Everyone, Welcome back to another episode of The Mark Moth Show where we're walking you through, talking you through the transition that the world is going through right now. Talking about the transition and from a centralized world into a
decentralized world. And what do I mean by that, Well, centralization meaning that everything is growing bigger and more connected and being more centrally planned, meaning, um, one small group of people at the top telling all the other people down below what to do with their lives and the world.
That's kind of kind of what we're talking about here, if you would imagine, um, the United States when it was founded, was founded as a decentralized government, meaning that there was fifty independent states that we're all supposed to be independent, and today almost everything is federal, right, so we have one small group of politicians in Washington, d c. That tell three million Americans what to do on a
regular basis. It wasn't supposed to be like that. It was supposed to be decentralized, meaning if I didn't like the way it was in my state, I could move to another state under under the way that the government was founded as a republic, and it is a republic, it's not democracy. Under republic, you have a representative government. UM. And in that sort of a situation, a couple of things. One UM, the state that you're in, the governor of
that state should be the most important thing. That the President of the United States should be Really not that big of a deal, shouldn't really impact your life much because it's it's not federal. The federal would only be dealing with um, with federal things like other nations and things like that. But what's happened is everything has become federal.
Of course, the Biden administration and not just not just him, all the other other administrations even before him, continue to creep continued to build more and more and more federal laws. So of course recently we saw like a federal you know, mask mandate and a federal vaccine mandate, etcetera, and um. Again those should be done um state by state, and so we've seen things continue to get centralized. UM. And not just in the United States. It's happening all over
the world obviously. And really this trend started about two and fifty years ago with the advent of them or the invention of the Industrial revolution, and before the Industrial Revolution, which was in the late seventeen hundreds, everything was spread out around the farms. It was farms and cottage industries. And through the Industrial Revolution, we created machines, and machines could now do work for people, and this caused people to move to the cities, leave the farms, moved to
the city. So we had all these decentralized people all over the all over the farms now moving into central locations, into cities and building factories. And now all these people are working at one business, at one factory. So we started the centralization. And over the last two and fifty years, the world has continued to trend that way towards centralization. And then it got to the point where like, if you wanted to make it in this world, um, you
couldn't just live anywhere in the world. You had to live where there were actual business and commerce. That was mostly in the United States. All right, Well, will say North America, Western Europe, and um, not just North America. You had to move to the United States, not just the United States. You had to move to a city like New York or Chicago, Atlanta, San Francisco, etcetera. UM here in southern California, UM, Los Angeles obviously is the
big city here, and people commute. I mean some people commute over an hour a day each way to get into the city. And that's been the trend of the last two d and fifty years. However, that's a pendulum that swings back and forth. It swings from centralization to d centralization. And this pendulum is maxing out on this centralization scale and is now just about to start swinging back and swinging back hard back towards the centralization. Now,
it's already been under way for quite some time. Um, and that's part of the reason why the world is getting so shaken up, getting so shaken up and and going through these uh you know, growing pains, if you will, because of the way the world's changing. So instead of these big giant um factories and and companies like we used to have, now we have all these small companies. And it's really the the Internet that has been the
catalyst for that change. Remember, as I always say, it's technology that changes the way that we uh communicate and organize and work. And that's exactly what the Internet has done. And so, um, if you used to go to Chicago or New York, all those big skyscrapers there used to be from companies, companies that made things industry, they made goods and services. Now today those buildings are mostly full
of financial companies or a bunch of small companies. And today you can have you know, people working for you all over the world. So the Internet has really created this decentralization. And then we have COVID which is only sped that up and to the point where you know, people were forced to work from home, and now people are starting to move to all different area is not you know, now we have real estate blowing up in Idaho or Wyoming or Montana or Colorado because people can
actually live there. Now they can actually work from there. And this trend will only continue on. I think we're going to continue to see this trend play out over the next hundred years, um gradually and suddenly, but it's actually happening really fast. Like I said, this COVID was was a big catalyst for that. And so now people can move to Wyoming or Idaho, or Montana or Mexico or Central America or Fiji or Bali or wherever they want.
Um And and this this trend will continue and as it does, we're going to continue to see Um, the we're gonna continue to see these growing pains, but until then we're kind of maxing out on this centralization. It's something that I've been talking quite a bit about on my YouTube channel. UM. If you don't follow me there, you should, you can just search Mark Moss on YouTube. And I'm calling it the the blowoff top of centralization.
