Doug Casey's Take
Matthew Smith
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Doug Casey, a best-selling author and libertarian philosopher, shares his controversial insights on politics, economics, and investment markets. Known for his book 'Crisis Investing,' which topped the New York Times bestseller list, he has appeared on numerous TV and radio shows. The podcast features his perspectives on profiting from economic turmoil and current events.
Episoder
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"Dangerous and Capable of Almost Any Kind of Stupidity" — Doug Casey on America at 250 03.07.2026 1t 2minFind us at https://www.CrisisInvesting.com 1976 vs Today: Patriotism, Demographics, Tech, and Subscriber Q&A on Capital Controls, Uranium, Cuba, and Milei On the July 3 observed July 4 holiday, Matt and Doug compare America's 1976 Bicentennial mood with today, citing major shifts in demographics, a larger population, widening class divides, the decline of manufacturing, and especially computerization and heavy screen time, alongside reduced patriotism and optimism and more political polarization. They discuss changing race relations and immigration, then pivot to subscriber Q&A about Crisis Investing after Lau Veges' departure, risks of foreign bank accounts amid potential capital controls, gold-backed "goldbacks," whether a US government could compel the Sprott Uranium Trust to sell uranium, possible investment opportunities in a collapsing Cuba, views on the death penalty and abortion, where "renaissance men" are most common, why countries splitting can be beneficial, concerns about Javier Milei's pro-Israel actions and immigration stance, and why they won't track panelists' personal trades from their experts roundtables. 00:00 1976 vs Today 02:06 Population and Lifestyle Shifts 04:09 Middle Class Squeeze 05:50 Computers Change Everything 07:20 Immigration and Identity 11:11 Patriotism and Politics 14:13 Subscriber Q and A Begins 17:52 Foreign Accounts and Controls 20:52 Goldbacks and Gold Money 24:29 Uranium Trust and State Power 29:55 Cuba Collapse and Opportunities 33:02 Cuba Property Outlook 34:19 Death Penalty Rethink 36:21 Abortion Family Choice 40:21 Renaissance Men Today 44:30 When Countries Split 47:15 Milei Zionism Concerns 57:46 Roundtable Stock Followups 01:01:49 Holiday Signoff
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Doug Casey: "Trump Will Not Fully Serve Out His Term" 01.07.2026 38minDoug Casey on oil's new floor, the $1.4 billion grift, and why the next president will make Trump look like a moderate Doug made a call on this week's episode that stopped me mid-conversation: he's betting Trump resigns before 2028. Not impeachment. Not the 25th Amendment. Resignation — dressed up, in Doug's telling, with "some nonsensical reason why. Well, time for Vance to get groomed or whatever." And he didn't stop there: "I'd also make book that Melania is going to divorce him." His suspicion? The Melania coin was part of the alimony settlement. You can dismiss that as Doug being Doug. But listen to the whole episode and the logic hangs together. Here's the chain. The money trail Trump's latest financial disclosure shows $1.4 billion in crypto earnings while in office. The Trump meme coin alone brought in $635 million. (Melania's coin managed about $6 million — which tells you something about the settlement theory.) Doug's read: "Those coins serve absolutely zero useful purpose. It's like giving somebody a book contract or a speaking fee to pass money to them. It's basically a grift." And that money has a job to do. "He'll need that money to mount a proper legal defense after he's out of office." A president facing legal exposure the moment he leaves power, sitting on a billion-plus war chest, in years Doug expects to get "so wild and wooly" that walking away becomes the smart trade — that's the resignation bet. Mussolini economics Doug's larger frame is that the grift isn't a side show — it's the system now. "He really is a modern-day reincarnation of Mussolini. His economic policies are actually identical to those of Benito Mussolini" — the US government buying stakes in companies on the open market, ten of them at this point, with the family positioned ahead of the deals. Take the Kazakhstan tungsten arrangement: