
LET IT RISE: Trump’s Tariff War Isn’t Just Economic Strategy—It’s an Exorcism | Part TWO
(From Part One. Skip down if you’ve already read it):
Donald Trump has never simply played to win.
He plays to expose.
Art of the Deal, anyone?
I know enough about tariffs to recognize that both “sides” of the argument can make logical, coherent cases. This is largely why at some point many many months ago I started moving into an angle in my writing that explored narratives and what the public is gleaning and is supposed to glean from information deployments by both supposed good guys and bad guys. Today I explore that angle with the tariff question, something on which I’ve offered an introductory salvo on February 4 when Canada and Mexico were in the crosshairs of Trump’s process.
And yes, that process can sometimes seem strange.
We saw his penchant for exposure with the Gaza story, and for some untold reason, there are still people—including on the conservative “side”—that don’t get it. Did you see what happened in the way of Middle Eastern-nation sovereignty when he floated the idea of simply “having” Gaza a couple months back? Countries were scrambling to come up with their own plans, for their own region, which sounds an awful like like national sovereignty to me.
That Trump quirk got them off the couch and interested in their own affairs. His media deployments are often not what he wants in the end–but it is necessary in the short term to gain what he actually does, especially in light of how he knows the antagonistic media will react.
Here’s a take from one “Burning Bright” today:
Always let the enemy hang himself.
This is Art of War 101, and as long as we don’t take this very real war strategy into account, we will continue to look like kittens trying to follow a tennis match with each new day’s “news” flying back and forth. I’ve been following this for quite some time, the spiritual dimension of this financial hell we are in:
LEJEUNE RELATED
Trump’s ‘Unserious Stuff’ Recalls SCOTUS 1895 Ruling… (June 2024)
On Usury and Other Dishonest Profits: An Increasingly Relevant 1745 Papal Encyclical
Modern America and the Ancient War Against Financial Enslavement
Author G Edward Griffin Talks The Creature From Jekyll Island
There’s a lot of context in those four articles that can help you understand what Trump is doing, which seems to me to always be a longer game than many Americans are wanting to wait for.
When will we learn this very real and very frequently visited pattern? It’s like scouting for the next game–but that takes time, and certainly more of it than what we see in a Facebook post or in a sound clip from one of our favorite TV characters. And I’ll say this as an adjacent point: If you don’t support Trump, squabbling over each new flight of the tennis ball or over some perceived (and grossly misplaced) incompetence on his part isn’t the way to go. If you want to put the alarm out there against Trump, do it by pointing to the fact that he is always right and seemingly has information at his disposal he shouldn’t have.
The magic acts he pulls with a mere narrative deployment here and another there is what should concern you—as they admittedly concern me even while I enjoy the “winning” and covering the unique angle of information war in this digital space. In short, he seems to have too much power and ability to move a populace with a single move of his thumb. But I leave that allowance (and Good Samaritan hint at a better argument against him) alone for the remainder of this piece. One can address only so many points in one article….
Part TWO
Narrative War Is Leading to a Multipolar World–and Something Else
Make no mistake—this is a narrative war being pushed by our nation’s leader. When Trump calls out the income tax scam, he’s doing more than dunking on the IRS.
He’s showing you the architecture of enslavement.
Jefferson warned, “I sincerely believe … that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies; and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity in the name of funding is but swindling futurity on a large scale.” Today we see bankers getting richer and politicians more powerful by bankrupting our country.
And when critics recoil—on both the left and right—it’s because they know the game is up. Democrats and Republicans both don’t fear tariffs because they’ll raise prices. They fear tariffs because they destroy the racket. They fear them because they reveal who’s been behind the bribe, the trick, the mass duping of the American people into this hellish financial slave system that takes us away from God and toward the chase of material possession just to make ends meet.
And once you start asking questions about the income tax and the Titanic and who’s behind it all and what really happened and who were among the ones to die, it’s only a matter of time before you start asking about the Federal Reserve, the endless wars, the Epstein blackmail operations, the missing Pentagon trillions, the NGO pipelines, and the aid deals worth billions we sign—in secret and out in the open.
