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America was promised MAGA prosperity.
Instead, it got more debt, more inflation, and jobs that barely pay the rent. 📉
While politicians celebrate “strong economic data,” ordinary people are drowning in higher costs, weaker purchasing power, and an economy that increasingly works only for the top 10%.
The American Dream didn’t disappear overnight… it was slowly outsourced, financialized, and inflated away. 💸🔥
This isn’t just an economic slowdown.
It’s the great unravelling of the middle class.
Learn to Earn with The Macro Butler Financial Academy: https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
Instead, it got more debt, more inflation, and jobs that barely pay the rent. 📉
While politicians celebrate “strong economic data,” ordinary people are drowning in higher costs, weaker purchasing power, and an economy that increasingly works only for the top 10%.
The American Dream didn’t disappear overnight… it was slowly outsourced, financialized, and inflated away. 💸🔥
This isn’t just an economic slowdown.
It’s the great unravelling of the middle class.
Learn to Earn with The Macro Butler Financial Academy: https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
While oil shortages are increasingly becoming a question of “when” rather than “if,” the oil curve has continued its impressive ascent, with year-end crude expectations rising roughly $12 over the past month. Apparently, markets have finally discovered that geopolitical disruptions, strained supply chains, and shrinking inventories may not be the ideal ingredients for “transitory” inflation after all.
As a consequence, U.S. Treasury yields surged higher as markets suddenly remembered that disrupting traffic through the Strait of Hormuz might have consequences for inflation, energy prices, and debt markets. The resulting selloff pushed the 30-year Treasury yield to its highest level since 2007, as investors slowly came to terms with the radical possibility that endless deficits, geopolitical chaos, and structurally higher inflation may not be entirely “well anchored” after all.
Welcome to the next phase of inflation, where prices are no longer only determined by supply and demand, but by how much the algorithm believes you can emotionally tolerate paying. Thanks to digital shelf labels, loyalty programs, in-store cameras, and AI-driven pricing systems, two people standing in the same grocery aisle may soon pay different prices for the exact same product — all in the name of “customer optimization.”
Retailers insist the technology is about convenience, efficiency, and improving the shopping experience, which in modern Orwellian translates roughly to: “the machine now knows your salary, your spending habits, your stress level, and how badly you need oat milk.” Your loyalty card, shopping app, and browsing history have quietly transformed you from customer into monetizable inventory.
https://www.tiktok.com/@write.in.cuteri/video/7636117581631327502?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc&web_id=7547131000448714258
Retailers insist the technology is about convenience, efficiency, and improving the shopping experience, which in modern Orwellian translates roughly to: “the machine now knows your salary, your spending habits, your stress level, and how badly you need oat milk.” Your loyalty card, shopping app, and browsing history have quietly transformed you from customer into monetizable inventory.
https://www.tiktok.com/@write.in.cuteri/video/7636117581631327502?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc&web_id=7547131000448714258
In the future, inflation may not be universal at all. It may become fully personalized — a dynamic subscription service where the better the system knows you, the more efficiently it extracts your purchasing power while politely thanking you for your loyalty.
While once again warning the world that Season 2 of the “Epic F**k Up” could begin at any moment, Donald Copperfield met with Syria’s newly repackaged leadership — yesterday’s battlefield revolutionary now rebranded as a statesman in a tailored Hugo Boss suit. In a region where the rule of law has historically been about as common as ice cubes in the Sahara, Washington apparently concluded that the best path toward influence was not stability, institutions, or reconstruction, but the timeless diplomatic strategy of branding, optics, and perhaps a light spray of “Trump Victory” cologne over the geopolitical rubble.
https://x.com/AH_AlSharaa/status/2056835465429336261
https://x.com/AH_AlSharaa/status/2056835465429336261
As Confucius almost certainly never said, “When the Eagle visits the Dragon, the Bear soon arrives for tea.” Less than a week after Donald Copperfield’s grand diplomatic pilgrimage to Beijing, Tsar Vladimir arrived to reaffirm the ever-deepening friendship between Moscow and the Middle Kingdom, with both leaders once again promoting their vision of a “multipolar world” — loosely translated as “less Washington, more us.” Xi and Putin signed dozens of agreements covering trade, technology, and strategic cooperation while politely reminding the world that sanctions, wars, and global instability have become excellent networking opportunities. Meanwhile, the long-discussed Power of Siberia 2 pipeline remained mysteriously absent from official remarks, proving that in geopolitics, as in ancient philosophy, the most important subject is often the one nobody mentions out loud.
