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Join Us at the World Economic Conference in Orlando, Florida! Nov. 17-19, 2023

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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:

  1. Event Admission: Enjoy reserved seating assigned based on the order of ticket sales, ensuring you have a prime view of every presentation.
  2. Presentation Slides: Gain access to the presentation slides from all speakers, allowing you to delve deeper into the topics discussed.
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. Bonus Conference Materials: Get a package of bonus conference-related materials, including exclusive bonus reports and videos (as provided by Martin Armstrong).
  6. Morning Information Sessions: Don’t miss out on important morning information sessions, screened on-site in the meeting room on Saturday and Sunday.
  7. 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.
  8. Culinary Delights: Savor delicious breakfast and lunch on Saturday and Sunday, prepared to keep you energized throughout the day.
  9. Cocktail Reception: Kick off the conference in style at our Friday evening cocktail reception. Meet and mingle with fellow attendees while enjoying refreshing drinks.
  10. 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"

Mark Antony Cleopatra Cleopatra Proxy War

Now available at all major retailers!

The eBook will be available shortly.

"THE PLOT TO SEIZE RUSSIA - THE UNTOLD HISTORY"

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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.

Energy Protests in Ireland

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Ireland is now confronting a full-scale energy protest movement that has gone far beyond symbolic demonstrations. What began as opposition to rising fuel costs has escalated into coordinated nationwide disruption, with farmers, haulers, and transport operators blocking major motorways, fuel depots, and even the country’s only oil refinery. The scale is unprecedented, with convoys and blockades reported in Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick, and beyond, effectively bringing parts of the country to a standstill.

The immediate driver is energy prices, which have surged sharply due to geopolitical tensions, particularly conflict in the Middle East. Diesel, petrol, and heating fuel costs have risen to levels that many small businesses and agricultural operators say are no longer sustainable. Protesters are demanding direct intervention, including fuel price caps, removal of carbon taxes, and emergency subsidies to offset rising costs.

What makes this situation critical is not just the protest itself, but how it is being carried out. Demonstrators have targeted the arteries of the energy system. Fuel depots in Galway and Limerick have been blocked, while the Whitegate refinery in Cork, which supplies a significant portion of Ireland’s fuel, has been shut down by protesters. As a result, up to half of the country’s fuel supply has been effectively immobilized, not because of global shortages, but because distribution has been cut off internally.

This has triggered immediate consequences. Panic buying has emerged across regions, with long queues forming at petrol stations and some locations running out of fuel entirely. Essential services, including emergency response units, public transportation, and hospital access, have been disrupted. The government has warned that supply chains for food, water, and basic goods are now at risk if the protests continue.

The response from the state has been to move into enforcement. Authorities have warned protesters to remove blockades or face legal consequences, while the Defense Forces have been deployed to help clear heavy vehicles from critical infrastructure. Officials have gone so far as to describe the protests as “national sabotage,” reflecting how seriously the government views the threat to the country’s functioning.

At the same time, the government has refused to negotiate directly with many of the protest groups, insisting it will only engage with officially recognized organizations. This has further inflamed tensions, as protesters argue that existing channels do not represent their interests and have failed to address the crisis.

Ireland’s energy strategy has left it heavily exposed to external shocks, relying on imported fuel while simultaneously pushing domestic climate policies that increase costs through taxation. When global energy prices rise, there is very little buffer. The burden is passed directly onto consumers and businesses, and that is now feeding back into the political system in the form of unrest.

There is also a deeper structural issue emerging. The protests are not confined to one sector. They involve agriculture, transport, and small business, all of which are highly sensitive to fuel costs. Once multiple sectors align in opposition, the movement gains momentum quickly because the economic impact becomes widespread rather than isolated.

When fuel distribution is blocked domestically, and the government is forced to deploy the military to restore order, it signals that the system is under real stress. The issue is no longer just energy prices.

