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Top Three Videos – June 10, 2026

David Morgan: Silver Drop Sparks Liquidity Fears as Debt and Geopolitical Risks Build...(June 6, 2026)

Liberty & Finance...

Summary

 

David Morgan, the “silver guru” from The Morgan Report, argues that the June 5th selloff (gold down ~3%, silver down ~7%, platinum down 5.5%) is a liquidity event rather than a fundamental change, noting gold pierced its 200-day moving average while silver held, but both likely head lower with gold support near $4,200 and weekly support around $3,500. He maintains the long-term bull case is intact because none of the drivers (debt, deficits, currency debasement, geopolitical instability, distrust in institutions) have gone away, frames $50 silver as “crossing the Rubicon,” and warns nimble traders risk buying back at the same price they sold. His broader thesis, drawn from his editorial “The Age of Distrust,” is that society is undergoing a structural, global, accelerating collapse of trust in every institution, and that once trust is gone institutions operate “on borrowed time,” with freedom being more valuable than all the gold in the world.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

The selloff is liquidity, not fundamentals: Gold fell ~3%, silver ~7%, platinum 5.5%, and mining shares more, triggered by a stronger farm payroll number Morgan calls “an excuse.” He stresses gold remains dramatically higher than a year or two ago, central banks keep accumulating, and gold is now the primary reserve asset over US Treasuries.

 

Profit-taking and the $50 silver line: Morgan tells members with an average cost around $35 to consider taking some money off the table in the low $50s, citing the painful scenario of watching silver run to $121 and giving back all gains down to $50. He invokes Harry Browne’s permanent portfolio concept and notes metals may now be 20-25% of portfolios that were meant to be 10%, justifying rebalancing.

 

Waterfall decline and the 2008 parallel: With the NASDAQ down nearly 1,000 points as they spoke, Morgan says this looks like the start of a waterfall decline, typically a three-day event, expecting more downside Monday-Tuesday unless the “Plunge Protection Team” intervenes. He recalls 2008 when gold fell ~30% and silver more than 50%, but both bottomed fast, with gold nearly doubling and silver rising roughly fivefold off the lows.

 

War scenarios and oil as the key indicator: Morgan lays out three scenarios from the Iran war: de-escalation (best case, gold benefits from lower oil and rate-cut expectations), ongoing conflict (most likely, gold higher over time with sharp corrections), and major energy disruption (gold surges eventually but miners/silver initially get hit on liquidity selling). He argues oil is the bridge between war and economy, and that the war accelerates existing debt and deficit problems rather than creating them.

 

The Age of Distrust and free speech: Morgan reads from his editorial arguing the world faces a structural, global, accelerating breakdown of trust in governments, media, banks, public health agencies, universities, and money itself. He urges viewers to exercise free speech while they still can and to pull some savings out of the system, citing Robert Malone on thought-monitoring technology and stating freedom is priceless and worth more than all the gold in the world.

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Lawrence Lepard: The Next Big Money Printing Cycle Is Almost Here...(June 7, 2026)

Thoughtful Money...

Summary

 

Lawrence Lepard, author of The Big Print, argues that in a credit-driven system where debt grows faster than GDP, another massive money-printing event is mathematically inevitable, putting the system at “Defcon 2, maybe 1,” following the 2008 and COVID prints. Taking a non-consensus view, he predicts new Fed chair Kevin Warsh will actually cut rates (despite a 3% market-implied odds and Warsh’s hawkish billing), pointing to the Dallas trimmed PCE at 2.3% versus headline PCE at 3.8%, and believes the endgame is a World War II-style yield curve control and “run it hot” industrial policy that tolerates serious inflation, removes bank SLR rules, and sends the 10-year yield higher as foreigners (Japan sold ~$46B, China ~$30B in March) dump bonds. He thinks a near-term recession is unlikely given AI capex approaching ~$1 trillion this year and ~$1.2 trillion next, dismisses stablecoins (~$350-400B) as too small to absorb $10 trillion of annual debt rollover, and remains massively bullish on gold, silver, and Bitcoin, viewing the current drawdowns as a bottoming process. He is aggressively buying Bitcoin (targeting $200,000) and MicroStrategy (targeting $1,000), defends Saylor against Ponzi accusations, and frames his personal mission as fixing the monetary system because the 1971 abandonment of the gold standard “ruined the country.”

