Glenn Beck’s latest warning that the United States, Europe, and China are acting as if a “global reset” is coming should wake every patriot up. The phrase isn’t just cable-noise; institutions like the World Economic Forum openly called for a “Great Reset” after the pandemic and have been urging multilateral coordination to reshape economies and governance.
We are not living in theory—this is a deeply stressed global finance system. The International Monetary Fund has repeatedly flagged global public debt and growing tail risks, warning that public debt has surged well into the tens of trillions and that trade and geoeconomic uncertainty make the outlook unusually fragile.
At home the numbers are terrifying for anyone who believes in fiscal responsibility. The national debt has exploded into the tens of trillions, and major financial firms and market-watchers are publicly fretting about the consequences of rising borrowing and interest burdens for the dollar and markets. Our grandchildren will pay if Washington keeps treating the treasury like an ATM.
On the other side of the ledger, rival blocs are quietly preparing alternatives to American-led financial architecture. BRICS and an expanding set of partners have been advancing payment rails, local-currency settlements, and practical de-dollarization tools—moves aimed squarely at reducing reliance on US-dominated systems and increasing their leverage in a new order. This is geopolitical competition, not academic debate.
Meanwhile, central banks around the world are buying hard assets and diversifying reserves as a hedge against political risk and dollar volatility; gold purchases have surged, with official buyers adding roughly a thousand tonnes in recent years as central banks scramble for safe, sanction-resistant stores of value. Markets are sending a message: sovereigns are preparing for systemic shocks, and they’re not relying on paper promises.
This is the moment for conservatives to stop being complacent. We should expose and oppose any global scheme that substitutes technocratic one-world planning for American sovereignty, while demanding real reforms at home—spending cuts, entitlement fixes, and a restoration of sound money principles that reward work, thrift, and patriotism.
Washington’s leadership must pivot from lecturing other nations to shoring up America’s fiscal foundations and defending our strategic financial advantages. Strengthening energy independence, supporting a resilient industrial base, and restoring fiscal sanity are not radical ideas; they are common-sense measures to keep America sovereign and prosperous.
The elites who talk about “resetting” capitalism are using crisis language to normalize sweeping transfers of power to international bodies and big banks. Patriots should meet that agenda with skepticism and a plan: transparency, accountability, and a refusal to trade our constitutional liberties for a brittle, centrally planned promise of stability.
