
Coin Stories with Natalie Brunell
- 2d ago
Simon Dixon argues the world is shifting to multipolarity, with Western governments fully captured by a financial-industrial complex that uses media as propaganda and algorithms to weaponize the populace.
- 2d ago
Dixon states the financial-industrial complex controls fiat currency creation through private banks, central banking, and the Bank for International Settlements, turning individuals into collateralized debt obligations within a Ponzi scheme requiring perpetual debt rollover.
- 2d ago
He claims asset managers like BlackRock, State Street, and Vanguard control global capital through ETFs and pensions, securing board seats on public companies and subordinating politicians who auction their services to the highest lobbying bidder.
- 2d ago
Dixon predicted Trump's reelection and war with Iran by following his backers: Elon Musk (technical-industrial complex), the Mellon banking dynasty (financial-industrial complex), and Miriam Adelson (military-industrial complex).
- 2d ago
He argues Trump's DOGE initiative was a data collection exercise for XAI and Palantir, while tariffs accelerated multipolarity by pushing trade toward China and BRICS and causing small business bankruptcies that benefited BlackRock.
- 2d ago
Dixon states the release of the Epstein files strategically weakened the dollar by exposing institutions like USAID and the National Endowment for Democracy, with banks like JP Morgan and Deutsche Bank having already settled with victims.
- 2d ago
He claims the post-Bretton Woods system is ending, replaced by multipolar central bank digital currencies, stablecoins, and neutral reserve assets like gold, with projects like mBridge and China's SIPs creating alternative payment rails.
- 2d ago
Dixon argues the financial-industrial complex is trying to centralize Bitcoin through ETFs, treasury companies, and leveraged custody products, using tax incentives to draw holders into the banking system while allowing self-custody as an escape valve for elites.
- 2d ago
He believes Bitcoin adoption spikes during disasters like the Cypriot bail-ins or exchange failures, when people realize the need for self-custody, but most will opt for convenience over sovereignty.
- 2d ago
Dixon advocates measuring wealth in Bitcoin, accumulating it monthly regardless of price, and using it to build parallel local economies and supply chains as governments move toward Orwellian surveillance states.
- 2d ago
He views Bitcoin's survival as non-inevitable, requiring constant vigilance against centralization risks in mining, nodes, and development, with community pushback being its key anti-fragile strength.
- 2d ago
Dixon connects financial decisions to spiritual energy, arguing that morally wrong investments tend to fail, citing his loss in Celsius the same day his father died as a lesson against borrowing against Bitcoin.