Episode 10: Do Tariffs Matter?The tariff debate is one of the most consequential economic conversations of our time — and it's almost entirely missing the point. In this episode, Brian argues that the fight over tariffs is a second-order argument happening inside a fraudulent frame. The real question isn't whether tariffs are good or bad. It's whether free trade is even possible when the money itself is corrupt.What we cover:Why money is half of every transaction — and what happens when that half is crookedThe proof-of-weapons network: Simon Dixon's framework for understanding what actually backs the US dollar (hint: it's not the economy)How the petrodollar system, SWIFT, the IMF, and military force form an interlocking system that controls global purchasing powerA candid look inside Gravitas Chemical — how tariff whipsaw forced a costly supply chain migration from China to Indonesia, and why the math on reshoring doesn't work for small businessesThe two completely different things being called "reshoring" — and why only politically connected corporations are eating from the government troughWhy free trade also means free movement of people — and how dollar hegemony drives the very migration crisis politicians blame on migrantsWhat a Bitcoin-denominated world actually looks like: peer-to-peer trade, honest war financing, and individual wealth sovereignty that no army can seizeWhy "stack accordingly" isn't a political statement — it's a rational response to an unstable signal environmentKey idea: You cannot have free trade without honest money. Half of every transaction is the unit of account. If that half is controlled by the proof-of-weapons network — by the alignment of central banks, defense contractors, and political establishments — the price signal is lying and the measuring stick is crooked. No amount of tariff negotiation changes that. Bitcoin fixes the money. Honest money gives trade a chance to actually be free.Mentioned:Simon Dixon — proof-of-weapons network frameworkNixon closing the gold window (1971) and the petrodollar arrangementGaddafi, Saddam Hussein, and Ayatollah Khamenei as historical examples of dollar hegemony enforcementCHIPS Act, TSMC Arizona, Intel, MP Materials — industrial policy reshoring vs. small business reshoringLove & Hard Money Episode 9 (Solzhenitsyn / Live Not By Lies)www.satoshigeneral.com linkedin.com/in/brian-bundy-b30a529
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