The US invasion of Venezuela on January 3rd, 2026, was not a law enforcement operation but a desperate attempt to enforce the petrodollar system, which has inadvertently accelerated its collapse by revealing it's maintained by military force rather than economic strength.
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On January 3rd, 2026, two days ago, US
special operations forces landed in
Caracus, Venezuela, and captured the
sitting president of a sovereign nation.
Nicholas Maduro was taken into custody,
flown to the United States, and is now
being held on drug trafficking and
terrorism charges. The US government
called it a law enforcement operation.
The rest of the world called it an
invasion. You probably saw the
headlines. You probably saw the official
statement. The president of the United
States stood at a podium and said this
was about national security, about
stopping drug cartels, about protecting
democracy. But that is not what this was
about. This was about oil. This was
about the petro dollar. And this was
about sending a message to every country
on earth that if you try to sell oil in
anything other than US dollars, we will
remove your government by force.
Venezuela has the largest proven oil
reserves on the planet. 303 billion
barrels, more than Saudi Arabia, more
than Russia, more than Iraq. For 50
years, Venezuela sold that oil in US
dollars. But over the past 6 years,
Venezuela stopped using dollars. They
started selling to China and yuan. They
started trading with Russia in rubles.
They started using barter systems with
Iran. They walked away from the petro
dollar. And now their president is in a
US prison. This is not about democracy.
This is not about drugs. This is about
what happens when you challenge the
foundation of American financial power.
The petro dollar is not a suggestion. It
is an enforcement system. And Venezuela
just became the example. But here is the
part the US government did not think
through by invading Venezuela to enforce
the petro dollar. They just showed every
other oil producing country exactly what
the system really is. It is not an
economic arrangement. It is a protection
racket backed by military force. And
when you show the world that the dollar
system is maintained through invasions
and regime change, you do not strengthen
the system. You accelerate its collapse.
China is watching. Saudi Arabia is
watching. Russia is watching. And they
are all asking the same question. If the
US is willing to invade Venezuela to
stop dolization, what will they do to
us? And the answer they are arriving at
is simple. We need to leave the dollar
system as fast as possible before we are
next. In this video, I'm going to show
you exactly how Venezuela went from
being a founding member of OPEC and a
key US oil supplier to a country that
was invaded for leaving the dollar
system. I am going to show you the
27-year timeline from Hugo Chavez taking
power to US forces landing in Caracus 48
hours ago. I'm going to show you the
$800 billion in oil trade that Venezuela
shifted out of dollars and why that made
them a target. And I am going to show
you why the January 3rd invasion is not
the end of the story. It is the
beginning of the end of the petrod
dollar itself. Because when you enforce
a system through military power, you do
not get compliance. You get resistance.
And right now, 14 countries are
accelerating their plans to exit the
dollar system. They watched what
happened to Venezuela, and they are not
going to let it happen to them. This is
not financial advice. This is a
geopolitical analysis of how the United
States just made the single biggest
strategic mistake since the Iraq war.
and you're going to pay for it at the
gas pump, at the grocery store, and in
your retirement account. Let me start at
the beginning because to understand why
the US invaded Venezuela on January 3rd,
2026, you need to understand what
Venezuela was before Hugo Chavez and
what it became after. Venezuela was
discovered to have massive oil reserves
in the early 20th century. By the 1970s,
Venezuela was one of the founding
members of OPEC and one of the largest
oil exporters in the world. Venezuela's
state oil company PDVSA was supplying
over 1.5 million barrels per day to US
refineries. The oil came to Texas and
Louisiana. It was refined into gasoline
and diesel. It powered the US economy
and every single barrel was paid for in
US dollars. This was the petro dollar
system. Venezuela produced oil. The US
bought it in dollars. And Venezuela took
those dollars and bought US goods, US
weapons, and US treasury bonds. The
dollar circulated back to the United
States. It was a closed loop. Venezuela
got rich. The US got cheap oil and a
market for its debt. Everybody won. But
this system had one requirement.
