Watch this on Rumble: https://rumble.com/v705eh8-fiat-children-when-we-left-gold-we-sold-the-future.html

Monologue:

There was a time when value was measured by what was real. Gold weighed nations. God weighed men. Children were seen as the inheritance of the Lord — a divine treasury passed from one generation to the next. But in 1971, something broke. Not just in the vaults of banks, but in the vault of the soul.

When America left the gold standard, it signaled more than the end of financial restraint — it marked the beginning of spiritual fiat. Value was no longer backed by anything eternal. Currency became illusion. And culture followed. Without a standard, anything goes — and everything costs.

We didn’t just unchain the dollar.


We unchained the child.

In the same breath that we printed trillions from thin air, we printed new identities for the young. Boys told they’re girls. Girls told they’re gods. Classrooms became laboratories. Families became optional. And the vault — the home, the father, the faith — was emptied.

What replaced it? Confusion. Debt. Despair. We raised a generation on moral inflation and called it progress. But when you corrupt the treasury, you collapse the kingdom.

You see, children were never meant to be experiments. They were meant to be entrusted. Shaped. Shielded. They are not liabilities. They are the living scrolls of God’s covenant with the future.

But we spent them — for votes, for movements, for pleasure, for profit.

And now we wonder why the nation is broke, both in coin and in conscience. Why the debt climbs and the soul sinks. Why we feel hollow despite all the noise and novelty. It’s because we traded the inheritance for indulgence. We left the gold and sold the future.

But there is still time. The vault can be restored. The treasury reclaimed.
But only if we return to the standard — not of banks, but of the Book.
Not of paper, but of purpose.
Not of currency, but of covenant.

Part 1: The Day the Standard Died

On August 15th, 1971, President Richard Nixon stood before the nation and unpegged the U.S. dollar from gold. With a stroke of policy, the dollar ceased to be a representation of real value and became a symbol of faith — not in God, but in government. It was called a “temporary suspension,” but it was permanent. From that moment forward, money became fiat — declared valuable by decree, not by substance.

This act wasn’t just an economic pivot. It was a prophetic fracture. Because in the spiritual realm, natural changes echo eternal truths. To abandon gold is to abandon accountability — to replace the weight of reality with the illusion of worth. It was the modern version of Esau selling his birthright for a bowl of stew. Short-term ease, long-term loss.

Before 1971, every dollar in your pocket had a shadow behind it — a piece of gold resting in a vault, anchoring your money to something real. That reality imposed restraint. It demanded discipline. But when gold was removed, so was the tether to truth. And when a nation detaches its economy from accountability, it won’t be long before its morality follows.

What happened next was not a coincidence. Within that same decade, we saw the removal of prayer from schools, the rise of abortion rights, and the redefinition of the family. Economic fiat became moral fiat. The currency was no longer backed by gold, and the child was no longer backed by God.

The truth is, a standard died that day — not just a financial one, but a foundational one. It was a shift in worldview. It told the nation: “We can create value from nothing. We can sustain ourselves without substance. We can build an empire without eternity.”

And now, the empire is hollow.

You can track the collapse of our culture right alongside the collapse of our coin. The graphs look the same: upward in debt, downward in dignity. Because when a people abandon the standard, they don’t just lose their money — they lose their meaning.

We left gold. But worse — we left the golden rule, the golden lampstand, the refiner’s fire.


We left the standard that was never supposed to be touched.

And what filled the vacuum? Paper promises. Inflated egos. Children raised without compass or covenant.


All because we thought we could declare value, instead of living by it.

Part 2: The Treasury of the Lord

Before there were banks, before coins, before any measure of material wealth, there existed a higher treasury—one not stored in vaults, but in wombs, homes, and altars. That treasury was the child. Psalm 127:3 declares, “Children are a heritage of the Lord; and the fruit of the womb is His reward.” The Ethiopian canon mirrors this truth, calling children “the inheritance of the Lord.” In the divine economy, children are the currency of the covenant, the reward of righteousness, and the vessels of tomorrow’s kingdom.

To understand this is to see clearly: a nation’s spiritual health is not measured by its GDP, but by how it treats its children. Are they protected or politicized? Discipled or distracted? Raised in covenant or corrupted by culture? A full treasury—a generation brought up in wisdom, love, and truth—secures a blessed future. But a spent treasury—a generation raised in confusion, sin, and rebellion—guarantees collapse.

