>
Widow of killed fire chief not satisfied with Secret Service suspensions...
Gunman leaves multiple injured at church after shooting cop at Kentucky's Blue Grass Airport
One year later: White House highlight Trump's legacy on anniversary of assassination attempt
Arizona homeowner fined by petty HOA for act of kindness during extreme heat
Magic mushrooms may hold the secret to longevity: Psilocybin extends lifespan by 57%...
Unitree G1 vs Boston Dynamics Atlas vs Optimus Gen 2 Robot– Who Wins?
LFP Battery Fire Safety: What You NEED to Know
Final Summer Solar Panel Test: Bifacial Optimization. Save Money w/ These Results!
MEDICAL MIRACLE IN JAPAN: Paralyzed Man Stands Again After Revolutionary Stem Cell Treatment!
Insulator Becomes Conducting Semiconductor And Could Make Superelastic Silicone Solar Panels
Slate Truck's Under $20,000 Price Tag Just Became A Political Casualty
Wisdom Teeth Contain Unique Stem Cell That Can Form Cartilage, Neurons, and Heart Tissue
Hay fever breakthrough: 'Molecular shield' blocks allergy trigger at the site
So while we're being directed towards the Middle East, I note the easing of the capital rule on banks. This — together with the war — are absolutely totally part of the same equation, despite the fact that not one in a 100 folks will ever know it or realize it, and for that very reason it will progress. Here is the problem…
The US government has quietly initiated a stealth liquidity backdoor for banks by easing capital requirements on Treasury trades. This means:
Banks no longer need to reserve as much capital when holding or trading US government debt, making banks dodgier than they already are.
They can now soak up more Treasury issuance without showing increased risk on their balance sheets, making banks dodgier than they already are.
This injects artificial demand into the Treasury market and helps paper over collapsing organic demand while making banks dodgier than they already are.
This is not a mere policy shift. It's a quiet declaration of structural stress.
What this really means is that the Treasury market, the backbone of the current financial system, is now so fragile and overburdened with issuance that it can no longer function without regulatory distortion.
The US government is now issuing a whopping $1–2 trillion in new debt every quarter.
Foreign buyers like China and Japan are net sellers.
Domestic demand for treasuries is not keeping up.
Yields are becoming increasingly unhinged from real risk.
I'd always thought they'd tap the boomers' capital sitting in pension funds, mandating percentages to be allocated to "safety" or some such hogwash, but this is a new one that I admit I did not see coming — they're turning banks into forced buyers by changing the rules. Sneaky buggers!
It won't be called yield curve control, but this is exactly what it is… and it stinks of desperation.
So where does the Iran distraction come in? Exactly here:
War is a cover for liquidity expansion. War equals narrative control. War is a moral justification for massive capital deployment. And war means optical deferral of systemic accountability (they screwed up biggie, but can't admit to it, because by doing so we'd get a revolution). Far better to send the peasants into a meat grinder (worked in Ukraine).