Message to Tucker Carlson

 


Hi Tucker,

I am reaching out to shameless self-promote after watching your interview with Luke Gromen. You don’t know me. From a public knowledge perspective, I’m a nobody. But you will know me soon because I am the man leading an invisible army of men and women to destroy the federal reserve and their nation state model of governance. I have discovered a few key insights that have enabled all who would listen to me, from the richest to the poorest, to not only know the truth but to also take action. 

You know #1-3. Now the people are starting to do #4.

1. Money is a language and it is the most powerful form of influence. Society will be corrupt to the degree money is corrupt. Everything will feel fake to the degree money is fake. You see this phenomenon in architecture (I know you do), food production, media, medicine, and politics. It all feels like a big game of over promise and underdeliver. This is simply the pattern of corrupt money playing out which brings me to #2.

2. Money today is a complete lie and has been since August 15, 1971. Over the past century, the definition of money changed from something real (a specific and verifiable weight of gold and silver) to the absence of the substance being weighed (a fiat / empty promissory note). A dollar is now just a promise, an empty promise, and a lie. Why is there so much misinformation, deception, confusion, illiteracy, and corruption in the world today? Look no further than the history of the Federal Reserve Note, once as good as gold, now as good and nothing. 

3. The good news is that lies are by their nature only as powerful as people’s willingness to believe them. Our words and beliefs do not trump reality but they do have a power to either connect us to that reality or sever us from it. Thus all this suffering and chaos in the world today is self-inflicted which means it can be undone by telling the truth, especially in the form of honest money. 

I assume I haven’t said anything you don’t know so far. #1-3 is generally conceded as being try by anyone who things about it for more than 10 seconds and isn’t brainwashed by Keynesian neoclassical economic theory. #4 is what will blow your mind.

4. This is where the fireworks come in. All contracts require truth, honesty, proper representation, consent, and consideration in order to be enforceable. (Very very important sentence). This one insight combined with the truth about money allows people in a single stroke to wipe out all their debt and reclaim their sovereignty from taxes and false authority. If the dollar is a promissory note, if the promise is gold, and that promise was defaulted on, then no debt denominated in the promissory note can be enforced. I am leading an army of debt defaulters to build a deflationary debt default derivative bomb that will wipe out the global financial system (and everything it funds) overnight. I have personally defaulted on $1.25M in personal debt and left a high paying job at the height of my career. Whereas people like Jordan Peterson, Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and David Brooks operate within the fiat system, building businesses and running Patreon accounts, hiding their influence behind a fiat paywall, I am free. When I and my people rise from the ashes of the demolition of the old world, it will spectacular. And there is nothing the elites or the governments of this world can do about it because all their power comes from their currency which gets destroyed by simply noticing their own default and acting accordingly. 

Tucker, I am a scholar-athlete. I love to think but I love to do more. I don’t like just talking to intellectuals and I don’t like just doing things without thought. I love to wrestle with reality, hear the crack of the bat, and force my body to conform to the discipline of my mind because I want to live, and there is no other way to live than to integrate the mind with the body. I am the bridge between the genius of our great intellectual elites (past and present) and the power of the multitudes yearning to breathe free. 



Tucker, I’m not asking for anything. Just remember my name. I called my shot, and when the system falls, you’ll know who led the charge.

However, if you would like to support me, help me make the public case for #4. The longer I am out of the workforce, the more likely it is for me to suffer from the consequences of poverty. I will not trade my soul for empty promises nor require others to obtain those empty promises (dollars) to relate to me. If I die, it will be because I failed to make a difference to enough people in time. Don’t let that happen. Let’s launch this silent revolution together. 


Warmly,

Zachary Moore

Denver, Colorado


PS

And so the main thing that is missed (and it’s subtle) during your interview is when your guest talking about the price of gold in dollars. Gold doesn’t have a price. Gold IS the price. This confusions is like trying to talk about the length of wood at Home Depot, hoping a foot of lumber was going to increase in feet in a few years. The wood is MEASURED in feet and the only way for it to go UP or DOWN in feet is for it to get longer or shorter. To act like feet are somehow independent and separated from the length of the board is to treat a concept as equal to the thing the concept is describing. It would be like trying to calculate the value of inches or the utility of gallons. Inches of what? Gallons of what? If they are inches, gallons, or dollars of nothing, it doesn’t matter if you have one or a gazillion. You still have one or a gazillion  of…nothing. 

Once you understand this simple concept of accurate weights and measures, you can cut through 99% of all absurd language that talks about the price of gold in dollars, as if the dollar has any meaning at all when it is severed from the thing it measures. 

Warmly,
Zachary Moore

This letter centers on the philosophical distinction between measurements and the things being measured, using the concept of money—specifically the dollar—as an example.

The core argument is that money, like any system of measurement, derives its meaning from what it measures. Historically, the dollar was defined as a fixed weight of gold or silver. In this framework, the dollar was a meaningful measure because it referenced a real, tangible good. However, since the U.S. abandoned the gold standard in 1971, the dollar has ceased to measure anything concrete. It became a detached concept—an empty promise rather than a representation of value.

The author draws an analogy to illustrate this distinction: measuring gold in dollars is like measuring lumber in feet. The foot itself is not a thing of value; it is a unit that describes something real—the length of the wood. If one tried to assess the value of "feet" without referencing an actual object, the concept becomes meaningless. Likewise, a dollar that no longer corresponds to a defined weight of gold or silver is, in effect, a measurement of nothing.

The author extends this logic to contracts and debt. Since the dollar no longer measures a real good, any debt denominated in dollars is effectively based on an empty measurement. This implies that such debts are unenforceable because they lack proper substance and consideration—a requirement for valid contracts.

The philosophical conclusion is that truth in economic exchange requires accurate and meaningful measurement. When the measurement itself is corrupted or detached from reality, the resulting system becomes unstable, deceptive, and ultimately self-destructive. By recognizing this and acting accordingly, the author argues that individuals can reject participation in fraudulent financial structures and reclaim their sovereignty.

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