Ireland is now a clear example of what happens when energy policy, geopolitical instability, and economic pressure collide. The protests may subside in the short term, but the underlying problem remains unresolved. As long as energy costs remain elevated and policy continues to rely on external supply without sufficient domestic resilience, the risk of renewed unrest will remain high.

Inflation Was Already Rising Before the War – Now the Real Surge Begins

Inflations

The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, rose 0.4% in February alone and is now running at 2.8% annually, while core inflation, which strips out food and energy, is still sitting at 3.0%. That is not progress. That is stagnation well above the Fed’s 2% target, and it is taking place before the energy crisis fully feeds through the system.

The key point here is that inflation is no longer being driven by a single factor, it is embedded across multiple categories, and that is what makes it dangerous. When you break down where prices are rising, you begin to see the real story. Housing, which remains the largest component of inflation, is still increasing at roughly 3% annually, showing that rent and ownership costs are not coming down in any meaningful way. Medical care costs are up around 3.4%, indicating that healthcare costs continue to rise regardless of economic conditions. Household furnishings and operations are increasing by nearly 3.9%, reflecting ongoing cost pressures on goods tied to supply chains. Personal care is running even hotter at roughly 4.5%, which shows inflation is filtering into everyday essentials.

Even the so-called “cooling” areas are misleading. Recreation is still rising above 2%, and services inflation remains persistent because wages and labor costs have not declined. When you look at transportation, airline fares rose 1.4% in February alone, and that is before jet fuel prices fully reflect the disruption in the Middle East. Healthcare services increased 0.5% in a single month, and hotel prices jumped 1.1%, showing that service inflation is not easing in any meaningful way.

Food is another category where the public is feeling the pressure directly. Meat prices are up significantly, with beef and veal rising over 14% year-over-year, while fruits and vegetables are also climbing. Gasoline already rose 0.8% in February and has surged sharply since the war began, which means the next inflation print will look dramatically different. This is the key point that the mainstream refuses to address: the February data does not yet reflect the energy shock that is now unfolding.

Personal income actually declined by 0.1% in February, while spending increased by 0.5%, which means consumers are now relying on savings or debt to maintain their lifestyle. That is not sustainable. It is the classic late-stage cycle behavior where inflation erodes purchasing power while consumption is artificially maintained.

Energy sits at the base of the entire economy, and with the disruption in global oil flows, every category you are already seeing rise will be pushed higher. Transportation costs feed into food. Energy feeds into manufacturing. Shipping feeds into goods. Once energy rises, everything rises.

The Federal Reserve is trapped in this environment because inflation is not collapsing fast enough to justify rate cuts, yet the economy is showing signs of weakness. Growth has already been revised lower, and the economy is running on an increasingly fragile footing. This is the classic setup for stagflation, where inflation remains elevated while economic growth slows.

The real issue is that people are looking at the 3.0% core inflation number and assuming the situation is stabilizing, when in reality, that number is backward-looking. It reflects conditions before the geopolitical shock, before energy prices surged, and before supply chains were disrupted again. The next phase of inflation has already been set in motion, it just has not fully arrived in the data yet.

This is exactly how these cycles unfold. First, inflation appears to stabilize. Then a new external shock emerges, in this case energy. That shock feeds into the system with a lag. By the time it becomes visible in the data, it is already too late to respond effectively.

The bottom line is that inflation is not going away. It is shifting, spreading across categories, and preparing to accelerate again as energy flows through the system. The February report was not a sign of relief. It was the calm before the next wave.

Greece – Energy Protests Worldwide

Greece has already moved beyond sporadic protests into sustained economic resistance driven by energy costs. Farmers across the country have mobilized on a national scale, deploying thousands of tractors to block highways, border crossings, and major ports. These actions have disrupted trade flows and forced the government into direct negotiations.

The demands are centered on energy. Farmers are calling for tax-free diesel, electricity price caps, and direct subsidies to offset rising costs. Agricultural production in Greece is highly sensitive to fuel prices, particularly for irrigation, transport, and machinery. When diesel prices rise, the cost of production increases immediately, and many farmers operate on margins that cannot absorb those increases.