It is one beauty of the DOGE deployment–it has given Americans permission to say and ask these things.
Many, many people are already fighting the fight, drawing attention to the truth. The narrative is breaking. The American people are waking.
Slowly, painfully, but steadily, we are staking our claim to more than just financial freedom.
Trump vs. China or any other nation isn’t a betrayal of nationalism. It’s the path to it. The trade war–or the theater of it–is just the latest smoke for the fire of a larger reality: the world is reorganizing into sovereign entities, away from Old Testament Egypt, away from the globalist stranglehold choking us and breaking our backs. This isn’t about ideological unity where these seemingly squabbling nations are working on a compromise to be more like the other. No, that would be just a different form of the globalist monster—same tentacles, new suit.
This is about undressing and dismantling that monster and its tentacles, the nefarious and clandestine globalist beast.
The one funded by and for bloodlines and families.
The one that feeds off your labor and calls it “democracy.”
You don’t have to love or idolize the Xis and Putins. You just have to understand that they, like Trump, are quite possibly working to remove a globalist and ancient parasite bloodline from their nations’ arteries. It’s not East vs. West anymore as the Rocky song goes. And it’s a good guess that tariffs are the latest spotlight in the sky beckoning us to understanding, inspiring us to the fight.
A fight for Trump necessarily? No, one for God.
If this goes as expected, my warning about Trump above notwithstanding of course, he is not bringing tariffs to tank the economy. This isn’t destruction—it’s revelation. He’s bringing them to expose foundations and root causes. When tariffs return, and income taxes evaporate, and the Treasury becomes what it was meant to be—Americans will realize they’ve been rich all along.
They just didn’t know it.
Wealth is not found in digits, but in direction, in truth, in depth, in value. Right now, for the first time in decades, the direction is away from global debt slavery… and toward a national rebirth based on that truth.
“Fixing what many argue is the greatest threat to national security requires significant disruption and brave determination.” I can’t find where I pulled that quote, and I’m sorry about that, but I leave it here because it’s true even without the quotation marks.
This may have to hurt a bit.
That’s what this is, the growing pains to something better, hopefully to something that opens the Godly life more sincerely to more people. Temporary pain is one thing Trump meant in the second sentence of his Inaugural Address:
Trump satisfied both the hard line politicals and the autists who are just as paramount a part of this war as any. The man understands narrative warfare, the Art of War. He understands that he needs communication movement at multiple levels and at strategic paces to lead us through the darkness sure to come–a darkness that must precede whatever “Golden Age” he is speaking about–that he alluded to in the very beginning of his speech yesterday when he said, “But first, we must be honest about the challenges we face.”
This simple line cannot be glossed over.
And if we still don’t get it—if we’re still complaining about the trade war, the market shocks, the “chaos”—just wait.
This could be a Lent-to-Easter lesson in disguise.
If the markets roar back from the tomb amidst sunshine and the chirping of birds, if manufacturing resurrects from the dead, if real wages climb out of the grave, if the dollar is backed by something more than IOU paper, if our children inherit a money system that will allow it to raise families in a more traditional way…
Make sure to say it–
Trump was right. And some of us lost the plot. Some of us lost the faith. Not in Trump, but in the hope that maybe, just maybe, God is giving us a tiny window to co-opt these political “victories” into something more substantive, something more eternal, something for the souls of our families and friends.
But here’s the good news.
Another Thomas not named Jefferson–the apostle–was a doubter like so many of us. And there’s still time to believe, to catch up.
This isn’t just about tariffs or trade deficits.
Just stop reading the script our enemies hand to us.
And start reading His.
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May everyone named directly or referenced indirectly ask forgiveness and do penance for their sins against America and God. I fight this information war in the spirit of justice and love for the innocent, but I have been reminded of the need for mercy and prayers for our enemies. I am a sinner in need of redemption as well after all, for my sins are many. In the words of Jesus Christ himself, Lord forgive us all, for we know not what we do.