The gold in Fort Knox and West Point just passed the $1 trillion valuation mark, courtesy of a 45% rise in price this year. But on the U.S. government’s books? It’s still listed at the antiquated 1973 price of $42.22/oz. That accounting fiction has now become a multi-hundred-billion-dollar lie—and a political tool hiding in plain sight. What’s being discussed today—marking gold to market—would be the modern-day equivalent of Roosevelt’s theft and Nixon’s betrayal: a quiet declaration that the fiat dollar has reached its endgame. Historical Parallels: This Has All Happened Before Revaluing gold isn't some fringe conspiracy. It's precedent. In 1933, Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 6102, confiscating Americans' gold under the guise of economic recovery. Then in 1934,…

Inner Circle · Premium

This article is for Inner Circle members.

Inner Circle is the daily-private-newsletter, premium-archive tier from Bill Brocius. Sign up for a free Citizen account, or upgrade straight to Inner Circle.

30-day money-back guarantee.