Well, hang on now. You’re comparing the M2 supply with a stock valuation. This… isn’t how things work. You have to compare the rate of change of that stock over time to the rate of change of inflation over time. Note that this image isn’t even correct because it’s using officially reported stats and not the real inflation rate.
The M2 doesn’t take into account the Eurodollar system, though. You know, the secret system created after WWII where European banks are allowed to print infinity US dollars out of thin air to use for transactions between their banks, and over which the US has no oversight.
Inflation is based on what level of interest jews want to charge us for renting their dollars. That’s what it boils down to. Every Federal Reserve Note in existence has more than its face value in debt in existence as a function of its creation. The debt can, by definition, never be repaid. The rate of interest changes the rate at which new dollars are printed to cover it in the short term, which then directly alters prices of actual goods.
Well, hang on now. You’re comparing the M2 supply with a stock valuation. This… isn’t how things work. You have to compare the rate of change of that stock over time to the rate of change of inflation over time. Note that this image isn’t even correct because it’s using officially reported stats and not the real inflation rate.
Some out-of-the-box(™️) thinkers believe M2 is the proper measure of inflation.
The M2 doesn’t take into account the Eurodollar system, though. You know, the secret system created after WWII where European banks are allowed to print infinity US dollars out of thin air to use for transactions between their banks, and over which the US has no oversight.
Inflation is based on what level of interest jews want to charge us for renting their dollars. That’s what it boils down to. Every Federal Reserve Note in existence has more than its face value in debt in existence as a function of its creation. The debt can, by definition, never be repaid. The rate of interest changes the rate at which new dollars are printed to cover it in the short term, which then directly alters prices of actual goods.
Yes. But M2 doesn’t reflect that in full. And you can’t compare the currency supply to the S&P as though that means anything.
M2 is controlled by the federal reserve under rules set by congress. It's not a measure of anything.
M2 is created by banks lending