Venezuela had to stay inside the dollar
system. They had to price their oil in
dollars. They had to accept payment in
dollars. They had to keep their reserves
in dollars. If they ever left the dollar
system, the entire arrangement would
break down. For decades, this was not a
problem. Venezuelan presidents
understood the deal. You stay in the
dollar system, you get access to US
markets and protection. You leave the
dollar system, you become an enemy. It
was simple and it worked. Then in 1999,
Hugo Chavez was elected president and he
did not agree to the deal. Hugo Chavez
was a former military officer who ran on
a platform of economic nationalism and
anti-imperialism. He looked at
Venezuela's oil wealth and asked a
simple question. Why are we selling our
oil to the United States for dollars
when we could sell it to the highest
bidder in any currency? Why are we
allowing US companies to extract profits
from our resources? Why are we
integrated into a financial system that
allows the US to control our economy
through currency and debt? In 2000,
Chavez made his first major move. He
traveled to Iraq and met with Saddam
Hussein. This was during the sanctions
era when the US had isolated Iraq.
Chavez shook hands with Saddam on
television and announced that Venezuela
would sell oil to Iraq in exchange for
goods, not dollars, barter. This was a
direct challenge to the petro dollar. In
2001, Chavez pushed through a new
hydrocarbons law that gave the
Venezuelan government majority control
over all oil projects in the country. US
oil companies like Exxon Mobile and Kico
Phillips, which had operated in
Venezuela for decades, were told they
had to give up majority ownership or
leave. Most of them left. In 2005,
Chavez began selling oil to China under
long-term contracts. The terms were
simple. China would provide
infrastructure loans and investments.
Venezuela would repay the loans in oil,
no dollars involved. This was the
beginning of the Venezuela China oil for
loans program that would eventually
reach 60 billion. In 2006, Chavez
announced that Venezuela would sell oil
to Cuba at subsidized rates in exchange
for Cuban doctors and teachers. Again,
no dollars. Barter. In 2007, Chavez
pulled Venezuela out of the
International Monetary Fund and the
World Bank. He said these institutions
were tools of US economic control. He
paid off all of Venezuela's debts to
them and stopped participating in their
programs. By 2008, Chavez was openly
calling for the end of the petro dollar.
He gave speeches at the United Nations
saying that the world should create a
new reserve currency to replace the
dollar. He proposed a South American
currency called the Sukri to facilitate
trade without dollars. He was building
alliances with Iran, Russia, and China
based on the idea of creating a
non-dollar trading block. And the US
government watched all of this and
realized they had a problem. Venezuela
was not just leaving the petrod dollar.
They were actively trying to build an
alternative system and convince other
countries to join them. If other oil
exporters followed Venezuela's lead, the
entire petro dollar system would
collapse. But the US did not invade in
2008. They tried regime change through
other means. In 2002, there was a coup
attempt against Chavez. He was briefly
removed from power. The US denied
involvement, but it was later confirmed
that the CIA had provided support to the
coup plotters. The coup failed. Chavez
returned to power within 48 hours. The
US tried again in 2004 with a recall
referendum. They funded opposition
groups. They used NOS's and media
campaigns to try to turn the Venezuelan
people against Chavez. The referendum
failed. Chavez won with 59% of the vote.
So, the US moved to economic warfare. If
they could not remove Chavez directly,
they would strangle the Venezuelan
economy until the people removed him
themselves. Hugo Chavez died of cancer
in 2013. His vice president, Nicholas
Maduro, took over. Maduro continued
Chavez's policies. He continued moving
away from the dollar. He continued
strengthening ties with China and
Russia. And the US continued trying to
remove him. In 2015, President Obama
declared Venezuela a national security
threat and imposed the first round of
sanctions. These were targeted sanctions
on specific Venezuelan officials, but
they signaled the beginning of a
coordinated economic attack. In 2017,
the Trump administration massively
escalated the sanctions. Here is what
they did. They banned US companies from
buying Venezuelan oil. This immediately
cut off Venezuela's largest customer.
The US had been buying 500,000 barrels
per day from Venezuela. That is 13.7
billion per year in oil revenue at $75
per barrel gone overnight. They froze
all Venezuelan government assets held in
US banks. Venezuela had approximately $7
billion in dollar denominated accounts
in the US financial system. Frozen.
Venezuela could not access its own
money. They prohibited US companies from
providing insurance, shipping, or
financial services to Venezuelan oil
tankers. This made it nearly impossible
for Venezuela to sell oil to anyone
because most international shipping and
insurance is denominated in dollars and
facilitated by US or European companies.
Even if China wanted to buy Venezuelan
oil, getting that oil from Venezuela to
China required ships, insurance, and
payment systems that were now prohibited
from working with Venezuela. They banned
Venezuela from issuing new debt in US
markets. This cut Venezuela off from
international capital markets. They
could not borrow money to finance
government operations or oil production.
And most devastatingly, they prohibited
US companies from selling spare parts,
equipment, or technology to PDVSA.