Trump's sons get in, then the US government invests heavily. Millions of Americans look at that and call it capitalism. Doug's correction: "It's actually fascism at work, in the classic Mussolini definition of the word." And every time Trump is associated with free markets, he delegitimizes them a little more. What comes next is worse Mamdani won in New York and is now using his star power to elevate three more like-minded candidates into Congress. Doug isn't mincing words: "They're actual real communists that wanna overturn the entire nature of US life." Left and right, Americans are being radicalized against the system itself. Sanders, Obama, "drain the swamp," Mamdani — every one of those was a vote to tear something down. And the anger is monetary at its root, even if almost nobody can name it. M2 money supply surged $247 billion in May — the largest monthly jump since May 2021, when Washington was mailing checks to everyone with a pulse. We now sit $1.3 trillion above the peak of that printing orgy. That's what's laying waste to the average American's standard of living. They can't make ends meet, they can't explain why, and so they reach for "billionaires shouldn't exist." Doug's punchline on where the numbers go from here: "Trump is gonna have to ask what comes beyond a trillion. He doesn't know it, but it's a quadrillion. So that number is the next one we're gonna start hearing about." "It's all like a gambler on tilt at this point." The one trade hiding in all of this Amid the doom, Doug laid out the most concrete investment case he's made in months. The Hormuz standoff isn't getting resolved. Even under the best scenario, flows through the Strait will be controlled by Iran and its allies — restricted flows are the new baseline. Doug's conclusion: "Oil has reached a new base level at, let's say, $65 to $70 at a minimum." Now the anomaly: "During the last real oil bubble, which was in 1980, oil stocks were 20% of the S&P 500. Now they're 4%" — even though oil matters more to the world economy than ever. Some of these companies are yielding up to 10% in current dividends. "They're cheap, they're paying big dividends, nobody wants them, and it's one of the only parts of the financial world that's actually underpriced." Everyone's chasing semiconductors and AI. The energy that powers all of it trades like an afterthought. That's the setup Doug lives for. Also in this episode Trump's feud with Meloni at the G7 (and what the Italian press called him afterward), the $16 million Reflecting Pool fixation, the CPS visit to the Buttigieg household and why child protective agencies should terrify every parent in America, and whether there will even be an election in 2028. Doug: "Who knows what could happen between now and then where we could have a national emergency and the election is put off — and that's really the end of the Republic of America." On Friday: Doug's take on the recent Supreme Court rulings, his thoughts on Peter Thiel's Zero to One, and your questions. Subscribers can submit via the "Ask Doug a Question" link at the top of the Substack. One more thing John Hunt — Doug's co-author and, as Doug put it this week, "an actual renaissance man... not just an MD, he was trained in geology, and he can do everything" — has taken over the monthly Crisis Investing issues. His first one is out now, and it includes a genuinely interesting gold recommendation. Doug's assessment: "Crisis Investing is a better newsletter than ever, and it's going to improve a lot from here." If you want John's full write-up on the gold pick, upgrade at crisisinvesting.com.
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Trump's Peace Deal: "It's Going to Blow Up" 19.06.2026 42minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Matt and Doug discuss the proliferation of U.S. holidays, including Juneteenth and Martin Luther King Day, before turning to the opening of Obama's presidential library and Trump's competing, highly theatrical library renderings, comparing modern presidential libraries to pyramids and noting Biden's reported difficulty raising funds. They debate Trump's showmanship around his birthday and a ceasefire/peace deal they expect won't hold, citing Iran's improved position, unresolved issues, disrupted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, and risks to oil prices. They then address Ukraine's drone attacks on Moscow and concerns about an escalating, lingering war. Doug shares his positioning in gold miners, energy, uranium, and a corn ETF, answers subscriber questions on filmmaking/royalties, the FIFA World Cup and U.S. border hassles, trade blocs like Mercosur/EU, recommended books, and impressions of Malaysia and Penang. 