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Powerful financial entities can intentionally devalue a nation's currency. This erases citizen savings and creates hyperinflation, aiming to manufacture an uprising against the government, justifying military intervention to seize resources.

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The era of a strong, passive dollar designed to attract foreign capital is over. The US now actively manipulates the dollar's value to suit strategic needs, rewarding allies and punishing enemies. The currency has been drafted into foreign policy as a tool of statecraft, moving from a stable 'King' to an active 'General'.

Instead of an explicit default, governments often employ 'financial repression.' This strategy, a 'soft default,' involves policies that lead to inflation, steadily eroding the purchasing power of citizens' savings and effectively stealing their economic value to manage national debt.

Instead of a transparent default, the U.S. government's strategy is to devalue its debt by keeping interest rates below inflation. This policy, known as 'financial repression,' erodes the real value of the dollar, effectively transferring wealth from savers and bondholders to the government to pay down its massive debt.

Modern global conflict is primarily economic, not kinetic. Nations now engage in strategic warfare through currency debasement, asset seizures, and manipulating capital flows. The objective is to inflict maximum financial damage on adversaries, making economic policy a primary weapon of war.

The US response to the 2008 crisis—massive money printing—exported inflation globally. This led to sharp increases in food prices in places like the Arab world, creating economic hardship that became a key, though often overlooked, trigger for the widespread social and political upheaval of the Arab Spring.

China is engaging in economic warfare by systematically reducing its holdings of US debt. This strategy targets the foundation of the US economy, which is 70% based on debt-fueled spending. By simultaneously pushing a gold-backed digital yuan, China aims to undermine the dollar's reserve status.

Instead of direct military intervention, a modern strategy involves crippling a nation's economy and military so severely that the regime deteriorates from internal pressure. This approach aims to force a collapse without committing ground troops, which is politically unpopular.

Economic uncertainty and anxiety are the root causes of political violence. When governments devalue currency through inflation and amass huge debts, they create the stressful conditions that history shows consistently lead to civil unrest.

As the world's reserve currency, the US can always print money to cover its debts and avoid a technical default. The true danger is not insolvency but the resulting hyperinflation, which devalues the dollar and silently erodes the purchasing power of everyone holding it, both domestically and globally.

Fiscal irresponsibility forces money printing, devaluing the dollar. This inflates asset prices, enriching the few who own assets (like stocks and real estate) while impoverishing the majority who live on income. This widening wealth gap fuels the populist anger and social division that manifests as civil unrest.