8:19] letter stated Sherwin Williams is not
[8:22] immune from these conditions which have
[8:24] lasted longer and been more impactful
[8:26] than anticipated. Unfortunately,
[8:29] customer demand remains soft and in some
[8:31] areas it's getting worse. The suspension
[8:34] which goes into effect October 1st
[8:37] affects the company's current policy of
[8:39] matching 100% of the first 6% of
[8:42] eligible employees 401k contributions.
[8:45] The company implemented similar
[8:47] suspensions during the 2009 financial
[8:49] crisis and 2020 COVID pandemic,
[8:52] eventually restoring full matching as
[8:54] conditions improved. The CEO said
[8:56] Sherwin Williams intends to do the same
[8:58] in this case, but did not share a
[9:00] potential timeline for when full
[9:02] matching would be restored. Sherwin
[9:04] Williams has already undertaken what
[9:05] pets described as disciplined,
[9:07] responsible, and aggressive cost savings
[9:09] measures, including reducing thirdparty
[9:11] spending, simplifying operations,
[9:13] delaying new hires, and restructuring
[9:15] global assets. Okay, there's a lot to
[9:19] take away from this news. The big thing
[9:22] that I want you guys to understand is
[9:24] we're there's two economies, okay? And
[9:28] this is really the story of the wealth
[9:30] gap in the United States and a lot of
[9:32] the
[9:34] vitrial, anger, stress, and divide that
[9:38] at least as an American I can speak to
[9:40] that a lot of us are experiencing.
[9:44] What happens is when we're debasing the
[9:46] dollar
[9:48] that causes inflation and particularly
[9:51] in assets and particularly in scarce
[9:55] desirable assets meaning the real estate
[9:58] on the water, the real estate on the
[10:00] beach, the top floor of the building in
[10:02] Manhattan goes up more than the abundant
[10:07] real estate that no one really cares
[10:08] that much about that doesn't have that
[10:10] much of a scarcity value. You can maybe
[10:12] create a bunch more homes in the Chicago
[10:14] land area, but you can't create a bunch
[10:17] more homes on the water because there's
[10:19] a scarcity element to that land, right?
[10:22] Same thing with gold. Same thing with
[10:23] Bitcoin. And so what we've seen is Wall
[10:27] Street or just, you know, how would you
[10:30] say asset holders, the folks that
[10:32] actually own scarce desirable goods,
[10:35] they're getting incredibly wealthy as
[10:37] time goes on. People misunderstand that
[10:40] having
[10:42] uh interest rates or having you know Fed
[10:46] set rates at 4 and a.5%. That's actually
[10:49] very stimulative because the United
[10:51] States is paying such a high bill on its
[10:55] interest costs and though that money is
[10:57] going back into the economy. So people
[10:59] that own a ton of tea bills, a ton of
[11:04] short duration US debt, they're getting
[11:06] paid out a ton of money and they're
[11:09] going yaching and they're buying real
[11:10] estate and they're traveling and they're
[11:12] buying Bitcoin and they're buying gold.
[11:14] Now, the other side of the world or the
[11:16] other side of this coin, these people
[11:19] are struggling because if you're living
[11:21] paycheck to paycheck and you don't own a
[11:23] home yet, you don't own one Bitcoin yet,
[11:26] you don't own a good gold position yet,
[11:28] you don't own these scarce, desirable
[11:30] assets that you're either consuming in
[11:33] homes or a car or you're saving in
[11:36] Bitcoin and gold. These things are
[11:38] inflating away from you. So, they're
[11:39] getting harder and harder to acquire as
[11:42] the story plays on. And so the people
[11:44] that don't own these things are getting
[11:46] poorer every single day in purchasing
[11:50] power terms in their ability to acquire
[11:52] these things. And the people that do own
[11:54] these things are getting exponentially
[11:56] wealthier and not necessarily doing a
[11:59] lot of work per se. Right? And so this
[12:03] in my opinion causes the divide, the
[12:06] anger, the tension in society.
[12:10] the ability for someone to work so hard,
[12:12] sacrifice and do everything right and
[12:14] still have a life that they don't feel
[12:16] is worth living.
[12:18] And what we're seeing is there's two
[12:20] economies here. The Wall Street economy,
[12:24] the Larry Finins of the world, they're
[12:26] killing it. Breaking records with their
[12:28] ETF. They own a lot of Bitcoin. They own
[12:30] a lot of assets. Their Kagger on every
[12:32] single portfolio is through the roof.
[12:35] They own a lot of T bills. They're
[12:36] getting paid 4 and a.5% 5% to sit in
[12:41] this short US debt. That's this is
[12:44] financing their mortgage, their private
[12:47] planes, their yachts. But the Sherwin
[12:50] Williams customer, the do-it-yourself
[12:52] paint your house customer, the new home
[12:55] buyer customer, what Sherwin Williams is
[12:58] saying is we're all getting destroyed.
[13:00] Our business is down tremendously. Sales
[13:02] are down. And that's because middle to
[13:04] lower America is getting crushed. Is
[13:06] getting crushed. And the only time
[13:09] Sherwin Williams did this 2009 and 2020.
[13:13] 2009 in 2020. So it's it's an
[13:16] interesting idea. Are we in a recession?
