The curriculum

112 lessons.
Zero fluff.

From your first paycheck to the architecture of global monetary power. Read straight through or jump to whatever pulls. Every lesson has a hands-on instrument you can operate.

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Module 01

Your Money

Start here. This is your paycheck, your debt, your savings, your exposure. Before you can understand the system, you have to see what it's doing to you.

Module 02

How The System Works

Zoom out. Banks don't lend deposits — they create money. The Fed doesn't print bills — it sets the price of borrowing. Government doesn't fund programs from tax revenue alone. None of this works the way you were taught.

Module 03

How The Game Is Rigged

Same income, different rules. The tax code, the corporate structure, the asset-management industry — all built to accelerate wealth for those who already have it. Here's exactly how.

Module 04

The World Stage

Power isn't local. Tariffs, sanctions, scarce resources, drone warfare, surveillance, and the quiet transfer of wealth between nations. Follow the money across borders.

Module 05

Follow The Money

The deep architecture. Who created the Federal Reserve and why. How debt becomes control. What happens when money dies. The bailout machine and who it really serves.

Module 06

What Comes Next

The system isn't permanent. Currency resets, wealth limits, alternative money designs, and the concrete actions that have actually shifted power. Your toolkit.

52
What changed since 1971
The wealth-concentration timeline with mechanisms named
53
The long-term debt cycle
The 80-year clock running underneath everything
54
The everything bubble
When QE made all assets move together
55
Reflexivity
Soros's framework for bubbles, crashes, and feedback loops
56
Demographics is destiny
The math already in the bank for the next fifty years
57
Exorbitant privilege
Two narratives of US reserve-currency status, on the same axes
58
Government capture
When governments serve someone other than their citizens — and what citizens can still do
59
The reset question
Would a new currency redistribute wealth? The historical answer.
60
Currency wars
How nations weaponize money instead of missiles
61
Other kinds of money
Demurrage, complementary currencies, and what they actually threaten
62
The monopoly on money
The legal moat — every statute that locks the incumbent system in place
63
Playing their game
How citizens become the bank — every parallel-finance vehicle, from credit unions to charters
64
Public banking & sovereign money
Bank of North Dakota, postal banking, the Chicago Plan, and the lawful reform package
65
When the money was rewritten
The monopoly contests — Bank War, Greenbacks, Free Banking, Wörgl, Vollgeld, Bitcoin
66
The legislative pathway
A Monetary Pluralism Act, drafted section by section — every statute it would have to amend
67
The limits of wealth
Caps, limitarianism, taxation that rebalances — with the redistribution math made visible
68
The hard cases
Armed drones, digital wealth, and the political economy of violence
69
The youth coalition
Realistic avenues for generational reform
70
The operator's lens
Multi-frame decision system for an unpredictable world
Module 07

What You Can Actually Do

The operational manual. The time problem, the asymmetry of power, the organizer's playbook and the opponent's, the 30-day starter kit, the script, and the arithmetic that turns coordination into leverage. Written as a checklist, not a sermon.

Module 08

The Great Conversion

The most radical experiment, run to its end: what a citizen-led exit from the dollar would actually require. Designing the new money, demolishing the legal moat, choreographing the conversion, engineering adoption, binding the politicians — and the honest verdict on whether it should ever be attempted.

Module 09

The American Rebuild

The lawful build, made concrete. How 300 million people, each in their own role, move their money, their votes, and their institutions toward a system that represents them: the ownership map, the great reallocation, the payment rails, the parallel-institution stack, the constitutional limits on force — and exactly how the status quo fights back.

Module 10

Holding the Line

The discipline that keeps a movement from being broken. The attention economy engineered to keep you numb, the shock doctrine that turns every crisis into a rollback, and the skills, habits, and conversations that turn a reader into a leader who reaches everyone.

Module 11

The Builder's Mandate

The confident, offensive close. The narrative war, national capability, the financial chessboard, an honest empirical answer to why violence and coups fail (not promoted, not encouraged), funding organizers and veterans to do the work, and the citizen wallet stack that switches commerce off the incumbent rails.

Module 12

The Ground Floor

The literacy every other module quietly assumes — read these first if any concept ever felt shaky. The math of risk and ruin, the cognitive biases that drive money mistakes (and the products built to trigger them), insuring the catastrophe and self-insuring the rest, the legal tax shelters the wealthy don't want ordinary people to use well, and the biggest asset you will ever own: your own future earnings.

Module 13

The View From the Top

The capstone. The whole curriculum read from the perspective of concentrated power: the only three moves a population can make that unlimited capital cannot absorb, why the robot age threatens the oldest source of citizen leverage, how the unit of account is the master leash, the playbook rulers reach for to keep populations distracted and divided — and the proven, tangible counter-playbook, drawn from Solidarity to the civil-rights movement, that any citizen can begin this week.