
August 26, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 says governors can only be removed “for cause” — meaning malfeasance, not politics.
Trump cites alleged mortgage fraud (charges Cook denies) as his justification.
But the timing is telling: markets sit at historic highs, tech valuations are stretched to perfection, and even the hint of volatility could topple the indexes.
Trump has spent months berating Jerome Powell for not cutting rates. Now he’s maneuvering to add enough loyal voices to the Board of Governors to outvote him. If successful, the Fed’s independence — already wobbling — could collapse.

August 25, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

August 22, 2025 • Andrew Packer

August 27, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
The construction industry is contracting. The number of permit applications recently hit a two-year low, meaning builders are not seeing much growth.
In fact, builders are having to add a lot of incentives just to sell the homes they’ve got out there. And in fact, when we talk about building starts, it’s at an 11-month low. In other words, demand for construction workers isn’t booming. It’s quite the opposite.

August 26, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

August 25, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
August 26, 2025 • Dominic Frisby
Trump wants to revitalise America’s Rust Belt. But there is more to it than that. As the curtains pulled back with Covid, the extent to which the US has been operating with its trousers down was exposed: an excessive dependence on China and its supply chains for too many strategically essential products, especially related to health, tech and the military.
Then, during the Ukraine conflict, NATO found itself unable to match Russian production. The US, in short, is struggling to produce critical goods. It’s why Trump keeps harping on about rare earth metals. It is vulnerable.
The answer is to engineer a “managed decline” of the dollar as global reserve asset.
August 26, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
August 25, 2025 • James Hickman
The other issue is that there are so many federal laws, rules, and regulations, that even the federal government can’t take a step without tripping over red tape.
So how do they expect the private sector to fare any better when the potential presence of the Florida bonneted bat can cause all progress to come crashing down?
They need to take a chainsaw to federal regulations if they want to spur the type of economic growth America needs in order to grow itself out of its debt problem.
August 22, 2025 • Andrew Packer
The absolute bare minimum for a member of Congress is to be a voice for the people of their district.
As a Democrat or Republican, they have certain issues that may feel more important and worthy of time and legislation — but constituents need to be heard too, not just brushed off.
America works best when policies focus on creating a thriving and growing middle class, not supporting an oligarchic donor class.
August 22, 2025 • Andrew Packer
Measured in gold, stocks have underperformed the metal since the U.S. left the remnants of the gold standard in 1971.
You can see a small blip in stocks around 2000, reflecting not only the dotcom bubble, but gold hitting a generational low.
Sure, if you only held Apple, Tesla, and NVIDIA over the past 15 years, you may have fared better. Different timeframes will lead to different results.
But it goes to show that even though stocks are the best game in town, there’s still a place for gold in your portfolio.
And right now, gold mining stocks are starting to break higher, buoyed by higher earnings and cash flow potential for quarters to come.
August 21, 2025 • John Robb
In 2016, the red network fell apart after the election, as nobody could agree on what to do once the objective was completed (i.e., getting Trump into office).
In 2024, the result was different. The red network became a loose association of large social media accounts that share a common resonance. This structure kept the network relatively cohesive after the election, and many of these large accounts became part of the new government.
However, since these large accounts don’t agree, but only resonate on some core themes, forks were inevitable. So, although the red network’s new configuration did provide it some much-needed cohesion, it wasn’t a complete solution to its core problem.

August 21, 2025 • Andrew Packer
With traders still betting on a quarter-point rate cut in September, we have just one simple question: Why?
After all, gold is near all-time highs. Ditto stocks. Even bitcoin, which hit an all-time high last week and is only down 8%.
The fact of the matter is, the Fed has a history of cutting interest rates while assets are still trending higher, if not near or at all-time highs.

August 21, 2025 • Andrew Packer
Trump’s attacks on Lisa Cook are but a prelude to the major event of the week — a speech from Fed Chairman Powell from the central bank’s Jackson Hole, Wyoming retreat this week.
This year, investors expect fireworks. If so, that’ll be the first time in about 9 years when a Fed speech from the Jackson Hole retreat mattered.
Back in 2016, then-Fed Chair Janet Yellen used the retreat as the opportunity to note that the U.S. economy was “resiliant” and could support a quarter-point rate cut that September.

August 20, 2025 • Zoltan Istvan Gyurko
In the early 21st century, as we pump trillions into AI systems that we increasingly do not understand, we are confronted by a paradox as old as Prometheus: that to gain fire is to risk the wrath of gods — or to become gods ourselves.
But these thinkers aren’t building heaven or hell. They’re building something stranger: a successor species not born of biology but of code and concept, free from carbon and chaos, capable of exploring dimensions of consciousness we have only dreamed of.
This isn’t extinction in the Hollywood sense. It’s evolution. Not the end of meaning — but the beginning of deeper meaning, designed not by divine intervention or natural selection, but by minds we taught to think better than us.
If that offends your human pride (and it does mine), then you and I may be clinging to the past.
But if you believe that intelligence is sacred, then you understand that its purpose is not to remain chained to Homo sapiens, but to explore the universe without us, or perhaps with us, in new form.

August 20, 2025 • Andrew Packer
Cash holders saw their worst returns in the 2010s. Although inflation was moderate during that decade, and the Fed was arguably fighting deflation following the Great Financial Crisis, banks largely paid no interest to depositors.
That’s improved since the Fed aggressively raised interest rates in 2022-2023. Investors are almost getting a positive return after inflation.
But with rates coming down, potentially aggressively under a new Fed Chair next year, that trend will worsen.
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