America’s Silent War: The Battle for Economic Survival Has Already Begun

 




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America’s Silent War:
The Battle for Economic Survival
Has Already Begun

The headlines talk about missiles, drones, and military buildups—but the real war isn’t being fought on the battlefield. It’s being fought in global markets. Dr. Joe Arminio, host of America Resurgent, warns that the United States has already lost round one of a three-part global economic war, and unless it changes course, the next two rounds could decide the fate of American power itself.

Round one wasn’t just about tanks or troops—it was about the petrodollar system, the foundation of American financial might since the 1970s. This system links the value of oil to the U.S. dollar, keeping global demand for dollars strong. But that foundation is cracking. Iran and other members of the BRICS alliance, led by Red China, are now pushing oil sales in Chinese yuan, not dollars. For Washington, this is a direct hit to economic dominance.

The proposed counterstrike—a naval blockade of Iran—might look strong on paper. But it’s a short-term move in a long-term economic war. China, dependent on Persian Gulf oil, will not quietly accept such a blockade. Military pressure may shift the headlines, but it won’t fix the deeper wound: America’s economic stagnation.

Hidden data tells a chilling story. Adjusted for real inflation, U.S. GDP hasn’t grown meaningfully since 2009. Economist John Williams’s “shadow statistics” suggest America’s economy has been treading water for nearly two decades, while inflation masks the truth. Meanwhile, China’s economy—when adjusted for inflation—could be twice the size of America’s. Even if the U.S. spends $1.5 trillion a year on defense, the real value of that money is only a fraction of the nominal amount.

So what can reverse the decline? Not more debt, not “stablecoins,” not more wars. According to Arminio, the solution lies in public banking—a proven but ignored system once advocated by thinkers from Thomas Jefferson to modern economists like Stephen King of Australia.

Under public banking, the government, not private banks, issues credit. This cuts out the profit-driven middleman, lowers borrowing costs, and channels money into production instead of speculation. The state-run Bank of North Dakota stands as living proof: profitable, stable, and free of Wall Street’s chaos since 1919.

But even that may not be enough. Arminio calls for a bold “debt jubilee”—a historical solution to restore balance and ignite growth. Under such a plan, debt is written down in a way that protects both borrowers and lenders, without inflation or new taxes. It would reset the system, shrink public and private debt, and exceed the explosive growth America last saw between 1945 and 1970.

Public banking and a debt jubilee together could spark a new American renaissance—creating low interest, low taxes, and economic predictability. This would close the gap with Communist China, attract global investment, and restore the U.S. as the world’s premier economy once again.

The missiles may fill the air, but the real war is about money, trust, and independence. America has the tools to win—but only if it dares to fight the right battle.

Read about the full economic solution HERE:--



















Keywords: America Resurgent, Iran conflict, petrodollar collapse, BRICS alliance, public banking, debt jubilee, U.S. GDP stagnation, China economy, economic war, global finance

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