The recent rise in gold and bitcoin prices reveals more than market dynamics. It reflects a quiet awakening to Fiat Money centuries ago.
Fiat fraud: how inflation was accepted into theft
Are you curious to see how people remind you of the past? Remember that candy bars once cost 50 cents, or as if prices that rose over time were the inevitability of the universe. Those who interrupt this nostalgia rarely point out that what they witness is not about nature, but rather a calculated deception they have endured for generations.

Between 1913 and 2023 or 110, the US dollar lost 96.7% of its purchasing power. For $1 in 2025, I only bought about 3.1% of what I could buy in 1913. In other words, its value fell to about $0.03 under the conditions of 1913. What happens at zero?
Inflation is not an accident. It is not the result of the mystical market forces beyond understanding. This is the intentional result of a system designed to dilute the value of money by growing the supply of currency faster than the production of actual goods and services. That is its only definition and the only cause of inflation. Meanwhile, technology (the man’s tool to master nature) has made production faster, cheaper and more efficient than ever.
So why does the price go up, not because someone is tampering with the money?
Still, society shruggs and accepts this continuous theft. They repeat “back to my time” like a blind babysitter to confessions hidden in their nostalgia. They were taken away by political and banking institutions, and they were taught to trust. The government expelled their wealth slowly, quietly and with cold accuracy. The central bank has explicitly designed this betrayal not just once, but for generations since its inception.
This is the moral background where you have to understand the gravity of gold, which is Bitcoin, which is at 10am Eastern time on Friday, at $3,356 per ounce. These are more than just products. They are rebellious acts. They represent acknowledge that hard money really means. It is money that cannot be reminiscent of political convenience or central planning.
The immunity of manipulation is rooted in money, objective value, backed by rarity.
Gold and Bitcoin are neither relics of the past nor speculative whims of the future. They are the direct result of moral rebellion. They reflect their refusal to be enslaved by an unfair financial regime. People don’t just want safety, they also want justice.
Both gold and bitcoin have rare and powerful attributes in a world dominated by concentrated authority. They are fundamentally resistant to censorship and manipulation. Gold, by its nature, is a physical asset that is far beyond the reach of political orders. It cannot be printed, replicated or existed. It takes effort.
Bureaucrats cannot circulate more money with signatures.
Bitcoin, although digital, is governed by the same principle of corruption. The code is public, the supply is fixed, and the network is distributed. It is run by thousands of independent nodes and miners around the world. A single government, institution, or cartel cannot change its issuance schedule or freeze transactions without consensus from the global community. In Bitcoin, the main consensus rules are transparent and unchanging. They apply equally to all.
This is why these hard assets are important. It’s not just an alternative, it’s a lifeline of economic integrity. They represent systems that refuse to bending into coercion, chronism, or inflationary deception.
They are free men and women financial products, individuals who demand the right to own, trade and save without giving permission.
If you are twisting the monetary system to serve political interests, it will stop serving people. In contrast, gold and Bitcoin offer areas where voluntary exchanges, property rights, and objective value still take priority. Understanding them is understanding freedom itself.
Flights to hard money are not about profits. That’s about principles. It is a sign that an individual is awakening to a truth that has long been obscure by jargon, bureaucracy and lies. The only way to fix the world is to fix the money.