Join Us at the World Economic Conference in Orlando, Florida! Nov. 17-19, 2023
Join Us at the 2023 World Economic Conference in Orlando, Florida!
? Dates: November 17, 18, and 19 ? Location: Orlando, Florida, USA (or tune in from home with our virtual ticket options)
Are you ready to unlock the future of economics and finance? Prepare for an unforgettable World Economic Conference experience in sunny Orlando, Florida! This premier event is your gateway to insights, networking, and valuable resources that will supercharge your understanding of the global economy.
?️ What’s Included for In-Person Attendees:
- Event Admission: Enjoy reserved seating assigned based on the order of ticket sales, ensuring you have a prime view of every presentation.
- Presentation Slides: Gain access to the presentation slides from all speakers, allowing you to delve deeper into the topics discussed.
- Video Recording: Can’t make it to a session? No worries! You’ll receive access to video recordings of all conference presentations, so you can catch up at your convenience.
- WEC Event App: Connect with the conference on a whole new level. Access presentation slides, bonus reports, recordings, and more via the official WEC Event App.
- Bonus Conference Materials: Get a package of bonus conference-related materials, including exclusive bonus reports and videos (as provided by Martin Armstrong).
- Morning Information Sessions: Don’t miss out on important morning information sessions, screened on-site in the meeting room on Saturday and Sunday.
- Networking Opportunities: Exclusive access to the Event App Networking Feature allows you to connect with fellow attendees, both in-person and virtual, fostering valuable professional relationships.
- Culinary Delights: Savor delicious breakfast and lunch on Saturday and Sunday, prepared to keep you energized throughout the day.
- Cocktail Reception: Kick off the conference in style at our Friday evening cocktail reception. Meet and mingle with fellow attendees while enjoying refreshing drinks.
- Swag Bag: As a token of our appreciation, each in-person attendee will receive a swag bag filled with goodies, including an Armstrong Economics notebook, pen, and an event collector’s mug!
Unable to travel? We also have two different ticket options for those wishing to attend virtually!
Don’t miss this opportunity to be part of a global gathering of economic and financial minds. Secure your spot at the World Economic Conference in Orlando, Florida, and gain the knowledge, connections, and resources you need to thrive in the world of finance and economics.
Space is limited, so act now and reserve your seat! Visit our Events page to register and join us in sunny Orlando this November.
NEW BOOK Now Available : "Mark Antony & Cleopatra"
"THE PLOT TO SEIZE RUSSIA - THE UNTOLD HISTORY"
The second edition of “The Plot to Seize Russia – The Untold History” is now available for purchase in paperback and hardcover on Amazon and Barnes and Noble. The ebook will be available shortly.
Book description:
“Take care of Russia,” Boris Yeltsin said as he departed his presidency in August 1999. These words were directed at current Russian president, Vladimir Putin. Yeltsin specifically picked Putin as his predecessor to prevent the takeover of Russia.
So, who was Yeltsin warning against? Newly declassified documents from the Clinton Administration prove that there was a plot to rig the Russian election of 2000. These never-before-seen documents confirm numerous attempts to implement pro-Western policies using the Russian oligarchy headed by Boris Berezovsky.
On the other side were the communists who desired a return to the glory days of the Soviet Union. As one of the largest international hedge fund managers, author Martin Armstrong found himself in the middle of perhaps the greatest espionage, or attempt at a regime change for Russia, in modern history.
The Plot to Seize Russia pulls back the curtain to expose the most extraordinary attempt to seize power in modern history, but with the pen rather than armies. These declassified documents reveal a plot that has altered our thinking about the relations between the United States and Russia. The thirst for power comes seething through every line of these papers that alter our perception of reality, change the course of history, and now threaten us with World War III.
FIAT The Truth About Money – 2nd Edition (unedited)
$59.95
At last, the real truth about money.
