All Episodes
Feb. 3, 2026 - Health Ranger - Mike Adams
42:10
Critical Rare Earth Elements CUT OFF from U.S. Military, Halting Weapons Production

China’s near-monopoly on rare earths—99% control of dysprosium/terbium, 80% of tungsten, and 77–100% of graphite—threatens U.S. military production, with six months of gallium disruption halting 60% of radar systems (F-35, Patriot missiles). Export bans since 2020 now cover 14 critical minerals, including antimony (97% reduced) and tungsten, vital for stealth tech, ammunition, and nuclear reactors. Trump’s $12B Project Vault and mining orders face 10–20-year delays, leaving stockpiles depleted after shipments to Israel and Ukraine. Adversaries like China and Russia outpace U.S. capabilities, risking a "shadow military" exposed if conflict escalates, potentially destabilizing the dollar. [Automatically generated summary]

|

Time Text
Mike Adams' Warning 00:03:56
All right, welcome to the special deep research report on China's export restrictions of strategic metals and rare earth elements.
And this includes an analysis of U.S. military applications of these rare earths and why we are in deep, deep trouble.
I'm Mike Adams.
I'm the creator of numerous AI platforms, as you know.
And one of the interesting things that I did is I wrote an article based on my research.
That article has been published at naturalnews.com, if you want to see it.
Anyway, I took the article and then using our AI engine, I created a newscast script for our AI avatar, who is our sort of our retired military expert, AI avatar guy.
And he wants to tell you something.
He wants to tell you the summary of this report.
So I'm going to play this, I don't know, two-minute video roughly of our military guy to give you the overview of this report, and then I will continue with the details.
So check this out.
Imagine a world where America's most advanced fighter jets and missile defense systems could be switched off by a foreign power with the stroke of a pen.
That's the stark reality we face tonight, as China's near-total monopoly over strategic metals threatens to cripple U.S. military readiness and technological sovereignty.
This is not merely an economic dispute.
It's a silent siege on the foundations of American power.
China controls staggering percentages of the global supply, over 80% of rare earths and up to 98% of gallium, a metal critical to next-generation radar systems.
Their dominance wasn't accidental.
It was achieved through decades of state-directed industrial policy, while environmental regulations and cost pressures force the closure of major U.S. mines.
The result?
Our most advanced weapons, like the F-35's radar and systems designed to track hypersonic threats, are held hostage to China's export licensing whims.
The vulnerability is profound.
A Pentagon report warned that just a six-month disruption in gallium supplies would halt production of 60% of planned radar units.
And it's not just gallium.
Graphite, essential for both stealth technology and batteries, is 93% controlled by China.
Tungsten and antimony, crucial for armor-piercing rounds and semiconductors, are also under Beijing's command.
This centralized dependency is a fundamental security failure.
However, there is a path forward.
The current administration has initiated aggressive countermeasures, including an executive order to fast-track domestic mining and Project Vault, a plan to build a $12 billion strategic mineral stockpile.
Discoveries of rare earths in U.S. coal ash and new mines signal that domestic resources exist.
The temporary suspension of some Chinese export bans offers no cause for complacency.
It's a tactical pause, not a strategic reversal.
Breaking this resource stranglehold requires treating these minerals not as commodities, but as strategic assets vital for national survival.
The battle for control over the elemental building blocks of the 21st century has begun.
America must win it to secure its future.
This is Daniel J. Harris reporting for BrightVideos.com.
So there you go.
That was Daniel J. Harris.
At least that's our fictional AI avatar.
I created a backstory for him.
He's a military professional who blew out his voice screaming at the other soldiers because they were idiots.
That's why he talks that way.
He's got a little bit of a southern accent because he's probably from Texas or Tennessee or someplace like that.
You know he's.
He's a honorable guy honest, you know hard-hitting uncensored, just gives it to you straight.
Export Restrictions on Critical Minerals 00:11:55
But he, he did blow out his voice a little bit in the military.
Um, you're going to hear more from him in upcoming videos and again, he is one of the many AI avatars that I have created in order to well, to present information to you in various compelling formats.
So you'll hear more from him.
Let's move on to the special report here.
So here's what I did.
You know, I've talked about rare earths.
I've talked about the strategic importance of all of these key elements for quite some time.