[13:17] No, we're not in a recession
[13:18] technically, but it depends who you're
[13:21] talking about. We shouldn't look at
[13:23] America as this one big economy anymore.
[13:26] There's two economies. Okay. So this
[13:29] from the Wall Street Journal. The middle
[13:31] class vibe has shifted from secure to
[13:33] squeezed. After months of tracking
[13:35] high-income earners positive economic
[13:37] outlook, America's middle inome
[13:39] households appear to be losing
[13:42] confidence. Let's take a look. For the
[13:44] American middle class, it has been a
[13:46] summer of cooling confidence. Consumer
[13:48] sentiment dropped nearly 6% in August
[13:50] after trending up in June and July.
[13:52] According to a closely watched index
[13:54] from the un University of Michigan,
[13:56] pessimism about the job market increased
[13:59] with more people surveyed saying the
[14:01] expected their income to decline.
[14:03] According to polling done by think tank
[14:05] in the conference board, the middle
[14:07] class generally considered to include
[14:09] households making roughly 53,000 to
[14:11] $161,000 a year is playing an outsized
[14:15] role in the warning of or the waning,
[14:17] excuse me, of optimism. After months of
[14:19] tracking high-income earners increased
[14:21] confidence in their economy, households
[14:23] making between $50,000 and $100,000 made
[14:25] an abrupt about face in June. They now
[14:28] more closely resemble lowincome earners
[14:30] glooier views. According to surveys done
[14:33] by morning consult, a data intelligence
[14:35] firm. There was a period of time briefly
[14:37] where the middle-income consumer looked
[14:39] like they were going to be dragged up by
[14:41] all that was going well in the world,
[14:43] said John Leer, chief economist at
[14:45] Morning Consult. Then things fell off a
[14:48] cliff. Evidence of a squeeze middle
[14:50] class is mounting. Several CEOs across
[14:52] the dining, retail, fashion, and airline
[14:54] industries have said their middle class
[14:56] customers are increasingly strapped even
[14:58] as high earners keep on buying. And this
[15:00] is it, guys. And I've said many times
[15:03] before, you know, fiat, this fiat
[15:06] regime, this fiat era has decimated the
[15:09] middle class in the United States of
[15:11] America. What do I mean by that? It's
[15:14] really simple. You either own assets and
[15:17] are protected and are benefiting from
[15:20] debasement and destruction of the
[15:22] currency or you don't and that's it.
[15:26] In a prosperous society, there is a
[15:29] middle class. Let me explain it to you
[15:31] guys this way. If the third floor is the
[15:33] top floor, the penthouse floor, the
[15:35] Larry Frink floor, the Wall Street
[15:37] floor, the elite floor, and the first
[15:39] floor is non-asset holders paycheck to
[15:42] paycheck. No matter how hard you work,
[15:44] if housing is is inflating at 20% a
[15:47] year, you have to be getting a 21% raise
[15:49] every single year to just be making
[15:51] marginal progress towards owning a home,
[15:54] right?
[15:57] And there is no second floor. So you
[16:00] have the top floor and the third floor.
[16:02] The first floor is the bottom floor. If
[16:04] there's no second floor, the third floor
[16:06] people can't get to the first floor.
[16:08] Elite asset holders can't become poor.
[16:11] All they do is sit on their assets.
[16:14] They're not doing any proof of work for
[16:15] society. They're not doing [ __ ] all
[16:19] and they're getting rich.
[16:21] And the first floor people can't get to
[16:23] the third floor.
[16:26] They're working as hard as they can.
[16:28] They're getting degrees. They're working
[16:30] two jobs. They're sacrificing parenting
[16:32] their children so that both parents have
[16:35] income. They're saving in high yield
[16:38] savings accounts. They're not getting
[16:41] close to getting to the third floor no
[16:43] matter what. That's a very destructive
[16:46] society. That's a pain society. That's
[16:48] two different economies.
[16:51] Larry think loves getting the yield he's
[16:54] getting on tea bills and watching
[16:55] Bitcoin go from 20,000 to 115,000. He's
[16:58] swimming in it.
[17:00] Now, Bitcoin's unique because it's the
[17:02] only thing all of us can buy and benefit
[17:05] from. Not all of us can get fancy real
[17:08] estate that outperforms inflation, but
[17:11] all of us can get Bitcoin. That'd be my
[17:13] message to the first floor. But to bring
[17:14] it back to the point, a healthy society
[17:16] needs a second floor.
[17:19] Having no middle class is very
[17:21] destructive.
[17:22] And what ends up happening is the rich
[17:25] get richer and smaller. The third floor
[17:27] is not nearly as big as the first floor.
[17:29] The first floor houses like 70 80% of
[17:32] the population. The first floor is the
[17:35] minority, the wealthy minority. And
[17:38] that's what we're seeing here. That's
[17:40] what we're seeing here. And it happens
[17:43] because when your job is to export the
[17:46] currency, be the world reserve currency.
[17:48] You don't have jobs for these people.
[17:52] The way to get rich in America is to be
[17:55] a financeier.
[17:56] Wall Street, finance,
[17:59] trading, hedge funds. You're not
[18:02] actually making real [ __ ] You're not
[18:04] actually providing tangible things to
[18:06] the people around you. All of the
[18:08] manufacturing jobs, they're in China.