Venezuela's oil infrastructure was built
with American equipment. The refineries,
the drilling rigs, the pumps, all of it
required American parts and expertise to
maintain. When the US banned the sale of
these parts, Venezuela's oil production
began collapsing. The numbers tell the
story. In 2016, before sanctions,
Venezuela was producing 2.4 million
barrels per day. By 2020, production had
fallen to 500,000 barrels per day, an
80% collapse. Oil revenue fell from 56
billion per year to 11 billion per year.
The economy imploded. Hyperinflation hit
1.7 million% at its peak. People were
starving. The country was in crisis. The
US government said this was about
democracy and human rights. But let me
show you the comparison that proves this
was about the petro dollar. Iran,
heavily sanctioned for decades,
currently under massive sanctions. Why?
Because Iran sells oil in non-dollar
currencies and challenges US dominance.
Iran's human rights record is worse than
Venezuela's. But the primary issue is
not human rights. It is oil and the
dollar. Russia sanctions intensified
after 2022. Why? Because Russia began
demanding payment for oil and gas in
rubles, not dollars. The US said it was
about Ukraine, but look at the financial
warfare. They froze $300 billion in
Russian reserves. They cut Russia out of
Swift. They targeted Russian oil
exports. This is dollar enforcement.
Saudi Arabia. Terrible human rights
record. Killed a journalist. Bombs
Yemen. No sanctions. Why? Because Saudi
Arabia sells oil exclusively in dollars
and recycles those dollars into US
Treasury bonds. Saudi Arabia is inside
the petrod dollar system. Therefore,
Saudi Arabia is an ally. No matter what
they do, the pattern is clear. If you
sell oil in dollars, you are protected.
If you sell oil in anything other than
dollars, you are sanctioned, isolated,
and regime changed. This is not about
human rights. This is about maintaining
the petro dollar. And Venezuela
understood this. So, they made a choice.
If the US is going to sanction us and
try to destroy our economy anyway, we
might as well completely abandon the
dollar and build an alternative system.
Here's what Venezuela did between 2017
and 2025. They sold oil to China in
Yuan. China became Venezuela's largest
customer, buying approximately 500,000
barrels per day by 2024. All
transactions in Yuan, $0. That is 13.7
billion per year in non-dollar oil
sales. They sold oil to India in rupees.
India needed cheap oil and was willing
to ignore US sanctions. India bought
200,000 barrels per day, paid in rupees.
That is $5.5 billion per year in
non-dollar sales. They sold oil to
Russia in a barter system. Venezuela
shipped oil to Russia. Russia shipped
wheat, machinery, and military equipment
to Venezuela. No currency involved.
Direct barter. This circumvented
sanctions entirely. They created
bilateral payment systems with Iran,
Cuba, and Nicaragua. These countries all
faced USA sanctions. They built clearing
mechanisms to trade with each other
without using dollars. Venezuela traded
oil for Iranian gasoline and chemicals.
The value was approximately $2 billion
per year. They launched the pro, a
cryptocurrency supposedly backed by
Venezuelan oil reserves. The pro was an
attempt to create a digital currency
that could be used for international
trade without touching the dollar
system. It failed to gain significant
adoption, but it showed the direction
Venezuela was moving. They negotiated
debt repayments to China and oil, not
dollars. Venezuela owed China
approximately $20 billion from
infrastructure loans made during the
Chavez era. Instead of repaying in
dollars, Venezuela repaid in oil
shipments. This was oil for debt, not
oil for dollars. Add it all up. By 2025,
Venezuela was selling approximately
900,000 barrels per day in non-dollar
currencies and barter arrangements. At
$75 per barrel, that is $24.7 billion in
annual oil sales that were not using the
US dollar. For a country with the
world's largest oil reserves, this was
unacceptable to the United States. But
Venezuela was not alone. They were part
of a broader trend. Russia was selling 5
million barrels per day in non-dollar
currencies. Iran was selling 1.5 million
barrels per day in yuan and euros. Saudi
Arabia was negotiating with China to
accept yuan for portions of oil sales.
The petro dollar was not just losing
Venezuela. It was losing its grip on the
entire global oil market. By late 2025,
an estimated 15% of global oil trade was
occurring in non-dollar currencies. That
is approximately $410 billion per year
out of 2 74 trillion in total global oil
sales. The trend was accelerating.
