“I am altering the deal. Pray I don’t alter it any further.” – The Empire Strikes Back

I always felt disappointed when I lost a model rocket as a kid. I guess I have thrust issues. (all memes as found)
Am I the only one who feels like the Fed© has been auditioning to play Darth Vader® in the Disney™ Star Wars: Sith on Ice cast since about 2008?
We’re well into the Fourth Turning® now, and Strauss and Howe laid it out clear as day: crisis, chaos, and a whole lot of “what the hell just happened?” And boy, did they ever deliver.
- War grinding on in Ukraine.
- Fresh conflict kicking off with Iran – airstrikes, oil price jitters, the works.
- Tariffs flying like confetti at a parade nobody wanted.
- February hits and we lose 92,000 jobs just like that.
Yet somehow the stock market just, well, keeps going. The Dow® is still near all-time highs, but it’s less than 50,000 so I guess it’s okay to ask Pam Bondi questions about Epstein now. The NASDAQ© is shrugging off bad news like it’s just another Wednesday. Prices are steady. It’s almost impressive.
Almost.
Here’s the thing that keeps me up at night: this steadiness isn’t natural. I think it’s juiced. Freshly printed money, courtesy of the Federal Reserve® and its never-ending balance sheet expansion. Tectonic shifts are happening everywhere: geopolitics, energy, labor.

Pa Wilder always told me to not spend too much on headphones. That’s sound advice.
Wall Street acts like it’s business as usual. That’s not resilience. That’s a managed decline wearing a happy face.
Think about it. The real economy? People are cutting back. Groceries are heavier on the wallet, so families skip the steak and finance Encharitos© for six months from Taco Bell®. Credit card balances are climbing while actual stuff bought is shrinking. The money printing isn’t creating wealth it’s masking the fact that the purchasing power is evaporating for regular people on the things they need to buy all the time.
But cracks are showing elsewhere.
BlackRock™. You know, the biggest asset manager on the planet. Just recently they slammed the door on their own shareholders trying to pull money out of a $26 billion private credit fund. Redemption requests hit 9.3%, so they capped it and only let a fraction of that cash out.
“Sorry, billionaires, no soup for you this quarter. Live like a wagie and crowdfund that Nachos Bellgrande©.”

Things are so tight that the Vatican is allowing tithes to be paid via PrayPal®.
This isn’t some glitch. It’s happened before with other funds, and it’s spreading. When the biggest players start gating withdrawals, it’s not because everything’s fine and dandy. It’s because the underlying assets are illiquid and selling them fast would reveal prices that don’t match the fairy-tale valuations on the books.
Translation: the music’s still playing, but the chairs are getting scarce. Where does this end?
Well, first off, it doesn’t end. Not really. Not in the neat, tidy way the TV experts promise. Markets and prices, and whole economies work a lot like faults deep in the Earth’s crust. Stress builds up slowly for years, sometimes decades, with hardly any movement you can see on the surface. The tectonic plates stay locked together.
Everything looks calm and stable. Then one day the pressure becomes too great and it all snaps like a 1980s postal worker, an 8.3 on the Richter scale. The ground rips open and the entire landscape shifts twenty feet in seconds while people are shaking like a stripper in a vat of melting ice cream just trying not to fall down. I guess that was an oddly specific metaphor wrapped in another metaphor.
Anyway.

Sam told the orphans they should play Grand Theft Auto® so they can be wanted.
When the shaking finally stops, things don’t go back to where they were. The new normal is permanently different. And when we’re talking asset prices in our funny money dollars, that shift is almost always higher than before. Markets do the exact same dance.
Silver prices? Steady as the rocks they were mined out of for years at a time. Stress builds quietly. Then inflation, crisis, or panic hits and the price explodes upward and the new resting level is higher than before.
Same story in 2008-2011: $9 to $49, overshot, pulled back, never returned to the old lows.
Gold does the same dance. Fixed at $35 an ounce until Nixon slammed the gold window shut in 1971. Then the printing started and it flew to $800, crashed to $300, but the next plateau was higher.
2000s bull run led to $1,900 gold, then a pullback, then new records above $3,000 and climbing. Each release of pressure overshoots, then settles higher when measured in our funny money.
Silver and gold and assets are telling us the story.
The money printers are holding the fault lines, sort of. The pressure underneath is still growing every day as silver and gold and A.I. bubble. Meanwhile, debt, demographics, global realignment, and the whole Fourth Turning stew.

An oracle once told me I would hit my leg at school. She was right. It was my desk to knee.
If I were giving advice to a young person starting out today, here’s at least part of what I’d say:
- Buy stuff that’s real. Physical silver and gold, every single year, with at least part of whatever you save. Doesn’t have to be a ton. An ounce of gold here, a few ounces of silver there. Stack it. Hold it. Treat it like insurance, not a get-rich-quick scheme.
- Land if you can swing it and cover the taxes and upkeep dirt doesn’t print more of itself and if it blows up at least you own a hole in the ground.
- Stocks? Sure, invest in them too, as long as there’s still a stock market that isn’t just a government-sponsored casino.
- Diversify, but never forget: paper assets only work while the system that backs the paper holds together.
- The real key? Build skills. Learn to produce something useful. Grow food. Fix things. Trade with neighbors. Get out of debt that isn’t productive.
- Avoid crowds. Get out of cities if you’re still there: a year too soon beats thirty seconds too late.
Because here’s the truth nobody on CNBC® wants to say out loud: the managed decline might buy time, but it doesn’t buy forever. The money printing is papering over cracks that are getting wider. When the next quake comes, and it will, gold and silver won’t just hold value. They’ll ratchet higher again, overshooting on the way up, then settling at a new, higher plateau. It’s default, but just enough to bleed you a little.
It’s the same pattern every cycle. History’s a harsh teacher, and she doesn’t offer extra credit.
The Fourth Turning isn’t here to be fair. It’s here to reset. The people who see the pattern coming, who stack real assets quietly every year, who prepare instead of panic are the ones who come out the other side with options.