So what does the blow off top mean? Well, if you understand financial markets, then you understand what to blow off top is. We can look back at like the dot com boom of the two thousand's, we can look at the bitcoin boom in and basically what happens is as the price starts going up, more and more people come in and start buying it because you know it's going up and they want to make money um or like real estate in like two thousand four or two five thousand six, um. And so as it's going up,
more people come in. And when more people come in and pushes the price up even more, which brings more people in, which puts the price to be more more people in. It this a reflective loop, and it starts sucking so many people in that it starts going straight vertical. I mean, it's just a parabolic run. Now, at the top of these blow off tops, we can, like I said, you see them many times throughout the stock markets, real
estate markets, etcetera. At the very top, they become the most volatile because it's sucked in all these brand new people who don't really know what they wanted. They just said, people are making money, I'm just gonna buy it, right, And so then the price starts going swinging violently. The volatility is violent, going up and down, up and down, up and down, up and down, and then boom, and
then the market sells off. And what happens is all those people that got sucked in at the very top that didn't really know what they wanted, um, as soon they just thought, hey, I'm gonna get rich, as soon as they start losing money, they start leaving. As humans were very basic, we're very basic. Beans. Were were motivated by two things. We're motivated by pleasure and pains. We want to whenever there's pleasure, we want more of it.
We want to run towards pleasure, rush towards pleasure. And when there's pain, we want to run away from the pain. We want to get away from that. And so as the price is going up. Everyone's getting pleasure but me. Everyone's making money but me, and I want some of that. I want some of that pleasure, and so I run towards that. I jump in, I buy at the top. But then when the markets start selling off, it's painful. I don't want to lose any more money, and sorry,
start selling off. And that's why we get this massive blow off top. Well, I'm talking about the blow off top of centralization. What does that mean? Well, very similar, Just like we're talking about, um, financial markets, I believe that we're in a political blow off top as well, which of course will affect the financial markets as well.
It already is, and so um, we're talking about this blow off top of centralization where the entire as I already kind of outlined, the United States has been centralizing. We used to have fifty independent states and now we have one federal government. And around the world we used to have twenty seven independent member states in Europe and now they're the EU and now they've centralized as well.
And now even on top of it, the entire world has become centralized under the control of the central bankers, which is the central banks with the b I S above them the Bank of International Settlements. I had a guest on last week we talked in depth about the b I S. UM. You can find that just search Mark Moss podcasts and you can look for that episode UM where we talked about the b I S and if we want to learn more about that. Most people don't anything about that, but it's been centralized by the
b S and the central bankers on top. And then of course we have the policymakers like the World Economic Forum UM, and then we have the policy distributors down below that, which is like the World Health Organism, Astion, the I m F, etcetera. And then the government sit down below that. So the whole world has become centralized and and just like financial markets where it pulls more
people in, that's exactly what's happening. I want to I want to break that down for you, but I want to more important to tell you when I think the peak is and when it starts to blow off down
to the downside. UM. I want to explain what I think could happen over the net a couple of years, what you should be doing to protect yourself, and then we'll talk about the future and what it holds after that, and you're listening to the markma Show talking about the decentralized Revolution, talking about the intersection of politics, finance, and technology. I got a lot more to cover. Don't go away,
I'm gonna be right back. All right, welcome back. You are listening to the Mark Moah Show, and we are talking about talking about the decentralized revolution. We're talking about I'm talking specifically about this what I'm calling the blow off top of centralization. Of course, if you listen to me on a regular basis, you know that I talked about the intersection of politics, finance, and technology and trying to make sense of what the world is going through
and how to navigate it correctly. I was talking about how we're in this blow off top of centralization, and I kind of broke down why the blow off top means and centralization. But basically, um, just like in a financial market, it starts sucking in more and more people, and it starts going up almost in a straight parabolic line and gets very volt to the top. That's exactly
what's happened with centralization. So if we look back about eighty years ago at the end of World War Two, UM, you know, a couple couple of things happened in the United States. FDR created the New Deal. The New Deal turned America from like a free market capitalist country into like a socialist country with massive government redistribution, massive government spending,
massive government involvement. UM. That the birth of lots of institutions, you know, the SEC and the f d A and all these things, UM, the d e A and all this um. And at the same time we had the kind of start of the EU, the start of the U n UM. Then as we go forward a little bit, we had, you know, the birth of the World Economic Forum, and things have continue to get more and more centralized.
