A banner has appeared on the US debt monitoring website with a clear hint that Musk's department may fire the Fed chief.

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A banner has appeared on the US debt monitoring website with a clear hint that Musk's department may fire the Fed chief.

A remarkable graphic has appeared on a website that monitors the enormous US debt. Against the backdrop of the running growth figures, a large banner has been placed, which depicts a cartoon image of Fed Chairman Jerome Powell saying the words “They can’t fire me.” Powell said these words recently, when the headquarters of US President-elect Donald Trump began to discuss the unconstitutionality of the Federal Reserve System. Let us recall that Elon Musk supported the idea of ​​dissolving the Fed.

The banner posted on the monitoring site is a variation of the image of a popular American show, where a vote by the audience or a jury determines whether a participant stays on stage or falls through it. It can also depend on whether he answered a question correctly or not. Next to the cartoon head of the Federal Reserve System is a red button that opens a hatch under his feet. Under the hatch is a pile of dollars.

It is noteworthy that this cartoon of the site, which is followed by millions of Americans, shows the symbols of a new agency for the United States - the Department of Government Efficiency DOGE. As VO has already reported, Trump has instructed Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to head this agency. Clicking on the button takes you to the official DOGE page.

That is, the hint is clear: the new department can “dump” Powell by pressing the red button.

The US debt itself continues to grow, and is less than 36 billion away from reaching the $4 trillion mark.
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  1. +7
    14 November 2024 07: 26
    Will it be ok to beg from some gay woman now?
    1. 0
      14 November 2024 08: 23
      Europe can't handle this! The British, Germans, etc. have already said that without the US it will be a disaster... They are just puffing out their cheeks for the sake of decency, especially the Franks.
    2. 0
      14 November 2024 11: 49
      Incvizitor
      Today, 07: 26
      Will it be ok to beg from some gay woman now?

      hi Bolivar will not be able to bear the external government debt of 36 trillion greenbacks, and it may soon end with the Yankees being able to screw the whole world by refusing to pay off their debts.
      Those who may suffer the most are the country of hara-kiri and the Ghanaians who keep gold in penguins. what
      1. -1
        14 November 2024 16: 18
        Quote: ZovSailor
        Bolivar will not be able to bear the external government debt of 36 trillion greenbacks, and it may soon end with the Yankees being able to screw the whole world by refusing to pay off their debts.
        Those who may suffer the most are the country of hara-kiri and the Ghanaians who keep gold in penguins.

        Everything will be even more fun (as Trump said) "I'll just write a check in bitcoins to pay off this debt." Now the bitcoin rate is something like $60 per 000 bit, and by the time the check is written, it may well grow to $1. But after the settlement of government bonds, the rate will return to the previous level, or even lower - when you live with wolves, you howl like a wolf.
        But with the Federal Reserve System, something much more interesting can happen (and will definitely happen). The US government and its institutions do not issue any money (neither dollars nor tugriks); the dollar is issued by a cartel of private banks (LLC or joint-stock company), which print and issue THEIR OWN MONEY in non-cash form. And the US government does NOT bear any responsibility for providing this money. It itself borrows from these scumbags... strange people. Like the rest of the world.
        But the US government may well revoke the license of this strange financial institution and seize its assets for violating the US Constitution and causing damage to the state. And all the dollars in the world will IMMEDIATELY turn into... dry pumpkin tops. And immediately - no debts. Neither the US, nor the states, nor the counties and municipalities, districts and even individual citizens. Their creditor is abolished.
        And you can start from scratch.
        And even come up with a new name for the currency... Let's say "Amers"... or "bitcoins" or "American Thalers"
        Everyone who has and keeps savings in dollars will of course suffer. But not the Americans! Their paper money will probably be exchanged. Not for everyone and not everything, but for the rest of the world... it will be belay sad wassat in short it will be UNFORGETTABLE.
        What? Soviet economists warned about this. smile
        Tram won't let you down. Yes good bully drinks
        1. 0
          14 November 2024 16: 55
          bayard
          Today, 16: 18
          What? Soviet economists warned about this. smile
          Tram won't let you down. Yes good bully drinks


          hi I am aware of this and more than 10 years ago I withdrew my stocks from gay Europe and mattresses, unlike our sislibs of the school of Geidar - Chubes (Segal) - Kudrin and Co! drinks good
  2. +1
    14 November 2024 07: 38
    image of Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell saying "I can't get fired"

