The aliens were let by the blue in to sow chaos, giving the red Manipulator In Chief an excuse to tighten the reins.
Elected on a banner of freedom, less than a year back in the Oval Office he’s pushing stablecoins and digital IDs—sold as convenience and public safety, but really paving the way for global surveillance and a creeping tyranny as the U.S. Republic edges toward its final chapter.
Elected on a banner of freedom, less than a year back in the Oval Office he’s pushing stablecoins and digital IDs—sold as convenience and public safety, but really paving the way for global surveillance and a creeping tyranny as the U.S. Republic edges toward its final chapter.
American shoppers went on a summer spree in July, splurging on cars, gadgets, and anything Amazon, Walmart, or Target could slap a “deal” tag on. Retail sales rose 0.5% (before inflation rained on the parade), with nine of 13 categories climbing. Cars had their best month since March, and online sales soared thanks to an arms race of discount days. Of course, some of that “extra spending” might just be paying more for the same stuff—but hey, who’s counting when it feels like a bargain?
Retail sales look sturdy on paper but strip out inflation and they’re more limp handshake than firm grip—still stuck below the April 2022 high and below last December level. History shows that real retail peaks often line up with highs in the S&P 500-to-oil ratio, which usually dips under its 7-year average before recessions. The signals are blinking red, but Wall Street’s still whistling past the graveyard.
In a nutshell, shoppers are splurging like it’s a boom, but behind the discounts and headlines, inflation’s turned the retail rally into a recession warning in disguise
Washington’s cheerleaders can keep parroting “all is well,” but Americans aren’t buying it—literally. Consumer sentiment just tanked to 58.6, inflation fears are back on the rise, and more people say high prices are shredding their living standards. Shoppers are cutting back, unemployment worries have doubled since 2022, and tariff chatter is creeping into kitchen-table talk.
In short, Main Street feels a lot more like the Great Recession than the glossy picture painted by elites who’ve never wrestled with a grocery bill.
🤵 The Macro Butler Weekly Digest 🤵
🌐 Behold BRICS’ Gold Glory: As the dollar’s weapon turns to dust, a new dawn rises—with gold as the cornerstone of a reborn mercantilist world. 🌐
Read more here: https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/brics-gold-glory-the-dawn-of-a-new
🌐 Behold BRICS’ Gold Glory: As the dollar’s weapon turns to dust, a new dawn rises—with gold as the cornerstone of a reborn mercantilist world. 🌐
Read more here: https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/brics-gold-glory-the-dawn-of-a-new
Substack
BRICS’ Gold Glory: The Dawn of a New Era
Behold BRICS’ Gold Glory: As the dollar’s weapon turns to dust, a new dawn rises—with gold as the cornerstone of a reborn mercantilist world.
Sure, LinkedIn can keep patting itself on the back for “protecting the community” by censoring anyone who dares point out the Davos crew’s little depopulation project during the 'plandemic'.
But history has a funny way of outing the real criminals—no matter how many posts get deleted.
https://t.me/TheMacroButlerSubstack/367
But history has a funny way of outing the real criminals—no matter how many posts get deleted.
https://t.me/TheMacroButlerSubstack/367
💯1
Housing debt crept up $149B, mostly mortgages, while HELOCs added a measly $9B. Meanwhile, non-housing debt threw a party: credit cards +$27B, auto loans +$13B, student loans +$7B. New auto loans hit $188B, credit card limits +$78B, HELOC limits +$18B. Basically, Americans are maxing out everything except common sense.
Almost all debt types managed to behave… except student loans. With the government ending sleepy Joe’s payment freeze, delinquency rates skyrocketed. Serious delinquencies (90+ days past due) for student loans hit 12.9%—the highest in 21 years—while autos, credit cards, mortgages, and HELOCs barely twitched, albeit already elevated.
The spike in delinquencies—especially among student loans—signals growing financial strain for American households amid high rates and weak hiring. Consumer spending already fell in H1 2025, before tariffs pushed prices higher. Meanwhile, the bankruptcy pipeline is swelling: 131,000 consumers saw new bankruptcy notations in Q2. Expect this number to skyrocket as delinquent student loans roll into defaults, bringing the student debt crisis fully into view.
As the US staggers from its inflationary boom straight into an inflationary bust, Main Street braces for more poverty while Wall Street throws a party, raking in cash from endless banker-driven wars and tightening their chokehold on the Washington swamp.
Survival of the fittest, or at least the richest
Survival of the fittest, or at least the richest
Listen to a summary of The Macro Butler weekly newsletter via podcast on Substack; YouTube; Rumble & TikTok.
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/brics-gold-glory-the-dawn-of-a-new-0ae
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/brics-gold-glory-the-dawn-of-a-new-0ae
Substack
BRICS’ Gold Glory: The Dawn of a New Era - Podcast
Listen to a summary of The Macro Butler weekly newsletter via podcast on Substack; YouTube; Rumble & TikTok.
You don’t need a PhD in the CPI (Corruption Perceptions Index) to figure out that Ukraine is basically running a masterclass in corruption—not just in Eurasia, but on a global scale.
https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2024/index/ukr
https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2024/index/ukr