Most Important thing Happening Right Now End of the Deep State

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🇺🇸 What the FSOC Report Reveals — If You Read Between the Lines

For centuries, the Western financial order has been built around a few pillars:

• Private central banking influence
• Debt-based monetary control
• Intermediary dominance (too-big-to-fail banks, clearinghouses, custodians)
• Opaque leverage and offshore opacity
• Financialization over productive value

This is the system that grew out of the City of London, the Eurodollar markets and the post-Bretton Woods fiat expansion.

This is the ‘#Rothschild’ system. One that thrives on monolithic control, opacity, complexity, and regulatory capture.

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In response Robert Wakefield to his Publication

What the FSOC Report Quietly Signals Is a Break From That Model:

A. Shift from “Systemic Risk” to “Operational Resilience”

This is enormous. For over a decade, “systemic risk” meant:
• Protecting large financial institutions
• Maintaining liquidity for megabanks
• Preventing cascades that would harm the system itself

Now the language pivots to:
• Operational resilience
• Market plumbing
• Infrastructure integrity

That is a move away from protecting institutions and toward protecting function.

That alone undermines the old banking cartel logic.

B. The end of “Too Big to Fail” Thinking

In response Robert Wakefield to his Publication

The report no longer centers the financial system around a small number of systemically important intermediaries. Instead, it:

• Talks about distributed risk
• Emphasizes market functioning over institutional preservation
• Avoids language that justifies emergency bailouts

This is a quiet rejection of the post-2008 worldview.

C. Subtle Delegitimization of the Old Financial Priesthood

Look at what isn’t emphasized:
• No reverence for legacy banking institutions
• No framing of global finance as an elite, technocratic priesthood
• No insistence that stability requires centralized control

Instead, the report frames innovation, competition, and transparency as stabilizing forces, which is the opposite of the old doctrine.

D. The Real Tell: Infrastructure over Intermediation

In response Robert Wakefield to his Publication

The report’s fixation on:
• Market plumbing
• Settlement efficiency
• Clearing transparency
• Digital rails
• Operational resilience

It signals a move toward infrastructure-based finance, not relationship-based finance.

That is deadly to old power structures, because when systems become transparent, auditable and technologically enforced, you no longer need priesthoods, middlemen, or opaque “guardians of stability.” The banking cabal becomes obsolete.

The emphasis is shifting from who controls money to how the system actually works. This is exactly how real power transitions happens; through the establishment of new architecture.

The plumbing is changing, and the old system will soon, hopefully, stop working.