I've done quite a lot of research myself.
And you know that Trump has declared silver to be a critical resource.
And I think copper is on the list.
And then China also late last year, actually going back for many years, they have declared many elements to be critical minerals.
And then late last year in 2025, they slapped all these export restrictions on these minerals, especially rare earths like dysprosium or what, terbium, neodymium, using magnets and so on.
These elements that are used in military applications can no longer be acquired from China.
So the U.S. military is in a very difficult situation where the military can't manufacture much right now.
And that's why Trump is appropriately panicked to build up a domestic supply of rare earths.
But that's going to take more than a decade, easily.
In the meantime, better not get into any wars because whatever missiles we fire off, you know, we can't replace them.
I mean, not easily.
And this might be one of the reasons why Trump seemingly backed off of attacking Iran recently, because it turns out that if you attack Iran with your ships in the area, I'm not a naval expert, but I guess there's, you know, frigates and destroyers or whatever they are.
And they've got missiles and they only carry a couple hundred missiles on each ship, is my understanding.
Once they fire all those missiles, you know, to intercept incoming drones and things, then they're done.
They got to sail back to port to reload somewhere.
And that, you know, that can take weeks.
So, and that's assuming you've got the missiles to reload with, you know?
So I don't think that the U.S. military wants to tangle with Iran right now.
And that's one of the reasons why there has not been a big attack, at least not yet.
And even if there is, it'll probably be very calculated and narrow is my guess.
Okay.
So that all traces back to the shortage of rare earth minerals in terms of the Western supply chains.
So let me read you the executive summary.
Oh, let me back up and tell you.
I did spawn a bunch of research agents to scour the web and look for all kinds of information and documents about the history of rare earths and what they're used in, etc.
And then I also used my own book engine at brightlearn.ai to create a book on this topic.
And it conducted additional research spanning, you know, 100,000 books and almost a quarter of a million science papers and millions of pages of articles, etc.
So there's a lot of research behind what I'm about to bring you.
But here's the executive summary.
So it says that over the past six years, China has implemented an increasingly comprehensive export control regime targeting strategic metals and rare earth elements that are essential to the United States defense industrial base and advanced technology sectors.
So in July of 2023, they began with gallium and germanium restrictions.
And then they've expanded their controls now to include graphite, which is really key, antimony, tungsten, and other rare earth elements and critical minerals.
These restrictions, according to my report, have significant implications for U.S. national security, as these materials are essential components in radar technology, guidance systems, military electronics, and other advanced weapon systems.
The key finding, if you want to wrap this whole thing up, the key finding here is that China controls 48% to 99% of global production of restricted minerals.
You know, it depends on the mineral.
The U.S. is 100% import dependent for several critical minerals.
100% import dependent.
The U.S. does not produce some of these domestically at all.
And as a result, if we get into an extended war with China or with anybody, the U.S. will be out of ammunition and out of minerals and rare earths very, very quickly.
So all of this really begins in 2020 when China enacted this comprehensive law called the Export Control Law.
And this provided this legal framework for China to start restricting exports of strategic assets.
Once that law was established, then year after year, they started putting out more restrictions.
So in July of 2023, they restricted gallium and germanium.
And now you have to have an export license for that.
And that license is not given to any company that sells weapons or materials to the U.S. military, by the way.
In October of 2023, graphite was added.
And in December of 2023, they restricted exports of rare earth processing technology because other countries were trying to tap into Chinese expertise because China is ahead of the whole world on how do you extract rare earth elements from ore, mining ore.
It turns out that's a very tricky thing to accomplish.
China is leading the world.
Everybody else in the world wants to know how to do it.
But China's now banned the export of that technology.
Then in August of 2024, they expanded export controls to hit antimony, which is, and other certain metals like, let's see, super hard materials, they call them.
Antimony, that's a funny mineral to me.
I think it's hilarious.
I call the dollar currency antimony.
Why?
Because if you say, show me the moni, and then I show you dollars, that's anti-moni.
Get it?
Okay, sorry, bad joke.
Antimony.
Antimony is used in alloys for weapons because it has very high density.
Not perhaps as much as tungsten, but it has very high density.
And then in December of 2024, they also expanded, well, they had a total export ban to the U.S. of gallium, germanium, antimony, and other super hard materials.
