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Retired Army Col. Douglas Macgregor is sounding an alarm that cuts across party lines, accusing Washington of engineering a half‑century “crime scene” against the American middle class by severing money from reality and weaponizing the dollar for war, bureaucracy and corporate cronyism.
In a viral video titled “The Great Betrayal,” followed by a fiery appearance on Ron Paul’s Liberty Report, Macgregor argues that the 1971 abandonment of the gold standard “changed the rules” so politicians could silently steal Americans’ work, savings and future. He urges people to stop waiting for a presidential savior and instead build parallel structures of independence—silver, skills, gardens and local communities—outside the reach of the money printer.
‘This Is Not Economics. This Is a Crime Scene.’
Macgregor begins his video by recounting the tale of an ordinary American who dedicated 31 years to the same company, holding the belief that hard work, integrity, and diligence would be mirrored by the nation’s leaders. Back in 1971, this worker’s annual salary was $11,000—sufficient for a comfortable life that included owning a house, a car, and providing for a family with a stay-at-home wife.
Fast forward to today, and that role offers $50,000 annually. On the surface, this seems like progress, yet the cost of living has skyrocketed. Houses are now 15 times more expensive, cars 20 times the price, and the idea of a single-income household has become nearly unattainable. Macgregor questions, “Did Americans become lazy or less capable? No, it was stolen by those in power who changed the rules while our parents placed their trust in the country.”
For Macgregor, the pivotal moment occurred on August 15, 1971, when President Richard Nixon “temporarily suspended the gold standard.” Prior to this, the dollar held tangible value, backed by gold. Afterward, it became “a promise backed by nothing but faith in a government that has deceived us into every war over the past 50 years.”
Without the gold standard, government spending required taxation. There was a natural limit. However, post-1971, the ability to print money meant eroding the value of savings, income, and heritage with each new dollar created.
To illustrate the magnitude of this economic shift, Macgregor presents an analogy he calls “Jesus math.” Picture yourself in Bethlehem at the time of Christ’s birth, holding $1 million and spending that amount daily through centuries of history. Even after spending $740 billion, you wouldn’t reach the trillion-dollar mark. Yet, today, Washington adds $1 trillion to the national debt every three months, underscoring the vastness of this financial transformation.
To reach today’s $38 trillion, he says, you would need to spend “$1 million a day for 100,000 years… This is not economics. This is a crime scene.”
Printing Press: Mother of War, Bureaucracy, Immigration and Outsourcing
Macgregor then links endless money to endless war. “The printing press is the mother of endless war,” he says, noting that the U.S. spent “$2 trillion in Afghanistan over 20 years… we replaced the Taliban with the Taliban.” If the government had to directly tax Americans “to bomb countries most Americans couldn’t find on a map,” he insists, “you would revolt. But because they print, the war is invisible.”
He calls the printing press “the mother of endless bureaucracy,” explaining that when money is infinite “you can hire armies of bureaucrats.” Federal code ballooned from “70,000 pages… [to] 200,000,” creating “a maze designed to strangle the small businessmen and protect the corporate giant.”
He blasts mass immigration as an economic weapon, not compassion: “Why pay an American a living wage when you can import a replacement for half the price?” The result, he says, is “millions of people flood into the United States and drive down the cost of American labor, while Washington prints money to drive up the price of their assets… It’s not a border crisis. It’s an economic weapon deployed against us, the American people.”
Outsourcing rounds out the attack. “Printed money allowed them to ship your factories overseas. Behind those closed doors lie rusted towns, broken families, and an opioid epidemic that is killing more Americans than the Vietnam War ever did.” This isn’t free markets, he says, but rigged cronyism: “You were told this is capitalism. This is the free market. It was not capitalism… In this system, when big business fails, Washington prints money to bail out its donors… If you do not [have the right friends], you are foreclosed.”
He illustrates the theft with a simple comparison: “Your grandfather earned a dollar in 1971. He put it in a box… That dollar bought ten loaves of bread. Today you open that box… now it buys one slice. The paper did not change. Washington drained the life out of it… That box is not an inheritance. It is evidence for theft.”
The real cost, he says, is stolen time. The average American works 2,000 hours a year and “thanks to taxes and inflation, the government takes half. 1,000 hours stolen every year… Over a 40‑year career, that’s four and a half years of your life… gone.”
Three “Plantations” and the Rigged Uni‑Party
Macgregor describes Americans as trapped on “three plantations” run by different masters. The “digital plantation” is run by Silicon Valley, where “you are the product” and tech giants “harvest your attention, your data, your anxiety” while censoring you
“if you step out of line.” The “debt plantation” belongs to Wall Street, where “student debt before you can buy a beer” and 30‑year mortgages ensure “a man in debt is a man who is afraid… He won’t speak up. He won’t rock the boat. That is the point. Both parties serve Wall Street. Check the donor lists.”
The “tax plantation” is run by Washington, where “you work half the year for the government” and your labor is sent to “countries that hate us, corporations that replace you, and bureaucrats who despise you.”
He names the political class as a single machine: “Republicans, Democrats, what’s the difference? Nixon, Carter, Reagan, Trump, Obama. Different faces of the same machine, with the same hand on the printing press.” From the inside, he says, “the machine is not broken. It’s actually working as designed to extract wealth from the productive and transfer it to the connected.”
On Ron Paul’s Liberty Report, Macgregor carries the same theme into foreign policy, warning that “constant warfare that drains the treasury” and immigration “weaponized against Americans” are two sides of the same betrayal.
He tells Paul and co‑host Daniel McAdams that the “middle class has been largely destroyed,” and notes that his “Great Betrayal” video “wasn’t really designed” as a response to Donald Trump’s boasts but makes clear that even Trump has “behaved in very much the same manner” as his predecessors on spending and war. Paul underscores the point, asking how anyone can “divide” economic policy from foreign policy when the two are welded by the printing press.
‘The Savior Is Not Coming’: Build Parallel America
Unlike many critics, Macgregor doesn’t end with despair. He gives a battle plan. “If you are waiting for a savior to show up in the White House, stop. The savior is not coming,” he says. “When the system fails, do not beg to be rescued. Build a parallel structure. Build a lifeboat.” Washington “can print a dollar,” he says, “but Washington cannot print an ounce of silver. Buy a silver coin. Hold it in your hand. Feel its weight.” Real money like that “implies no liability to anyone else… They cannot debase it. They cannot hack it.”
He urges viewers to plant “a backyard garden… a localized food source” and to “learn to repair, learn to build. The ability to fix your own world is the ultimate rebellion against a disposable society.” Real community is another shield: “They cannot print a community, barter, or trade. If you have eggs and your neighbor has firewood, you can trade. That is a transaction Washington cannot tax, cannot track, and cannot control.”
Macgregor frames his nonprofit National Conversation as part of this “parallel structure,” a “movement, a network of Americans who are determined not only to survive, but to prevail,” built around town halls where regular citizens, not consultants, speak their minds. He calls on supporters to “sign up, bring one person… who knows something is wrong, but may not have the words to describe it. Give them the words.” At the personal level, he asks Americans this holiday season to “find a combat veteran in your town… invite them into your home, break bread… That is where the resistance begins, not in a ballot box, but at the dinner table.”
Macgregor closes with a stark choice: “The empire of lies is dying. Let it die. We will build the real America on the other side… We do not need the government’s permission to be free. The nonsense ends when we say it ends.”
For a political class addicted to the printing press and permanent war, that is the real threat: a country that stops begging Washington to save it and starts rebuilding the republic from the ground up, one silver coin, one backyard garden and one dinner‑table alliance at a time.