This book on FIAT is perhaps the most definitive work on this subject, tracing the origin of this theory of FIAT and why it has become so distorted. The lack of understanding of what even constitutes FIAT, that all paper currency is just FIAT because it is not backed by some commodity, prevents us from comprehending not merely what money is, but its role within the global economy. Coins over the century could be struck in gold, silver, bronze, or some copper-alloy, and if their value was decreed to be worth far more than their metal content. FIAT is by no means just paper money. There were people who proposed issuing a platinum coin with a value of $1 trillion to pay off the debt? That too would be FIAT.
Then there is the questionable Elastic Money used by central banks creating inflation combined with discredited Keynesian Economics assuming society can be manipulated with interest rates. But is money exclusively the product of a central bank? Has debt become money that just pays interest? Are we blaming the gun for a murder rather than the person who pulls the trigger? Is debt a part of the monetary system? Does bank lending create money privately? Where does BITCOIN fit into this quagmire of trying to define what is actually money?
PRIVATE BLOG – Gold & Trump Escalating War
PRIVATE BLOG – Gold & Trump Escalating War
Private blog posts are exclusively available to Socrates subscribers. To sign-up for Socrates or to learn more, please visit Ask-Socrates.com.
China’s Greatest Crime Is Competing Too Well

The Pentagon has now added BYD, Alibaba, Baidu, and dozens of other Chinese firms to its list of companies allegedly linked to China’s military establishment. Washington wants the public to believe this is about national security. China’s greatest crime is not that it has a military. Every major power has a military. China’s greatest crime is that it competed too well.
China is building electric vehicles that are taking market share from Western automakers. Suddenly it becomes a national security concern. China develops world-class battery technology. National security concern. China advances artificial intelligence. National security concern. China dominates solar manufacturing. National security concern. China expands semiconductor capabilities. National security concern. At some point people need to ask whether the issue is military activity or economic competition.
The United States spent decades shipping factories, manufacturing, technology, and investment capital to China. Wall Street and consumers rejoiced after receiving cheaper products. The assumption was always that China would remain a low-cost manufacturing platform while the West retained financial and technological dominance. That has never been what our computer indicated, and although it may not have made sense decades ago, every indicator shows China on the rise.
China took the capital, the technology, the expertise, and the industrial capacity and built an economic machine that now challenges the West across nearly every major strategic industry. BYD now sells more electric vehicles than many Western competitors. China produces the overwhelming majority of the world’s battery components. Chinese companies have become major players in artificial intelligence, robotics, telecommunications, and advanced manufacturing. The problem is not that China failed. The problem is that China succeeded.
What would happen if BYD were headquartered in California? Politicians would celebrate it as proof of American innovation. If Baidu were based in Silicon Valley, every financial network would praise its technological achievements. If China’s battery industry belonged to the United States, politicians would be holding press conferences celebrating industrial leadership.
Instead, these companies are Chinese. Yes, there have been instances of technology theft as both nations play dirty to compete. Every success achieved by the rival nation is portrayed as a threat. Governments begin redefining ordinary commerce as strategic warfare.
Washington is finally admitting what China understood from the beginning. Beijing never separated economics from national strategy. China viewed industrial development as national power. The West viewed industry as something to offshore in pursuit of quarterly profits. Now policymakers are discovering that surrendering industrial capacity has consequences.
We are rapidly approaching a world where every Chinese company is viewed as a military company and every American company operating abroad is viewed as an instrument of Washington. Once governments start treating commercial competition as military competition, the distinction between economic warfare and actual warfare begins disappearing.
The public should understand what is taking place. This is not merely about BYD, Alibaba, or Baidu. This is another step in the escalation between the world’s two largest economies. The war cycle is advancing precisely as expected. The rhetoric becomes more hostile as restrictions become more aggressive. The economic walls will grow higher.
The Pacific Prize

The Taiwan issue is not simply about reunification. That has always been far too simplistic. If Taiwan were merely a political dispute, China would not be spending trillions of yuan to build one of the largest navies on Earth. It would not be launching aircraft carriers into the Pacific. It would not be conducting large-scale naval exercises beyond the first island chain. What we are witnessing is something much larger.
