The Downgrade That Should’ve Shocked Everyone—But Didn’t Last Friday, after the markets had conveniently gone home for the weekend, Moody’s quietly downgraded the U.S. credit rating from AAA to AA1. Wall Street shrugged. CNBC smiled. But gold didn’t. It spiked $42. Silver roared over $2 higher. Bond yields nudged upward. This wasn’t a blip—it was a signpost on the road to collapse. The debt is unsustainable. Interest payments are exploding. And yet the talking heads reassure us it’s all under control. Don't buy it. The markets are already shifting—away from equities and toward real money: gold, silver, and hard assets that aren’t built on promises and printing presses. QE Is Back—But Don’t Call It That While the Fed insists we’re…
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