Trump’s “Gift” to Patriots on America’s 250th Anniversary
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Presented by Paradigm Press |
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Below is an important message from one of our highly valued sponsors. Please read it carefully as they have some special information to share with you. |
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Dear reader, |
It’s no secret that 2026 will be a very special year for American patriots like you… |
But what most people don’t know is that… |
This coming May, just a few weeks before America’s 250th anniversary… |
President Trump is planning to use executive powers granted by Public law 63-43… |
To make a critical move that I predict will unleash a historical supercycle of wealth… |
That will make a lot of patriots rich. |
And if you click here and learn what to do, you could be one of them. |
As a former advisor to the CIA, the Pentagon and the White House… |
I’ve seen a hand-written letter from President Trump about what’s coming. |
Click here to see the letter for yourself… |
And you’ll understand exactly why this “gift” could be a game-changer for America in 2026. |
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Regards, |
Jim Rickards
Former advisor to the CIA, the Pentagon and the White House |
This ad is sent on behalf of Paradigm Press, LLC, at 1001 Cathedral St., Baltimore, MD 21201. If you're not interested in this opportunity from Paradigm Press, LLC, please click here to remove your email from these offers. |
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Exclusive Headlines |
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Markets Shrugged Off the Fed and Ended the Week Higher |
The S&P 500 gained 0.9% for the week. The Nasdaq rose 2.4%. The Dow added 0.7%. A Wednesday selloff following Warsh's press conference was erased by Thursday and Friday as peace deal optimism overtook rate hike fears. |
The math is straightforward. WTI crude fell 10.6% on the week to $75.85, its lowest since early March. Average U.S. gasoline prices dropped below $4 a gallon for the first time since late March. If energy is driving inflation and energy prices are falling, the Fed's case for hiking gets harder to make. |
The underlying economy remains solid. Q2 GDP is tracking at 3% per the Atlanta Fed. Q1 S&P 500 earnings grew 28.8%. Analysts project 22% EPS growth in Q2 and 23.3% for the full year. Retail sales came in stronger than expected and the gains were broad-based, not just gasoline. |
The week ahead brings the first real test of whether the AI trade is still performing. Micron reports June 24. KB Home and Carnival follow June 22. Core PCE for May lands June 25, expected to show monthly inflation accelerating. That number will tell markets whether peak inflation is actually behind them or whether Warsh's rate hike signal was well-timed. |
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America Just Demonstrated It Controls Access to Frontier AI |
The Anthropic export control order was about more than a jailbreak. In one action, the U.S. government showed it can decide who gets access to the world's most capable AI models. The Economist's framing is correct: that is a significant and new form of national power. |
The historical parallels are instructive. America restricted nuclear technology after World War II, then eventually accepted that allies with independent capabilities warranted cooperation. It tried to contain cryptography in the 1970s and failed. Frontier AI has elements of both: dangerous enough to warrant restriction, but potentially impossible to contain permanently as open-weight models improve and other countries develop independent capabilities. |
The economic tension is acute. Anthropic says 80% of its consumer use is overseas. Many of its researchers are not American citizens and were caught by the order. Restricting the world's best AI lab from global markets is self-defeating if the goal is American technological leadership. |
The likely outcome is a tiered access model. Best capabilities reserved for U.S. military and cyber advantage. Next-best available to allies, the F-35 equivalent. A handicapped version sold broadly with safety constraints built in. |
For U.S. allies, the dependency problem is structural. Europe has roughly one-fifteenth the compute capacity of the U.S. Running frontier models requires compute. If SpaceX builds orbital data centers, that gap widens. The leverage America holds over allies through AI access may eventually exceed its leverage through trade or defense commitments. |
The non-whining response, per the Economist, is to build strength: more energy, faster permitting, integrated East Asian semiconductor cooperation, and conditions where AI ecosystems can thrive outside the U.S. |
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