00:00 Holiday Overload Debate 01:06 Which Holidays Matter 02:24 Equinoxes and Global Days Off 03:25 Juneteenth and Identity Politics 05:08 Obama Library Obamalisk 06:55 Trump Library Renderings 09:38 Pyramids and Presidential Tombs 11:31 Biden Library Money Trouble 14:25 Trump Birthday Peace Deal 15:13 Hormuz Oil and Ceasefire Doubts 18:02 Ukraine Drone War Escalation 20:02 War Escalation Risks 21:01 Ceasefire Won't Hold 22:13 Crisis Investing Plays 23:34 Corn ETF Thesis 25:47 Film Investing Reality 29:55 FIFA World Cup Fallout 34:23 Trade Blocs Skepticism 36:19 Five Books To Read 38:56 Malaysia And Penang 41:35 Weekend Signoff
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Peace Bombshell & Israel as the 51st State 17.06.2026 50minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Matt and Doug discuss a reported US–Iran peace deal whose MOU hasn't been released, doubting it will last due to Israel–Iran hostility and Israeli opposition, while arguing the US bombing of Iran was unnecessary and that the deal looks like a US surrender with potential reparations (estimated $300B) and possible UAE/private funding plus future service fees after 60 days. They then focus on provisions in the NDAA (Section 219) and an Intelligence Authorization Act measure (Sen. Tom Cotton) that would fuse US–Israel military and intelligence programs, outlining six harms: inability to stop unwanted wars, technology leakage (AI/quantum) possibly to China, US contractors losing business, Gaza-tested AI targeting tools entering US systems, Israeli espionage risks, and irreversible entanglement by FY2027. The conversation also covers Trump's credibility, government involvement in AI companies and energy-hungry data centers, China's open-source AI stance, IMF conditional lending in Papua New Guinea, rising authoritarian security policies in Peru, and broader fears of global conflict. 00:00 Iran US Peace Deal 01:08 Why Bomb Iran 02:31 Israel Leverage Theories 04:21 China Oil Shock Absorber 06:58 Trump Character Spin 10:02 Reparations And Tolls 11:18 Israel Lebanon Sticking Point 12:21 Israel As 51st State 14:59 Six Ways It Hurts 21:36 USS Liberty And AIPAC 24:32 AI Data Centers Bubble 28:24 AI As Strategic Weapon 33:42 World War Three Thesis 36:31 IMF In Papua New Guinea 39:48 Peru Fujimori Crackdown 43:47 Authoritarian Trend Fears 45:44 Hopeful Wrap And Outlook
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SpaceX Rings the Bell While Gold Hits Zero 12.06.2026 44minMatt and Doug discuss SpaceX's IPO jumping from 135 to about 171 a share and compare the frenzy to the dotcom era, noting its importance for broader market sentiment and Elon Musk's reported trillionaire status. They mention reading Peter Thiel's Zero to One, then pivot to extreme bearish sentiment in gold miners (a bullish index falling from 100 in January to 0 on June 10) and argue this may be a buying opportunity, alongside unloved oil despite ongoing Strait of Hormuz disruptions and prices around $80 WTI/$84 Brent. They cover rising inflation (CPI 4.2%), skepticism about official numbers, and expectations for new Fed chair Kevin Warsh. Subscriber questions include Costa Rica as a destination, tokenized gold's practicality and redeemability, whether to short markets, Ebola risk to Ivanhoe Mines, China's reduced oil imports, distrust of Howard Lutnick/Trump-linked trading dynamics, and whether humanoid robotics could extend the AI bull run. 00:00 SpaceX IPO Buzz 01:46 Thiel Book Talk 04:29 Trillion Dollar Math 06:24 Gold Miners Capitulation 09:26 Inflation Fed Outlook 12:47 Paper Fantasy Economy 16:07 Costa Rica Expat Reality 18:38 Central America Picks 20:17 Tokenized Gold Idea 21:07 Tokenized Gold Doubts 21:39 Swiss Gold Token Update 23:43 Shorting Market Timing 25:33 Ivanhoe Ebola Risk 28:36 Oil Prices and China 34:56 Stablecoins and Power Players 37:51 Epstein Files Speculation 39:04 Robots and AI Bubble 41:18 Trump Tweets and Markets 44:13 Weekend Sign Off