[18:12] Apple doesn't want to make the iPhone in
[18:13] Manhattan. Rent in Manhattan's $5,000 a
[18:17] month. Apple's margins would be crushed.
[18:19] Stock would go to zero. The iPhone's
[18:22] made in whatever Shishuan or some place
[18:25] in rural China.
[18:28] And so when your job is to export the
[18:29] currency, you're also exporting jobs.
[18:31] You're also exporting the middle class
[18:33] and you're creating a division of you
[18:35] their own assets and you don't. And this
[18:38] was such a rigged game before Bitcoin.
[18:40] Before Bitcoin, none of us on the first
[18:43] floor could own anything that the third
[18:45] floor owned.
[18:47] Nothing.
[18:49] Now we get Bitcoin. Bottoms up movement.
[18:53] Bottoms up movement. So some of the
[18:56] charts that were referenced, here's US
[18:58] consumer sentiment across the income
[18:59] levels. So, income over 100 grand a
[19:02] year, it's great. Income 50 to 100
[19:06] grand, not great. Income under 50 grand,
[19:10] even worse. And so, you guys can start
[19:12] to see the division in the trends here.
[19:14] If you're making enough money, if you
[19:16] can afford things on the third floor,
[19:18] you're fine. Now, what I would want to
[19:20] add to this, obviously the data doesn't
[19:22] exist, is Bitcoiner sentiment.
[19:25] Because it doesn't matter how much money
[19:27] you're making, whether you're making
[19:29] under 50 grand, 50 to 100 grand, over
[19:32] 100 grand. If you found Bitcoin, you
[19:36] understand Bitcoin. You've lowered your
[19:38] time preference. You earn more money
[19:41] than you spend, which allows you to
[19:44] save. You produce more value for the
[19:46] world than you consume, which allows you
[19:48] to save, and you save it in Bitcoin, and
[19:51] you've lowered your time preference. I
[19:53] would say sentiment is through the roof.
[19:56] You're getting 50 to 60 60% kagger every
[19:59] year for the last 10 years. And that's
[20:03] the escape. Bitcoin is that exit door,
[20:06] guys. It is that exit door. The New York
[20:08] uh what what journal was this? Wall
[20:10] Street Journal. Uh they referenced the
[20:13] uh University of Michigan data. So this
[20:16] is this is the tweet that shows the
[20:17] data. Yumish prelim September consumer
[20:19] sentiment falls to 55.4 4 which
[20:22] estimates had it at 58. Not good. And
[20:25] the point here is stagflation is
[20:27] hammering the middle class. This reading
[20:29] is sub208.
[20:31] So we are getting middle class consumer
[20:33] sentiment readings that are below the
[20:37] '08 financial crisis guys. So are we in
[20:41] a recession? Are we in a crisis? Do we
[20:42] have problems? Depends who you're
[20:44] talking about. Bitcoiners have escaped.
[20:46] They found the exit door. All of you
[20:48] listening to this, we're on the boat on
[20:51] our way out of the sinking Titanic,
[20:56] we have hope.
[20:58] We have a hard scarce asset that nobody
[21:01] can take from us, that nobody can print
[21:02] on us, no one can dilute our share in
[21:05] the 21 million. [ __ ] that.
[21:09] But people that have not found this
[21:11] show, have not found Bitcoin, have not
[21:14] downloaded Strike, have not set up the
[21:15] DCA sentiment is below 2008.
[21:22] Americans face increase in health
[21:24] insurance costs in 15 years. The pain
[21:26] will keep coming. And so when you wonder
[21:28] why does Trump why does Bessant want
[21:30] rates down so bad, there's a lot of
[21:32] reasons. One of the reasons is the
[21:34] country is struggling mightily.
[21:38] Absolutely.
[21:40] They're going to have to let inflation
[21:42] go just to get the economy off its feet.
[21:45] Now, thi this I thought was fascinating.
[21:49] A third of US states could already be in
[21:52] a recession because I was looking for
[21:55] data that didn't look at a recession
[21:58] just with everyone included with these
[22:01] [ __ ] definitions and these [ __ ]
[22:03] metrics. Everybody knows not to trust a
[22:07] technical recession. A bunch of
[22:09] nonsense.
[22:11] And this said 33% of US states are
[22:14] already in a recession. Monday's
[22:16] analytics finds that states accounting
[22:18] for one-third of US uh GDP are in or at
[22:21] high risk of recession. On the other
[22:23] hand, California, Texas, and New York
[22:25] are holding steady, helping stabilize
[22:28] the national economy. And this is it,
[22:30] guys. Look at the middle of America.
[22:32] Look at Illinois where I live. Crushed,
[22:36] decimated. It's yellow, orange, and red
[22:38] in the middle of the country.
[22:41] That is the middle class. That is what
[22:44] is now the rust belt. The rust belt is
[22:46] rusty because all of those jobs in
[22:48] manufacturing is in China. In 1971, when
[22:52] we said, "We're not going to obey the
[22:55] laws of mother nature. We're not going
[22:57] to live by the laws of physics. We're
[22:59] not going to live in the real world. are
[23:00] going to print time and energy out of
[23:02] thin air,
[23:04] force people to use it through violence,
[23:06] and take on the role of exporting the
[23:08] world reserve currency and importing
[23:11] real stuff.