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

The Big Print is mathematically inevitable: Lepard’s thesis is that money supply must grow to support credit, but debt is outpacing GDP, leading to a sovereign debt or dollar currency crisis whose only solution is printing. He cites Hank Paulson’s recent “break the glass moment” warning on credit markets and notes the debt-to-GDP level is comparable to World War II.

 

Non-consensus call that Warsh will cut rates: Against the CME-implied 3% chance of a June cut, Lepard thinks Warsh could even cut 50 basis points, citing Warsh’s push for the Dallas trimmed PCE (2.3% versus headline 3.8%), Truflation under 2%, and Warsh’s claims that AI will boost productivity. He argues the chairman browbeats the 12 voting members and that a high-rate environment is incompatible with Bessent’s industrial-policy growth agenda.

 

Yield curve control and “run it hot” inflation: Lepard expects a WWII-style cap (short rate 0.375%, long rate 2.5% in 1942) and elimination of the supplementary leverage ratio to force banks to absorb Treasuries off the Fed balance sheet. He thinks the next big print may not be a crisis but a “run it hot” scenario where Bessent and Warsh (both ex-Druckenmiller, personal friends) run industrial policy that produces jobs alongside serious inflation, with stocks making nominal highs like Weimar Germany or Venezuela.

 

AI capex tsunami delays recession but is the key risk: Lepard pegs AI capex near $1 trillion this year, ~$1.2 trillion next, plus deficit spending and bonus depreciation from the “one big beautiful bill,” making a near-term recession unlikely. The main danger is a change in expectations, citing Ed Dowd’s evidence of “double ordering” of chips like 1999-2000, with Nvidia’s momentum reportedly stumbling per Michael Oliver.

 

Bullish on gold, silver, and Bitcoin through the drawdown: Lepard sees metals carving a bottom after a blowoff top, with silver having broken its $50 cap to $120 before falling to $76, and targets of $100-200 on Jeff Curry-style commodity breakout math. On Bitcoin (drawdown only ~50% versus prior 70-90%, low near $60K), he uses a power-law model, targets $200,000, defends MicroStrategy’s leveraged-Bitcoin and 11.5% “Stretch” preferred-dividend strategy, and warns Saylor would go bankrupt if the thesis breaks but believes it won’t.

History's Biggest Wealth Transfer Forced Us To Buy Farm Land...(Jan 28, 2025)

Laura Farms...

Summary

 

By the numbers:

 

  1. Purchased 80 acres for $850,000 = $10,625 per acre
  2. Financed over 30 years
  3. Budgeting to grow a corn crop of 240 bushels per acre in 2025, sold at $4.40 per bushel to earn $84,480
  4. Mortgage payment on the ground of $70,000 per year, plus $70 real estate tax per acre
  5. Have to pay for seed, fertilizer, equipment, irrigation, etc to actually raise corn crop

In this video, we dive into the biggest wealth transfer in history and why it’s changing the game for everyday people like us. With over $84 trillion expected to transfer between generations in the next 20 years, we’re seeing major shifts in who holds financial power and what it means for the future of land ownership.

 

Land isn’t just an investment—it’s a blessing. I don’t take lightly the opportunity to be a steward of the land and to share this journey with all of you.

 

For generations, owning land has been a symbol of stability, independence, and security. But as this massive wealth transfer unfolds, the opportunity to invest in land is quickly becoming a necessity—not just an option.

 

As farmland values climb—some increasing by over 10% per year in the Midwest—we’re seeing why people like us are choosing to invest in land to protect our legacy and create opportunities for the future. It’s not just about today, it’s about creating something lasting for tomorrow.

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