And then I think also just like a financial market blow off top starts sucking more people in at the top, I think it also started sucking more people in as well. So it's like, um, we used to have big corporations that took care of people's retirement, and now let's just let the government take care of that. How about the government just take care of retirements, so security, pensions, entitlements, things like that. That sounds good, right, Let's just let
them take care of that. And then with Obama came the Obamacare, so you know, let's just let them take care of healthcare to two thirds of the economy. Sure, just take that over. So they took over retirements, they took over investments. Oh yeah, now they just take over the entire health care sector. You just take care of that. Oh what about education, Yeah, why don't want? You just take over education too. So now they took over all
the education. So now we have money, education, health. They're just taking it overall, and we just as people just continue to give them more and more and more. Next thing, you know, we need the government to save us from everything. Can you save us from these tech monopolies? Can you save us from these big bad oil companies? And on and on and on and so we've just continue to assign more and tell we're at this point now where
we're at peak centralization. And just like a financial blow off top, at the end of that parabolic run, the financial markets get very very volatile I meaning they swing up and down. And that's exactly what we're seeing right now. So we're seeing, um, Canada get way too crazy, um and the people push back next to you know, there's massive protests going on, shutting the country down. They come
up even more. They start freezing bank accounts, and the people start revolting and they unfreeze the bank accounts, and so we have this back and forth and it only continues to get worse. Now now there's this war, and then we have Russia and Ukraine and um again, it's all these central leaders, like there's a war going on with Russia and Ukraine. Somehow it's the United States is problem, and the United States now has to lead the world
in sanctions, and so we're gonna go penalize Russia. Personally, I don't have any problem with any Russian people. I don't know any I guess I've met a cup Russians here and there, but I don't know anybody over there. I'm not mad at them. I don't know them, and I would imagine people in Russia aren't mad at us and don't like us either. It's the leaders. It's Biden and his administration and Putin and their administration, central authorities. They don't know what we want. If I had to vote,
I would say, we don't go to war. That's my vote. But they don't ask what I want. Central central authority, central planning. That's exactly what's happening. Um and it's all powered by the central banks, by their ability to print money at will. That's the source of all their power. I've used the analogy many times before of Star Wars, and I think Star Wars is a great analogy for this. UM. If you've watched the original Star Wars, UM, the first one that came out, UM, it was a story of
the rebels on the ground and they were fighting the Empire. UM. Maybe it sounds kind of eerily familiar now. They were fighting the Empire, and the Empire had the Death Star and it was like you know, this big round ball, this spaceship up and up in the sky, up or up in space, and the rebels wanted to blow up the Death Star, and if they could blow up the
Death Star, then they would defeat the Empire. And if you remember in this story, or and if you don't, we go watch it after I explain to you spoiler alert, but um, Luke Skywalker and the band of rebels they flew into the Death Star when their X Wing fighters and uh, there was a section on the Death Star and this giant ball of a space of a space station or whatever, and they had to fly into like this channel and they had to fly through this channel, and there was one spot at the end that they
had to hit. And if he could blow up this one spot, and the whole Death Star would fall apart, and then the whole empire would fall apart. And that's exactly what we have going on today. Um, the central banks the empire, if you will. What's an empire? Right? An empire is as as a nation of government that continues to expand, expand expand, basically takes over everything and
controls every the Roman Empire. Now we have the United States Empire or in Star Wars, we're talking about that empire UM and and the source of their power was the Death Star, and that one spot on the desk star was the weak point and the source of the United States Empire, the global empire, as I said, it's kind of been taken over by the central bankers, the b i s at the top. The source of their power is the money printer. That's that little spot on
the death Stars, the money printer. UM. And if we can, if we can take away their source of their power, which is their money printer, then they start to lose all their power. So how is it they can just um continue to pass these draconian measures. How is it they can just continue to print trillions of dollars the other day or just this week? Um, the US passed that was, I think a one point six trillion dollar
bill within a couple of days. It's like I didn't pull up the staff from shooting off the cuff here, so I don't have the exact data in front of me, So I apologize for the fact checkers out there. But it was something like, I don't know, twenty thousand pages or something like that, and they passed it within like a day or two. No bloody read that, and they just fired it up at one point six trillion. Let's just dump it into the market. And where is it?
