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The Global Financial Illusion: How Central Banks Control the World

March 17, 2025 by
The Global Financial Illusion: How Central Banks Control the World
Devon Casey
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The scale of mass change we’ve witnessed in recent years is unprecedented. Unfortunately, much of this change is here to stay. The level of deception and propaganda imposed upon the public by governments worldwide is not only alarming but a stark reality we must confront. However, what’s even more insidious is the web of lies spun by central banks across the globe.

Unlike governments, which are often scrutinized and challenged, central banks operate under a veil of complexity, convincing the masses that their monetary policies are beyond ordinary comprehension. This illusion of expertise has allowed them to dictate financial policy with little resistance, positioning themselves as both the architects of economic crises and the sole providers of solutions—solutions that only deepen the problems they claim to fix.

The Debt-Based Economy: A System Designed to Fail

Central banking, in the grand scope of history, is a relatively modern financial construct. The system we live under today is entirely debt-based, meaning that it can only function if new debt is constantly created and injected into the economy. Without this continuous expansion, the entire financial system collapses. We will see what and how that can happen

This is why we see endless cycles of economic manipulation—wars, policy changes, financial crises, pharmaceutical interventions, and emergency government spending programs. These are not mere coincidences; they are deliberate mechanisms designed to justify the relentless expansion of debt. The economy doesn’t just require more debt—it requires exponentially increasing debt simply to maintain itself.

The fundamental reality of this system is that debt creation directly fuels inflation. The more debt that enters circulation, the more the purchasing power of existing currency declines. Governments, enabled by their central banks, flood the system with liquidity under the guise of stimulus programs and social spending, further exacerbating the very problem they claim to address.

As Henry Kissinger famously stated:

"Who controls the food supply controls the people; who controls the energy can control whole continents; who controls money can control the world."


The Rate Hike Illusion: A Deliberate Misleading of the Public

For months, central banks such as the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have aggressively raised interest rates, claiming that this strategy will curb skyrocketing inflation. Yet, to date, these actions have proven completely ineffective. Why? Because they were never intended to work.

The truth is that raising interest rates does not directly combat inflation. Instead, it suppresses demand by slowing economic growth—pushing businesses toward bankruptcy, increasing unemployment, and stifling consumer spending. However, it does nothing to address the real driver of inflation: the ever-expanding money supply.

If central banks truly wanted to stop inflation, they wouldn’t be focused on interest rates. Instead, they would take steps to contract the money supply, such as raising capital reserve requirements for commercial banks. But they won’t do that, because doing so would shrink the financial system itself—a move that goes directly against the debt-driven model they need to sustain.

Make no mistake: central banks want inflation. Inflation erodes the value of money, making it easier for governments to service their massive debts. It also forces individuals deeper into financial dependency, ensuring continued reliance on credit and, by extension, the banking system itself.

What Comes Next?

As the cycle continues, we should expect a predictable sequence of events:

  1. More Propaganda: The narrative will shift from "inflation is worsening" to "inflation is cooling," despite no meaningful changes to the root cause.
  2. The Great Pivot: The Federal Reserve (likely first) will transition from aggressive rate hikes to a “pause” or “pivot,” claiming that economic conditions require a more balanced approach.
  3. Monetary Expansion Resumes: Despite claims of tightening, the global money supply will continue to expand, ensuring inflationary pressures persist.
  4. Public Distrust Grows: As people feel the continued erosion of their purchasing power, confidence in the financial system will weaken, leading to increased interest in alternative stores of value (e.g., gold, silver, decentralized assets).

The deception will continue for as long as the public allows it. But the truth remains: central banks are not here to fix the problem. They are here to perpetuate it—because that is the very foundation of their power.

The question is: how much longer will we allow them to do it?

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