And then in December of 2024, also, they expanded the restrictions to dual-use items.
They prohibited exports of dual-use items to the USA.
In 2025, then this really accelerated.
In January of 2025, they expanded their export prohibitions to specific companies, including General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, etc.
And then in February, they expanded export controls over tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum, indium.
Yeah, some interesting stuff there.
And then in April, they added seven more elements to the restrictions.
That includes gadolinium, terbium, dysprosium, lutetium, scandium, and yttrium plus samarium.
I know, we almost never talk about these metals.
They also banned all kinds of permanent magnet materials and various alloys and oxides, compounds, and mixtures.
So pretty much, you know, if you want dysprosium, you're screwed.
Because, you know, your dysprosium has become unobtainium.
And now the U.S. military is running on hopium, which doesn't exist.
In July, then they banned exports of lithium technologies, which of course is used in battery technology.
They banned all kinds of positive electrode material preparation technologies.
By the way, don't forget, during all of this, the U.S., of course, is banning all kinds of technology from China, such as UV lithography chip making equipment or certain microchips themselves.
So this goes both ways.
This isn't just China saying, you know, no soup for you.
October 2025, they added restrictions to holmium, erbium, thulium, europium, which should just be called hopium, and ytterbium, yterbium.
It starts with a Y. Why would anyone spell an element starting with the letter Y?
I don't know.
Then in October, let's see, more processing equipment is banned.
Rare earth technologies banned.
Design drawings, simulation data.
Then they banned lithium battery components later on.
And then, yeah, that's kind of where we are.
Now, let's talk about the elements and what they go into.
But, you know, before we do that, we have to play the elements song by Tom Lehrer.
here we go here's a song i always get requests for but i can't understand for the life of me why It's simply the names of the chemical elements set to a Gilbert and Sullivan tune.
I think the only reason I do it is to see if I still can.
I'm going to try.
Astronium, and silicon, and silver and samarium, and business, brominalithium, beryllium, and barium.
I left out one, actually.
A new one was discovered since the song was written.
It's called Laurentium.
So those of you who are taking notes can write it down in your programs.
There's holmium and helium and hafnium and erbium and phosphorus and francium, fluorine, and terbium, and manganese and reconnecting, lymph, and magnesium, dyscosium, and scandium, and cidium, and cesium, and lead, praseodymium, and platinum, plutonium, palladium, promethium, potassium, polonium, tattle, and magnesium, titanium, tellurium, and cadmium, and calcium, and chromium, and curium.
There's gold and californium, and fermium, berkelium, and also metal ethium, ectanium, nobelium, and argumentium, ranc, nuts, and rhodium, and chlorine, carbocobal, copper, tungsten, and sodium.
These are the only ones of which the news has come to Harvard.
And there may be many others, but they haven't been discovered.
Rare Earths in Military Tech 00:10:25
All right, you got that?
Tom Lehrer, probably his most famous song.
So now we begin with gallium.
U.S. military applications for gallium include electronically scanned array radar systems.
Let's see, the F-35 Lightning II radar systems.
They use gallium arsenide technology.
The Navy uses it in missile defense radar systems.
The Army uses it in ground-based radar for detecting, you know, incoming everything.
Missile defense sensor systems for Patriot missile systems.
Electronic warfare and jamming systems.
Military communications, etc.
So there are 11,000 U.S. military components that depend on gallium.
85% of those components use Chinese suppliers of gallium.
And that's cut off.
Oops.
Okay.
Germanium.
You can tell this is going to be a long report, so I will try to move swiftly.
Germanium, China controls 60% of the global refined germanium production.
We use it in our military in night vision goggles, thermal imaging cameras and FLIR systems, missile guidance, early warning systems, fiber optic communication systems, tank sights, aircraft surveillance systems, and UAV sensors and semiconductor components.
That doesn't sound important at all.
Okay, antimony, which has the element symbol of SB, by the way, in case you're wondering.
SB.
Let's see.
Chinese shipments to the U.S. have dropped 97% since September of 2024.
China controls 48% of the global antimony production, and the U.S. has no domestic production.
No Mo antimony for the U.S. There we go.