Japan is reporting that China’s aircraft carrier Liaoning and its accompanying strike group recently conducted extensive operations east of the Philippines. Carrier aircraft reportedly carried out roughly 170 takeoffs and landings as the fleet operated throughout the western Pacific. These were not coastal defense exercises. These were blue-water naval operations designed to demonstrate that China intends to project military power far beyond its own shores.
Taiwan sits at the center of what military planners call the First Island Chain, a series of islands stretching from Japan through Taiwan and the Philippines. Since the end of World War II, this chain has effectively limited China’s direct access to the broader Pacific. Control of Taiwan would fundamentally alter that equation. Military analysts have openly acknowledged that China’s navy is steadily expanding beyond the First Island Chain and increasingly operating in waters once dominated almost exclusively by the United States and its allies.
This is why military planners throughout Asia are becoming increasingly concerned. China is not simply building ships. It is building the capability to operate far from home for extended periods of time. In 2025, Chinese carriers reportedly spent a record amount of time operating beyond the First Island Chain, launching thousands of aircraft sorties as operational experience rapidly increased. These are the actions of a nation preparing for regional power projection, not merely coastal defense.
Japan is expanding defense spending. The Philippines is increasing military cooperation with the United States. Taiwan is rapidly expanding missile production. China continues building carriers, destroyers, submarines, and long-range missile capabilities. Every nation claims it is acting defensively. History shows that when everyone is preparing for war defensively, the risk of conflict rises dramatically.
Our models have warned that 2026 would be a panic-cycle year characterized by rising volatility and escalating geopolitical tensions. We are now watching multiple theaters move simultaneously. Ukraine continues to expand. The Middle East remains unstable. Europe is openly discussing military vulnerability windows extending into 2028 and 2029. Meanwhile, China is steadily pushing farther into the Pacific. None of these events exist in isolation.
War Is Now Appearing in Inflation Data
The May inflation report came in exactly where many expected, yet the details beneath the headline reveal what is actually taking place in the economy. Consumer prices rose 0.5% for the month and 4.2% year-over-year, the highest inflation reading in three years. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, rose only 0.2% for the month and 2.9% annually. This is primarily an energy shock that is spreading through transportation, travel, and production costs due to the war in Iran.
Government data show that energy alone accounted for more than 60% of the monthly increase in consumer prices. Energy prices rose 3.9% in May after climbing 3.8% in April. Gasoline prices surged 7.0% in a single month and are now up 40.5% compared to a year ago. Electricity prices rose 5.9% over the past year while natural gas prices increased 3.0%. These are not insignificant numbers. Energy is the foundation of every economy. Every product must be manufactured and transported. Every store must be heated, cooled, and illuminated. When energy rises, it eventually works its way into virtually every aspect of economic activity.
What is particularly important is that shelter inflation remains elevated. Shelter costs rose another 0.3% in May and are up 3.4% over the past year. Rent increased 0.4% for the month while owners’ equivalent rent rose 0.3%. Housing remains one of the largest expenses for the average household, and these increases continue to erode disposable income even as policymakers insist inflation is under control.
Food prices are also moving higher, though at a slower pace than energy. The overall food index rose 0.2% during May and 3.1% over the past year. Food away from home increased 3.5% annually, showing that restaurants continue passing higher operating costs on to consumers. Fruits and vegetables are up 6.1% over the past year while beverages increased 5.8%. The average family notices these increases every week at the grocery store regardless of what economists may say about “core inflation.”
Transportation is beginning to show the impact of rising fuel costs. Airline fares jumped 2.7% in May alone and continue to rise as carriers pass along higher jet fuel expenses. The travel sector has been particularly vulnerable because energy prices affect everything from airline tickets to hotel operations and rental cars. We are seeing the same pattern that has repeated throughout history whenever geopolitical tensions disrupt energy supplies.
The political establishment will attempt to debate whether inflation is temporary or permanent. They always focus on labels instead of causes. The numbers show that this inflation surge is being driven primarily by energy. Whenever governments become involved in war or geopolitical confrontation, energy becomes the transmission mechanism that spreads economic pain throughout the system. The current Middle East conflict has once again demonstrated how fragile global supply chains remain and how dependent modern economies are on stable energy markets.
