
THE PCE REPORT: INFLATION DATA OR A COVERT FED SIGNAL FOR THE GREAT RESET?
If you blinked, you missed it. The Bureau of Economic Analysis dropped its latest Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index report this morning, and the mainstream media is already spinning it as "good news" for the economy. But for those of us who have been paying attention—who understand that the game is rigged and the deck is stacked against the American worker—this isn't just numbers on a spreadsheet. This is a distress signal. This is the Federal Reserve’s way of telling you that the currency you hold in your wallet is nothing but digital dust, and the "soft landing" they’re selling is actually a controlled crash into a new world order.
Let’s break down what the headlines are screaming: "Core PCE rises 2.8% year-over-year," "Inflation eases slightly," "Fed on track for rate cuts." Sounds benign, right? Wrong. The PCE isn't just an inflation gauge—it's the Fed’s pet metric, the one they use to justify every backroom deal and shadow policy move. The Bureau of Economic Analysis is the same agency that told you GDP was soaring while you couldn't afford a loaf of bread. They’re the same people who changed the definition of "inflation" in 1983 to exclude housing costs and energy prices when it suited them. Now, they want you to believe that a 2.8% increase is "moderate"? Wake up.
Here’s the hidden truth they don’t want you to connect: The PCE report is released exactly when the Fed needs to signal a pivot without saying a word. Look at the calendar. This report drops as the Treasury is preparing to auction off billions in long-term debt. The stock market is teetering on a knife's edge. Regional banks are still bleeding from the SVB collapse. The Fed needs to create the illusion of stability so the house of cards doesn't collapse before the election. So what do they do? They massage the PCE methodology. They "seasonally adjust" the data to make the numbers look palatable. They include "substitution effects"—a fancy term for telling you that if steak is too expensive, you should just eat dog food. That’s not economics; that’s social engineering.
But the real story is deeper. The PCE report is the key to unlocking the Fed’s true agenda: the digital dollar and the Great Reset. Think about it. Why does the Fed care so much about a 0.1% tick in PCE when real wages have been stagnant for decades? Because inflation is the excuse. Every time the PCE "runs hot," they scream "tighten policy!" and raise interest rates. Every time it "cools," they whisper "rate cuts coming" and pump the market. But the goal has never been to stabilize prices. The goal is to create a crisis of confidence in cash itself. When inflation is high enough, when your savings are eroded enough, when the system is volatile enough, you’ll beg for a stablecoin. You’ll welcome the central bank digital currency (CBDC) as a savior. The PCE report is the weather forecast for that storm.
And let’s not ignore the political angle. This report drops just as the Biden administration is trying to gaslight the American people into thinking "Bidenomics" is working. The White House press releases will cite this PCE figure as proof that inflation is "under control." But the American people aren’t stupid. They see the grocery bills. They see the rent hikes. They see the gas prices. The PCE is a weighted average that underrepresents the things that hurt working families the most—housing, energy, food. It overrepresents things like "recreational services" and "financial services" that only the elite can afford. This isn't a mistake; it's a deliberate statistical manipulation to manufacture consent for a failing economic policy.
The real data—the data they hide in the footnotes—shows that the cost of shelter is still skyrocketing. The "supercore" services inflation (which strips out everything except what the Fed doesn’t want you to see) is stubbornly high. And the money supply? M2 is contracting at a rate we haven't seen since the Great Depression. That’s not a soft landing; that’s a liquidity trap. The PCE report is the canary in the coal mine, and the canary is dead.
So what does this mean for you? It means you need to stop trusting the narrative. The PCE report isn't a neutral economic indicator; it’s a political weapon. It’s used to justify wealth transfers from savers to borrowers. It’s used to prop up a stock market that’s detached from reality. It’s used to keep the American people docile while the financial elite prepare for the transition to a cashless society.
Connect the dots. The PCE report is the smoke screen. The real war is against your privacy, your savings, and your freedom. Don't let them fool you with seasonally adjusted data and cherry-picked metrics. The truth is in the shadows, and the shadows are everywhere.
Stay woke. The numbers are lying.
Final Thoughts
Having pored over the PCE report’s latest data, it’s clear that while the headline inflation numbers are cooling, the core services component remains stubbornly sticky—a reminder that the "last mile" of this fight is the hardest. The market’s immediate sigh of relief is understandable, but seasoned observers know the real story lies beneath the surface: consumer spending is starting to fray at the edges, and the Fed’s delicate dance is far from over. My takeaway? This isn’t a victory lap, but a cautious checkpoint in a marathon where the biggest risk is declaring victory too soon.