Now it's used in things like ammunition, in primer compounds, armor-piercing ammunition, flame retardants, night vision goggles, nuclear weapons, submarines and warships, laser sighting systems, and military vehicle batteries.
Yeah, apparently there are lead antimony alloys, which sounds incredibly toxic.
Okay, graphite.
This is important.
Graphite.
You know, it's a special substance.
Itself is not on the table of elements, but it's made from special carbon, obviously.
But graphite, China controls 77% of the world's graphite production.
95% of the synthetic graphite and 100% of graphite refining.
That seems like a big deal.
The U.S. imports 100% of its graphite.
And what is graphite used in?
Oh, I don't know, just a few things like F-22 and F-35 airplanes that use graphite composites, lithium-ion batteries for drones, missile guidance systems, thermal management, tank and infantry vehicle components, combat ID equipment, inertial navigation systems, nuclear reactors on submarines and aircraft carriers, gun barrels and artillery because of the temperature resistance,
submarine holes, and high-power laser weapons for thermal management, among other things.
So graphite seems important.
Tungsten.
Tungsten, the symbol for tungsten is W, by the way.
China controls 80% of the global tungsten supply.
The U.S. stopped mining tungsten in 2015.
No more tungsten for you.
Armor-piercing ammunition is made out of tungsten.
Kinetic energy penetrators for tank ammunition.
Missile components, fragmentation components.
Jet aircraft engines use it.
Armor plating uses tungsten alloys for the tanks like the M1 Abrams.
Semiconductor manufacturing.
And radiation shielding for nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers, which are powered by onboard nuclear power plants, obviously.
Multiple plants in the case of aircraft carriers, right?
Okay, so now that alone, what I just covered, that's bad.
Like the U.S. doesn't make any graphite, and it has almost no supply chain for tungsten or antimony or germanium or gallium.
Where are you going to get that stuff?
You know, Trump had better keep us out of war because the U.S. could only last a couple of weeks and then it's out of ammo and can't really make anymore unless China agrees to sell us more stuff.
So let's talk about the rare earth elements here.
Samarium and gadolinium and terbium and dysprosium and so on.
And it's almost getting to the song at this point.
So all those export controls are still in effect from China.
They will not export those to the United States.
For phase two, they kicked in.
They started restricting the holmium and erbium and others.
China controls 60% of mining and 91% of global processing.
Now for dysprosium and terbium, China controls 99%.
99% of dysprosium and terbium.
That's a big deal.
So why is this a big deal?
Well, there's something called neodymium iron boron magnets that contain dysprosium and terbium.
Did you know that?
Yeah, it's neodymium iron boron.
It's NDFEB, right?
Those are the chemical or the elemental symbols together.
Those are special magnets.
In every F-35, there's 920 pounds of rare earths per aircraft.
920 pounds.
That is a boatload of rare earths.
You have to mine thousands of tons of ore to get that much of various rare earths.
Every Virginia-class submarine uses 9,200 pounds of rare earths.
And this is according to online research.
Let's see, the Arleigh Burke DDG 51 destroyer uses 5,200 pounds of rare earths per ship.
It's also used in fin actuators for precision guided missiles and disk drive motors in aircraft and tanks.
So kind of important.
And we don't have any more coming.
We're done.
Samarium cobalt magnets, S-M-C-O.
There's 50 pounds of samarium cobalt magnets in every F-35 engine.
Did you know that?
Every engine.
By the way, also, if an F-35 ever gets shot down, it's like a gold mine of debris.
Seriously, it's an actual gold mine, but I mean, it's a rare earth mine.
Whoever finds the F-35 can probably sell off the rare earths for, you know, $100,000 or more, way more probably.
Think about that.
You're flying around with a giant vault of gold in the sky that everybody's trying to shoot down.
Let's see.
Lockheed Martin is the largest consumer of samarium cobalt.
It's also used in stealth helicopter rotor systems.
The use of dysprosium and terbium, back to those two, is that it enables magnets to maintain strength at high temperatures in jet engines.
And it's used for vibration dampening in tanks and vehicles.
Yttrium is a thermal barrier coating, or it's used in that for jet engine turbine blades.
It's used in laser systems and optical applications.
Overall, 78% of U.S. weapons or weapon programs use rare earth magnet components.
78%.