Today, we no longer guard the treasury. We hand it over to predators disguised as teachers, entertainers, and influencers. We no longer sow into it with Scripture and sacrifice—we strip it for clicks, cash, and comfort. What should be the inheritance of the Lord has become the inheritance of the State, the corporation, the cult of self. The child is no longer treated as sacred but as programmable—malleable clay in the hands of ideologues and industries.

What is gender ideology if not an assault on the divine blueprint? What is modern education if not the inflation of the soul with counterfeit knowledge? What is abortion if not the incineration of the treasury before it ever draws breath? These aren’t policy debates—they are spiritual bankruptcy procedures. We are selling off the future to fund a present that pleases only the flesh.

The Ethiopian tradition viewed the child not only as a blessing, but as prophecy. To pollute the child is to distort the scroll. To abort the child is to delete a line from the covenant. To confuse the child is to sever the thread of divine memory. And that thread is unraveling fast.

We didn’t misplace the inheritance. We spent it. We inflated its value with lies and devalued its worth with compromise. We exchanged purity for perversion, purpose for pleasure, and presence for programming. And we did it all while claiming progress.

But this treasury was never ours to spend. It was entrusted to us by the King of Kings. It was given that we might multiply righteousness across generations. Now the King is asking, “Where is My inheritance?” And if we cannot answer with our children, we cannot answer at all.

Part 3: Fiat Morality and Cultural Hyperinflation

The moment the dollar became fiat—detached from gold, from weight, from reality—something shifted in the spirit of the world. The idea that value could be declared without substance, that worth could exist without backing, infected more than economics. It infiltrated morality. We stopped just printing money. We began printing identities, truths, and realities that had no anchor in eternity.

Once a nation learns it can create money from nothing, it soon believes it can create morals from nothing. We told ourselves: there is no fixed standard, no universal truth, no divine design. Everything became a construct. Gender, marriage, family, even right and wrong. We inflated the culture like we inflated the currency—pumping it full of temporary highs and borrowed time. The result? A bloated society with no weight, no spine, no soul.

The parallels are striking. Just as inflation makes the dollar worth less, moral inflation makes the soul cost less. Sex is cheap. Life is disposable. Words are redefined until they mean nothing. And like an economy propped up by artificial wealth, culture is propped up by artificial virtue—tolerance without truth, inclusion without integrity, freedom without responsibility.

Children are the first to suffer. In a fiat moral system, they are taught that truth is subjective, that identity is fluid, that feelings outrank facts. What would have once been treated with prayer, discipline, or deliverance is now affirmed, medicated, and celebrated. Confusion is institutionalized. Brokenness is paraded. And the treasury of the Lord becomes the testing ground of man’s rebellion.

This is cultural hyperinflation: the rapid, unchecked devaluation of everything sacred. The more we try to create value without God, the more worthless everything becomes. The more identities we manufacture, the less anyone knows who they are. The more freedoms we demand, the more enslaved we become. And like a currency losing its grip on gold, our culture loses its grip on God.

We are living in a time when people can identify as anything except what they were made to be—because the standard has been removed. The weight is gone. And without weight, there is no value. Without value, there is no protection. And without protection, the treasury is exposed.

The question isn’t whether we’re in collapse. The question is how long the system can pretend it isn’t. Because like a bubble ready to burst, a fake morality cannot last. Eventually, the bill comes due—not in dollars, but in daughters and sons. And when that happens, no stimulus package can save us.

Part 4: The Collapse of the Household Bank

If the child is the treasury, then the household is the bank — the vault where that inheritance is stored, nurtured, and protected. For centuries, the family was the strongest institution on earth. It was the first temple, the first school, the first government, and the first economy. The father was the priest, the provider, and the protector. The mother was the nurturer, the builder of legacy. Together, they were entrusted with heaven’s most precious asset: the soul of the child.

But after the gold standard was dropped and the culture followed into fiat morality, the household began to fracture. The divorce rate soared in the 1970s and 80s. The number of single-parent homes escalated. Fatherlessness became epidemic. And with the father removed, the vault was left unguarded. The State stepped in as the new guardian — but it had no covenant. It had no love. Only systems, incentives, and surveillance.