[23:13] What do you do? You you the the
[23:18] edges of the country become tremendously
[23:21] wealthy. California, Silicon Valley, New
[23:24] York, Wall Street, those are the
[23:26] winners. The losers are everybody else.
[23:30] How did Trump win the populist vote? How
[23:34] did he win? How did he do that? You
[23:37] don't understand how much of the United
[23:40] States is struggling.
[23:43] This is two different economies. This is
[23:46] what it looks like when you want to be
[23:48] the world reserve currency and you don't
[23:50] use neutral assets. Neutral assets that
[23:52] no one can print, that are bound to the
[23:54] laws of physics, that obey mother
[23:56] nature.
[23:59] No country. Listen, people say, "Oh,
[24:02] you're American. You're so lucky." In
[24:04] many ways, we are. But in many ways,
[24:06] we're not. Okay? Being the world reserve
[24:10] currency is a disease. Triffin's dilemma
[24:12] is real.
[24:14] And none of these things scale. None of
[24:16] these things last
[24:18] because they're not real.
[24:21] They have to come to an end. And they're
[24:23] coming to an end right now. This is a
[24:26] chart from Luke.
[24:28] This shows US consumer confidence
[24:32] over stocks
[24:35] S&P and the NASDAQ. What you're seeing
[24:38] is usually US consumer confidence
[24:42] trended with the stock market. And what
[24:45] that tells you and what that shows you
[24:47] is there's been this kind of like
[24:49] [ __ ] myth
[24:52] this this misty
[24:54] like pitch from the US government.
[24:58] They've been saying look at the stock
[25:01] market. Stock market's all-time highs.
[25:03] You guys are killing it. Everyone's
[25:05] savings accounts going up, right? Your
[25:07] 401k killing it. And everyone believed
[25:10] that [ __ ] Everyone believed that [ __ ]
[25:15] Not anymore. That's what this chart
[25:16] shows. If you look at the far right, the
[25:18] stock market's going up. US consumer
[25:21] confidence is going down. The system is
[25:24] breaking. Nobody is buying that anymore.
[25:29] Inflation matters too much or
[25:31] stagflation matters too much. People are
[25:34] losing purchasing power. You cannot keep
[25:38] lying to them. Oh, don't worry about
[25:40] purchasing power or inflation. Look at
[25:42] your Nvidia stock. No,
[25:45] no. Gold has outperformed the stock
[25:48] market since the divorce of the gold
[25:50] standard. You're better off just holding
[25:53] gold than investing in any of this
[25:55] garbage.
[25:59] So, the this chart tells me the gig is
[26:03] up.
[26:05] US consumer confidence is down despite
[26:07] an all-time high stock market. You watch
[26:10] Scott Bessant go on, well, you know, we
[26:12] uh if you take a look at the stock
[26:14] market, the Trump administration's done
[26:16] an incredible job. Yeah, but nobody
[26:18] cares about that anymore.
[26:20] Nobody cares about that. There's too
[26:22] much pain. Next chapter, liquidity
[26:25] mountain and fiscal super cycle.
[26:28] Now, in the month of August, the US
[26:31] government collected $344 billion.
[26:35] Just one problem. $344 billion. That's
[26:37] great, right? If you annualize that out,
[26:40] that's a ton of money. Killing it. They
[26:42] spent almost $700 billion.
[26:46] So our deficit in August was $345
[26:52] billion. If you annualize that out, our
[26:55] deficit would be over three trillion,
[26:57] almost $4 trillion a year.
[27:04] Guys, this is policy. Again, people look
[27:08] at this and say, "This is a mistake.
[27:10] This is a crisis. This is Putin's fault.
[27:12] This is the war's fault. This is China's
[27:13] fault." No. I I I need to tell you, this
[27:16] is policy.
[27:18] This is policy decisions. They are
[27:20] purposefully making these decisions.
[27:23] They're going to try and grow their way
[27:24] out. They're going to run it hot.
[27:25] They're going to let inflation run.
[27:28] Real rates negative. Debase, debase,
[27:30] debase. Bitcoin is going to win. It's
[27:34] the exit door. It's all of our ways out.
[27:37] The middle of America, that yellow, that
[27:40] orange, that red that's living in a
[27:42] recession, that middle to lower class,
[27:44] there's no longer a middle class. If you
[27:46] don't have the right assets, you're the
[27:47] lower class. It doesn't matter anymore.
[27:50] You have to get yourself some Bitcoin.
[27:52] It's the only ticket out that is sold to
[27:56] all of us.
[27:58] Great. Larry Frink adopted Bitcoin later
[28:01] than than me and he found his way out. I
[28:04] wasn't I wasn't given the opportunities
[28:06] Larry Larry Frink was given.
[28:10] I'm telling you, Bitcoin is the only
[28:13] ticket available for sale to everybody
[28:16] to get out.
[28:20] If you're listening to this podcast and
[28:22] you're a top financeier on Wall Street,
[28:24] good for you. Good for you. You don't
[28:27] have to listen to the rest of the
[28:28] episode. You got it, bro. You figured it
[28:30] out. Good for you. If you're not,
[28:35] your way out is Bitcoin.
[28:39] This is policy. These are purposeful
[28:41] decisions.
[28:44] I'll put it to you another way. Their
[28:46] only way out is Bitcoin.