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“When the Strait closes, the pipeline suddenly becomes negotiable.” Russia is now quietly hoping that chaos in Middle East energy markets and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz will make Beijing more flexible on the long-delayed Power of Siberia 2 gas deal. While Xi and Putin continue celebrating their “multipolar friendship,” the reality is that Moscow increasingly depends on China for everything from trade to sanctioned technology imports, while Beijing carefully balances supporting Russia without becoming too visibly attached to the Ukraine war.
In ancient strategic wisdom, this is known as “standing close enough to the Bear to benefit from the hunt, but not close enough to get covered in blood.”
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Every empire believes it’s eternal… right before the decline begins. 🏛📉
Rome had bread, circuses, debt, corruption, and endless wars.
America has stimulus, Truth Social, trillion-dollar deficits, and “transitory” inflation. 🇺🇸🔥
History doesn’t repeat exactly — but it rhymes loud enough for investors willing to listen.
The real question isn’t whether the system is changing.
It’s who will survive the transition when the plutocracy finally cracks.
Learn to Earn with The Macro Butler Financial Academy: https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
Rome had bread, circuses, debt, corruption, and endless wars.
America has stimulus, Truth Social, trillion-dollar deficits, and “transitory” inflation. 🇺🇸🔥
History doesn’t repeat exactly — but it rhymes loud enough for investors willing to listen.
The real question isn’t whether the system is changing.
It’s who will survive the transition when the plutocracy finally cracks.
Learn to Earn with The Macro Butler Financial Academy: https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
When a central bank speaks with many voices, markets should prepare for turbulence beneath the surface of apparent harmony. The latest FOMC minutes under Chairman “Too Late Jerome” revealed a Federal Reserve increasingly divided between officials fearing persistent inflation and others still dreaming of eventual rate cuts. A growing number of policymakers favoured removing the Fed’s easing bias altogether, while several officials acknowledged that renewed inflationary pressures tied to war and energy markets could justify keeping rates higher for longer — or even tightening further if inflation refuses to obey official forecasts. Meanwhile, stronger labour market data briefly restored confidence that the economy remains stable, proving once again that in modern monetary philosophy, one resilient payroll report can erase many inconvenient concerns.
https://www.scribd.com/document/1041425699/Fomc-Minutes-20260429
https://www.scribd.com/document/1041425699/Fomc-Minutes-20260429
The deeper message from the minutes is that the Fed no longer speaks with unified conviction. Like an empire debating the weather while the river quietly rises, policymakers remain divided over whether the next move should be a cut, a hike, or simply another meeting explaining why certainty remains “data dependent.”
As the Empire quietly prepares the release schedule for “Epic F**k Up: Season 2,” the Treasury successfully auctioned $16 billion in 20-year bonds at a reassuringly elevated 5.122% yield — the second-highest stop in the history of the modern 20-year auction, surpassed only by the delightful panic levels of October 2023.
The auction cleared exactly at the When Issued level, ending a brief and apparently temporary streak of healthier demand. Investors, it seems, continue demanding increasingly generous compensation for the privilege of financing endless deficits, geopolitical adventures, and the modern monetary philosophy known as “don’t worry, the Fed will figure something out eventually.”
The auction cleared exactly at the When Issued level, ending a brief and apparently temporary streak of healthier demand. Investors, it seems, continue demanding increasingly generous compensation for the privilege of financing endless deficits, geopolitical adventures, and the modern monetary philosophy known as “don’t worry, the Fed will figure something out eventually.”