And the DOD consumes 3,000 to 4,000 tons of rare earth magnets annually.
And those are all cut off now.
You see why Trump is going after, you know, Venezuela or Greenland?
Got to open up some new mining operations.
Tellurium, TE.
Let's see.
This was restricted under China's announcement number 10.
Sure how.
Infrared detectors, cadmium telluride and mercury cadmium telluride for military sensors.
I thought that's the name of a town in Colorado, isn't it?
Is that a ski town?
Telluride?
Isn't that where they traffic cocaine and everything?
Anyway, cadmium telluride is not for snorting.
It's for military sensors, it turns out.
Thermoelectric devices, bismuth telluride for cooling electronics and solar cells for space and military applications.
Then there's bismuth.
That was restricted since February 4th of 2025.
And that's important because bismuth germinate is for radiation detection in nuclear applications.
And then molybdenum or molly, as some of you may know, if you work in industry, you live on a ranch, you know that the best grease for your equipment contains MOLI.
That's molybdenum.
It helps protect parts that wear, right?
So molybdenum is used here.
The powder is used for high-temperature missile parts and high-temperature alloys for jet engines and rocket nozzles, armor plating, and military vehicle components.
I've got grease that's like 3% molybdenum.
Probably I'm not going to be able to get any more of that.
U.S. As A One-Punch Fighter 00:11:27
I'm just guessing.
Indium in 2025, this was restricted.
Now indium phosphide is used in semiconductors for military electronics.
Indium tin oxide is used in touchscreens for military displays and cockpit systems.
And let's see, LCD displays in military equipment.
So if you go on down the list, I mean, there's more, you know, lasers and magnets and displays, electronics, radiation detection, and everything you can imagine.
The key findings here are that China controls 48 to 99% of global production for virtually all of these restricted materials.
Now, in November 2025, there was a suspension of that because of Trump and China agreeing to this in order to drop tariffs.
But that window only operates, and that only affects some of these, and it only operates through later this year.
And the most strict conditions can be reimposed at any time, such as if Trump bombs Iran.
If Trump bombs Iran, China's just going to say, no soup for you.
Let's see.
And there are complete bans, regardless of that agreement, on tungsten, tellurium, bismuth, molybdenum, indium, and seven other rare earth elements.
All right.
So remember that each F-35 requires over 900 pounds of rare earth materials.
This means that if the U.S. starts to lose aircraft, or stealth bombers or F-35s or ships, it can't replace them.
It cannot replace them.
And even though the Department of Defense and Trump, they are working right now to try to develop domestic supply chains, that's going to take at least a decade to have any meaningful impact whatsoever.
And probably longer than a decade.
I'm guessing more like 20 years because U.S. companies don't even know how to do this.
China has been the pioneer in this space.
They've figured this stuff out, just like they're going to lead the world in AI technology.
They're already leading the world in robotics and drones and automation of factories and vehicles.
You know, China makes the highest quality vehicles in the world now, by far.
You haven't seen them because they're not allowed to be sold in the U.S.
But around the rest of the world, people are buying Chinese-made EVs that are extremely high quality at a fraction of the price of U.S. vehicles.
Did you know that?
You're just not allowed to buy them.
But China is leading in almost every area of technology other than, let's say, heavy lift, you know, rocket technology or things like that.
China leads in almost everything, including in rare earth extraction.
And that's a big deal for all the reasons that are now obvious.
So here's the situation.
Trump is, you know, he's like a bull in a China shop, right?
He's running around the world as a bully with a baseball bat, like cracking everybody's dishes.
You know, like, we're going to come after you.
We're going to bomb you.
He's threatening Iran, you know, threatening Yemen and bombing Yemen, etc.
And then shipping all these weapons to Israel, you know, anti-air systems that like a quarter of all those got used up last summer when Iran fired a bunch of missiles in the 12-day war.
Well, I think Israel fired first and then they exchanged missiles.
And then, you know, Ukraine has been begging for all these weapons for all these years.
And the Biden administration basically emptied the U.S. military storehouses of excess weaponry and shipped it off to Ukraine, where it mostly got blown up by Russia.
So the truth is, this is my understanding, but I don't have any special inside information.
This is just my best guess based on public information.
The U.S. weapons stockpiles are near zero.