Where's the money going to go? Who's going to oversee it? Who even read words? It's gonna say, nobody obviously, And how how can they just do that? How can they just print up one point six trillion? Well, the money printers shouldn't be able to create money from thin air. If if, if you anytime, you have one group of people that are forced to trade their time for money, which is most of us, and then you have another group of people that have a money printer and they
can print money at will. It leaves the slavery every single time because I only have my I only have my time to trade and they have an unlimited money printer. Doesn't sound very fair, does it? And so that's this is the decentralized revolution that we're talking about. This is the blow off top that we're talking about, and it's climaxing here, we're getting to a climax. Now. The world reserve currency has been the US dollar. The US dollar
and the ability to create more U. S. Dollars. Is this or of their power that's led to this globalization movement? Now maybe the U. S. Dollar falls apart on its own, or maybe there's something that comes along and knocks it off, or maybe there's something even more deliberate. Now one of my favorite economists, F. A. Hyak famously gave us a gave us a prophetic message. He said there would never be a sound money again. A sound money being the
money that can't be artificially and created. He said, there should never be a sound money again until the thing is taken from the hands of the government. But it can't be done by force. It can only be done by some sly roundabout way. Introducing something that can't be stopped, so it can couldn't be done by force only in a sly roundabout way. Now, he said this in the eighties very prophetically, and maybe just maybe he was explaining what is going on today. I want to break that
down for you. I want to break down what what what left to their own devices, what's already happening. Maybe the empire is going to shoot themselves in the foot, um, And I got a lot more to break down into Gus in this blow off top Um. You're listening to the Mark Mo Show, talking about the decentralized revolution, talking about the converging cycles of politics, finance, and technology, talking about the way that the world is changing before our eyes.
And I'm really right now breaking down what's going to happen over the next couple of years and what happens on the other side of that. So don't go away, all right, Welcome back. You're listening to the Mark Mo Show. We're talking about the intersection of politics, finance, and technology,
three converging cycles that are happening right now. And I've been breaking this down for you, kind of setting this up a little bit and explaining how these blow off tops work, what that means, how the centralization is coming together. If you've missed it, UM, I can't go back and explain to you, but you can catch it. You can catch it on the podcast UM just search Mark Moss podcast or Mark Mark Moss I Heart and you'll find it.
UM queue up for you when you're ready. But whatever you don't listen, don't don't miss it because you definitely want to kind of catch this because I'm breaking it down kind of what this intersection means and like I said, really what this blowoff top means. Now I was talking about specifically before the break, talking about the source of their power really being the money supply. So we've had this centralization has continued to grow really for the last
two or fifty years. It's only continued to escalate UM, and now we can see that we're a peak centralization. Of course, I'm talking about the the B, I S, the Bank comment and International Settlements. I'm talking about the the U N, the I m F, the World Economic Forum, the World Health Organization, the World Trade Organization, all these three letter UM NGOs that stands for non government organizations. We didn't we didn't we didn't vote for any of
these people. We didn't We didn't ask for any of these policies. But yet here they are, um, running the world, not just the country, but running the world, which is tough because there's not a lot of places you can go to get away from them. Um. But yet here, here we are. And so um I was saying before the break, I was talking about how being the source of their power is the money supply. And one of
my favorite economists, fa hiak Uh. He famously wrote the book Road to Serfdom, which if you haven't read that book, it should be on your list. Everyone should read that book, The Road to Servedom. He wrote a bunch of other good books, but but that one for sure. Um. But he he prophetically said that there would never be a sund money aga until the thing was taken from the hands of the government. But it couldn't be done by force,
but rather in a sly roundabout way. And um, just like the just like using the Star Wars analogy I was on before, Um, just like the rebels went in and blew up the Death Star. Um. I guess they did it by force. Um, But but we might have another way. So first of all, the empire, the American Empire is on a course to destroy themselves, right because they're using a fake feat currency and they're arbitrarily printing
in at will. And the problem is, and that's really happened since nine since they broke the peg to gold, the backing of gold, and since that time, they've printed over three hundred trillion dollars worth of debt. They've um created over two hundred trillion dollars worth of liabilities that need to be paid um in a strates are zero or negative. And uh, it's just not are much more room that they can do. I mean, they're there are
two tools, interest rates zero or negative. That's done. Monetary policy. They can create more money, you know money, and they've created hundreds of chillions of dollars that that's pretty much done. And they're really stuck between a rock and a hard place because now if they continue printing more money, continue monetary stimulus, inflation is gonna just I mean it's already through the roof. It's just going to continue to get worse and worse and worse. And the people aren't having it, right,
They're not having it. So if they continue to stimulate, we get more inflation, more price increases, the costs to live are going to continue to go astronomically. It wasn't that long ago, or maybe I'm just old. It wasn't that long ago that I could go out to lunch and get you know, a sandwich and the chips and a drink for five bucks. The other day it was like bucks. I mean, that's how high things are. I mean that the cost of filling in my truck with