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Special Guest: Tom Woods 10.06.2026 59minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Find Tom at www.tomwoods.com In a wide-ranging discussion, Tom Woods joins Doug Casey and the host to assess current U.S. politics, culture, and economics. Woods reflects on Trump's 2024 win, the apparent retreat and performative nature of "wokery," and a broader sense that public life is "oddly fake," arguing that Trump squandered political capital and abandoned promising ideas like DOGE while ballooning spending, pursuing misguided trade and housing approaches, and attacking right-wing dissenters. They discuss generational divides in information and voting behavior, pessimism about fixing deficits and entitlements, and the likelihood that "reality" will force a fiscal reckoning through unmanageable interest costs or money printing. The conversation also touches on U.S.-Israel influence politics, concerns about deeper military integration, social media's role in mass conformity, the possibility of U.S. fragmentation, and Woods's commitment to keep speaking out and promoting his newsletter and history courses. 00:00 Welcome Tom Woods 00:33 Old Friends on PBS 01:10 Culture Wokery and Faith 04:15 Trump Momentum and Plan B 05:42 Economic Agenda Letdown 06:53 Housing Prices and Mortgages 09:48 Loyalty Tests and Vance 13:47 Israel NDAA and Intelligence 18:19 Censorship and Empire Decline 19:30 Pride Ads and Mass Psychosis 23:01 Social Media Amplifier 25:13 Will America Break Up 30:01 Keep Fighting Anyway 31:43 No Matter Who You Vote 33:03 Owning the McCain Line 34:04 Twitter Algorithms and Links 34:35 Debt Nobody Wants to Fix 39:49 Progress and Modern Comforts 43:00 Phones Amplify Human Nature 44:43 Boomers vs Gen Z Divide 48:19 Self Reliance for Young Men 51:23 Doug Casey Boomer Memories 55:54 Risks Hope and Do What You Can 58:28 Tom Woods Courses and Farewell
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Is Your Money Safe? 05.06.2026 35minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Matt and Doug open with a light discussion about June holidays, local attitudes toward Pride Month in Virginia, and Trump's unusual AI-style memes, then shift into subscriber questions. Doug explains his cautious stance on sizing into cheap junior mining and gold stocks while wanting more cash "dry powder" amid fears of a potential deflationary market collapse that could temporarily drag miners down too. They discuss whether nuclear weapons and modern city-targeting warfare violate the Geneva Conventions, citing WWII bombings, Korea, Iraq infrastructure attacks, and the devastation and contested casualty estimates in Gaza and southern Lebanon. Doug and Matt touch on eVTOL investing as a regulatory-heavy, early-industry space; risks from Japan rate changes, major tech IPOs, index/ETF dynamics, and speculative options; corn vs. soybeans as a fertilizer play; Doug's views on the soul as unprovable but personally plausible; why Eric Sprott's Forbes cover isn't a top signal; Interactive Brokers for Canadian exchanges; and why inheritance often harms children unless values and education are strong. 00:00 June Holiday Banter 01:12 Pride Flags and Virginia 02:08 Trump Meme Calendar 05:08 Gold Stocks and Dry Powder 08:52 Nukes and War Crimes 13:01 Gaza and Lebanon Fallout 15:22 eVTOL Investing Outlook 18:43 Japan Yen Carry and IPO Top 21:16 Corn vs Soybeans Trade 23:18 Do Souls Exist 27:09 Sprott Cover Top Signal 29:47 Broker for Canadian Stocks 30:13 Inheritance and Raising Kids 35:39 Wrap Up and Next Week
