While private crypto has scams, the true systemic risk is Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs). Being programmable and centralized, they give governments the power to monitor, block, and control every citizen's transactions, creating an infrastructure for authoritarian control under the guise of progress.

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Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto demands a state monopoly on money and credit. Since all modern economies use central banks to control the money supply, they are built on a Marxist principle. With money being half of every transaction, these economies are at best 50% capitalist and 50% Marxist.

By creating a regulatory framework that requires private stablecoins to be backed 1-to-1 by U.S. Treasuries, the government can prop up demand for its ever-increasing debt. This strategy is less about embracing financial innovation and more about extending the U.S. dollar's lifespan as the global reserve currency.

Unlike the 2008 crisis, which was concentrated in housing and banking, today's risk is an 'everything bubble.' A decade of cheap money has simultaneously inflated stocks, real estate, crypto, and even collectibles, meaning a collapse would be far broader and more contagious.

While convenient, the decline of physical cash risks locking the economy into tech platforms and creating barriers for the unbanked. Cash represents an open, uncontrolled system whose loss has significant societal and class-based downsides, concentrating power in the hands of platform owners.

Coinbase is funding a UBI experiment giving New Yorkers crypto. This is a strategic play, not just charity. It aims to prove crypto's efficiency as a distribution mechanism for government welfare, positioning it to become the foundational infrastructure for future social programs and driving mass adoption.

The Federal Reserve's ability to print money is a direct mechanism to take value from every citizen without legislation. It is mathematically equivalent to government-sanctioned counterfeiting, devaluing currency and transferring wealth from the populace to the government, acting as a tax.

Central banks evolved from gold warehouses that discovered they could issue more paper receipts (IOUs) than the gold they held, creating a fraudulent but profitable "fractional reserve." This practice was eventually co-opted by governments to fund their activities, not for economic stability.

In a novel attempt to delay a debt crisis, policymakers are pushing for regulations that would force stablecoin issuers to back their digital dollars one-to-one with U.S. Treasuries. This cleverly creates a new, captive international market for government debt, helping to prop up the system.

Recent breakdowns in student loan processing, AI governance, and cloud infrastructure highlight the vulnerability of centralized systems. This pattern underscores a key personal finance strategy: mitigate risk by decentralizing your money, data, and income streams across various platforms and sources.

The financial system is made intentionally complex not by accident, but as a method of control. This complexity prevents the average person from understanding how the system is rigged against them, making them easier to manipulate and ensuring they won't take action to protect their own interests.