gases doubled. Um, you know, uh rents. Rents went up I think was it like thirty percent nationally, but some states went up as highest six sixty percent. That's a six zero sixty in a single year. I can imagine paying you know, a thousand bucks a month for a rent. Next you know you're paying two thousand or bucks a month for a rent. I mean, you just can't afford that type of a price increase, and then your gas
goes up on top of that. Of course, the poor people are the ones that are hurt the worst because they make the less less amount of income. And so for example, um, you know, if you make thirty thousand dollars a year, the amount of gas money is a bigger percentage of your thirty thousand than if you made a million dollars a year, the amount of gas you spend is a smaller percentage of your million. And then it affects poor people even worse because let's say that
the majority of people commute in and out of a city. Um, if you're if you're, if you have more money, you can probably afford to live in the city. If you don't have as much money, you're forced to live out of the city. So now now you're commuting an hour a day because you can't afford to live in the city. But now you gotta pay for this exorbitant gas. It continues to go up. Um. And so if they can continue to printing money, increasing the monetary supply, the prices
are going to continue going crazy. So they can't have that. But if they stop the monetary stimulus, then asset prices crash, the economy crashes. So what are they gonna do. I mean, they're they're you know, they're they're stuck between the proverbial rock and a hard place. And so back to kind of this quote from f A High that, Um, there won't be a sound money again until we take the thing from from the hands of the government. I don't know if the government can do anything to stop it.
They've they've they've shot themselves in the foot. These central bankers have ran themselves into the ground, and they just don't have many options left now. I guess they're never gonna want to give up the ability to print money from from from thin air. I mean, I guess I can't blame him. If I had a money tree in my backyard, I wouldn't want to chop that down either. But the problem is is that it doesn't work. There's a few um laws of the universe that can't be broken.
So for example, like the law of gravity. Um, with enough money and technology, I could suspend the law of gravity temporarily, but it's still there. And there's another law of the universe called the law of sewing and reaping, and that states that I must so before I reap. Imagine that I must produce before I consume. Imagine that you can't consume before you produce. But that's exactly what central bankers do. They print money from nothing that allows
them to consume before they produced. They're stealing from the future. They're pulling future gains into the current, bankrupting their own futures and so UM that that's what we're talking about in this this blow off top of centralization. They've continued to print all this money over the last fifty years. It was a fifty years in August when they broke the ties to the gold standard, and we've seen the rise of centralization at a level we've never seen before.
Like I said, take over education, take over healthcare, take over everything. UM. They've used this money to continue to UM build their centralization and their central powers bigger and bigger UM. And now they're even weaponizing the money system against people like in Canada, seizing their bank accounts, freezing their bank accounts, UM, keeping them out of finance system, and even other governments who aren't playing along with this, and all that does is speed up their own demise.
It's like Newton's third law physics that each each force has an equal and opposite reaction. So the more that they squeeze, the more people push back. But the more people push back, the more they squeeze, the more they squeeze, the more people push back. And it's this reflexive loop that happens. And so that's why we're seeing this volatility at the top so, Um, there's a quote that says, was it Nietzsche? He says, that which is falling, shall
ye also push? And so it's already crumbling, Right, it's already fallen apart due to their own uh, their own policies. They're doing it to themselves. They're the ones that are printing more money opposed to sticking with a budget and living under your means. Um, everybody's trying to get something for nothing. Everybody wants that free, proverbial free, I want to say everybody. Um, a lot of people want this proverbial free lunch, which there is none. And so that
which is falling, it's already fallen. It's already crumbling. Shall ye also push? And so how do you push it? Well, we can push it. At the same way we can push it, we can also limit its impact. I don't I don't want to. Uh, I don't want anyone to think that I don't understand the severity of this. When this system crumbles and falls apart, it is not going to be good. Um, the majority of people are It's going to be devastating. Um. And so I don't underestimate
that at all. But what I want is I want to limit the amount of damage that's done. And the way that we limit the amount of damage is done is the same way that we also bring an end to the system, which is take people from that system
and put them into a new one. How do we do that well, the perfect roadmap for us, or perfect case study, if you will, to follow, is if we just go back and study history, of course, and we can see what happened at the fall of the U. S. S r. UM, when when communism fell, when Russia fell apart, when the when the Berlin Wall came down, and it was really through the teachings of a couple of people, um, that really sped that up, and one brought an end
to it, but even two more importantly, it really cushioned the blow. And that's what we want to make make happen. We want to get to the other side that massive hope and prosperity for our kids and for our future. But we want to limit the impact. We don't want a bunch of collatter with damage, um. And there's a way to do that. So I'm gonna break that down when I get back. I want to talk about how we can transition peacefully and carefully over that new system.
