“The Most Predictable Crisis in History” (He Said It, Not Us)

Jamie Dimon doesn’t do panic.

He runs JPMorgan Chase, the most powerful bank in America—and one of the last institutions with a seat at every economic table that matters:

Fed meetings, White House briefings, and global central bank summits.

So when he says the U.S. debt disaster is...

“The most predictable crisis in history.”

…it’s worth more than 1,000 think tank papers.

He’s not guessing.

He’s not speculating.

He’s telling you—in the plainest language he’s legally allowed—that the math has already broken, and the system is just coasting on momentum.

The Dollar’s Decay Isn’t a Theory Anymore—It’s Arithmetic

Dimon is pointing to something everyone else is pretending not to see:

Interest on U.S. debt just passed $1.1 trillion a year.

The government is borrowing $1 trillion every 100 days. That’s more than defense spending—and soon more than Social Security.

But the Fed can’t raise rates without blowing up the budget. Nor can it cut rates without reigniting inflation.

No conspiracy. No theory.

Just cold math—and it no longer works.

It’s Controlled Demolition.

Dimon knows the dollar won’t vanish overnight. That’s not how this ends.

Instead, the currency will rot in place:

  • You’ll still get paid.

  • You’ll still spend.

  • But the value of everything will drift farther out of reach—until “saving” feels like a joke and “retirement” becomes a luxury item.

While the public waits for permission to panic…

The elites are already repositioning.

Dimon isn’t warning you. He’s warning his circle.

The ones with exposure to gold, land, private equity, non-dollar assets, and real-time data pipelines the public will never see.

So Ask Yourself…

If Jamie Dimon, the guy with the ultimate backstage pass to the financial system, says this is a predictable crisis, why are you still betting on the system not breaking?

Why are you trusting the institutions whose own architects are hedging against collapse?

Why are you holding the bag?

This isn’t about fear. It’s about clarity.

The cracks are in plain sight.

The insiders are moving.

And the window to act like one of them is closing.

—Death of the Dollar