Electricity costs have also been a major factor. Greece has experienced significant volatility in power prices due to its reliance on imported energy and the structure of the European electricity market, where marginal pricing ties electricity costs to the most expensive source of generation. This has led to periods of sharply elevated prices that directly impact both households and businesses.

The scale of the protests reflects the severity of the pressure. Thousands of participants have taken part in coordinated blockades, and demonstrations have persisted for weeks rather than days. This is not a short-term reaction. It is an ongoing standoff between the agricultural sector and the government.

Public support for the protests has been relatively strong, as rising energy costs affect not only farmers but the broader population through higher food prices and living expenses. This alignment between sector-specific grievances and general public concern is what allows protests to sustain momentum over time.

Greece demonstrates how energy-driven unrest evolves into a broader economic conflict. Once essential sectors such as agriculture are affected, the impact spreads across the entire economy, and the pressure on government intensifies.

Beware of Netanyahu

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COMMENT: Mr. Armstrong, when you were on Commodity Culture at the end of last year, you said you had a panic cycle in 2026 and that war was going to unfold. Then you said Netanyahu orchestrated this war long before anyone else. It has now come out that he gave a presentation on war, and Trump said, “Sounds good to me.” I don’t know how you do it, but you are the real deal.

Josh

REPLY: The computer has been amazing. It has taught me a lot. It also warns this is by no means over. Trump did not include Netanyahu in the negotiation. But with Netanyahu up for election again, this means if he loses, his life’s dream of destroying Iran is finished. He will do whatever he can to try to drag Trump into his war.

Market Talk – April 9, 2026

Market Talk 2017

ASIA:
The major Asian stock markets had a mixed day today:
• NIKKEI 225 decreased 413.10 points or -0.73% to 55,895.32
• Shanghai decreased 28.826 points or -0.72% to 3,966.171
• Hang Seng decreased 140.62 points or -0.54% to 25,752.40
• ASX 200 increased 21.40 points or 0.24% to 8,973.20
• SENSEX decreased 931.25 points or -1.20% to 76,631.65
• Nifty50 decreased 222.25 points or -0.93% to 23,775.10
The major Asian currency markets had a mixed day today:
• AUDUSD increased 0.00446 or 0.63% to 0.70888
• NZDUSD increased 0.00514 or 0.88% to 0.58714
• USDJPY increased 0.129 or 0.08% to 158.703
• USDCNY decreased 0.00722 or -0.11% to 6.82597
The above data was collected around 13:10 EST.
Precious Metals:
•  Gold increased 70.43 USD/t oz. or 1.49% to 4,791.37
•  Silver increased 2.106 USD/t. oz. or 2.84% to 76.224
The above data was collected around 13:12 EST.
EUROPE/EMEA:
The major Europe stock markets had a negative day today:
•  CAC 40 decreased 18.07 points or -0.22% to 8,245.80
•  FTSE 100 decreased 5.40 points or -0.05% to 10,603.48
•  DAX 30 decreased 273.64 points or -1.14% to 23,806.99
The major Europe currency markets had a mixed day today:
• EURUSD increased 0.00544 or 0.47% to 1.17172
• GBPUSD increased 0.00599 or 0.45% to 1.34537
• USDCHF decreased 0.00316 or -0.40% to 0.78823
The above data was collected around 13:21 EST.

Americas:

US Markets:

  • DJIA declined by 85.42 points (-0.18%) to 46,584.46
  • S&P 500 advanced by 5.02 points (0.08%) to 6,616.85
  • NASDAQ advanced by 21.51 points (0.10%) to 22,017.849
  • Russell 2000 advanced by 3.61 points (0.14%) to 2,544.254

Canada:

  • TSX Composite advanced by 49.98 points (0.15%) to 33,231.95
  • TSX 60 advanced by 3.81 points (0.20%) to 1,931.49

Brazil:

