The United States has been using this move for 55 years. Can't you see it yet? When the Middle East is in chaos, the whole world bears the cost.


Have you noticed? Every time the dollar encounters problems, the Middle East gets into war.
In 1971, the dollar detached from gold, and people stopped trusting the dollar, dumping it wildly.
Two years later, the Middle East war broke out, and oil prices skyrocketed from $2.7 to $13—quadrupling in three months.
Then the U.S. told Saudi Arabia: Oil can only be settled in dollars, and your profits must be used to buy my U.S. bonds.
Would Saudi Arabia dare to say no?
In 1979, gold surged again, and everyone shouted, “The dollar is no good anymore.”
Coincidentally, the Iran-Iraq war started, and oil prices rose from $13 to $40, lasting for several years.
In 2000, the internet bubble burst, and the dollar plummeted.
In 2001, “9/11” happened, and the U.S. directly entered Afghanistan and Iraq.
Oil prices rose from $9.7 to $147.
Do you understand now? The script is exactly the same: dollar hegemony faces shocks → Middle East wars → oil prices surge → the whole world rushes to buy dollars → the U.S. buys the dip → crisis is resolved.
And now? Gold has risen to $5,600, the Federal Reserve is about to cut interest rates, and funds are preparing to flee.
Guess what? Will the Middle East stop soon?
Impossible. If oil prices don’t stay high long-term, how will the U.S. harvest?
If the U.S. military isn’t fighting, who will pay for protection?
How to resolve the trust crisis in U.S. bonds?
Stop always shouting “The dollar is collapsing.”
The reality is: long-term high oil prices are what the U.S. wants.
Gold rises, and oil prices follow; if gold falls, oil will still have to bear it for years.
This is no coincidence; it’s the same old script that hasn’t changed in 55 years.
Those who understand are already making their moves. #Hohl
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