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After detaching the dollar from gold in 1971, Nixon created its modern foundation through two key deals: forcing oil to be sold in dollars (the petrodollar) and making China the world's cheap-labor factory for US consumers.

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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'.

Global demand for dollars as the reserve currency forces the U.S. to run persistent trade deficits to supply them. This strengthens the dollar and boosts import power but hollows out the domestic industrial base. A future decline in dollar demand would create a painful economic transition.

America's ability to deficit spend relies on the world's appetite for US debt, which allows it to export inflation. If countries dump this debt, the US can no longer "tax the world," triggering immediate domestic austerity and creating a global power vacuum likely to be filled by China.

The spike in 1970s oil prices was a direct reaction to the U.S. abandoning the gold standard. Oil-producing countries were no longer being paid in gold-backed dollars, so they raised prices from $3 to $40 per barrel to compensate for the currency's rapid loss of purchasing power.

Protests in Iran, if they disrupt the regime, could halt cheap oil flows to China. This would force China to buy from more expensive, US-friendly markets, strengthening the US dollar's global dominance and isolating anti-Western powers without direct US intervention.

The US dollar's dominance is less about its role in oil transactions (petrodollar) and more about its deep integration into global banking and financial plumbing via the Eurodollar system. This structural entrenchment makes it incredibly difficult to displace.

By establishing the dollar as the world's reserve currency after WWII, the U.S. gained the unique power to run huge debts and print money. This effectively forced other countries holding and trading dollars to absorb the inflationary costs of U.S. spending, funding the 'American dream' at global expense.

The U.S. economy's ability to consume more than it produces is not due to superior productivity but to the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency. This allows the U.S. to export paper currency and import real goods, a privilege that is now at risk as the world diversifies away from the dollar.

The US dollar reached its peak global dominance in the early 2000s. The world is now gradually shifting to a system where multiple currencies (like the euro and yuan) and neutral assets (like gold) share the role of reserve currency, marking a return to a more historically normal state.

Despite political tensions, a vast majority of global trade, including oil sales between US adversaries China and Russia, is denominated in US dollars. This reliance gives the US an unparalleled national security tool and soft power, as the trade must cross through US financial institutions.