This Is What Happens If Trump Does The Unthinkable…

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Cameron Long
 

  • @LondonCrusader says:

    I don’t have enough popcorn for this twisted nightmare.

    • @alanheadrick7997 says:

      There is going to be a pop corn shortage.

    • @conspiracystacker says:

      @@alanheadrick7997☺️

    • @StevePaige says:

      You eat popcorn during nightmares?

    • @ghanna7787 says:

      Still eating popcorn from Mueller?

    • @TaiwoEgbayelo-n6r says:

      The market is constantly changing, isn’t it? I must say, being a bit hands-off and having an expert guiding me has made all the difference in navigating these waters. I’ve managed to secure a 60% profit in the last 6 months alone. Some might doubt, but that’s okay – results speak for themselves. Success came when I stopped trying to juggle everything and sought professional guidance. The right expertise can accelerate financial goals significantly while reducing the effort and stress involved.

  • @lucimich0224 says:

    Older adults need the interest from CD’s this is DEVASTATING for them and Trump could care less.

    • @Jsmith1515 says:

      More than that, he doesn’t even remotely understand. But I agree, even if he did, he wouldn’t care.

    • @galliogarcia says:

      No way that’s your position 🤣

    • @galliogarcia says:

      If older adults are relying on interest rates from CD’s so that a lower rate would devastate them, interest rates are the least of their issues. At least put your money in a T-Bill if you’re gonna park it where it’s gonna make you almost nothing. Or you could be a reasonably educated person and buy mutual funds. In any case, anyone relying on the interest of CD’s is being played by the bank who is turning around and parking that money where you should be parking it and actually playing the game, not being played.

      Besides all of that. Biden’s inflation and high rates made it 10x harder for a young guy like me to buy a house, and guess what, I didn’t wine about it. I worked overtime and bought a house. Stop whining, come up with a plan and adapt, nothing worse than an older adult still whining like a toddler

    • @thinkthisover says:

      @@galliogarcia Fools take out loans to make yourself poor and the banks rich. Get smart and buy what you need instead of what you want. It is called living within your means.

    • @galliogarcia says:

      ⁠@thinkthisover what about what I just said would suggest to you that I don’t live within my means?

  • @WJ165 says:

    Interest rates should be whatever inflation is. Therefore you are never benefited nor penalized for holding cash.

  • @alanheadrick7997 says:

    Somebody is making billions off of this. Just not sure at what cost to the country. But it is a good distraction from ep-steen.

  • @coreytrevor1311 says:

    I think they want the interest rates lower because of the national debt. That is the elephant in the room.

    • @Just2aguy says:

      Thank you captain obvious lol

    • @ericsheasby says:

      But the debt, or more importantly the interest on the debt is the interest paid to Treasury yields. They could spike!

    • @thenoodlebuddy says:

      ​@@ericsheasbyyep the government has messed up for so long they’re backed into a corner and now it’s a catch22. They are living on borrowed time

    • @404Listnotfound says:

      The bond markets are too soft and saturated, last debt reissuance started at 5% didnt finish selling till nearly 6% interest – thats market rate. 1% ffr would artificially pump financial markets, but give all of the buying power to large corporate interests, and greatly lessen the dollars value especially for regular people.

    • @SexiSeahawk69 says:

      ⁠because president JFK and EO 11110 to give the power back to the people of America instead of the zionist c@BaAAAL who worship B@aaAAAL and they killed him for giving Americans the power to have real money INTEREST FREE and get America out of debt and everyone else would have followed.

      Then as a result nobody would have war anymore because there’s no bank to start all that shi to profit with interest and enslave us.

      So yeah. You’re cute tho! Still ridin with trump after he literally did the opposite of everything he said he’d do that you wanted him to do when you voted for him?

      Oh you just don’t want to know do you. Naive

  • @Felale says:

    We still pretending the president has authority over the private banking cabal?