[28:49] Gold and Bitcoin are absorbing all the
[28:51] liquidity and constantly making new
[28:53] all-time highs and performing the best
[28:55] because they have to. The dollar has to
[28:59] go down. something else has to go up. So
[29:03] their only way out is Bitcoin. Now they
[29:06] don't think about it that way. They
[29:07] think about it as their only way down is
[29:08] debasing the dollar, debasing the debt,
[29:10] and effectively defaulting through
[29:11] inflation. A soft long default.
[29:18] But the sooner you find the exit door,
[29:20] the better you'll be. There's now 7.5
[29:24] trillion dollars in money market funds.
[29:26] And this is just the level of liquidity
[29:28] that Bitcoin is going to see soon. When
[29:30] rates start to come down, this capital
[29:33] needs to find a new home, needs to find
[29:36] returns.
[29:38] The amount of money that is going to
[29:41] flow into assets that needs to find a
[29:44] bonds are getting destroyed.
[29:47] Real rates are negative and will
[29:49] continue to be. We haven't even started
[29:52] cutting rates yet. The amount of capital
[29:54] will be immense.
[29:56] This is Bitcoin over TLT over
[29:58] treasuries. Yummy,
[30:02] guys. Like, and look, here's the thing.
[30:05] You look at these charts. I've been in
[30:07] Bitcoin since 2013. I watched Bitcoin go
[30:10] from $50 to $1,300. And then Mount Gox
[30:14] gets hacked, Silk Road got busted, all
[30:16] this [ __ ] happened back then. And then
[30:18] it went all the way down to 200. And the
[30:20] chart looked insane. like the hockey
[30:22] stick up and the fall down looked crazy.
[30:25] Now it went from 50 to 1300 to 250. Then
[30:28] it went to 20,000. I was like, "Oh my
[30:31] god, I thought $1,300 was a lot for a
[30:33] Bitcoin. Holy crap."
[30:36] And then it went from 20,000 to 2,000 or
[30:39] whatever, 3,000. You see these little
[30:41] blips down here? Every single bigger run
[30:46] ends up looking like a little blip. And
[30:48] you can see since 2020, I mean,
[30:50] Bitcoin's been ripping the face off of
[30:53] TLT since co everything broke in 2020.
[30:57] Now, this is gold over TLT. Look at
[30:59] this. Relatively stable until 2020.
[31:03] My goodness. And this is the stock
[31:05] market. Now, gold in the stock market
[31:07] looked the same over TLT. Everything
[31:10] broke in 2020. In 2020, a lot of [ __ ]
[31:13] broke. Now, Bitcoin is just a beast of
[31:16] its own.
[31:17] It's it's the pin that popped the
[31:19] balloon. But I mean here from Reuters
[31:23] Ray Dalio last week, gold is a shield
[31:26] for US market risk. He suggests 10 to
[31:29] 15% of your portfolio should be in gold.
[31:32] Now I don't own any gold because I own
[31:35] the better version of gold. I own
[31:37] Bitcoin. Okay. My recommendation is own
[31:42] whatever allows you to be comfortable
[31:44] sleep at night and build the life you
[31:46] want to live.
[31:48] As much Bitcoin as that is 10 15% sure
[31:52] listen I don't know anybody that
[31:54] understands Bitcoin and it's 1% of their
[31:56] portfolio 5% 10% 15%. If you get it, if
[32:00] you get it, if you listen to this show,
[32:03] if you're one of me, one of us, I mean,
[32:05] guys, Bitcoin's 100% of mine, but you
[32:09] have to be comfortable. You'll get
[32:11] there. It's a journey. It wasn't always
[32:12] 100% for me.
[32:15] But my recommend I I'm on the same page
[32:18] as Ray Dalio, but he's one of these, you
[32:20] know, oldtime portfolio manager dudes
[32:22] who, you know, like
[32:26] owning a bunch of [ __ ] Hedging,
[32:29] you know, hedging is a fancy way of
[32:32] saying allocating money away from the
[32:35] winner. Owning a bunch of losers. I
[32:38] don't own losers.
[32:40] My dad once told me, you know, you know,
[32:43] the funny thing about my sport, and his
[32:45] sport is, you know, investing markets.
[32:48] He's like, the funny thing about my
[32:49] sport is
[32:51] I don't have to hit a bunch of home runs
[32:54] and bat 300 to make the Hall of Fame,
[32:58] I got to hit one home run,
[33:01] and I got to hit it far.
[33:04] And then I'm a Hall of Famer.
[33:07] Then I put my kids through school. I
[33:10] give them the life I couldn't or my
[33:13] grandfather couldn't.
[33:16] I give them everything. Like one home
[33:18] run makes you a Hall of Famer,
[33:22] right? Think of it that way. [ __ ] the
[33:24] hedging. [ __ ]
[33:26] We found our home run. We found the best
[33:28] invention of our lifetime.
[33:32] Hit it far. Don't hit it 1% of your
[33:35] portfolio. That's my advice. sue me.
[33:37] People are gonna say, "Oh, Jack, you're
[33:39] so irresponsible." Oh, God. How could
[33:42] you recommend such a thing? Shut up.
[33:45] Shut the [ __ ] up. It's my advice. You're
[33:47] an adult. If you're listening to this
[33:49] show, you do whatever the [ __ ] you want.