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Melt Up? 03.06.2026 43minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Matt and Doug discuss whether current markets resemble a melt-up fueled by AI enthusiasm, citing massive gains in large-cap tech and AI-related stocks, surging option speculation including same-day expirations, and the growing proliferation of ETFs. They note trillions sitting in money market funds that could re-enter risk assets, but warn rising rates and heavy government/agency-paper exposure could contribute to a bust. They contrast expensive AI leaders with deeply out-of-favor mining, gold, and oil stocks, arguing commodities may be at new equilibrium levels while producers remain cheap, and point to oil's reduced S&P weight versus 1980. They also question the economic purpose of enormous global data-center buildouts for training ever-more-compute-intensive frontier models. A Washington Post story about a Fidelity account "vanishing" underscores digital fragility, prompting advice to save statements and favor physical gold/silver and smaller, more personal banking relationships. 00:00 Market Melt-Up Talk 00:44 NVIDIA Hype Signals 03:27 AI Stocks Mint Fortunes 05:23 Options Casino Era 07:12 Sidelines Cash and Rates 09:25 Bubble Timing and Sentiment 12:05 Mining and Oil Value Plays 15:19 Geopolitics and Oil Outlook 17:35 Data Center Buildout Boom 20:08 Training the AI God 22:12 Fidelity Account Vanishes 23:27 Account Vanishes Digitally 24:55 Own What You Hold 26:17 Save Your Statements 27:24 Escape Big Bank Hell 30:12 Commodities New Equilibrium 31:20 Buying Physical Gold 31:49 Best Coins For Portability 33:37 Inflation And Dollar Decay 35:18 Ferrari EV Mandates 38:20 Old Ferrari Memories 40:28 Travel Plans And RV Life 42:24 Markets Limbo And AI Top 43:10 Wrap Up And Next Episode
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Trump's $250 Billion Dollar Bill, CIA Gold Hoard & More 29.05.2026 51minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Matt and Doug take subscriber questions for Crisis Investing while reacting to current events: a reported new $250 bill featuring Trump (and claims about a "gold note"), Trump imagery in passports, and the impact on Americans abroad. They discuss a raid on a CIA supervisor found with 303 kilos of gold, $20 million in cash, and luxury watches, raising concerns about CIA controls and corruption. The conversation turns to the Iran conflict and the Strait of Hormuz, arguing U.S. actions have repeatedly tightened shipping despite talk of wanting the strait open, with tolling, sanctions, and 1,500–1,700 ships reportedly stuck. They answer questions on inflation, Polymarket vs investing, how oil pricing works, what could invalidate their worldview, AI/robotics investing (favoring China/robots), OPEC weakening, skepticism on SpaceX/OpenAI/Anthropic IPOs, oil stocks and dividends, and preferred older vehicles to avoid surveillance tech. 00:00 Subscriber Q&A Setup 00:25 Trump 250 Dollar Bill 03:36 Passports and Global Backlash 05:15 Venezuela 51st State Post 07:00 CIA Gold Hoard Scandal 12:28 Iran War Fog and Losses 13:56 Hormuz Strait Toll and Sanctions 22:40 Energy Prices in Uruguay Argentina 25:38 Inflation Deficit and Collapse Risks 26:51 Betting Versus Investing 27:04 Polymarket And Market Corruption 29:03 Oil Futures Versus Physical 31:24 When The Worldview Breaks 38:12 AI Robots Real Edge 41:52 OPEC Control And Breakup 43:37 SpaceX IPO Bubble Bells 45:55 Why Own Oil Stocks 48:14 Cars Surveillance And Sweet Spot 51:09 Wrap Up And Next Week
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"This Ends Badly" – Doug Casey on America's Breaking Point 22.05.2026 48minMatt and Doug discuss signs of consumer strain in the U.S.—record-low sentiment, rising delinquencies, and high prices—alongside a stock market at all-time highs, comparing the disconnect to historical episodes like Germany's 1923 hyperinflation. They argue official inflation measures are unreliable, deficits and money printing persist, foreign holders are cutting U.S. Treasuries, and gold benefits while mining stocks remain cheap; Doug remains long gold, oil, and commodities and warns the AI/data-center boom may be a debt-fueled bubble. The conversation turns to widening inequality, debt-based consumption tools, weaker job prospects even for top graduates, and fears of social unrest and potential civil conflict. They criticize what they describe as escalating corruption under Trump, including a DOJ settlement structure and extensive trading disclosures suggesting insider activity, then discuss elections, AIPAC/Israel influence, speech taboos, and rising generational and ethnic tensions. 00:00 Everybody Wants Love 00:08 Economy vs Market Highs 01:34 Sticker Shock in America 04:28 Inflation Numbers Doubt 05:57 Treasuries to Gold Rush 07:12 Mining Stocks and ESG 08:36 AI Data Center Bubble 10:32 Haves and Have Nots 12:08 Buy Now Pay Later Living 13:23 Decades of Debt Warnings 17:10 Trump Corruption Claims 17:50 DOJ Settlement Slush Fund 24:25 Insider Trading Allegations 25:50 Epstein and Ukraine Talk 28:59 Elections and Voter Trust 32:17 Israel Influence and AIPAC 36:38 Hate Speech and Taboo Topics 40:32 Tribalism and Protected Classes 44:22 Civil War and Generational Rift 47:22 Wrap Up and Next Guest
