
Between real ruptures and symbolic simulations, the dollar’s dominance remains intact — upheld by an invisible mechanism called the Federal Reserve.
In recent weeks, new Russian statements have reinforced the intention to abandon the dollar as a global reference currency.
China, while maintaining parallel deals, avoids direct confrontation.
In Brazil, the rhetoric of “alternative global leadership” circulates in forums like BRICS and G20 — but lacks functional grounding.
Meanwhile, the dollar remains the backbone of the global economy.
And behind it operates a little-understood structure: the Federal Reserve — the true axis of monetary command on the planet.
- In recent forums, Russian authorities reaffirmed their goal of building a trade system based on local currencies, especially in the energy sector.
- China maintains bilateral deals outside the dollar but avoids a full break — its economy still depends on Western markets.
- Brazil speaks of a new BRICS currency, an alternative bank, and South-South cooperation networks, but in practice remains fully tied to the traditional financial system.
- The dollar is still used in about 85% of global transactions.
- The FED, a private central bank in the U.S., controls the issuance of dollars and manipulates global liquidity through its internal interest rate decisions.
- Each move by the FED directly affects dollar-indebted countries — including Brazil.
Currency is no longer a neutral tool of exchange.
It has become a vectorial instrument of command.
- Russia wants financial and energy sovereignty — but is blocked by SWIFT-based sanctions (dollar system).
- China wants to preserve its export channels — hence delays the break, even while building alternatives.
- Brazil is used as a symbolic showcase of the “emerging new world,” but remains trapped by external debt and exchange rate dependency.
Behind it all is the FED:
an entity that prints value out of nothing and sets the cost of global debt according to its own interests.
Vectorial Reading:
The Federal Reserve is not a state bank — it is a private entity that exercises sovereign power over the world, without ever being elected or questioned.
The interest rate it sets to “protect the U.S. economy” becomes a silent bomb over dozens of peripheral countries.
It’s not just about money.
It’s a command architecture:
- issue value,
- control liquidity,
- decide who may grow and who must collapse.
Monetary war is silent — and the dollar is its invisible missile.
The speeches from BRICS or emerging summits are merely strategic staging.
The true rupture will only occur when value issuance detaches from control-driven motivation.
Until then, the FED prints power.
Every currency carries an intention.
The dollar no longer represents trust — it represents domination.
And the world has yet to create a structure with real courage and force to break this mechanism.
Until then, the FED will continue setting the pace of reality.
“Facts show. Motivations shape. Seeing clearly is power.”