[33:51] Okay? My advice. You found a home run.
[33:53] You want to make the Hall of Fame. You
[33:55] want to secure generational wealth. You
[33:58] want to put on for your family, your
[34:01] kids.
[34:03] Don't hit a home run 1%.
[34:08] Okay, let's play this video uh from
[34:12] Elon.
[34:14] Uh this is just the icing on the cake in
[34:16] my opinion.
[34:18] >> In PaloAlto
[34:20] and um not Washington DC I'm at Tesla
[34:24] Global Engineering headquarters in Palo
[34:26] Alto.
[34:26] >> Yeah. So no more Washington DC. You're
[34:29] back at work. You're focused. Yeah.
[34:32] >> Uh yeah. I haven't been to DC since May.
[34:34] >> Okay.
[34:36] That was a that was a hell of a side
[34:37] quest.
[34:39] >> That was a good Any lessons from your
[34:42] time in Washington DC?
[34:45] >> Uh
[34:47] the government is basically unfixable.
[34:53] >> Elon O's
[34:58] noble efforts and this uh it's good to
[35:00] it's good to have talented people in the
[35:02] administration. Uh but at the end of the
[35:04] day um if you look at our national debt
[35:08] which is uh insanely high uh the
[35:11] interest payments exceed the u defense
[35:15] department I guess sorry war department
[35:19] uh budget
[35:21] um and um Nikki Bryzy so if AI and
[35:26] robots don't solve our national debt
[35:28] we're we're toast.
[35:35] Yeah. I mean,
[35:38] so Elon thought he was going to doge the
[35:41] place up and he realized
[35:44] it's he called it unfixable.
[35:46] This is policy, guys. This is it. This
[35:49] is it. The only way out is through
[35:52] debasement. They have to weaken the
[35:53] dollar. They have to debase the debt.
[35:55] They have to default
[35:57] through inflation, through currency
[35:59] debasement. That's their soft default.
[36:02] You heard it right there. What did you
[36:04] learn from Washington DC working with
[36:06] the president trying to solve this
[36:08] problem? It's an unsolvable problem.
[36:12] Bitcoin isn't a fix. It's an
[36:16] alternative. Right? Bitcoin is not a
[36:19] hedge. It's the replacement.
[36:22] We got to move on to a new system.
[36:24] Okay. Let's move on.
[36:27] uh geopolitics as currency wars. So, you
[36:31] know, on this show, we like to check in
[36:33] on bricks primarily. I mean, you know,
[36:35] who really matters is China, right? We
[36:37] all know that. And what's fascinating is
[36:41] they are remonetizing gold and building
[36:44] a neutral reserve standard, a neutral
[36:48] reserve system to get themselves out.
[36:52] And you know, the United States at this
[36:54] point can't do anything about it. It's
[36:57] over. Now, listen, markets can remain
[37:00] irrational far longer than you can
[37:01] remain solvent. So, I'm not saying it's
[37:03] over like it's going to end in a month,
[37:06] in a year, hell, maybe even a decade.
[37:08] These things take time. But the
[37:11] trajectory is clear. The next chapter
[37:13] has started. Like that much I know.
[37:17] Okay. Treasury Secretary says US and
[37:20] European Union must partner to collapse
[37:22] Russian economy.
[37:24] Whoa. Uh, let's listen to our boy
[37:27] Scotty.
[37:31] Last question. Russia. Overnight, uh,
[37:34] Russia hit Kev in the largest aerial
[37:36] attack on the country since the war
[37:39] began, Mr. Secretary. It caused NATO, in
[37:41] fact, to scramble jets. You have a very
[37:43] high stakes meeting on Monday with key
[37:46] economic officials from European
[37:49] countries. Is the administration
[37:51] prepared to impose sanctions against
[37:52] Russia? Now,
[37:54] >> President Trump, Vice President Vance
[37:56] had a very productive call with EU
[37:58] President Ursa Vanderladen on Friday.
[38:01] She followed up with a call with me. uh
[38:04] and we are talking about what can the
[38:07] two uh EU and the US do together and we
[38:11] are prepared we are prepared to increase
[38:14] pressure on Russia but we need our
[38:16] European partners to follow us because
[38:19] if the US and the EU do this together.
[38:22] We are in a race now between can the how
[38:25] long can the Ukrainian
[38:28] military hold up versus how long can the
[38:30] Russian economy hold up and if the US
[38:34] and the EU can come in do more sanctions
[38:38] secondary tariffs on the countries that
[38:40] buy Russian oil the Russian economy will
[38:44] be in full collapse and that will bring
[38:46] President Putin to the table.
[38:47] >> Okay. All right Mr. Secretary there with
[38:50] some big news on Russia. We really appre
[38:54] >> Well, there you have it, guys. Our form
[38:58] of violence, our form of war is
[39:00] economic. It's the sanctions. Okay, it's
[39:04] a big tell. Now, I'm not saying it's a
[39:05] bad or good thing. I mean, I think Putin
[39:08] is awful. I think what's happening in
[39:10] Ukraine is awful. The point here is
[39:12] this.