    • @jamessteele7010 says:

      Why is everyone pretending like this? I don’t get it.

    • @badinstinctsYoutube-xb3oj says:

      Why are you pretending that he doesn’t?

    • @jamessteele7010 says:

      @@badinstinctsYoutube-xb3oj 😂 the Supreme Court presided over this already. In the 111 years the Fed has been around, a few presidents have tried and failed to do just that. So why are you pretending? 😂

    • @benjackson8103 says:

      @@jamessteele7010and that’s a good thing? A secret group of powerful bankers that control the money supply that cannot be voted on?

    • @Nobluffbuff says:

      All roads lead to the private banking cabal.

  • @lewieanderson6579 says:

    Need to raise rates not lower them.

    • @sct9963 says:

      well stupid last time Trump was in office stock market went up up 81.25% in 4 years!

      8 years of Obama stock market went up 14%

    • @raybod1775 says:

      Rates don’t need to be higher as long as they are above inflation.

    • @badinstinctsYoutube-xb3oj says:

      In fact, higher interest rates cause higher inflation. Just look through history when rates were 16% or so. Inflation was out of control. We had 2008-2020 where rates were pretty much zero and there was no inflation. Blaming inflation on interest rates after the government gave out trillions, there was hundreds of billions of dollars in fraud, theft, etc during covid, that is what caused inflation, not low rates.

    • @trobertday1390 says:

      Lowering the short-term rates will likely lead to a spike in longer-term rates, so there is no need to lower rates in haste. I personally think the rates should remain high so when there is a recession, weak and unproductive industries and assets won’t be able to get cheap financing to continue the zombie-economy effect.

    • @HxrisF1 says:

      @@badinstinctsYoutube-xb3ojno rates were higher at 16 percent BECAUSE inflation was so high not the other way around, lol

  • @welcometoclownworld69 says:

    Hyperinflation happens

    • @anrit5972 says:

      Especially when a moron that’s playing a 4D game of chess in fantasy land still hasn’t realised that when wielding his business acumen it traditionally blows up in his face.

  • @SarahJ.Oakley says:

    Every time things start to feel “normal,” something like this pops up.
    we’re all planning retirements, IRAs, and 401ks like the system isn’t hanging by a thread.
    I don’t want another rant. I want someone who’s already moving different.
    is that even possible anymore?

    • @ChadJ.Stapler says:

      I used to stress over headlines too — politics, Fed moves, elections. Then I realized none of it mattered if I wasn’t positioned right.
      Shifted when I found Carla Keros. No theories. Just live, tactical trades. Real alignment. Been dialed in ever since.

    • @Education007-sj2zh says:

      america every 4 years: “this election will decide the future”
      also america: forgets everything in 3 weeks
      meanwhile my portfolio just cries in silence 😭

    • @James6025-f7v says:

      wait — Carla Keros?
      people keep dropping her name in random alpha groups.
      is she legit trading or just another prepper with charts?

    • @ChadJ.Stapler says:

      Carla Keros is among the best traders on the internet and I’ll keep saying it every time.

    • @ChadJ.Stapler says:

      She’s mostly on Telegrams, using the user name.

  • @riderpowermanagement6197 says:

    Stop spending $$ that we don’t have! It’s not fucking rocket science

    • @paranoidandroid9825 says:

      There is no money that’s the deceit and if there is no money there is no DEBT in the PUBLIC you cannot pay DEBT with DEBT.

    • @ltkreg says:

      Washington DC being what it is, good luck with that.

    • @johnathanfindlay9112 says:

      Rocket science is easier than economics. Rocket science is physics+engineering. Economics is a complex system with elements of fluid+system dynamics, political sciences, geopolitics, history, production, monetary policy, and philosophical questions of ethics and morality. There is also far less misinformation about rocket science and how it works. Based on your statement I have to assume you are working from a simplified model that includes loanable funds etc. There is a reason we got to the moon before we eliminate poverty.

