
Dave Collum and Rudy Havenstein warn that a merged Fed-Treasury is eroding the middle class and driving markets toward an inevitable collapse.
Dave Collum and Rudy Havenstein argue that the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury have effectively merged, enabling reckless fiscal policy that fuels inflation, distorts housing, and deepens wealth inequality. They contend real inflation far outpaces official numbers, eroding purchasing power and locking younger generations out of homeownership. Financial illiteracy, predatory lending, and private equity exploitation compound the problem, while political leadership, across parties, protects itself through systemic cover-ups and selective justice. They distrust official narratives on major events, view the market melt-up as unsustainable, and believe the ruling class is steering the country toward social unrest and economic crisis.
“The Fed is Congress’s drug dealer… they’ve acted as an agent of congressional profligacy since 2008.”
“If you think the boomers are going to transfer their wealth without it getting repriced, you’re out of your mind.”
“Half the country has been in a depression since 2008, and nobody cares about them.”
“Only the small secrets need to be protected. The large ones are kept secret by public incredulity.”
“There’s a two-tiered system of justice in this country, completely obvious to everyone except the Attorney General.”
“Cash is freedom… once they ban cash, they can monitor and control everything you do.”
“Quit looking for political saviors. The system will swallow them whole.”
“The gold guys and the Bitcoin guys are passengers on the same hijacked plane.”
“This movie is going to end badly… nothing goes on forever in this game.”
The episode paints a picture of an economic and political system run for the benefit of a small, entrenched elite, with central banks, corporate power, and government acting in concert to maintain control while masking structural decline. Collum and Havenstein stress that real reform won’t come from party politics or elections, but from individuals building parallel systems to preserve financial sovereignty, share truthful information, and strengthen communities. In their view, the corruption is bipartisan, the problems systemic, and the eventual reckoning unavoidable.