Projections suggested this could reach
25 to 30% by 2020 set. And then on
December 28th, 2025, China and Venezuela
announced a new agreement, $80 billion
over 5 years. China would rebuild
Venezuela's oil infrastructure. In
exchange, Venezuela would supply 1.2
million barrels per day to China. All
transactions in UN. This was the
breaking point because this deal was not
just about oil sales. It was about
infrastructure. China was investing in
Venezuela's long-term production
capacity. They were building refineries,
pipelines, ports. They were integrating
Venezuela into the yuan system
permanently. This was not a temporary
arrangement. This was China locking in
the world's largest oil reserve outside
the dollar system for decades. The US
government made a decision. If we allow
this to proceed, if we allow China to
lock in Venezuela's 303 billion barrels
of reserves in Yuan, the petro dollar
will be finished. Other countries will
follow. Saudi Arabia will flip. The
entire system will collapse. So on
January 3rd, 2026, they invaded. At 3:47
a.m. local time, US special operations
forces landed at multiple locations in
Caracus. The operation was conducted
under title 10 military authority, not
title 50 covert action, meaning this was
an acknowledged military operation, not
a secret CIA mission. The stated
objective was the arrest of Nicholas
Maduro under a 2020 US federal
indictment for drug trafficking and
naroterrorism. The US claimed that
Maduro was working with Colombian drug
cartels to smuggle cocaine into the
United States. They said this was a law
enforcement operation to bring a
criminal to justice. But the operation
was conducted by US military special
forces, not law enforcement. This was an
act of war disguised as law enforcement.
Maduro was captured at the presidential
palace. He was immediately transported
to a US military aircraft and flown out
of Venezuela. He is currently being held
at a US federal detention facility
awaiting trial. The US government
immediately recognized Juan Guyaido, who
had claimed to be interim president
since 2019 as the legitimate president
of Venezuela. Guyaido had been living in
exile. The US flew him back to Caracus
on January 4th. The official statement
from the White House said, quote,
"Today, the United States took decisive
action to dismantle a naroterrorist
regime that has caused immeasurable
suffering to the Venezuelan people and
threatens the security of the Western
Hemisphere. Nicholas Maduro is a
criminal, not a president. His arrest is
an act of justice, not an act of war.
The rest of the world saw it
differently. China issued a statement
calling the operation an illegal
invasion and a violation of
international law. They said the US had
quote kidnapped a sitting head of state
and demanded his immediate release. They
announced they were suspending all
diplomatic talks with the United States.
Russia called an emergency session of
the UN Security Council. They introduced
a resolution condemning the US action
and demanding withdrawal. The US vetoed
it, but the vote was 14 to1 with only
the US voting no. Even traditional US
allies like France abstained. The United
Nations General Assembly held an
emergency debate. 147 countries voted in
favor of a resolution condemning the
operation as a violation of sovereignty.
The US and four other countries voted.
Number 28 countries abstained. But the
condemnations do not matter. The UN
resolutions do not matter. What matters
is what happens next because the US now
controls Venezuela. They have installed
a friendly government and the first
thing that government will do is restore
Venezuela's oil sales to the dollar
system. Within days, acting President
Guyaido announced that all future
Venezuelan oil contracts will be
denominated in US dollars. The China
deal is suspended pending review. PDVSA
will resume sales to US refineries.
Venezuela is being brought back into the
petrod dollar system by force. But here
is the problem. The message this sends
to the rest of the world is not the
petro dollar is strong. The message is
the petro dollar is enforced through
military invasions. And when you show
the world that your currency system is
maintained through regime change and
military force, you do not inspire
confidence. You inspire fear. And fear
drives countries to find alternatives as
quickly as possible. Let me show you
what happened in global energy markets
in the 72 hours after the Venezuela
invasion. Oil prices spiked from 74 per
barrel on January 2nd to 89 per barrel
on January 5th. That is a 20% increase
in 3 days. Why? Because every oil
exporting country is now wondering if
they are next. If you are Saudi Arabia
and you are negotiating with China to
accept UN, are you now a target? The
risk premium on oil just went up. The UN
strengthened against the dollar.
Normally, when the US projects military
power, the dollar strengthens, but this
time the yuan gained 1.8% in 2 days.
Why? Because China is positioning itself
as the alternative to a dollar system
that is maintained through invasions.
Countries looking to diversify away from
dollars now see WAN as the safer option.
Russia announced it is accelerating its
oil for goods barter programs with
India, China, and BRICS nations.