  • Bovespa declined by 323.84 points (-0.17%) to 187,838.13
ENERGY:
The oil markets had a mixed day today:
•  Crude Oil increased 1.974 USD/BBL or 2.09% to 96.384
•  Brent increased 0.179 USD/BBL or 0.19% to 94.929
•  Natural gas decreased 0.0522 USD/MMBtu or -1.92% to 2.6718
•  Gasoline decreased 0.029 USD/GAL -0.96% to 2.9769
•  Heating oil increased 0.0479 USD/GAL or 1.26% to 3.8563
The above data was collected around 13:24 EST.
•  Top commodity gainers: Platinum (2.62%), Crude Oil (2.09%), Cotton (2.15%) and Silver (2.84%)
•  Top commodity losers: Sugar (-1.92%), Orange Juice (-5.44%), Lithium (-1.74%) and Natural Gas (-1.92%)
The above data was collected around 13:32 EST.
BONDS:
Japan 2.3970% (+2.5bp), US 2’s 3.77% (-0.031%), US 10’s 4.2720% (-2.9bps); US 30’s 4.88 (-0.011%), Bunds 2.9812% (+3.89bp), France 3.6150% (+4.23bp), Italy 3.7480% (+4.14bp), Turkey 29.050% (-140bp), Greece 3.773% (-14.5bp), Portugal 3.388% (+4.7bp); Spain 3.422% (+2.6bp) and UK Gilts 4.6790% (+2.78bp)
The above data was collected around 13:37 EST.

PRIVATE BLOG – Will the Ceasefire Hold?

PRIVATE BLOG

PRIVATE BLOG – Will the Ceasefire Hold?


Private blog posts are exclusively available to Socrates subscribers. To sign-up for Socrates or to learn more, please visit Ask-Socrates.com.

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Europe Begins Energy Rationing as the Crisis Moves Into Daily Life

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Europe is now removing any doubt about the seriousness of this crisis, because governments do not tell millions of people to stay home from work unless there is a genuine shortage forming beneath the surface. The European Union has begun urging citizens to work from home, drive less, reduce speed limits, and cut overall energy consumption as part of an emergency response to the shock created by the Iran war.

The language coming out of officials makes it clear that this is not temporary. European authorities are warning of a “very serious situation” with no immediate end in sight, and that is consistent with what we are seeing globally as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted one of the most critical energy arteries in the world. Roughly 20% of global oil and gas normally moves through that route, and Europe alone depends on it for a meaningful portion of its energy mix, including about 7% of its oil, 8.5% of LNG, and as much as 40% of jet fuel and diesel. When that flow is disrupted, there is no quick replacement.

What governments are doing now is trying to reduce demand because they cannot increase supply fast enough. The International Energy Agency has even outlined measures such as reducing highway speeds, limiting private car use, encouraging public transportation, and shifting work patterns to remote where possible. This is not environmental policy, this is rationing by another name. It is the same playbook we saw in the 1970s, only now it is being implemented through modern systems rather than overt fuel lines and shortages at the pump.

The push toward remote work is particularly telling because it highlights how deeply energy is embedded in the economy. Commuting, office buildings, transportation networks, all of these consume energy, and by reducing physical movement, governments are attempting to lower overall demand without explicitly declaring rationing. Some countries are even moving toward four-day workweeks and limiting travel to essential activities only, which again shows that the problem is not theoretical but already impacting how economies function on a daily basis.

This ties directly into the broader supply shock that has been described as the largest in modern history. The International Energy Agency has warned that this crisis is worse than the shocks of 1973, 1979, and even the recent energy disruptions combined, and that is because the current system is far more interconnected and dependent on continuous energy flows. Europe entered this crisis with already low gas storage levels, estimated around 30% capacity after a harsh winter, which has left it particularly vulnerable as prices have surged and supplies tightened.

What the public still does not fully grasp is that this is only the beginning phase. The oil and gas that were already in transit before the disruption are still working their way through the system, and that has delayed the full impact. Governments are trying to get ahead of that moment by cutting demand now, because once those flows diminish further, the gap between supply and consumption will become impossible to ignore. That is when rationing becomes unavoidable rather than advisory.