The May CPI report demonstrates that inflation has not disappeared. It merely changed form. The energy sector is once again dictating economic reality. As we move deeper into a Panic Cycle year, geopolitical events are becoming increasingly important drivers of economic activity. The lesson remains the same as it has throughout history: when energy prices move sharply higher, they eventually impact everything else.
61% of Israelis Against Netanyahu
COMMENT: You have always stated that wars are created by the leaders, not the people. The majority of Israelis do not want Netanyahu to run again. According to a poll released this week by the Israel Democracy Institute, it found that 61% of Israelis, including 27% of Likud members, do not want to see Netanyahu run again this fall. The same proportion said they want to see Israel adopt a two-term limit for prime ministers in the future.
I understand your criticism of Netanyahu that this is an endless war that does not end well for us, according to your computer. There has to be some long-term solution, and sending missiles back and forth will not resolve this. Do you have any update for us here in Israel?
V
REPLY: I know, we have a lot of readers in Israel. The greenback is starting to position itself for a rally and we still have a major directional change in 2027. I agree with you that the real problem here is that there is no military victory. Netanyahu has sold his Neocon theory and he always assumes that if you assassinate the leader, you are cutting off the head of the snake and you win. The logic behind it is known as the “better the devil you know” or the “decapitation paradox.” Often, the second-in-command is less capable, less charismatic, or lacks the same control over factions. This can lead to a less effective or more moderate successor. If you kill the leader, the entire command structure that could negotiate a ceasefire or surrender is gone. You might be left fighting a fragmented, leaderless, and even more vengeful enemy for years. Killing a charismatic leader can turn him into a martyr, inspiring a new wave of recruits and making negotiation with his followers politically impossible. Netanyahu’s strategy is by no means foolproof especially since Iran countered by decentralizing. Taiwan is now adopting the Iran model of decentralization.
Like Iraq, they focused on removing Saddam. They NEVER consider what comes next. Netanyahu puts out the same BS I have heard about Russia. Get rid of Putin and the people will rise up and give the Neocons a tickertape parade. They made the same argument about Iraq. It did not happen there either. Iran decentralized its government knowing Netanyahu’s strategy of assassinating. You hear Rubio now saying they are having to negotiate with the 3rd tier of leaders.
Trump is trying to get out of this mess but Netanyahu is up for possible reelection. Trump has been saying that he was unsure if Netanyahu would press forward in the elections. Netanyahu’s party has rejected speculation that he might not run in Israel’s election this fall, following an offhand comment by U.S. President Donald Trump.
We have a clash of self-interests where Netanyahu is being criticized there by his opposition that he has achieved nothing including no regime change or the people rising up. This makes Netanyahu anti-peace or he has to admit failure. In the USA, there are the midterms and if Trump does not end this before, he looks like a failure. These two elections are on a collision course.
It just does not seem to be peace on the horizon long-term.
PRIVATE BLOG – Gold Down & Dirty?
PRIVATE BLOG – Gold Down & Dirty?
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Europe’s War on Crypto Is Really About Capital Controls
?BREAKING: The European Union announces FULL CONTROL over crypto assets.
?? Ursula von der Leyen: "For the first time, we will introduce a FULL third-country BAN for crypto asset services to make sure ?? Russia can’t avoid sanctions." pic.twitter.com/8iDG87TcO6
— JackTheRippler ©️ (@RippleXrpie) June 9, 2026
The European Union has announced what may prove to be one of the most significant developments in the battle over financial freedom. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen declared that the EU would introduce, for the first time, a “full third-country ban” on certain crypto-asset services as part of a new sanctions package against Russia. The official explanation is that Brussels wants to prevent Russia from using cryptocurrency-related services to evade sanctions. Most people will read that headline and move on. They should not.