Russia's finance minister said, quote,
"Venezuela has shown us what happens
when you depend on the dollar. We will
not make that mistake." Saudi Arabia
postponed talks with the US about
renewing defense commitments. The Saudis
are reconsidering whether US security
guarantees are worth staying in the
petro dollar system if the cost is
potential invasion. They are now
accelerating talks with China about
accepting UAN for 20% of oil sales. OPEC
issued a statement expressing quote
grave concern about the use of military
force to resolve disputes related to
energy sovereignty. This is diplomatic
language for we are all targets now. 14
countries issued a joint statement
calling for the creation of an
alternative international payment system
that does not rely on the US dollar. The
signatorries included China, Russia,
Iran, Brazil, South Africa, Indonesia,
Turkey, and seven others. This is the
beginning of a formal non-dollar block.
The invasion of Venezuela was supposed
to strengthen the petro dollar by
bringing the world's largest oil reserve
back into the dollar system. But the
second order effects are the opposite.
It is accelerating ddollarization
because it showed every country that the
dollar system is not a voluntary
economic arrangement. It is a coerced
system backed by military force.
Countries do not want to be in a system
where leaving means regime change. Now,
let me show you the long-term
implications because this is where it
gets really bad for the United States.
Venezuela is now a case study. It is the
example that will be studied in every
foreign ministry and central bank in the
world. The case study is this. A country
with the world's largest oil reserves
tried to leave the petro dollar system.
They sold oil in yuan. They built barter
systems. They created bilateral payment
mechanisms. And the US response was to
invade, remove the government and
install a puppet regime that brought the
country back into the dollar system. The
lesson is clear. The dollar is not
maintained through economic strength. It
is maintained through military
enforcement. This changes everything.
For 50 years, the dollar was the reserve
currency because it was the most liquid,
the most trusted, and the most stable
currency in the world. Countries held
dollars because dollars were useful.
Dollars were accepted everywhere.
Dollars were backed by the world's
largest economy. This was soft power.
This was economic dominance. But now the
petro dollar is maintained through hard
power. If you try to leave the system,
you get invaded. This fundamentally
changes how countries view the dollar.
They do not hold dollars because dollars
are useful. They hold dollars because
they are afraid of what happens if they
do not. And when your currency is
maintained through fear rather than
economic strength, it is fragile.
Because the moment countries believe
they can escape without being invaded,
they will. And that moment is coming.
China is providing that escape. The Belt
and Road Initiative is building
infrastructure in 150 countries. The
Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank is
providing development financing. The CIP
payment system is providing an
alternative to Swift. China is offering
countries a way to trade, invest, and
grow without needing dollars. And
critically, China is offering military
protection to countries that join their
system. The China Russia Iran axis is
now a counterweight to US power. If you
are a midsized oil exporter like
Kazakhstan or Nigeria or Angola and you
want to sell oil in Yuan, China will
protect you from US retaliation. They
may not be able to stop a US invasion,
but they can make it costly enough that
the US thinks twice. This is the new
game. It is not about economics anymore.
It is about security guarantees. The US
offers you access to dollar markets in
exchange for staying in the petrod
dollar system. China offers you access
to yuan markets and military protection
in exchange for leaving the petrod
dollar system. And after January 3rd,
more countries are going to take China's
offer. Here is the timeline for how this
unfolds. Q1 2026, January to March,
Venezuela is back in the dollar system,
but global oil markets are in chaos. Oil
hits $95 per barrel. Gas prices in the
US reach 420 per gallon. Countries
accelerate dd dollarization plans
quietly to avoid being the next target.
Q2 2026, April to June. Saudi Arabia
announces it will accept UAN for 15% of
oil sales to China. They frame it as
economic diversification, not a
political statement. But the result is
the same. The petro dollar just lost
Saudi Arabia. Oil hits $15 per barrel.
The dollar falls 4% against major
currencies. Q3 2026 July to September.
Nigeria, Angola, and Kazakhstan
announced they will sell portions of oil
in UN. These are smaller exporters, but
the trend is clear. The dollar's share
of global oil transactions falls from
85% to 72% in one quarter. Oil hits $118
per barrel. US gas prices hit 560 per
gallon. Q4 2026, October to December.
