The discussion highlights the historical context of destabilization tactics from the 19th century British intelligence operations led by Lord Palmerston to modern-day globalization influenced by multinational corporations.
When Trump ended 80 years of US-backed regime change abroad, the empire reached for a 170-year-old playbook. The same destabilization tactics used in Ukraine and Syria are now being deployed in American cities—and the new National Defense Strategy forced their hand.
Barbara Boyd is back this week after being away, and she's bringing the heat on a topic the establishment desperately wants you to ignore: the Federal Reserve versus the American System of national banking.
LIVE REPLAY January 15, 2026
The Fed's Panic: Central Banking vs. National Banking
The establishment is in full meltdown mode over Trump's criticism of Jerome Powell. Central bankers worldwide, along with their media assets, are circling the wagons to defend the "independence" of the Federal Reserve.
But here's what they won't tell you: The Federal Reserve was never designed to serve the American people. It was created in 1913 to replace Alexander Hamilton's vision of a national bank—one that directs credit toward productive economic development—with a British-style central bank that prioritizes financial speculation and imperial control.
The Real Fight: 2026 Midterms
Here's what the British establishment understands: If Trump holds Congress in November, their entire system collapses. If they can flip the House and Senate, they can strangle his economic revolution and launch another round of impeachment proceedings.
That's why every move Trump makes—from Greenland to the Fed to Davos—is connected to the domestic economic transformation. He's clearing the board of imperial control systems so that sovereign nations can engage in mutually beneficial economic development.
Then join us live today, 11am Eastern, 8am Pacific, 4pm UK time.
We broke down Trump's economic revolution and why staying focused on physical economic transformation—not social media distractions—is critical as we head into 2026.