There’s no way that this can go bad, right?
The rest? They’ll be financing their next Taco Bell® run on a maxed-out card while wondering why the market “suddenly” stopped cooperating.
Things stay the same, until they don’t.
Stack accordingly. And pray the deal doesn’t get altered any further.
Disclaimer: I write funny things, and you should know that by now so this isn’t investment advice. I do have positions in silver and gold, because I’m not completely allergic to reality. Do your own homework. Talk to a professional who isn’t trying to sell you the next hot ETF® or his children.

The winningest winnarz evarz. Duh, winning.
Taco Smell? Goyslop.
Door Dash? Have another plate hambeast.
It seems like we are entering the “government is always shut down because spending cap” phase. Nothing good coming from all this debt.
Well, government shutdown for three or so years would be okay.
https://gizadeathstar.com/2026/03/ai-agents-and-kleptocurrencies-the-folly-of-financialization/
“Like 1929, there are pied pipers from the major banks and brokerage houses – and now, the major klepto-currencies and tech companies – all assuring us that everything is ok, and that “the market is sound.””
It’s all gonna be fine.
Half of US spending is done by 10% of the people. This is not good.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/economy/2025/11/25/us-economy-spending-rich/87453670007/
In France such an imbalance led to the gilliotine. I still think similar public executions for entertainment in 20x0s America could be done using a cheap microwave oven with a hole cut in the bottom. Or worse. We’ve made 1984 into an instruction manual; soon it will be Mad Max’s turn. However crazy you thing the resolution of this mess will be, think again. It’s gonna be crazier.
10 4 the fork is ready to attack
https://cms.zerohedge.com/s3/files/inline-images/2026-03-12_06-32-56.jpg?itok=rS96kszD
https://jonathanturley.org/2026/03/12/eat-the-rich-sanders-and-khanna-introduce-federal-billionaires-tax/
This is not good. And it won’t last.
One addition to your list of suggestions: become proficient in some form of self defense and practice enough to maintain that proficiency. It could be a firearm or even a less lethal device like pepper spray. Whatever the choice, practice with it enough so that you know what to do in an emergency. As my DIL found out, it doesn’t do much good to keep a stun baton in the car if you don’t keep the battery charged.
Bingo.
Well said Sir. One of those skills to acquire needs to be self defense. IMHO our diversity is going to make stronger survivors.
Yes, a winnowing.
Not to mention a gazillion $$$ of derivatives that will never be covered. When crude skyrocketed last week, it crashed quickly. Why? PM futures (And Dr. Copper) were liquidated to cover margin calls. Naked shorts ensued.
The psychic woman (Jenny) that Bix Weir has on weekly has been saying for years that once the Pedos are completely exposed, JPM will crash and take down the whole kit and caboodle.
One can only imagine what NYC, Shee-cargo, El-Lay & Frisco, not to mention Cleveland, ATL & Charlotte, will become when EBTs are worthless. And ATMs get turned off. Bank holiday(s) too?
John, another recommended action is to have what my attorney calls “walking around money”. At least a thousand is reasonable in our area.
When (and why) did Charlotte get so bad? I remember interviewing for a job there back in the 90’s and it seemed like a beautiful and safe city. I recall there was a rougher “inner city” area to the north , but it seemed to be well isolated from the nicer communities to the south.
Anon-
We now live between Charleston (her condo) and Beaufort (SC, our marsh house ), so only I can comment on CLT. I’ve been doing biz around there since 1976, I moved my business/lived there from W-S starting in 2000, left in 2018. But still owned my office until last year. Still up every other week on biz for 2-3 days.
Charlotte’s a great place in some areas. It got bad after Pat McCrory retired as Mayor 10 years ago. As the last Republican in that office.
Your take is right. Downtown was safe & fun in the early 2000s even for older guys in their late 40s like me then; it was a happy hunting ground for late 20s sl*ts. These days, my group hangs around the SouthPark/Eastover/Myers Park area, specifically Providence Road Sundries, The Palm, Selwyn Pub & Providence Cafe. We deserted Selwyn Pub (4PM drinking) for Carmella’s on Montford because the owner is an A**hole.
In CLT, all those areas are still safe & fun. Beaufort is much better. Great restaurants, few but decent Yankees. No local snobs. And we have The Fillin’ Station, our 5-Star Upper Middle Class DiveB. 72 Sea Island Pkwy, I believe. The bar crowd starts at 2:30PM. The city built an overflow lot next door. Do the math. The Gray Brothers suggested that.
If you can work remote, it’s the best. Mini Charleston, sorta affortable.
I lived in Matthews in the 80’s it was nice then. Last trip there 2025 was an eye opener. The place is a ghetto and the Indian population is over the top. Sad
son24-
It’s a hole these days. Early 2000s did lots of heating oil tank excavations & inert foam in-place abandonments. Plus, dug up the gas tanks at Harry Williams Exxon downtown 8 years ago. Today? 50K pop. 30 years ago 15K.
If you think it’s bad there, drive up on 485 to 77 and see what Exits 23 through 35 encompass.
POS. Look at Google Maps of that area. Much worse.
And if the borrower can’t pay, the lender will. And since the lenders never pay, it will be . . . us.
The stock market will continue to rise (overall) as long as at least one of two things keep happening:
1. The Fed keeps printing more money.
2. Retirement accounts keep dumping more cash into the system than they withdraw.
Or the billionaires panic.