Globalism’s House of Cards For decades, global trade has been propped up by a fragile architecture — one that relied not on productive capacity or sound money, but on artificial demand, engineered debt cycles, and unholy alliances between governments and megabanks. We were told this system was robust. That interdependence and free movement of capital would create “resilience.” But the moment tariffs — a single wrench in the gears — were introduced, cracks widened into chasms. And instead of asking why the system was so sensitive, mainstream economists cried foul over the disruption itself. Here’s the truth: if your economy collapses because someone changed the price of entry into your biggest market, your economy was a fraud to begin with.…
Continue reading as a Citizen
Dedollarize News is free to read for signed-up members. Become a Citizen to finish this article, save what matters, and get the daily “While You Were Distracted” briefing.
No credit card required.



