A bombshell revelation buried in the Jeffrey Epstein files has exposed a dark secret connecting the deceased pedophile financier to the early funding and development of digital currencies—assets that millions of Americans now hold in their portfolios, believing them to be safe havens.

Josh Ward, Noble Gold's top salesperson for four consecutive years who personally owns more gold and silver than almost anyone, dropped this explosive information during a recent interview, calling digital currencies 'digital fool's gold' and warning that 'the only reason people buy it is because they think someone stupider will buy it from them later at a higher price.'

The timing couldn't be more critical. While Americans were sold on the '21 million hard cap' scarcity story, Ward explains how Wall Street completely destroyed that thesis through 'cash-settled futures, perpetual swaps, options, ETFs and prime broker lending.' One digital asset can now have six different claims stacked on it simultaneously, creating 'theoretically infinite synthetic supply.'

The warning signs are everywhere, Patriots. The dollar has crashed 10% since the start of 2025. A massive $150 billion Swedish pension fund just announced they're dumping U.S. bonds due to 'reduced predictability.' Foreign ownership of U.S. government debt has plummeted from 38% to just 13%—the lowest in history.

Meanwhile, central banks bought over 1,100 tons of gold in 2025 alone. Poland grabbed 150 tons. China remains a massive buyer. JP Morgan predicts gold will hit $6,300 per ounce, while Deutsche Bank sees $6,000. Ward believes those estimates are conservative—he's calling for $7,000 to $8,000 by year's end.

Silver has exploded from $30 to nearly $90 in a single year—a staggering 300% increase with nine consecutive positive months. The U.S. Mint literally ran out of silver and stopped producing American Silver Eagles, doubling prices overnight from $90 to $180.

Every fiat currency in history has eventually gone to zero. The average lifespan? Just 65 years. The dollar has been pure fiat since Nixon closed the gold window in 1971. The 10% decline we've seen this year is nothing compared to what's coming, especially with the Federal Reserve changes ahead.

The question isn't whether you can afford to buy physical gold and silver—it's whether you can afford NOT to. The smart money sees the writing on the wall. Do you?

Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.

Source: Next News Network