There is also a secondary effect that is already emerging, which is the impact on industry. Energy-intensive sectors across Europe, including chemicals and manufacturing, are facing rising costs and in some cases reducing output or adding surcharges of up to 30% just to stay operational. This is how an energy crisis turns into an economic crisis, because once production slows, prices rise, and growth begins to stall while inflation accelerates, creating the classic stagflation scenario.

The idea that economies can continue operating at full capacity while energy supply is constrained is simply not realistic. When energy becomes scarce, everything above it must contract, and that is exactly what we are seeing with reduced work schedules, remote work mandates, and transportation limits.

Governments are trying to manage the transition in a way that avoids panic, but the measures themselves reveal the severity of the situation. Once you begin telling entire populations to change how they work, travel, and consume energy, you have already crossed into crisis territory.

This will not resolve quickly. Officials are already warning that the shock will be long-lasting, and that suggests the current measures are just the first step. If the disruption to global energy flows continues, these temporary adjustments will evolve into more formalized restrictions, and what is now being presented as voluntary guidance will become mandatory policy.

Energy sits at the foundation of the entire economy, and once that foundation is disrupted, everything built on top of it begins to shift. Europe is now entering that phase, and the move toward remote work and reduced consumption is simply the first visible sign that the system is under strain.

Why America’s Money Always Follows War

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When you strip away the propaganda, foreign aid is rarely about charity. It is about strategy, war, and buying influence. The latest long-run data show that from 1946 through 2024, more than $1 trillion in inflation-adjusted U.S. foreign aid went to just five recipients: Israel at $337.0 billion, Egypt at $198.9 billion, former South Vietnam at $193.8 billion, Afghanistan at $168.5 billion, and South Korea at $127.6 billion. Together, those five alone absorbed roughly 30% of all U.S. foreign aid since World War II. In fiscal 2024, overall U.S. foreign aid obligations were about $82.3 billion, covering 177 countries, and about two-thirds of that aid was classified as economic while roughly one-third was military. That is the first clue. Washington calls it aid, but the money consistently follows conflict zones, military alliances, and geopolitical choke points.

Israel sits at the top because it has long served as Washington’s anchor in the Middle East. The Council on Foreign Relations notes that Israel has received over $300 billion in total U.S. economic and military aid since its founding, and under the current memorandum of understanding the United States agreed to provide $3.8 billion per year through 2028, including $500 million annually for missile defense. Nearly all modern U.S. aid to Israel is military. That tells you exactly what this is. This is not a poverty program. This is a long-term military investment in maintaining a regional outpost that aligns with U.S. policy and projects power into one of the most unstable regions on earth.

Egypt comes second for a similar reason, but from the opposite side of the same equation. Cairo has for decades been paid to remain inside the American orbit and preserve the regional balance surrounding Israel and the Suez Canal. Reuters reported that the Biden administration granted Egypt its full $1.3 billion allocation in military aid in 2024, despite human rights concerns, because Washington considered Egypt vital to U.S. national security priorities, ceasefire negotiations, hostage talks, and humanitarian logistics linked to Gaza. In other words, Egypt is funded not because Washington admires its internal governance, but because it occupies critical real estate and performs a strategic function. If Israel is the spear point, Egypt is part of the containment framework around it.

Vietnam was pure Cold War spending disguised as nation-building. The National Archives notes that American assistance to Vietnam began before 1954 and continued after the Republic of Vietnam declared independence in the South, with U.S. backing sustaining the Diem government and then the wider anti-communist war effort. The Council on Foreign Relations summarizes it plainly: the United States poured money into South Vietnam to support the military and promote stability during the war, and when South Vietnam fell, the aid ended. That is the key point. If this had truly been development assistance, it would have continued after the war. It did not. The money was there to try to hold a strategic line against communist expansion in Southeast Asia. Once the line broke, so did the funding.