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Trumps Next Move 24.04.2026 42minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Matt promotes the Crisis Investing newsletter and VIP private placements, citing past returns and highlighting Midnight Sun's gains and the free Experts Roundtable featuring Arizona Eagle Mining. Doug and Matt discuss Spirit Airlines' bankruptcy and criticize a proposed government bailout as state capitalism, then argue the FAA and TSA should be abolished or privatized. They question Trump's claims about saving eight Iranian girls from execution, debate marijuana reclassification, and emphasize personal responsibility and cultural causes of drug use. In listener Q&A, they cover the importance of economics and psychology, skepticism about modern psychiatry, the value of intrapreneurship, risks of invading Iran, defining the deep state, best healthcare abroad (Switzerland, Thailand, Argentina), where private gold is concentrated (China), property vs self-investment, Roth IRA asset choice, private placement minimums, border interrogation, shareholder voting, helium investing limits, tungsten's strategic value, skepticism on South Africa REITs, and the film Barnum World's critique of political rhetoric. 00:00 Newsletter Pitch and Returns 01:21 VIP Deals and Roundtable 02:50 Spirit Airlines Bailout 04:44 Abolish FAA and TSA 05:48 Iranian Girls Tweet Controversy 08:12 Marijuana Rescheduling Debate 12:02 Economics vs Psychology Discipline 16:28 Intrapreneurship at Work 17:47 Invading Iran and Deep State 19:40 Best Healthcare Abroad 21:22 US Healthcare Reality 21:55 Where Gold Is Hoarded 23:33 Property Or Self Investment 27:06 Roth IRA Asset Choices 29:45 VIP Deal Minimums 30:27 Border Tech And Customs 31:55 Shareholder Voting Skepticism 33:13 Helium And Supply Limits 34:40 Tungsten And Critical Metals 36:56 South Africa REITs Debate 40:05 Barnum Statements In Politics 41:58 Wrap Up And Next Week
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The Strait "Reopens" and Gold Keeps Climbing 17.04.2026 29minIn today's episode: Good news broke this morning: the Strait of Hormuz is officially open again — assuming you believe what you read in the papers, which Doug emphatically does not. Oil dropped toward $80, gold crept toward $5,000 (a combination Doug calls "a little bit counterintuitive"), and meanwhile C-130s keep flowing into the Middle Eastern theater around the clock. As Doug puts it, "chances are this is just a pause in hostilities — everybody's taking the opportunity to reload." From there the conversation goes exactly where you'd hope it would. We get into Pete Hegseth's now-infamous "prayer breakfast," where the Secretary of Defense appears to have lifted Samuel L. Jackson's Ezekiel 25:17 monologue from Pulp Fiction and delivered it to a room of bewildered military brass as scripture. Doug's review was not kind: "It was kind of weak and mealy-mouthed the way Hegseth delivered those lines." His proposed fix? "Next time he ought to put a red bandana around his forehead à la Rambo, strip his shirt off to expose his war-like tattoos, and then deliver it with proper fervor." Elsewhere in a wide-ranging episode: Why coin collecting is dead and what that says about how we think about money Doug's characteristically diplomatic take on Ireland's troubles The Argentine citizenship-by-investment program that was, then wasn't Whether traveling as an American is about to get uncomfortable again (Doug remembers the Vietnam-era Canadian-flag-on-the-backpack trick) Human cloning, Multiplicity, and the curious case of Adolfo Cambiasso cloning his best polo ponies — which rather settles the question of whether someone, somewhere, has tried it on people An honest look at our private placement track record: the big winners, and the ones that aren't As Doug reminds us near the end: "We're just leaves drifting down the river of time. We shouldn't concern ourselves with these things — they're above our pay grade anyway." Have a great weekend, Matt