[39:15] We we tried to bring weapons to the
[39:19] Ukraine and we fought a proxy war and it
[39:22] didn't work. We were getting outproduced
[39:25] by Russia. You know, we've talked a lot
[39:27] about the rare earth. So things are
[39:29] bleak in that sense and our way to bring
[39:32] Putin to the table is actually not
[39:36] through weapons and the US military.
[39:39] It's through sanctions. And you're
[39:40] really starting to see a divide where
[39:43] we're living in this kind of, you know,
[39:44] multipolar world where you've got, you
[39:48] know, China, Russia, bricks, and then
[39:50] you've got the West and we're going to
[39:52] continue to weaponize sanctions. Now,
[39:54] I'd make the argument that sanctions
[39:56] haven't worked. You know, I think that
[39:59] they're failed experiment. I think we
[40:02] weaponize them too often. They really
[40:04] forgive the notion that we respect
[40:07] property rights in the United States.
[40:09] But this is just very very very telling
[40:12] very telling. Okay, this is share of
[40:15] global global GDP and again so bricks
[40:19] Brazil, Russia, India, China, South
[40:22] Africa. Um it's
[40:26] yeah I mean listen like US EU share of
[40:29] global GDP has declined tremendously and
[40:34] uh now this isn't in real terms by the
[40:37] way in real terms but yeah bricks is
[40:39] bigger than both combined um I mean
[40:42] bricks produces all of the real stuff
[40:46] that we all use. I mean the United
[40:51] States has hyper financialized. It has
[40:53] been a curse to be the world reserve
[40:56] currency issuer. We've overextended us
[40:58] and the empire is starting to crack.
[41:01] This is China's crossborder interbank
[41:05] payment system. So this is in CNY.
[41:08] So whatever this is 46 trillion 47
[41:11] trillion but uh in US terms I have in my
[41:14] notes here it's about 7 trillion. So the
[41:17] point of this graph is to show that you
[41:19] know in CNY interbank payment systems
[41:21] it's not the people are using the CNY
[41:23] over the dollar. You know the CNY is
[41:25] really you know think of it like
[41:26] goldbacked.
[41:29] So you have US treasuries backed dollar
[41:31] and you have goldbacked CNY. And to make
[41:35] this point China paves way for RMB
[41:38] fundraising by Russia energy giants.
[41:41] Next, China is cranking up its LG trade
[41:44] with Russia in test for Trump. Next,
[41:46] China proposes rule changes to ease gold
[41:49] imports and exports. So, what you're
[41:52] seeing is BRICS is building a neutral
[41:54] reserve system. Again, you got people in
[41:57] my comments like, "How could you like
[41:59] China? [ __ ] you. I don't like China. Get
[42:02] the [ __ ] out of here, man." Trying to
[42:03] tell you guys the truth. My message is
[42:06] find Bitcoin distributed, fair,
[42:09] inclusive, equal technology. Get out.
[42:12] Get out.
[42:14] They're building a neutral reserve
[42:17] system.
[42:18] China and Russia are getting out. They
[42:21] mine Bitcoin. Bitcoin's not big enough
[42:23] yet for their central banks to be buying
[42:25] in any significant size. Who knows,
[42:28] maybe?
[42:30] But they're very clearly remonetizing
[42:32] gold.
[42:34] And we're living in this multipolar
[42:36] world.
[42:38] The demand for US debt from these folks,
[42:41] it's gone.
[42:43] It's gone. Even using US dollar payment
[42:46] rails, they're building goldbacked
[42:50] rails, goldbacked system, neutral
[42:52] reserve system. And I I mean guys, I
[42:56] really really think Bitcoin is
[43:00] going to be a big winner over the next
[43:03] six to 12 months. A big winner. The
[43:06] United States has to run this thing hot.
[43:09] They have to try and grow their way out.
[43:11] They have to debase their way through
[43:13] it. They have to.
[43:16] We're living in two separate economies.
[43:20] And the middle and lower class economy
[43:21] are getting demolished. are getting
[43:23] crushed. They need liquidity. They need
[43:25] help. I don't think
[43:28] because here's the thing, everything's
[43:30] fixable. Yeah. Could the United States
[43:32] go through some form of austerity? Could
[43:35] Trump just let everything collapse?
[43:38] Of course. And then everything,
[43:40] including gold, will have a really tough
[43:42] time. We'll go through something worse
[43:43] than the Great Depression. And then on
[43:44] the other side of that, Bitcoin will be
[43:46] a winner. All roads lead to Bitcoin. But
[43:51] but
[43:54] the point here is it could be gram, it
[43:57] could be bleak, they could I mean, you
[43:58] know, there could be world war.
[44:03] I think what they will do is what they
[44:06] always do. Print the money. Default
[44:09] through inflation.
[44:12] Default through infl I mean it just
[44:15] couldn't be more obvious. Now this last
[44:17] one I just wanted to show you guys. I
[44:18] thought it was interesting. So this is
[44:19] the US dollar to the Naira. Okay, look
[44:22] at the chart. Just look at the
[44:23] aesthetics of the chart. You see here
[44:25] before 2010, a little blip, a little
[44:28] bump, and then a little bump and then a
[44:30] little bump and then what looks like a
[44:31] massive one. Look at Bitcoin to the
[44:33] dollar. You see this little bump, little
[44:36] bump, then these massive ones. I mean,
[44:40] you see these emerging market currencies
[44:42] collapse against the strong ones. The
[44:45] Naira collapsing against the dollar.