    Don't flatter yourself... no one is irreplaceable! Yes
    1. +1
      14 November 2024 07: 47
      "Don't be fooled... no one is irreplaceable!"
    2. -3
      14 November 2024 07: 53
      Quote: Mouse
      Don't flatter yourself... no one is irreplaceable!

      There is no need to delude yourself, the US Federal Reserve is owned by the shareholders of the Federal Reserve, not by the US Government. wink Only shareholders can decide who will manage their property. hi
      1. +4
        14 November 2024 08: 00
        Quote: fif21
        Don't be fooled, the US Federal Reserve is owned by the shareholders of the Federal Reserve, not by the US Government. Only the shareholders can decide who will manage their property.

        This is probably in some ideal market economy. There is no such thing now. This will be confirmed by the shareholders of the American bank Republic First Bank and about a dozen more American banks that have been closed over the last couple of years by a government department with the establishment of a transitional board in the person of the FDIC (US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation). In none of the cases did the shareholders choose its managers themselves.
        1. -2
          14 November 2024 11: 57
          You and those who upvote you don't understand what you're writing about at all

          you are comparing the fed and a regular commercial bank
          Google it for at least 5 minutes - the US Federal Reserve is not subject to jurisdiction (yeah, that's right) and is not subordinate to anyone, not even the US President
          1. -1
            14 November 2024 12: 17
            Quote: Ivan№One
            Google it for at least 5 minutes - the US Federal Reserve is not subject to jurisdiction (yeah, that's right) and is not subordinate to anyone, not even the US President

            So you too, spend your precious minutes and google what Trump and his staff say about this. I will help you so that you do not waste time: it is precisely because the Fed does not answer to anyone that Trump's team proposes to disband the Fed as inconsistent with the US Constitution. Or make it constitutional - that is, answerable to the president in a presidential republic.
            1. 0
              14 November 2024 12: 27
              1. You compared regular commercial banks where managers were appointed and the Fed - which is idiotic in itself. The Fed is not a bank at all, but an independent federal agency that "monitors" these very banks.
              2. The fact that the Fed has a special status, according to which it is not subordinate to anyone, this has been going on since 1914, good luck to Trump in changing something there.
              1. 0
                14 November 2024 12: 30
                Quote: Ivan№One
                You compared ordinary commercial banks where managers were appointed and the Federal Reserve - which is idiotic in itself.

                There was probably no need to be rude... Or is a different opinion an immediate reason for you to be rude?

                I didn't compare anything to anything. I gave an example of how anything can happen in the modern world, including government interference in those private matters in which, it would seem, it has no right to interfere at all.
        2. The comment was deleted.
      2. -2
        14 November 2024 08: 12
        Quote: fif21
        Make no mistake, the US Federal Reserve is owned by the shareholders of the Federal Reserve, not by the US Government. Only the shareholders can decide who will manage their property.

        No, the US President appoints the managers and can fire any of them at any time.
        And there have already been cases of dismissals
      3. +2
        14 November 2024 08: 12
        Quote: fif21
        Only shareholders can decide who will manage their property.

        Looking at numbers like these, shareholders may pull out their shares and approve the dissolution of the Fed.
        1. -1
          14 November 2024 08: 21
          Quote: Egoza
          Looking at numbers like these, shareholders may pull out their shares and approve the dissolution of the Fed.

          What are they worried about? Almost all of these figures are the US debt to the Federal Reserve, and the Federal Reserve doesn't owe anything to anyone.
        2. +1
          14 November 2024 14: 02
          Quote: Egoza
          Looking at numbers like these, shareholders may pull out their shares and approve the dissolution of the Fed.