The US threatens sanctions against
countries accepting UN for oil. This
backfires. More countries see this as
confirmation that the dollar system is
coercive. The BRICS nations announced
the creation of a new reserve currency
backed by a basket of commodities
including oil, gold, and rare earth
minerals. Oil hits $134 per barrel. The
dollar has fallen 18% from its January
2026 peak. The dollar's share of global
reserves falls below 50% for the first
time since World War II. US import
prices spike. Inflation hits 11% despite
a recession. The Fed is trapped. They
cannot raise rates high enough to fight
inflation without bankrupting the
government. Gas prices hit $8 or 20 per
gallon. The American standard of living
is collapsing. The US is forced to
accept a multipolar currency system. The
dollar remains important but is no
longer dominant. The era of American
economic hegemony built on the petrod
dollar is over. And it ended because the
US tried to enforce the system through
military power instead of maintaining it
through economic strength. The invasion
of Venezuela on January 3rd, 2026 will
be remembered as the moment the petro
dollar died. Not because Venezuela is so
important, but because the US revealed
that the system is maintained through
force. And once you reveal that, the
system is finished. Now, who wins and
who loses? The losers are the American
people. You are going to pay $8 per
gallon for gas within 18 months. Your
cost of living is going to rise 35% as
the dollar falls and import prices
spike. Your savings will lose 25% of
their purchasing power. Your retirement
will be destroyed. You did not invade
Venezuela, but you are the one who will
pay the price. The losers are oil
exporting countries that stay loyal to
the dollar. If you are Kuwait or the UAE
and you stay in the petrod dollar
system, you are now wondering if you
made the right choice. You could have
diversified. You could have negotiated
with China. Instead, you stayed loyal.
And the reward is watching the dollar
collapse and your reserves lose value.
The winners are China and the countries
that left the dollar system early. China
locked in energy supplies in Yuan. They
built an alternative financial system.
They positioned themselves as the refuge
for countries fleeing the dollar. When
the dollar falls 25%, China's yuan gains
35% in relative value. China wins. The
winners are countries with hard assets
and no dollar debt. If you are a country
with gold reserves, oil reserves, and
minimal dollar denominated debt, you are
insulated from the dollar collapse. You
can trade in alternative currencies. You
are fine. Everyone else is trapped in a
collapsing currency system with no exit.
Now, what do you do as an individual?
How do you protect yourself from the
collapse of the petro dollar triggered
by the Venezuela invasion? First, reduce
dollar exposure immediately. If you have
cash and bonds denominated in dollars,
you're going to lose 25 to 35% over the
next 24 months. Move 40% of liquid
assets into foreign currencies. Gold or
assets that hold value when the dollar
falls. Second, buy energy stocks. Oil is
going to $150 per barrel. Energy
companies are going to make record
profits. Exxon, Chevron, Koko, Phillips,
accidental. These companies benefit from
high oil prices and pay dividends that
will rise. Third, buy gold and
commodities. Gold is currently 2,50
per ounce. Fourth, prepare for higher
costs. Budget for gas at 7 to8 per
gallon by late 2027. Budget for food
costs up 40%, budget for imported goods
up 35%. This is coming. Fifth, pay
attention to geopolitics. If the US
invades another oil exporting country,
the timeline accelerates. If Saudi
Arabia announces UAN acceptance, that is
the trigger. Position yourself before
the announcements, not after. And sixth,
understand that this is not temporary.
The petro dollar is not coming back. The
system that allowed the US to print
unlimited money for 50 years is ending.
What comes next is adjustment. A lower
standard of living, higher costs, a
weaker currency. This is the new
reality. The invasion of Venezuela on
January 3rd, 2026 was sold as a law
enforcement operation against a
naroterrorist. But what it really was
was the last desperate act of an empire
trying to hold on to a monetary system
that is collapsing. They invaded a
country to force it back into the dollar
system. They showed the world that the
petro dollar is maintained through
military power, not economic strength.
And in doing so, they accelerated the
very thing they were trying to prevent.
Countries are now racing to leave the
dollar system before they become the
next Venezuela. The petro dollar is
dying. Not in 10 years, not in 5 years,
right now. And you have 12 to 18 months
before the full weight of this hits your
wallet. You have been warned. The age of
the petro dollar is ending. The age of
dollar dominance is ending. And what
comes next is a multi-polar world where
the US is one power among several, not
the dominant power. Your cost of living
is about to double. Your savings are
about to lose a third of their value.
And there's nothing you can do to stop
it. But you can protect yourself if you
act now. Smash that like button.
Subscribe to this channel. Because in
the next video, I'm going to show you
what happens when the government
realizes the dollar is collapsing and
they start looking for assets to seize.
And the target is your 401k, $7.3
trillion in retirement accounts. And
there is already legal authority to
confiscate it. Argentina did it. Poland
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