The collapse of the household bank was no accident. It was engineered by movements that viewed the traditional family as outdated, oppressive, or patriarchal. Feminism, Marxism, and humanism worked together — subtly and then aggressively — to redefine the roles of men and women. The father was portrayed as unnecessary, the mother as overburdened, and the child as an independent being beholden to the culture, not to covenant.

This dismantling of the home was a spiritual economic attack. Without fathers, there is no intergenerational wisdom. Without mothers, there is no consistent nurture. Without both, children are deposited into the world with no backing — emotionally, morally, or spiritually. Like fiat currency, they’re told they’re valuable, but they carry no inheritance. No root. No covering.

When the bank collapses, counterfeit currencies flood the system. So too, when the family collapses, counterfeit identities, ideologies, and “families” flood the child’s world. The vault is open. The treasury is exposed. And predators rush in to claim what was never theirs.

The household was designed to be the place where value was taught, preserved, and defended. But now, many homes are war zones — not between good and evil, but between confusion and compromise. Screens replace scripture. Noise replaces prayer. Pleasure replaces purpose. The child, once guarded by mother and father, is now raised by algorithm and agenda.

And yet, the cost of this collapse is not measured in court filings or custody battles. It’s measured in the eyes of a generation that no longer knows who they are — or whose they are. The household bank has been looted. The vault is empty. And the currency of the future has been spent on the altar of the present.

Part 5: Hijacking the Inheritance

An inheritance is meant to be passed down, not stolen. It is sacred, not up for negotiation. But in our time, the inheritance of God — the children — has been hijacked. Not with force, but with seduction. Not with chains, but with ideologies. What was once seen as the blessing of the womb has been rebranded as a burden, a problem to be solved, or a choice to be terminated. In doing so, we have committed a spiritual act of theft against heaven.

In ancient times, when an enemy wanted to destroy a kingdom, they wouldn’t just kill the king — they would target the heir. Because whoever controls the next generation controls the future narrative. This is what we are witnessing now. Abortion on demand. Normalized sterilization. Gender reassignment pushed on minors. Fertility sacrificed on the altar of personal autonomy. We are not protecting the inheritance — we are offering it up.

Eugenics once wore the mask of science. Today it wears the mask of progress. Yet the spirit is the same: not all lives are worth preserving. This lie has taken root in our systems and in our hearts. We’ve been conditioned to see the child as an economic liability, a climate threat, or a social inconvenience. And so we spend billions to end the lives that heaven declared priceless. We used to celebrate fruitfulness. Now we subsidize its elimination.

But the hijacking goes deeper. It’s not just about bodies — it’s about souls. Through entertainment, education, and endless screens, the child’s mind is programmed with confusion before they can read. Their innocence is traded for ideology. Their curiosity is harvested for perversion. Their allegiance is shifted from family and faith to state and self. This isn’t parenting. It’s grooming — and the world has become fluent in it.

In the Ethiopian canon, inheritance isn’t merely material. It is covenantal. It is passed through names, blessings, memory, and identity. To steal a child from that process is to cut off a bloodline — not just of genetics, but of divine purpose. The hijackers know this. That’s why the attack is focused, relentless, and disguised as virtue.

We were supposed to raise prophets. Instead, we’re raising platforms. We were called to disciple sons and daughters of the kingdom. Instead, we’re developing brand ambassadors for Babylon. The inheritance hasn’t just been hijacked — it’s being repackaged and resold to the highest bidder.

But make no mistake. God does not forget what belongs to Him. The child bears His name. His image. His intention. And He will hold us accountable for what we did with the treasury. Whether we raised it, or robbed it.

Part 6: Educating a Bankrupt Generation

If the household was the original bank, then education was the treasury ledger — the record of what values were passed down, what truths were taught, what wisdom was preserved. Education was never meant to be neutral. It was a sacred trust: to form the minds of the next generation in alignment with eternal principles. But once the standard was removed — once truth became subjective and God was evicted from the classroom — the curriculum became a weapon. The ledger was falsified. And the deposit turned to debt.