You listen to the Mark Moa Show talking about the decentralized Revolution, breaking down what's gonna happen over the next couple of years. I got a lot more. Don't go away, I'll be right back everyone. Welcome back. You're listening to the Mark Moa Show, and we're talking about the decentralized Revolution. Of course, each and every week, talking about the convert gene cycles of politics, finance, and technology altogether. I've been spending the show talking about the what I'm calling the
blow off top of centralization. Something I spent a lot of time talking about them and a lot of podcasts. UM talked about it on my YouTube channel quite a bit. Three cycles converging. You can go onto YouTube and search that. You can find that. But I was kind of breaking it down for you, and if you've missed it, you can go finding it on the I Heart podcast network to search Mark Moss podcast and you can find that.
And I'm explaining how we're in this this peak centralization, this blow off top of centralization, and uh, we'll start spending back the other way now. I was talking about specifically before the break, talking about how um the USSR fell and the Berlin Wall fell, and how it was really through the teachings of a certain people, at least uh the way that I see it. Um. And it was Vaclab Hovel who was he was right. His writings ended up putting them in jail, you know. Soviet Union
put him in jail. USSR put him in jail, Um, I think for three years, and then he went on to get out of jail and became the president of Czechoslovakia. The writings of Solchanizchev, who wrote the goolag Archipela, but specifically with Hovel, Um, it was talking about how, um, whenever you're forced to live a lie so like communism would be a lie, didn't allow you to speak, didn't allow you to think, forced you to do whatever they said. Um,
they're forced to live in a line. So whenever you're forced to live in a lie, um, you have no choice but to try to live in the truth. In order to live in the truth, you have to build what he calls a parallel system. I talk a lot about that. A parallel system is something, Uh, you might consider it a black market. Um. So when the government doesn't um, basically anything, the government doesn't give you a permit for is black market these days. Now, we used
to live in the land of the Free. We used to live in a free country that in the States, we could do whatever we wanted. Obviously not anything, but for the most part. But today, if you want to have a birthday party for your daughter, are in a park, that requires a permit, at least where I'm aut in California, I have to get a permit to have a birthday party from my daughter in the park. And Uh, I can't just hire any um balloon people or whatever. I
have to work with their approved list of vendors for example. UM. And so if I do that without him, without the government, if I bring in my own people that's not authorized by them, that's black market or or gray market at least, right, that's a that's a parallel system. And it's that's that's that's what happened through the Soviet Union. They were so rigid. They they outlawed so many things, they regulated, they rash
and so many things that you had black markets open up. UM. In California, for example, UM, marijuana has been legal for a long time. UM. First it was for medical use. Now it's you know, medical and recreation use, but they regulate it so hard, they tax it so hard that a majority of the marijuana is still sold black market uh um because it's so regulated and so in in a way, UM, as they continue to um impose their will and take away your options, people are forced to
go find another way. When you've been kicked out of the financial system, like what happened in Canada or Russia, you're you can't just go die. You're forced to find a way to live without that financial system, in a parallel system. And so, for example, I can't go change mainstream media. I can't change the media system, but I can create my own media, which I do I'm doing right now. I can't change the education system, but I can pull my kids out and and educate them on
my own through homeschool or private, which I've done. I can't change the medical system, but I can pay my own doctors and go see whoever I want. And um. And it's through these parallel systems that we do two things. We take away their power. So back to kind of this Fa Highatt quote, we can't take the thing from the hands of the government, but rather a sly roundabout way, and so we can just opt out of the financial system.