          The Morgans, the Rockefellers... did not build this system in order to disband it. wassat The printing press (US dollars) and Fort Knox, that's theirs too. That's how they rule the world. hi
    3. -3
      14 November 2024 07: 59
      Don't flatter yourself... no one is irreplaceable!

      It’s especially funny that this comment was written by a Russian citizen. No.
    4. -1
      14 November 2024 11: 56
      it's not about replaceable or not

      The US Federal Reserve is not subordinate to the US President or any other government agency.

      The Central Bank of the Russian Federation too, by the way
      "copied" it from the USA at the time
  3. 0
    14 November 2024 08: 15
    If only we could fire Nabiullina and Siluanov. Oh, dreams, dreams.
    1. +3
      14 November 2024 08: 19
      Quote: nikolas 83
      If only we could fire Nabiullina and Siluanov. Oh, dreams, dreams.

      You can fire them, but you need to change the financial system. Where have you ever seen a financial regulatory body that is not subordinate to the government and the supreme authority?
  4. +6
    14 November 2024 08: 16
    Take away the printing press from a bunch of profiteers? That's a lot. Well then our central bank may also be ordered to live long. There will be a state bank.
  5. +2
    14 November 2024 08: 23
    Musk is turbocharging and gaining momentum. Perhaps he will really stir up the Washington swamps.
    A banner has appeared on the US debt monitoring website with a clear hint that Musk's department may fire the Fed chief.
  6. +1
    14 November 2024 08: 28
    In principle, it is good when, when the supreme power changes, as Batka says, the strategic structures of the state are "screwed over". The struggle of concepts of the country's development.
    Well, as always, I have a question: do we have a struggle of ideas, concepts for the development of our country?
    Or will we continue to wander in the wild field of oligarchy and embezzlement? soldier
    1. -1
      14 November 2024 11: 39
      Quote: V.
      In principle, it is good when, when the supreme power changes, as Batka says, the strategic structures of the state are "screwed over". The struggle of concepts of the country's development.

      Yeah. And it’s advisable to look at these cardinal changes from the outside.
      Perestroika, acceleration, glasnost! smile
  7. 0
    14 November 2024 08: 45
    Elon Musk and Trump's team could end up like D. Kennedy in Dallas.
    From several points and with different weapons, different shooters.
    And now the shadow owners have started to promote Bitcoin.
    Let me remind you that Bitcoin is a fiat, empty, unsecured unit of money, yesterday it hit 93.000 $$$$$ dollars and US dollars.
    Notice????
    Again, the measurement is in dollars.
    Another new scam is being planned.
    It's like the green agenda on CO2 emissions.
    And the green economy ESG.
    They continued to fool the whole world.
    Let Musk and Trump try, they also have industries in the US behind them
  8. 0
    14 November 2024 09: 17
    What's the point of disbanding the Fed right now? Almost all of the American inflation is being happily bought up by the snorting states. You can once again increase the national debt (as has happened many times) and continue to live at someone else's expense. The economy on our planet is so virtual that any sudden movements are contraindicated. Trump and Musk are either trolling or bargaining with the deep state.
  9. 0
    14 November 2024 09: 24
    Quote: Vladimir Nizhny Novgorod
    .
    Let me remind you, Bitcoin is a fiat, empty, unsecured unit of money, yesterday it hit 93.000 $$$$$ dollars and

    Yes indeed. People are rushing from one virtual currency to another virtuality. I have deep suspicions that it is not the Bitcoin rate that is growing, as well as the cost of gold, oil, etc. It is the dollar rate that is falling.
  10. 0
    14 November 2024 12: 01
    Quote: BlackMokona

    No, the US President appoints the managers and can fire any of them at any time.
    And there have already been cases of dismissals

    Come on, name at least one Chairman of the Board of Governors of the US Federal Reserve who was "fired" before the end of his term!
    at least one since 1914!

    the US president has no rights, the appointed chairman can no longer be removed