The Global Reset Just Started (What You Must Know)
4 Deadly Predictions for 2025 From Trump and the WEF
YOU COULD OF HAD IT AAAAAAAALL with Kamala Harris.
That phrase keeps popping up—in interviews, online threads, casual conversations. Even some conservatives are regretting voting for Trump.
(do you trust the same ABC polling that has Trump down like 15% had Kamala winning by 3% lmfao?)
Also, Kamala could have given us all of what, I wonder? All the Haitians and Guatemalans on earth living in my neighborhood?
Trump’s second term isn’t just a reboot—it’s a global reset, and not all of it favors Americans.
Some of his moves mirror strategies lifted straight from the World Economic Forum’s own playbook. Whether that’s by design or irony, here’s 4 happening now:
1. The US is LOSING the Tariff War to China... (Data Proves It)
What does America produce exactly?
Nothing physical. (Not anymore)
It's a service industry now. China makes the computer, the USA sells you a Netflix subscription.
Aka Late Stage Central Banking Economy.
I also gotta point out that one of the two sides in this trade war suddenly turned on partnerships that have lasted for decades and tariffed the shit out of everyone they trade with. And then they reversed course. And then they reversed course again. And now it looks like they might reverse and un-reverse again.
What the fuck? It's more likely the Trump admin is lying about “trade talks” with China because they're been chronically lying about every single aspect of this that looks bad:
Egg prices are down! They're not
Tourism is up! It's down
The increased prices aren't because of the tariffs! They are and you can literally see that even after they bullied Amazon into not listing it by checking the import fee relative to the product.

Then again, I don’t think that the developed world will be so quick to cast America aside, especially for China.
But we’ll see what Trump’s end goal is here… speaking of…
2. What is Trump’s End Goal With Tariffs?
The US can’t isolate its economy. Our economy (along with probably all other developed countries, bar maybe Germany*) could never be totally self-sufficient and also be an economic power to be reckoned with.
As I understand it, the US, being a consumer driven economy, relies on imports to an unhealthy extent (similarly, the UK economy is ~50% financial services which is mega retarded.
So we’ll see what Trump does.
Trump’s tariff pitch makes sense on paper—rebuild U.S. manufacturing, shrink foreign dependency—but the execution has swung so erratically it makes Nicolas Cage in Leaving Las Vegas look like a model of long-term planning.
You know how bad it is when you're making fucking Xi look like the reliable one?
“Yeah bro, just buy an American made Xbox that would be $1199. Or a PC with a 5070 GPU that would be $1799 on its own.”
It would take at a minimum - warp speed effort - seven years to move 70% of our electronics manufacturing to the US. And taking on this tariff burden will only work if in four years the leading political party doesn’t undo everything.
3. US Dominance Is Over. We Now Have a Handful of Global Powers

Okay, I want to finish this with some predictions from the World Economic Forum that are coinciding with Trump’s latest actions. It’s not that the WEF is a Dr. Evil-esque Orwellian organization full of super villains; they just have a really warped way of looking at the world.
To start, yes, a global organization comprised of Bill Gates, Yuval Noah Harari, and the CEOs of Google, Amazon, and Apple called for the end of US hegemony.
The WEF says that by 2030 there will be a “multipolar world order” with a handful of global powers.
The US will still be one of them, but China, India, and the EU will also be major players. What does that mean for the US or UK? Guess we’ll find out.
Trump’s actions point to a familiar contradiction: preaching America First while greenlighting a swollen military budget, meddling in foreign conflicts—Israel included—and steering a trade war with no clear endgame.
The script keeps repeating.
4. Great Reset: All products will have become services

“I don’t own anything. I don’t own a car. I don’t own a house. I don’t own any appliances or any clothes,” — Danish Politician Ida Auken describing the WEF’s vision
According to the WEF, by 2030 we’ll all be using products as services. So instead of buying a car, you’ll pay to rent one when needed. Instead of owning a house, more of us will live in shared apartments.
This becomes all the more terrifying now that investment bank BlackRock is buying up real estate worldwide so it can offer “housing as a service.”

It’s not all bad news, though. The WEF predicts that we’ll have more free time because we won’t have to work to pay for all our stuff.
Strangely enough, crypto— which I believe will play a big part in the transition away from physical ownership to digital —seems to be one of the few things Trump’s administration is giving serious attention.
As someone who's been in the space since 2019, it’s almost surreal to watch digital assets become front and center policy. But that focus comes with risk—and it deserves scrutiny.
It’s hard not to feel burned after Trump tossed out a meme coin on the eve of his inauguration.
Yes, we’re moving into a digital economy where hard assets matter less and code carries more weight. But that shift needs a watchdog—not a magician slipping authoritarian tricks under the guise of innovation.
Middle-class ownership could still be part of the equation. Scrapping the income tax would help. But I doubt Trump commits to this (I pray, PRAY I’m wrong!)
We’re in the transition from mid-stage capitalism to late-stage capitalism. Unfortunately we're also still about 70-80 years out from post-scarcity utopia so this is gonna be the status quo for the rest of our lives.
Or maybe things will get better? Anyway, what do you grade Trump so far?
Well written. Thought provoking. Thank you.