[44:49] It looks the same here.
[44:51] The dollar is an emerging market
[44:53] currency against Bitcoin.
[44:56] I really think the dollar is going to
[44:58] collapse against Bitcoin. I really think
[45:01] Bitcoin is going to reach gold parody in
[45:05] the notsodistant future and then surpass
[45:07] gold as it is far superior as a money as
[45:11] a thing to acquire to save and later
[45:14] exchange for the things that you want to
[45:16] need in your life.
[45:18] I really think this is the story guys. I
[45:21] really do. And this is the last slide. I
[45:23] mean when you look at B gold and Bitcoin
[45:25] I mean Bitcoin's vastly outperformed
[45:28] gold and I think it will continue. And
[45:30] so when people say, "Is the bull market
[45:32] over?" Jack, we've reached the top. I
[45:35] don't measure Bitcoin dollars as much as
[45:37] I do Bitcoin Gold. We're still below
[45:39] all-time highs. We haven't even gotten
[45:41] started. We have not even gotten
[45:43] started. The party is just about to
[45:47] begin.
[45:49] Policy is to debase the dollar, inflate
[45:52] your way out, default through inflation.
[45:56] Bitcoin is the only ticket we are all
[45:59] sold.
[46:02] It's the only exit door we all can walk
[46:04] out of. And I personally think I'm
[46:07] getting very excited. It's really
[46:10] heating up. The temperature is getting
[46:12] warm. I think Bitcoin is going to go
[46:16] nuts. Personal opinion. Do what you want
[46:18] with the information. Okay, quick before
[46:20] I wrap up. Strike. For those of you that
[46:22] don't care about either of my companies,
[46:24] it was nice talking to you. Thanks for
[46:26] tuning in. If you do, I got a few
[46:28] updates. Um, as promised, we got rid of
[46:31] the direct deposit fees. So, zero fees
[46:34] when you get your paycheck and convert
[46:36] it into Bitcoin on Strike. So, for
[46:38] example, by the way, you can get any
[46:40] percentage of your paycheck. Sometimes
[46:42] people like, I only I don't want 100% in
[46:43] Bitcoin. I want 10%. Okay, cool. You can
[46:46] set whatever you want. Your paycheck
[46:47] comes into Strike. You can pay bills
[46:49] from Strike with your cash or your
[46:51] Bitcoin. So some people do 10% 90% 50/50
[46:54] zero 100. I do zero 100 and I finance
[46:57] myself by borrowing against my Bitcoin
[46:59] but I get my paycheck in Bitcoin 100% no
[47:03] longer fees on that. So Strike now has
[47:05] no fee DCA no fee direct deposit get
[47:08] paid in Bitcoin and we also have free
[47:11] onchain withdrawals unlimited. So you
[47:14] can get paid in Bitcoin, DCA Bitcoin,
[47:16] and get that Bitcoin to cold storage in
[47:18] your custody with no fees for free on
[47:21] the house. And we also partner with
[47:23] BitKey. So kind of semi-related, for all
[47:25] of you that use BitKey, that are BitKey
[47:28] consumers, have the hardware wallet, you
[47:30] can now set up auto withdrawals and link
[47:33] the two products together. So there are
[47:35] tutorials and videos on my Twitter
[47:37] online, but the TLDDR is you can now do
[47:41] direct deposit, get paid in Bitcoin on
[47:42] Strike. You can do DCA no fee with
[47:46] strike and then you can auto withdraw to
[47:48] your bit key whatever and whenever you
[47:50] want for free literally for free. So
[47:55] pretty cool feature. I'm super proud of
[47:56] it. I think we at Strike it's the most
[47:59] userfriendly cheapest way to get Bitcoin
[48:02] cold storage or just to get Bitcoin at
[48:04] all. And then for 21,
[48:06] you guys know what it is. My mouth has
[48:08] to be sealed. our uh our treasury is
[48:11] hovering around that five billion dollar
[48:13] mark. Um which is exciting. Um but uh I
[48:16] listen I think I'll have stuff um to
[48:20] tell you guys uh relatively soon, but
[48:23] we'll see. Right now um I'm in a quiet
[48:26] period. Quiet. Um all right, that's all.
[48:30] Uh again, sorry for the pre-record. I'm
[48:33] not in Chicago. By the time I would have
[48:35] had to do it live, it'd be well into the
[48:37] middle of the night. um can't do that.
[48:40] So, uh this was fun though. This was
[48:42] fun. Thank you guys as always for
[48:44] listening. It always means the world. I
[48:46] really really do appreciate it. Um this
[48:49] is don't don't tell my employees, but
[48:52] this is arguably the my favorite part of
[48:54] my days uh and my job, although I don't
[48:56] get paid for this. Uh so, thank you so
[48:59] much. We'll do some maybe extended Q&A
[49:01] next episode. I'll be home. So, we'll do
[49:03] some extended Q&A where uh I can answer
[49:06] all your questions to make up for this
[49:07] one. But get yourself some Bitcoin. This
[49:10] is new policy. The dollar's going down.
[49:13] Own something that will go up. Buy
[49:15] Bitcoin. Buy Bitcoin. Love you guys.
[49:18] Peace.