In earlier generations, children were taught that they came from something greater — that their lives had purpose, design, and responsibility. They were taught discipline, sacrifice, and the weight of history. But as fiat morality took root, education stopped forming character and started forming consumers — not of products, but of propaganda. Knowledge was replaced by programming. Facts were replaced by feelings. And wisdom was replaced by ideology.

Today’s schools no longer teach children how to think — they tell them what to think. The classroom has become the battlefield where the last fragments of identity are either reforged or erased. History is rewritten. Gender is redefined. God is removed. And the child — already untethered from family — is now untethered from truth. They are told they can be anything, while simultaneously being taught that they are nothing but evolved stardust and systemic guilt.

This is not education — it is indoctrination through deconstruction. And the result is a generation that graduates with degrees but no direction, credentials but no convictions, information but no identity. These children are not being equipped to build — they are being prepped to comply. To blend. To obey whatever narrative is trending at the time. Because without a foundation, anything can be built — and torn down — on their backs.

In the Ethiopian canon, the passing of knowledge is a spiritual act. It is generational obedience. To raise a child in truth is to write a living scroll. But when that scroll is torn, blanked, or rewritten by strangers, the inheritance is lost. What good is it to be a child of God if you are never taught His name?

And so we are witnessing a bankruptcy not only of money, but of meaning. The ledgers are full of lies, the vaults are empty, and the teachers are priests of a new religion: one that worships the self, denies the Creator, and demands the sacrifice of innocence.

The mind of the child was meant to be a sanctuary. Instead, it has become a stock exchange for ideologies, traded daily without the child even knowing the cost. And we, the stewards of the treasury, let it happen — while calling it progress.

Part 7: The Treasury Under Siege

The assault on children is no longer covert — it is coordinated. What was once whispered in dark corners is now shouted from platforms, streamed on screens, and baked into policies. The treasury of the Lord — the children — is under siege. The attack is not only physical or ideological; it is spiritual, strategic, and systematic. And it is global.

Every major industry with influence over the young has aligned itself to this cause. The entertainment industry conditions them to crave chaos. Music feeds them rebellion, sexual confusion, and nihilism. Social media inflames comparison, depression, and identity distortion. Even children’s cartoons now preach doctrines that rival pagan temples — masking the perverse behind colors and catchphrases. What was once safe has become a theater of war, where innocence is the primary casualty.

But the most dangerous aspect of this siege is its disguise. It comes cloaked in compassion. It claims to be inclusive, liberating, and affirming. “We just want children to be themselves,” it says — while aggressively remaking them in the image of the world. The strategy is simple: break their identity, sever them from tradition, erase the Creator, and replace Him with culture.

This is not new. In Scripture, when Pharaoh feared the growth of Israel, he ordered the sons to be killed. When Herod feared the birth of a king, he ordered the children to be slaughtered. Always — when the enemy fears a future move of God, he attacks the seed. The same spirit is active now. But instead of swords, it uses symbols. Instead of armies, it uses algorithms. Instead of altars, it uses the classroom.

The Ethiopian canon speaks of those who corrupt the innocent as thieves of divine order — as those who store up judgment for themselves. To wound a child spiritually is to tamper with the scroll of destiny. It is to vandalize the covenant before it can be fulfilled. And the enemy knows: if he can reprogram the child, he doesn’t need to fight the adult. He simply waits for the next generation to self-destruct.

The goal is not merely confusion — it is possession. Not by demons in the Hollywood sense, but by ideologies that turn the child into a product: a carrier of agendas, a foot soldier for causes they didn’t choose. We have children marching, protesting, transitioning, and even mutilating themselves — all while being told this is freedom. But freedom without truth is just a prettier prison.

The treasury is surrounded. The vault is under siege. But the most tragic reality? The guards — parents, pastors, teachers — have fallen asleep at their posts, or worse, joined the invaders. And the King’s inheritance is left exposed.

Part 8: Economic Debt as Spiritual Proof

Look at the national debt clock, and you’ll see a number spinning faster than any of us can comprehend. Trillions upon trillions — borrowed from a future we cannot repay. But this isn’t just poor economics. It’s prophetic mathematics. It’s a mirror of a deeper reality: spiritual debt. Because when a nation spends its children — morally, emotionally, and spiritually — it doesn’t just lose its future. It borrows against it, with interest.

