B.A. M
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Catherine Austin Fitts describes how the dollar could collapse this year (although she doesn't think it will) and how "violence" is the new Anthony Fauci—that is, how violence is used as a deflationary tactic to stall the inflation caused by de-dollarization. "For three decades I've been saying the dollar's not going to collapse. The dollar's not gonna collapse. So now I'm going to say you need to be prepared in case it does because it could, it could collapse this year.... "So now we're in an orderly decline, although it's not an orderly world. But it's an orderly decline. So we've been talking about our scenarios for 2026 and there are two axes on our scenario design. One is de-dollarization, which can be fast or slow. We're literally not conceiving of a scenario when dollars go up, though stablecoins, if successful, it could, it could. "So I think if it's successful, it will slow down the de-dollarization, it won't stop. Okay. But then the other axis is violent disruption. A lot of which is man-made. And what's very interesting, and I know you experience this with your clients all the time, if de-dollarization is fast, then we will feel that as much higher inflation. Okay. Or I would say cost of goods. So household cost of goods skyrockets, energy, housing, et cetera. "Violent disruption can be highly deflationary. It can also be inflationary, but it can— Generally, it's like a deflation machine. You know, I used to say Fauci's job was to manufacture deflation had nothing to do with health. Get a call— And the central bankers need more deflation. Shut some, you know, shut main street down. Violent disruption is a much more local thing where de-dollarization is more of a country-wide federal thing." This clip of Fitts, a former Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, investment banker, and founder of the Solari Report (@solari_the), is taken from a video posted to the Solari Report YouTube channel on February 24, 2026.