What was actually said is far more important than many realize. The European Union is asserting the authority to prohibit crypto-asset service relationships involving entities outside its borders if Brussels determines those relationships undermine its sanctions regime. Today the target is Russia. Tomorrow it could be any country, institution, company, platform, or financial network that falls outside the political objectives of Brussels. Once governments establish the power to control access to financial infrastructure, the scope of that power rarely contracts.
I have warned for years that governments would eventually move against cryptocurrency if it became large enough to threaten their ability to monitor and control capital. The crypto community often assumed governments would embrace innovation. That was never how this would unfold. Governments do not like competition when it comes to money. Their power rests on controlling the financial system. Taxation, regulation, reporting requirements, sanctions, and monetary policy all depend on that control. A decentralized system operating beyond their direct authority was always going to create conflict.
The timing is no coincidence. Europe is drowning in debt. France’s debt has surpassed €3.3 trillion. Italy’s public debt exceeds €3 trillion. Numerous European governments are running chronic deficits while facing aging populations, declining birth rates, expanding pension obligations, and stagnant economic growth. The mathematics simply do not work. Politicians continue making promises while the bills continue piling up.
This is where history becomes important. Governments rarely impose capital controls during periods of prosperity. They impose them when confidence begins to decline. During the Great Depression, the United States confiscated gold. Argentina repeatedly restricted currency movements. Cyprus imposed depositor losses during its banking crisis. India invalidated large denominations of cash overnight. Throughout history, governments facing financial stress have always sought greater control over private capital.
The European Union is quietly constructing the infrastructure necessary for that control. They have implemented sweeping anti-money laundering regulations. They are expanding crypto reporting requirements. They are advancing digital identity initiatives. They are discussing the digital euro. They are creating centralized databases capable of tracking financial activity across member states. Each measure is presented as a reasonable response to a specific problem. When viewed together, however, the objective becomes much clearer.
What terrifies governments about cryptocurrency is not the technology itself. It is the possibility that capital can exist outside traditional financial institutions. Governments can regulate banks. They can pressure brokers. They can freeze accounts. They can monitor transactions. Cryptocurrency introduced a system that operates differently. From the perspective of heavily indebted governments, that represents a threat.
The argument will always be sanctions, crime, terrorism, money laundering, or national security. Those explanations change depending on the political circumstances of the day. The underlying objective remains remarkably consistent. Governments want visibility. They want oversight. They want the ability to determine where capital is located, where it is moving, and who controls it.
What concerns me most is that Europe continues moving in the direction of greater centralization precisely as economic conditions deteriorate. The European project was sold as a framework for cooperation and prosperity. It is increasingly evolving into a system where unelected bureaucrats accumulate authority over energy policy, migration policy, financial policy, digital policy, and now cryptocurrency. Every crisis becomes justification for expanding power.
The tragedy is that none of these measures solve the underlying problem. Restricting cryptocurrency will not reduce sovereign debt. Governments bought into the lie that they can tax the people out of their debt crisis. Politicians refuse to blame failed policies and instead blame the average person for holding onto wealth, which they feel belongs to the state. Governments are attempting to manage a debt crisis through regulation when the problem is fundamentally fiscal and structural.
Our models have warned repeatedly that Europe is entering a period of rising political and financial instability. The 2026 Panic Cycle year was never solely about markets. It was about confidence in government itself. As confidence declines, governments historically seek greater control over capital. Investors seek freedom while governments seek restrictions. That conflict has existed for thousands of years.
The announcement regarding cryptocurrency should therefore be viewed as far more than another sanctions measure. It is a glimpse into how governments behave when debt burdens become overwhelming and confidence begins to erode. History shows that the road from regulation to capital controls is often much shorter than people expect.
Israel Spies on the US – What Else is New?

The announcement by the Pentagon that Israel spies on the United States is being presented as some shocking revelation. Really? Jonathan Pollard stole massive quantities of classified intelligence for Israel and was convicted in 1987. The NSA reportedly caught Israeli officials discussing efforts to influence U.S. policy during the Obama administration. Even former CIA and FBI officials have repeatedly acknowledged that Israel conducts aggressive intelligence operations inside the United States. This is not a conspiracy theory. This is how nation-states behave.