Since the moment we left the gold standard, the United States has seen explosive growth in debt. But that was only the surface. Beneath the numbers is a more terrifying trend: as we abandoned real money, we also abandoned real morality. We funded wars without cause, institutions without accountability, and lifestyles without consequence. And as the Treasury printed paper, the culture printed sin — endlessly, shamelessly, and at scale.

Every dollar of debt we accumulate as a nation is a reflection of something we refused to confront spiritually. It is the price of abortion, the cost of fatherlessness, the interest on generations of rebellion. We throw money at broken schools, broken cities, broken people — but never ask why they’re broken. Instead of repentance, we offer reparations. Instead of healing, we apply loans. And all the while, the vault grows emptier, the dollar weaker, and the children more confused.

Just like fiat currency is created from nothing and backed by nothing, modern identity and morality are now printed the same way. “You are who you feel you are.” “Truth is what you make it.” But feelings are not collateral. And lies do not hold value. So the system requires constant inflation — more pronouns, more genders, more surgeries, more slogans. Because the underlying foundation is bankrupt.

This is not sustainable. Economically or spiritually. You cannot build a kingdom on credit and call it freedom. You cannot spend what you never earned and expect it to endure. And yet, that’s exactly what we’ve done with both money and morality. We have maxed out the soul of the nation — and handed the bill to our children.

The Ethiopian tradition speaks often of debt, but not just financial. It warns of the debt of unrepented sin, of curses passed from father to son, of altars defiled that echo for generations. When a nation abandons its covenant with truth, the debt doesn’t vanish. It compounds — spiritually and structurally.

What we are witnessing now is not just fiscal collapse. It is the consequence of selling sacred things for temporal convenience. Our economy is groaning under trillions of dollars in debt — but that’s just the surface tremor. The real quake is in the spirit. And it will not be resolved by raising interest rates. It will only be resolved by repentance.

Part 9: The Lost Generation and the Prophetic Warning

There is a generation walking the earth right now that no longer remembers who they are. They were never taught the language of the soul. They were never shown the face of the Father. They are untethered, unanchored, and unclaimed — not because God rejected them, but because the previous generation refused to pass the scroll. These are not just troubled youth. This is a lost generation — not in the sense of geography, but of identity. They are the result of inheritance interrupted.

We see them everywhere — eyes glued to screens, minds filled with contradictions, hearts numbed by overexposure and overstimulation. Many of them are spiritually orphaned, though they may live with both parents. They have been raised in houses but not in homes. Schooled in systems but never discipled in truth. The vault was broken before they ever arrived, and now they wander through the rubble looking for something real.

The Bible warned us of this. In Jeremiah’s day, the children of Israel were taken into captivity because their fathers abandoned the covenant. The prophet wept, not only for the judgment to come, but for the children who would be born into a world of spiritual ruins. Likewise, Ezekiel saw a valley full of dry bones — not warriors slain in battle, but destinies left unfulfilled. What made them dry was not death, but abandonment. The breath had been stolen from them.

The Ethiopian canon echoes these themes, often warning that the curse of silence, the refusal to teach God’s Word to one’s children, leads to exile — not always physical, but spiritual. And what is exile if not disconnection from place, from people, from promise?

We’ve tried to rename the lost generation with words like “Zoomers” or “Gen Z,” but no branding can cover the fact that they have been spiritually stripped. When you erase memory, you erase mission. When you delete history, you delay destiny. And when you silence the prophets in the home, the culture sends sorcerers to take their place.

This generation was meant to be mighty. The enemy fears them — that’s why he targeted them early. But they are also fragile, because no one told them the truth. No one handed them the scroll. No one taught them how to weep, how to war, or how to worship. They were given options, not convictions. Identity, not authority. Rights, but no reason.

And yet, the prophetic warning still rings out: If we do not return to the standard, the generation that was meant to inherit the kingdom will inherit the ruins instead. The clock is running. The scroll is still open. And the treasury is bleeding.

Part 10: Returning to the Standard

There is only one way back from the brink: return to the standard. Not the gold of the earth, but the gold of heaven — the unchanging weight of truth. We cannot fix what we’ve broken by printing more money or redefining more morals. We must repent. We must rebuild. We must return to what was eternal before it was abandoned — the Word, the family, the covenant, the child.