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Narrative Warfare, Iran, and the Looming Energy Shock 15.04.2026 44minDoug and the host discuss how a gloomy zeitgeist has flipped inspirational "hard work pays off" stories into reminders that most people aren't Will Smith, reflecting young people's uncertainty and widening social division that could escalate beyond clashing ideas. They argue an "information war" now relies less on narrative control than flooding the public with competing, plausible, comforting, and gratifying stories that can't be proven, deepening confusion and polarization. The conversation centers on the escalating conflict with Iran, heated disagreements among investors and military professionals, and the market implications of a U.S. blockade and a Strait of Hormuz shutdown, which they warn could trigger fuel shortages, rapid economic contraction, bankruptcies, more money printing, inflation, and a potential bond-market panic, while noting potential geopolitical winners like Israel and possibly China. 00:00 Confusing Times Setup 01:05 Pop Culture Gloom Shift 03:05 Youth Outlook And Civil Strife 05:57 Iran Conflict Sparks Division 07:19 Markets View And Escalation Risks 11:40 Narrative Warfare Flooding 14:18 Why We Believe Stories 18:12 Extraordinary Claims Need Proof 20:31 Iran Narratives And Religion 22:25 No Shared Western Story 23:13 Heroes and Moral Vacuum 24:19 Drug Boats and Rules 25:48 Iran Blowback and Propaganda 30:36 Blockade Escalation Scenarios 33:38 Strait Closure Economic Shock 35:40 Markets Mispricing the Crisis 38:23 Trump Knew the Stakes 41:01 China Advantage and Bond Panic 43:44 Wrap Up and Prepare
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Space Aliens, Disappearing Scientists, and the Coal Comeback 10.04.2026 44minAliens, Energy Shocks, Migration, and Crisis Investing Q&A with Doug Doug and the host pivot from Iran to UFOs, discussing reports of nine connected people disappearing and a clip of Congressman Tim Burchett reacting to Matt Gaetz's claim of an alien-human hybrid breeding program and calling for disclosure, while the hosts debate the odds of alien visitation and mention alleged underwater craft reports. They then take subscriber questions on energy, arguing coal is undervalued, natural gas is extremely cheap versus oil (about $2.50 vs $100, shifting the usual 6:1 ratio to ~40:1), and explaining LNG's transport constraints and EQT's sensitivity to gas prices. They discuss mass migration into the U.S. from Latin America, speculate on motives, criticize Canadian political "wokeness," address nuclear-war risk and Argentina/Israel relocation rumors, touch on pensions' fragility, explain their Crisis Investing newsletter process, mention a VIP private placement called NAQI (earbud control tech), and share views on trusts. 00:00 Aliens and Disappearances 01:05 Art Bell Memories 02:23 Congress UFO Clip 04:47 Disclosure Day Hype 05:29 Do the Math on Life 08:23 Sci Fi and TV Picks 10:45 Energy Question Coal 12:51 Coal Gas and LNG 15:33 Migration Debate 20:33 Canada NDP Clip Setup 21:12 Canada Genocide Claim 22:52 Trans Surgery And Suicide 24:00 WEF Momentum And War Fears 25:31 Israel To Argentina Rumor 27:26 Technocracy Rabbit Holes 28:04 EQT Natural Gas Selloff 29:03 Shipping Insurance And Straits 31:28 Oil Shock And Australia 33:14 Rebel Vocalists Talk 34:56 Pensions And Dependency Risks 37:25 Newsletter Workflow And Picks 38:19 Private Tech Placement 40:16 Trusts Pros And Cons 42:43 Closing Thoughts And Farewell
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TACO Tuesday? Trump's Iran Ultimatum, Energy Shock Fears, and Dubai's Fragile Future 07.04.2026 29minDoug and Matt discuss escalating tensions with Iran, criticizing Trump's social media threats of "civilization" ending and calling his behavior unstable, with one suggesting the 25th Amendment. They argue U.S. involvement benefits Israel, dispute the "47 years" framing by citing the 1953 coup, and warn that threatening to cut power to Iran amounts to mass death. They anticipate potential Iranian retaliation against U.S. Gulf interests and infrastructure, triggering oil disruptions, diesel price spikes, global shortages (especially in Asia), and broader financial stress amid high debt and risky junk lending. They consider knock-on effects like reduced civilian air travel, then pivot to refuges and isolated places like Tristan da Cunha's small, lobster-based community. Finally, they assess Dubai's vulnerability in war and financial downturns, noting falling transaction volumes, possible car abandonments, and the city's artificial, hard-to-maintain nature. 