I can't change the financial system. I can't change the fact that the Federal Reserved prints trillions of dollars at will. But what I can do is I can take my money out of that system, and I can put into bitcoin, which is the system that nobody can control. Nobody can print more of it arbitrarily. And now I'm in my own parallel financial system. I'm in my own parallel education system,
media system, etcetera. And what happens is as I get my money out, as I get my kids out, as I get my health out of those systems, those systems, they can do whatever they want. And in California, let me just be honest with you, we got some crazy people running these school systems over here. Um, what what they're doing to kids in in my opinion, I mean, there's other channels that digg into this deeper, but what
they're doing to kids should be criminal. Um, they should not be teaching kids some of these subjects they're teaching them their kids. Um, but I can't change that. What I can do is I can take my kids out of that and then, um, they can get as crazy as they want. It doesn't affect me. Right, I can pull my money out of the system. They can go print as many dollars as they want, it doesn't affect me.
They can tell doctors they have to do every whatever with your patients, But I just go through my own doctors and it doesn't affect me. So Um, One it doesn't affect me as much by going to these parallel systems. But two, when the inevitable crash comes, I'm also insulated. So that's what happened in Soviet, in the in the U S s R, and in UH and and it still is today. So what's happened is, you know, through the through the fall of the U S s R,
many of the nation states broke off. It was the balconization. They started breaking off and become an independent and all these people learned how to operate um outside of what the state had set up for them. And so when the U S s R finally fell, which was you know, pretty traumatic event if you were dependent on the government, um, for most of the people, it actually didn't even matter. Or maybe it was even better because they were already living in a system without that anyway. Um. And so
it coushioned the blow, It took away their power. They weren't able to regulate that, and it coushioned the blow. And that's exactly what we can be doing today. Um, the inevitable was happening. Um, in less than fifty years, they printed over half have whatever, over five trillion dollars worth of obligations in debt and credit interest rate through zero negative. All that money is is making the world break apart. Um oils skyrocket and higher wars are breaking
out since their ship has never been higher. People are at each other's throat. And it's all because of the increase in the money supply. And uh, it's inevitable. Like I said the Nietzi quote, right, that which is falling, shall you also push? And so um, we can just opt out, and uh, it's it's not, Um, it's not it's not calling for violence. It's just peaceful. You know what, I just choose to vote with my money. I just choose to go do something else peacefully opting out. No,
thank you, I don't want to partaking that. And so it's not it's not violence, Like we're not trying to call for a violent revolution. We're not calling for overthrow of the government. Now, it's just like Okay, you do you, I'll do me, and good luck to both of us kind of thing. UM. I love that, and that's something I spent a lot of time thinking about. As a matter of fact, I'm having about fifty and experts in the world coming together to talk about this, UM and
UH in May Market Disruptors Live dot Com. I'll be there, it's my conference. UM. I'd love to shake your hand and meet you. UM. It's gonna be a great time trying to figure out, you know, how to navigate this because there I believe this blow off top of centralization climax is sometime in the next probably. It's always hard. It's always hard to give an exact date. I mean,
I can't give an exact date. But there's a saying that as I can tell you what's going to happen, I can tell you the date, but I can't tell you both. UM. I think it climaxes here around could Um. So that's you know, the next two years, and my guests one to two years or three years. UM. But I think it comes to a head and then things start getting better on the other side of that. But it's like, how do we stay alive? UM? From here to there, that's the question. And UM, you know you
can choose to ignore it. Unfortunately. UM. I like to say that the ostrich can bury its head in the sand, but it won't keep it from being eaten. UM. And so you choose to ignore this, but it's not going to change the fact that it's going to affect your life. UM. So a better way to do it is to understand what's going on, to try to make their necessary required moves, which of course I know you're doing, which is why you're listening to me. So congratulations, you already taking the
most important step right increase your education. But the next most important step is to get out and meet people. M build a community of like minded people around you. UM, A super super important step, which is why I have my conference Market Disruptors Live. It's also why I go to a bunch of other conferences. I try to get out and meet as many people as I can. UM.
Speak with shake with shake, as many hands as I can. UM. You're listening to the Markma Show talking about the intersection of politics, finance, and technology, hopefully bringing sense to what's going on in the world today and how to navigate them the right way. Because it's changing one way or another. Hopefully you enjoyed the shows today. Thanks for listening.