This generation is not beyond saving. The treasury can be restored. But we cannot do it with counterfeit currency. We need to re-anchor our homes, our churches, our schools, and our spirits to the only standard that was never supposed to be touched: God’s order. His design for the family. His image in the child. His covenant passed from father to son, mother to daughter, priest to people.

We must begin with repentance — not just for our personal sins, but for the national sin of spending the inheritance. We must grieve what we normalized. We must tear down the idols we built in the name of inclusion, tolerance, and freedom. We must close the vault, seal the altar, and guard the gates again.

Returning to the standard means re-establishing fatherhood, not just biologically, but spiritually. It means reinstating the role of mothers as life-givers and nurturers, not competitors to men or servants of the State. It means calling children back from Babylon — off the screens, out of confusion, and into covenant. We must rewrite the ledger, not with ink, but with sacrifice. With truth. With the blood of mercy.

This is not a call to nostalgia. This is a call to war. A war to reclaim what belongs to the King. A war to refinance the treasury with righteousness. A war to pour weight back into a weightless generation — not by yelling louder, but by standing stronger.

And we must be prepared to suffer for this standard. To be mocked for clinging to it. To be hated for refusing to print what the culture demands. Because in a world addicted to inflation — both economic and moral — those who carry weight will be persecuted. But they will also be preserved.

When the counterfeit collapses — and it will — it will be the weight-bearers who remain. Those who never left the gold of the gospel. Those who preserved the children. Those who kept the vault sealed even when the flood came.

The time for printing is over. It’s time to mine. To dig deep. To recover what was buried beneath decades of compromise. To return to the standard that doesn’t move, the truth that doesn’t change, and the God who doesn’t lie.

Only then can the treasury be full again.

Conclusion

We thought we could create value without substance. That we could raise children without truth. That we could build a future while burying the past. But now, the lie is collapsing under its own weightlessness. The fiat system we built — in both currency and culture — is bankrupt. And the children, the true treasury of the Lord, have paid the price.

This was never just about gold. It was about glory — the glory of God in the face of every child, every family, every covenant. When we left the gold standard, we didn’t just lose economic discipline — we signaled that we no longer believed in restraint, in absolutes, in backing our promises with real weight. So we printed. We legislated. We entertained. We affirmed. And we forgot what it means to carry something holy.

But God has not forgotten. He is still watching His inheritance. He still weighs nations on the scales of justice. And He still hears the cry of the innocent — those who were sacrificed for convenience, mutilated for ideology, seduced by systems, and told they are free while living in chains.

We are living in the judgment of a generation that thought it could counterfeit everything: money, morality, identity, even destiny. But the time is coming when all that is fake will fall, and only what is true will stand. The paper kingdoms will burn. The lies will dissolve. And what will remain? The children we preserved. The altars we rebuilt. The scrolls we refused to alter.

This isn’t just a cultural war — it’s a generational reckoning. But with it comes hope. Because even now, God is calling fathers back to their sons, and mothers back to their daughters. He is calling guardians to rise. He is calling the vaults to be sealed again.

So let us rise not as activists, but as ambassadors of the kingdom, sent to restore the standard, repair the breach, and refill the treasury. Let us carry the weight that was lost. Let us give our children truth instead of tolerance, identity instead of illusion, and covenant instead of compromise.

The treasury can still be restored. But only if we stop printing and start building.

Only if we stop spending the future and start stewarding it.

The standard is still there. We just have to return to it.