There's almost nothing left in the system, nowhere.
So even though Trump is running around the world threatening everybody, if he actually starts a war that lasts longer than a day, you know, like some kind of staged kidnapping of the president of another country, if it lasts more than a day, the U.S. is toast.
The U.S. can't replenish its weapons.
And it can't rebuild the fighter jets.
It just doesn't have the supply that it used to have from China.
And it's 10 to 20 years out before it can have a domestic supply.
So this, the reality of this situation is incompatible with Trump's posture, where Trump loves to say, oh, we have the biggest, baddest, most kick-ass military in the world.
We've got the most capable ships, this and that.
Yeah, okay, yeah, you can sail around with your, you know, your nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
But when you start launching missiles, you flame out within a matter of days or maybe a couple of weeks.
And then you're just a giant floating, you know, high school of 5,000 sailors that mostly just came out of high school, and some significant portion of whom cannot swim for some odd reason.
So that's not a sustainable war-footing situation.
Trump likes to project this idea that, oh, you know, we can fight these wars.
We could beat Russia.
We could beat China.
We could beat Iran.
Maybe we could beat them all at once.
Not even close.
We couldn't beat even one of them if we focused everything.
We just don't have the depth of the weapons.
It's all gone.
It's all gone.
So what's really floating out there right now, the U.S. Navy, it is a, I mean, I don't want to call it a paper tiger.
That's not the right term.
It's formidable, but only for a brief window of time.
It's formidable for a few days.
And then it's done.
It's out of weapons.
And the entire stockpile of the U.S. military doesn't really contain much in terms of actual weapons, you know, missiles, etc.
And half the stuff we have doesn't even work anyway, like Israel found out the hard way last summer, you know, when the Patriot missiles didn't really shoot down much that was coming in from Iran.
So-called Iron Dome turned out to be what was it called?
The nylon dome, because it didn't work.
Everything got through it.
And even though Trump loved to make new enemies around the world, even Trump can make enemies out of allies.
You know, he can piss off India or Japan or Taiwan or South Korea for that matter.
He loves to run around making enemies.
I mean, he's making enemies out of freaking Canada.
Canada is kind of hard to piss off because they're friendly people.
I mean, well, the people in charge are tyrants, but I mean, the everyday people of Canada are friendly.
But Trump loves to make enemies all over the world.
The problem is he can't make good on these threats because if there's any war that begins and the U.S. actually has to fight a war, even for a couple of weeks, it's going to become apparent to the rest of the world that the U.S. is really kind of a shadow military.
It doesn't have any depth to it.
It can't fight for any extended period of time.
Just doesn't have the weapons.
Who's got the weapons?
Well, China, Russia, and Iran.
Well, and Turkey, a NATO member, Turkey makes lots of weapons.
China is the world's industrial base now.
China is making weapons at a scale that you can't even imagine.
Iran is also manufacturing weapons like crazy, plus a lot of drones, but also missiles.
And Russia has reinvigorated its entire domestic supply chain ever since 2022.
And Russia's got its own steel industry, its own weapons industry.
Russia has, you know, innovated in ways that are just shocking the whole world with its Oreshnik missile systems and its Kinzal hypersonic missiles and many other systems.
So the U.S. is still cruising around with mostly ships that were built decades ago and threatening the world with ICBMs that were also designed decades ago.
The U.S. can't even field a hypersonic cruise missile that works.
And the U.S. can't replace anything if it actually gets into a fight.
So it's kind of like the U.S. is kind of like a one-punch fighter.
If the U.S. doesn't get you with the knockout blow in round one, then The U.S. can't win.
It's just going to go for the knockout blow, like with Venezuela, and hope that everybody buckles.
But in an actual knockdown, drag out fight, the U.S. loses.
And that might be why the military commanders told Trump, you better not attack Iran because we can't sustain a fight with Iran.
Can't do it.
Now, we'll see.
Maybe Trump is, I don't know, arrogant enough to think that this is still the 1980s and we can beat everybody in the world with our advanced military technology.
Well, if he launches a war and then he finds out he's wrong, then the dollar collapses because the dollar, the strength of the dollar, is based on the idea that the U.S. can project military power and that the U.S. can credibly threaten other nations around the world, you know, bombing them or destroying their ships, just like the U.S. is seizing ships coming out of Venezuela, you know, piracy on the high seas and all that.