The only visible crack in the Treasury’s latest funding exercise was a softer bid-to-cover ratio of 2.55, down from 2.68 in April and the weakest since February — a gentle reminder that investor enthusiasm for financing the Empire’s expanding balance sheet may not be entirely limitless.
Still, the auction internals remained solid. Indirect bidders absorbed 67.7% of the issue, well above recent averages, while Direct bidders took another 22.9%, leaving dealers with just 9.4% of the allocation — one of the smallest dealer takedowns on record. Apparently, global investors are still willing to buy long-duration debt at 5% yields, at least until the next episode of fiscal improvisation airs.
Still, the auction internals remained solid. Indirect bidders absorbed 67.7% of the issue, well above recent averages, while Direct bidders took another 22.9%, leaving dealers with just 9.4% of the allocation — one of the smallest dealer takedowns on record. Apparently, global investors are still willing to buy long-duration debt at 5% yields, at least until the next episode of fiscal improvisation airs.
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Overall, the auction was surprisingly solid, although recent bond market volatility may ultimately prove to be merely the opening chapter of a much larger repricing cycle. For decades, U.S. Treasuries were treated as the world’s “risk-free” asset. Increasingly, however, investors are beginning to question whether sovereign debt can truly remain risk-free when fiscal deficits expand structurally, inflation pressures persist, and reserve currencies become more closely tied to geopolitical strategy and financial sanctions.
The real risk may not simply be higher yields, but the gradual erosion of confidence in the long-term purchasing power and political neutrality underlying sovereign debt markets themselves.
The real risk may not simply be higher yields, but the gradual erosion of confidence in the long-term purchasing power and political neutrality underlying sovereign debt markets themselves.
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America once built the world’s greatest infrastructure. 🇺🇸🏗
Now it struggles with collapsing bridges, aging power grids, broken supply chains, and airports that look like abandoned shopping malls.
While trillions were printed for Wall Street and forever wars, the real economy quietly decayed underneath.
Infrastructure isn’t political — it’s the foundation of growth, productivity, and national power. ⚡️📉
The next economic superpower won’t be the country with the best slogans.
It will be the one that can still build infrastructure for its citizens rather than destroy those of other countries.
Learn to Earn with The Macro Butler Financial Academy: https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
Now it struggles with collapsing bridges, aging power grids, broken supply chains, and airports that look like abandoned shopping malls.
While trillions were printed for Wall Street and forever wars, the real economy quietly decayed underneath.
Infrastructure isn’t political — it’s the foundation of growth, productivity, and national power. ⚡️📉
The next economic superpower won’t be the country with the best slogans.
It will be the one that can still build infrastructure for its citizens rather than destroy those of other countries.
Learn to Earn with The Macro Butler Financial Academy: https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
US manufacturing activity surged in May to its strongest level in four years as companies rushed to front-run the inflation shock triggered by the Middle East excursion — because nothing says “healthy economy” like panic-buying raw materials before the next oil tanker disappears from the Strait of Hormuz. Factory activity hit a 48-month high while input prices posted their biggest jump since 2022, supply chains slowed again, and businesses quietly started cutting jobs as costs exploded. In short, manufacturers are still producing, consumers are still paying more, and economists are once again discovering that “temporary inflation” has a remarkable talent for overstaying its welcome.
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In a nutshell, America’s factories are booming for all the wrong reasons: panic-buying, exploding energy costs, and the growing realization that “transitory inflation” has once again become permanent.
As another glorious episode of CP-Lie Z, Japan’s softer April inflation print was largely powered by base effects, cheaper government subsidised school lunches, and statistical ninja techniques rather than any real victory over inflation. Beneath the anime smoke screen, price pressures remain alive and well, with rising oil prices preparing their inevitable “final boss” return across the economy. The Bank of Japan now looks increasingly likely to unleash its next rate hike attack toward 1% in June.
In a nutshell, Japan’s inflation “cooldown” was mostly a statistical anime filler episode, with rising oil prices already preparing the next boss battle for the Bank of Japan.