Afghanistan was Vietnam repeated in another century. According to SIGAR, by March 2021, U.S. appropriations for Afghanistan reconstruction alone had reached $144.4 billion, with the report warning that the investment was at serious risk of waste, fraud, abuse, or outright failure. SIGAR also found that more than $2.4 billion had been spent on capital assets that were unused, abandoned, misused, deteriorated, or destroyed. That was reconstruction money alone, before counting the much larger war costs. SIGAR cited a broader estimate of $2.26 trillion in total Afghanistan war costs, while even the Defense Department’s own estimate put cumulative obligations at $824.9 billion.

This is what Washington does. It invades, installs a model, funds the system to keep it alive, and then calls the expenditure foreign aid. Afghanistan ranked so high because it was not a normal aid recipient. It was a twenty-year attempt to subsidize an occupation, build a client state, and hold a strategic position in Central Asia.

South Korea is the one case on the list that Washington can point to as a relative success, but even there the motive was never altruism. Korea was funded because it sat on the front line of the Cold War, directly adjacent to communist North Korea and within range of China. Korean development archives state that foreign aid raised South Korea’s capital stock in education, health, roads, railways, power, water, sanitation, and industrial financing. A historical GAO review found that by the early 1970s the United States had provided South Korea with over $5.4 billion in grant military aid and significant economic assistance, while also bearing $9.8 billion in costs for maintaining U.S. forces in Korea from 1954 through 1972. Washington underwrote South Korea because it needed an anti-communist stronghold in Asia. The aid worked far better there than in Vietnam or Afghanistan, but the strategic intent was the same.

Once you line these five up side by side, the pattern is impossible to miss. Israel, Egypt, and South Korea were paid to anchor American influence in strategically vital regions. South Vietnam and Afghanistan were funded as war theaters and client-state experiments. None of this was random, and none of it was primarily humanitarian. The money followed military doctrine, containment strategy, logistics, and regime support. That is why foreign aid should always be analyzed as an extension of foreign policy, not as benevolence. Even the U.S. government’s own descriptions of assistance emphasize national security, influence, and regional stability.

The real lesson is that Washington does not hand out money because it has excess compassion. It deploys money where it wants control. That is why the same names keep appearing decade after decade. Aid is simply the cleaner word for financing alliances, subsidizing wars, and maintaining imperial reach. When the strategic value is there, the money flows.

Digital Iron Curtain Expands as Russia Adopts China’s Surveillance Model

Russia has now begun implementing what can only be described as a street-level surveillance hunt, with police conducting mass traffic stops not for crime in the traditional sense, but to inspect citizens’ phones for so-called “illegal VPNs.” This marks a profound shift in the role of law enforcement, in which the objective is no longer simply to maintain public safety but to control access to information. Reports indicate that officers are stopping individuals at random, demanding access to their devices, and scanning for software designed to bypass state-imposed internet restrictions, illustrating how governments are moving from policing actions to policing access itself.

What is unfolding closely resembles the system already embedded in China, where authorities have taken surveillance to a far more invasive level. Since 2021, Chinese police have reportedly gone door-to-door requiring citizens to install state-backed “anti-fraud” applications that function as real-time monitoring tools. These applications are designed to scan devices continuously and immediately alert authorities if users attempt to install VPNs or access restricted platforms. The purpose extends well beyond fraud prevention, as it creates a mechanism to detect intent before action, allowing authorities to intervene at the earliest stage of non-compliance.

The emergence of this model is not accidental, and it ties directly into the broader shift toward integrating technology with state control. Governments are increasingly building systems that allow them to monitor behavior across multiple layers, including communication, financial transactions, and movement. Once these systems are operational, they become part of the infrastructure of governance, expanding in scope rather than contracting over time. China has already demonstrated how digital ID systems, payment networks, and surveillance tools can be combined into a unified framework that tracks and influences behavior on a national scale.

Russia’s adoption of similar tactics reflects the pressures facing governments dealing with sanctions, economic instability, and internal dissent. Restricting VPN usage effectively limits access to external information sources, confining the population within a controlled narrative environment. This becomes especially relevant when economic conditions weaken, because managing perception becomes as important as managing policy. Confidence plays a central role in any financial system, and when that confidence begins to falter, governments often respond by tightening control rather than loosening it.

