80% of All US Dollars Were Printed After 2020, Currency Expert Warns
"80% of all M2 money supply dollars were printed after 2020. So that shows you how much inflation's gone crazy. And a lot of that is the loans that were given out from the government that were forgiven and things like that. So your money is rapidly becoming worth nothing. And that's a really, really dangerous thing."
About this episode
Host Danny Jones speaks with an ancient historian specializing in Roman Empire collapse patterns about disturbing parallels between Rome's fall and current American decline. The central revelation is that Rome experienced 15,000% inflation by 284 AD as part of what the historian calls the "Roman pattern" of civilizational collapse, driven by three factors: monetary debasement, failed immigration and border management, and short-sighted politicians prioritizing personal power over national interest. The historian argues civilizations can survive one of these factors but not all three simultaneously, with currency strength being paramount. The conversation takes a contemporary turn when discussing how 80% of all U.S. M2 money supply dollars were printed after 2020, creating what he calls "unlegislated taxation" that is more insidious than Rome's visible coin debasement. A significant portion examines the forgotten impact of the 1913 17th Amendment, which changed Senate selection from state legislatures to popular vote, effectively eliminating state representation in federal government and shifting America from a republic toward pure democracy. This constitutional change, combined with the Federal Reserve Act and income tax that same year, fundamentally altered American governance. The discussion also covers how Roman Emperor Aurelian was assassinated in 274 AD shortly after successfully fixing debased currency, drawing implicit parallels to modern resistance against monetary reform. Throughout, Jones and his guest connect ancient precedents to current events including Epstein files, congressional insider trading, and debates about political corruption, arguing that understanding Rome's collapse patterns offers crucial warnings for contemporary America. The historian emphasizes that late Roman citizens physically saw their coins changing in weight, color and composition, making inflation tangible, while modern digital currency makes wealth destruction abstract and harder to recognize until it's too late.
Key takeaways
- Rome experienced 15,000% inflation by 284 AD, driven by continuous monetary debasement as emperors diluted silver content from 95% pure to 5% bronze over 200 years to pay enlarged militaries
- The historian identifies three-factor 'Roman pattern' causing civilizational collapse: monetary debasement, immigration and border mismanagement, and short-sighted politicians, warning America faces all three simultaneously
- 80% of all U.S. M2 money supply dollars were printed after 2020, primarily through pandemic-era government loans and forgiveness programs, representing rapid currency debasement comparable to late Rome
- The 1913 17th Amendment removed state legislative selection of senators in favor of popular vote, eliminating state representation in federal government and shifting America from republic toward pure democracy
- Roman Emperor Aurelian successfully reunified the empire and restored currency silver content around 274 AD but was immediately assassinated by military officers fearing his anti-corruption crackdown
- Constantine fixed Roman currency after conversion to Christianity around 313 AD, and the Eastern Byzantine Empire maintained stable money for 700 years without inflation while the West collapsed
- The historian argues modern inflation is more insidious than Rome's visible coin debasement because digital currency makes wealth destruction abstract rather than physically observable through changing coin weight and color