Category: Finance

  • The Bilderberg CEO Purge

    A crisis-era elite-coordination theory claiming that the 2008 financial collapse was used not only to restructure banks and markets, but to remove corporate leaders who were not aligned with emerging global priorities, especially around climate policy, carbon transition, and centralized economic governance. In this reading, the crisis became a management tool for elite succession.

  • The Amero Currency

    A North American integration theory claiming that the U.S. dollar would eventually be replaced by a continental currency called the Amero after a planned or exploited economic collapse. The theory linked recession, trade integration, and fears of a “North American Union” into a single scenario in which financial emergency would be used to erase monetary sovereignty.

  • The Planned Meltdown

    A financial-crisis theory claiming that the 2008 housing and banking collapse was not merely the result of reckless lending and systemic fragility, but a controlled demolition managed by major Wall Street institutions and the Federal Reserve. In this reading, the crash functioned as a wealth-consolidation event that destroyed smaller banks, transferred distressed assets upward, and deepened the power of the largest financial actors.

  • The Banking Debt-Wipe

    A hopeful Y2K-era theory claiming that the millennium bug might erase or corrupt credit-card, mortgage, and banking records badly enough to free ordinary people from debt. In this reading, the year rollover was imagined not just as a threat but as a possible popular reset in which computerized ledgers would fail and creditors would lose the ability to prove what was owed.

  • The 1929 Crash Managed Exit

    The 1929 Crash Managed Exit was the theory that the stock-market collapse of October 1929 was not simply the bursting of a speculative bubble but a controlled event in which the biggest banking houses had already secured their own positions, reduced exposure, and prepared to profit from the public collapse. In its strongest form, the theory alleged that the “Big Five” or equivalent leading Wall Street interests had helped inflate the bubble, recognized the end in advance, and exited or hedged while small investors were still being drawn in. The historical record clearly shows a major speculative boom, a September 1929 peak, and emergency banker intervention on Black Thursday to stabilize prices. The conspiracy version turned those facts into evidence of orchestration and pre-arranged escape.