A wider pattern is beginning to emerge when these developments are viewed together. This is not limited to Russia or China, but represents a broader direction in which governments are moving toward systems capable of monitoring and restricting both information and capital flows in real time. The same types of frameworks being discussed elsewhere under labels such as digital currencies, fraud prevention, or online safety can be adapted to enforce compliance when necessary. Once authorities gain the ability to observe behavior at scale, the incentive to regulate that behavior increases significantly.

Previous eras relied on physical measures to impose capital controls, such as restricting bank withdrawals or limiting cross-border transfers, but the modern approach embeds control directly into the technology people use daily. Smartphones, payment systems, and digital identity platforms can all be leveraged to enforce rules instantly, without the need for visible intervention until enforcement is triggered. Limiting VPN access fits into this structure by ensuring that information cannot move freely beyond state oversight, reinforcing the broader architecture of control.

It is a mistake to assume that such measures remain confined to specific regions. As global financial pressures intensify and sovereign debt concerns continue to build, the incentive to deploy tools that manage both perception and behavior will only increase. Once the capability exists to control both the flow of information and the flow of money, government has unprecedented control over the population.

No One Wants War — But No One Wants to Think Either

All - Megyn Kelly on Democrats in a recent episode of her podcast: "Trump  could drop a nuke and I'd still vote Republican over those people. What  they want to do is

Mindless sheep exist on both wings of the bird. I often criticize the Democrats for their far-left views, but we are now witnessing the dark side of blind party politics. The latest headlines surrounding Megyn Kelly state she would remain loyal to the Republican Party “even if Trump dropped a nuke on another country.” Independent thought is collapsing.

When you step back and look at the broader data, the American people themselves are not aligned with this type of blind loyalty. Poll after poll shows the opposite. A CNN poll found that 59% of Americans disapprove of military action against Iran. Reuters/Ipsos polling showed only 27% supported strikes, while far more opposed them. Another CNN survey shows just 34% approve of the war, with two-thirds believing there is no clear plan. Meanwhile, over 75% oppose sending ground troops, which is about as decisive as it gets in modern polling. Even more striking, a CBS poll found that 92% of Americans believe the war should end as quickly as possible.

So the people are not demanding war. The media, on the other hand, is fueled by partisan politics. Instead of thoughtful debate, we are seeing ideological entrenchment where individuals align themselves with a party to the point that they are unwilling to question anything that comes from their side. This is not confined to one party.

There are extreme Democrats who will support policies regardless of consequence simply because they oppose Republicans. There are extreme Republicans who will support actions regardless of consequence simply because they oppose Democrats. The middle ground, where independent thinking once existed, is being squeezed out. That is how societies break down.

When political identity replaces independent thought, you no longer have a functioning republic. You have factions. Each side becomes convinced that the other is so dangerous that anything is justified to stop them. That is precisely the mindset reflected in statements suggesting that even the destruction of another nation would not be enough to reconsider political allegiance. This is modern-day tribalism.

The Economic Confidence Model has always shown that political polarization rises sharply during periods of declining confidence in government. As trust erodes, people do not become more rational. They become more emotional and more extreme. They seek certainty in group identity rather than truth. That is what we are witnessing right now.

The irony is that while the political class continues to push conflict abroad, the population itself is clearly against it. The polls could not be more consistent. Americans do not want war. They do not want escalation. They do not want endless foreign entanglements. But leadership is no longer responding to the people.

When people stop questioning their own side and begin to justify anything simply because it aligns with their political identity, that is when a society becomes vulnerable to its own collapse. It no longer requires an external enemy. It begins to destroy itself from within.

This is why independent thinking is now more important than ever. Blind loyalty to any party is a detriment to society. It prevents accountability and reason. No one wants war. The data proves that. The real question is whether people are willing to think for themselves or continue to follow respective tribes wherever they are led.