What caught my attention was not the allegation but the timing. Washington is warning about Israeli intelligence activities at the exact moment the United States is becoming increasingly entangled in Middle Eastern affairs. The Iran conflict continues to escalate. Gaza was destroyed and forgotten, and now Lebanon is under a constant barrage. American military assets are spread across the region. Defense spending is approaching levels that would have been unthinkable a generation ago. Yet instead of reassessing these commitments, our AIPAC devout Congress wants even deeper integration.
The numbers are becoming absurd. Federal debt has surpassed $37 trillion. Interest payments are now among the largest items in the federal budget. The Pentagon budget is approaching $1 trillion annually. Yet the solution is always more spending, more deployments, more foreign obligations, and more promises that American taxpayers will ultimately be forced to finance.
The espionage issue exposes a deeper problem. If intelligence officials genuinely believe there is a serious security concern, why pursue greater integration? If greater integration is essential, then why raise alarms? The answer is that Washington no longer has a coherent strategy. Different factions are pulling in different directions while pretending there is a unified policy.
This is how empires decline. Rome reached the point where competing interests, foreign entanglements, military expenditures, and political factions overwhelmed any clear national purpose. The government became reactive rather than strategic. Looking around today, the similarities are becoming difficult to ignore.
My concern has never been whether Israel spies. Every country spies. China spies. Russia spies. Britain spies. France spies. The United States spies on allies and adversaries alike. The real issue is that Washington continually places itself in positions where it cannot distinguish between American interests and the interests of everyone else.
What we are witnessing is not a sudden discovery. It is the slow realization that decades of foreign entanglements, endless commitments, and political hypocrisy have created a system that no longer knows where its own interests begin and end. That is a far greater threat than any espionage operation.
Bulgaria Finally Chooses Its Own Interests
I have said countless times that the biggest problem in Europe is not Russia. It is the complete abandonment of national sovereignty by politicians who seem more interested in satisfying Brussels than representing their own people. Bulgaria’s decision to halt further military aid to Ukraine is one of the first signs that some countries are beginning to recognize reality. After years of sending money, weapons, equipment, and resources into a war that has no military solution, there are finally voices asking the obvious question: When does this end?
The Ukrainian conflict has become Europe’s black hole. Hundreds of billions have been committed by Western governments while European economies struggle with stagnant growth, rising debt, housing shortages, inflation, and declining living standards. The European Union continues to demand sacrifices from ordinary citizens while finding endless resources for foreign wars. At some point, voters begin to realize that their governments have become more concerned with financing conflicts abroad than fixing problems at home.
Bulgaria is hardly alone. Public support for endless aid packages has been weakening across Europe. Governments in Hungary and Slovakia have openly challenged the prevailing narrative, while political opposition to continued military spending is growing in Germany, France, Italy, and throughout Eastern Europe. The reason is simple. People can see that every new shipment of weapons is followed by demands for even more weapons. Every funding package is followed by another request. Every promise that victory is just around the corner is replaced by a new justification for continuing the war.
What makes Bulgaria’s position particularly important is that it exposes the growing divide between European elites and the populations they claim to represent. The average citizen is worried about energy prices, food costs, taxes, housing, and economic security. Brussels is focused on military commitments, sanctions, and geopolitical ambitions. These priorities are no longer aligned.
From a cyclical perspective, this shift was inevitable. As economic conditions deteriorate, governments face increasing pressure to redirect resources inward. The 2026 Panic Cycle year was always likely to expose fractures within the European Union. The economic stress building across Europe is forcing governments to confront choices they have spent years avoiding. They can continue financing external conflicts while borrowing endlessly, or they can begin putting their own citizens first.
Bulgaria appears to be recognizing that prolonging the conflict indefinitely serves nobody’s interests. Whether other European governments follow remains to be seen, but this decision signals that the once-unquestioned consensus behind unlimited support for Ukraine is beginning to crack.