Bibliography

  1. The Holy Bible – King James Version (KJV). Thomas Nelson, 1611.
  2. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church Bible – Geʽez Texts & English Translation. Ethiopian Bible Society, various editions.
  3. Nixon, Richard M. Address to the Nation Outlining a New Economic Policy: “The Challenge of Peace.” August 15, 1971. The American Presidency Project.
  4. Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED). U.S. National Debt Figures & Inflation Trends (1971–2025). Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
  5. Barna Group. Gen Z: The Culture, Beliefs and Motivations Shaping the Next Generation. Barna, 2018.
  6. Sanger, Margaret. The Pivot of Civilization. Brentano’s, 1922. (Referenced for early eugenics and population control ideology).
  7. Kinsey, Alfred. Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. W.B. Saunders, 1948. (Referenced for sexual revolution impact).
  8. Postman, Neil. Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business. Viking Penguin, 1985.
  9. Vitz, Paul C. Faith of the Fatherless: The Psychology of Atheism. Spence Publishing, 1999.
  10. United Nations Population Fund. State of World Population Reports (1970–Present). UNFPA.org
  11. Shepherd, Naomi. The Zealot: The Life and Times of Jesus of Nazareth. HarperCollins, 1992. (For contextual comparison of imperial decrees vs. prophetic warnings).
  12. Piper, John. Let the Nations Be Glad: The Supremacy of God in Missions. Baker Academic, 2003.
  13. Dreher, Rod. The Benedict Option: A Strategy for Christians in a Post-Christian Nation. Sentinel, 2017.
  14. Bonhoeffer, Dietrich. Ethics. Translated by Neville Horton Smith, Simon & Schuster, 1955.
  15. Guiness, Os. A Free People’s Suicide: Sustainable Freedom and the American Future. IVP Books, 2012.

Endnotes

  1. Psalm 127:3 (KJV) and Geʽez translation confirm children as “heritage” and “reward.”
  2. Nixon’s 1971 address formally ended the gold-backed dollar system (Bretton Woods).
  3. U.S. national debt surpassed $1 trillion by the early 1980s and has continued to rise exponentially; cultural moral standards inversely declined during the same period.
  4. Ethiopian Orthodox texts and traditional teachings regard children as “prophetic vessels” and “inheritance of the righteous” (see 4 Ezra and Sirach in extended canon).
  5. Barna’s Gen Z report shows identity confusion, depression, and lack of biblical literacy at all-time highs.
  6. Social engineering through education (UNESCO, Department of Education initiatives) accelerated post-1970s with removal of prayer (Engel v. Vitale, 1962) and increasing emphasis on “value-neutral” learning.
  7. Gender theory and critical pedagogy roots trace to thinkers like Foucault, Kinsey, and John Money — each playing foundational roles in redefining human identity outside of biblical categories.
  8. Warnings about generational accountability appear throughout Scripture (Exodus 20:5; Deuteronomy 6; Ezekiel 18) and are echoed in Ethiopian canon texts such as Jubilees and Enoch.
  9. Historical precedent: Egypt’s slaughter of Hebrew infants (Exodus 1), Herod’s murder of Bethlehem’s children (Matthew 2), and modern abortion policies reveal repeated spiritual patterns.
  10. The phrase “fiat morality” is used metaphorically to describe post-truth ethics mirroring the fiat monetary model: value created without backing, enforced by decree, vulnerable to collapse.

Fiat Children: When We Left Gold, We Sold the Future is a prophetic and poetic exploration of the moment America abandoned the gold standard — and how that economic shift mirrored a deeper spiritual and cultural collapse. Through ten powerful chapters, this scroll exposes the connection between fiat currency and fiat morality, revealing how the removal of value from money paralleled the removal of truth from society, identity, and family. It makes the case that children, as the true treasury of the Lord, have been corrupted, spent, and sacrificed in the name of progress, and that the resulting national debt is not just fiscal — it is eternal. With insights drawn from the King James Bible, the Ethiopian canon, modern economic trends, and ancient prophetic warnings, this scroll is both an indictment and a call: to repent, to restore, and to return to the standard that never changes.

#fiatchildren, #goldstandard, #nationaldebt, #spiritualeconomy, #protectthechildren, #fiatmoralities, #culturalcollapse, #ethiopiancanon, #biblicaltruth, #godlyinheritance, #thevault, #restorethestandard, #generationalwar, #identitycrisis, #familyunderattack, #childrenareatreasury

fiatchildren, goldstandard, nationaldebt, spiritualeconomy, protectthechildren, fiatmoralities, culturalcollapse, ethiopiancanon, biblicaltruth, godlyinheritance, thevault, restorethestandard, generationalwar, identitycrisis, familyunderattack, childrenareatreasury

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

TikTok is close to banning me. If you want to get daily information from me, please join my newsletter asap! I will send you links to my latest posts.

You have Successfully Subscribed!