      You cannot solve a problem by trivializing it, that is a common cause of unintended consequences. Never trust an economic theory that depends a lot on “simplifying assumptions.”

    • @janerikpe5852 says:

      Spend your USD and invest them abroad. Sell your US assets.

    • @BrunoHeggli-zp3nl says:

      It’s ok,it’s not about spending money they don’t have,it’s about for what you spend it!

  • @AKATenn says:

    Lower interest rates to 1%, debt goes to infinity, the economy ends.

    Relatively speaking, none of the borrowed money will be used to fix the debt problem, it’ll all just be used to make the rich richer.

  • @WheelerRickRambles says:

    Inflation would skyrocket on effectively free money.

  • @karln3463 says:

    Why do you think the fed committee would go along with any of this? Each governor has a vote, one guys doesn’t control the fed rates.

  • @smootheyluke says:

    You work for 42yrs to have $2m in your retirement, Meanwhile some people are putting just $100k in a meme coin for just few months and now they are multi millionaires I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life

    • @smootheyluke says:

      she’s mostly on Telegrams with her verified account, using the user name below

    • @smootheyluke says:

      @evelynmya

    • @isabellhood9704 says:

      She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.

    • @SkylaRiley-y1p says:

      Evelyn mya has really set the standard for others to follow, we love her here in the Uk 🇬🇧 as she has been really helpful and changed lots of life’s.

    • @sidneymelendez514 says:

      I have been making significant profits in the market by using her daily signals.

  • @bobsacamano7653 says:

    Most people don’t have money as it is. If we get super high inflation due to the 300% interest rate drop. most people will buy nothing.

  • @neideparente1449 says:

    Should not have elected someone who views his presidency as a soap reality show where he is the only attraction and the others don’t matter.

  • @wealth9415 says:

    Sacking Powell would shake financial markets, damage Fed credibility, and provokes political chaos into monetary policy. Whether it would “help” or “hurt” the economy long-term depends almost entirely on who replaces him and how markets perceive that shift. My advice to those feeling the heat of inflation is to trade long-term more than ever. I’ve made over 723k from day trading with Nicole Riddell in just a few weeks. This is one of the best ways to protect your assets in case of a bearish market.

  • @galihpa says:

    Just like what Lyn Alden said *”NOTHING STOPS THIS TRAIN”*

  • @christopherherbert2407 says:

    This situation with Trump possibly doing the unthinkable has me on edge. The uncertainty is shaking the markets, and I have no idea how this could impact my retirement savings. What’s the best way to protect my 401(k) if things spiral out of control? Between the political chaos and economic fallout, I feel completely lost.

    • @RaymondJack-el2js says:

      It’s overwhelming for sure. Trying to figure out how to safeguard your savings amid all this turmoil is tough when you’re on your own.

    • @HectorBailey-zi7du says:

      It’s definitely unsettling, but moments like this are when you need to stay calm and focus on a solid plan. Strategic moves with your 401(k) can really make a difference when things look bleak.

    • @ericbergman7546 says:

      Historically, during periods of political instability or market shocks, it’s smart to review your 401(k) allocations. If you’re nearing retirement, shifting toward safer investments like bonds or stable value funds can help shield your savings. Staying consistent with contributions through dollar-cost averaging remains a reliable strategy even in uncertain times.

    • @georgeearling905 says:

      Rebalancing is key too. When markets react to political events, your portfolio might drift from your ideal mix. Bringing it back in line helps protect against unexpected downturns.

    • @KatelynnCox-qb5er says:

      I know that feeling. When the last big political crisis hit, my 401(k) took a hit and I almost panicked. That’s when I turned to my financial advisor, Paul Cory Cohen.

  • @stevestojanovich3105 says:

    Lower dollar is meant to boost exports. The big problem is too much spending on defence. It went from $500B to $1 Trillion, it should be back at $500B and then have a large tax cut for the poor and middle class which will grow the economy. There will also be a budget surplus.

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