If it turns out that the U.S. can't project its power and the U.S. is shown to be a shadow military with no depth, that changes the dynamic all over the world.
And when that changes, more countries will pull out of the dollar.
They'll stop using it.
China will sell off treasuries.
Japan is probably going to be forced to sell off U.S. treasuries no matter what, pretty soon.
And we're going to end up in a situation where not only does the U.S. military collapse, but the U.S. dollar collapses.
And then the question is: does the U.S. Empire collapse at that point?
Maybe it does.
So let's hope Trump understands everything I just presented to you in this report, but I doubt it.
I doubt it.
I'm not even sure that he's ever seen the table of elements.
But who knows?
I mean, a staffer one time showed him the word antimony, and Trump thought it said alimony.
But, you know, that's just the White House.
Free Gifts Available 00:04:21
So stay informed, folks, and you can find my article on this topic at naturalnews.com.
And you can also find video summaries of these topics at brightvideos.com.
And thank you for listening.
I'm Mike Adams.
And you can also use all my AI tools for free at brightlearn.ai or brightanswers.ai or brightnews.ai.
So check them all out and, you know, pray for sanity.
Pray for peace.
Because if we go to war, the U.S. might very well lose.
So thank you for listening.
Take care.
Get ready for this Valentine's Day by giving the gift of great nutrition to those you love.
Here at healthrangerstore.com, we've got a special sale for you to get those gifts with some bonus items.
Now, this sale runs February 3rd through February 6th from 11 a.m. Central on the 3rd all the way to 11 a.m. Central on the 6th.
And if you go to healthrangerstore.com/slash Valentine's, plural, you know, with the S on it, then you're going to see all of our specials.
Now, we've got a lot of items on sale.
Many of them are on sale for up to 20 or even 30% off in some cases with our third-party vendors.
Got a lot of extra items that are back in stock as well.
And we've got bonuses for you.
So if you purchase $199 or more, you get this collagen stick pack product, which has 14 stick packs in it, all laboratory tested, really outstanding clean ingredients.
You get that free of charge.
That's what you're seeing on the left there.
If you spend $2.99, then you get both that and the chocolate super protein, which is formulated on the Boku protein product line.
That's available for you for free.
Combined, those two are worth $70.
So you're getting quite a bit of value back.
You can use those as gifts or you can use them, enjoy them yourself.
That's up to you.
Some of the items we have on sale include the all-in-one seed kit, 30% off.
Also the backyard seed kit, great for getting ready for springtime planting and food preparedness.
A lot of products at 20% off, including our Omega-6 healing cream.
We've got the Transdermal C Serum and many other items.
We've got 20% off on our super protein, our plant-based zinc, our golden flax seed powder, and so much more.
And then at the 15% off level, we've got the 24-karat gold liquid gold nourishing oil from Nahaya, as well as we've got at 10% off, we've got bamboo, three-piece towel sets, bed sheet sets with bamboo cotton, and many other items there that are available.
We've got also 100% organic cotton kitchen towels from Delilah Home.
We've also got all the Bearded Brothers, the Yo Bars, the Yumster, the Mini, the Cookie Dough, Chocolate Brownie.
Oh my goodness.
We've got almond butter crunch and almond butter jelly bars from regenerative organic certified companies and so much more.
So check it all out at healthrangerstore.com slash Valentines.
In any case, you know that everything that we offer at healthrangerstore.com is laboratory tested.
It's formulated with pristine ingredients.
And also your support of us helps support this platform.
All of our free speech platforms and our free AI platforms that are spreading knowledge and helping to decentralize information away from the central controllers.
So by shopping now, get your Valentine's Day gifts early at healthrangerstore.com slash Valentine's.
Not only are you giving the gift of great nutrition, which is a great way to express love towards others.
Hey, I'd love you to be healthy.
I'd love you to have amazing food.
Love to help boost your nutritional intake.
But also you're helping us create the free tools that help keep you informed.
So thank you for your support.
And remember, this is only February 3rd through February 6th, starting at 11 a.m. on the 3rd Central Time at healthrangerstore.com slash Valentine's.
Thank you for your support.
Export Selection