00:00 D-Day Iran Threats 01:30 Trump Unhinged Turn 04:27 Bonkers Tweets Read 05:44 Iran History Context 07:21 Blowback and Terror Risk 09:42 Oil Shock Global Fallout 11:02 Debt Markets Unraveling 14:14 Invoke 25th Amendment 16:04 Escape Plans and Islands 17:04 Tristan da Cunha Life 20:42 Dubai Warzone Real Estate 28:25 Nuclear War Fears 29:31 Waiting for Taco Tuesday
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Americas Economic Future 03.04.2026 45minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Doug and Matt discuss a podcast featuring MIT professor Ted Postel, agreeing the Iran war is an escalating catastrophe with unavoidable, chaotic economic consequences driven by higher petroleum prices. They answer subscriber questions on how rising diesel impacts mining all-in sustaining costs (estimated 10–25%), how to identify viable new business ideas by solving real problems, and how Doug would start investing today by focusing on currently cheap resource stocks while avoiding becoming a one-trick pony. Doug recounts a few tense travel encounters (Haiti and Congo), outlines private placement risks (illiquidity and funding needy companies) and rewards (discounts and warrants), and says no clear asymmetric trade exists without reliable on-the-ground information. They cover music royalties, Brazil travel and bureaucracy, vaccine skepticism, corn's subsidies versus a bullish ag view, draft avoidance uncertainty, 401(k) dilemmas, dollar devaluation and gold, numismatics demand issues, and Hydrograph as a high-risk speculation where taking a "Casey Free Ride" is prudent. 00:00 Subscriber Q&A Kickoff 00:37 Podcast Takeaways on War 02:20 Economic Shock and Energy Reality 05:11 Mining Costs vs Diesel Spike 06:23 Finding a Business Pain Point 07:42 Starting Investing Today 09:18 Dangerous Travel Stories 13:42 Private Placements Risks 15:23 Asymmetric Bets in Iran War 18:08 Professor Jiang on Long War 21:11 Music Royalties and Dire Straits 22:17 Brazil Outlook and Regions 23:10 Brazil Travel Reality 24:23 Visas And Travel Tightening 25:16 Covid Vaccine Skepticism 27:29 Corn Subsidy Machine 30:08 Corn As Investment 32:05 Draft Avoidance Talk 33:45 Protecting 401k Savings 35:39 Dollar Devaluation And Gold 39:10 Numismatics Exit Strategy 40:40 Women And Preparedness 41:39 Buying Hydrograph Shares 42:52 Hydrograph Buy More Guidance 44:24 Free Ride Speculation Lesson 45:30 Wrap Up And Next Week
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DIY War, Oil, and a Market in Denial 01.04.2026 42minJoin us at https://www.crisisinvesting.com The hosts revive a "day in history" segment highlighting William Tyndale's 1523 English Bible translation and argue that Sir Thomas More, though revered as a saint, used authorities to hunt down and execute Tyndale. They then discuss the speaker's recent luncheon talk in Argentina for Rand Paul during his visit, where he said Javier Milei's election is historically important but criticized Milei for not acting like an anarcho-capitalist, citing failures such as not abolishing the central bank, moving Argentina's gold abroad, buying used F-16s, seeking NATO/Ukraine/Israel ties, and keeping foreign exchange controls. They note a $96 homemade MANPADS prototype as evidence of democratized warfare, then assess the US-Iran conflict's changing warfare dynamics, vulnerability of carriers, and risks from Strait of Hormuz disruptions, UAE and Houthi escalation, and attacks on Russian facilities, warning of recession/depression amid rising rates, private credit stress, an AI/data-center bubble, and overvalued markets, while remaining bullish but cautious on gold, gold stocks, and select oil stocks. 00:00 This Day in History Returns 00:24 Tyndale and English Bible 02:48 Saint Thomas More Exposed 04:35 Speech for Rand Paul 05:31 Milei Not Walking Talk 06:45 Gold and Central Bank 08:11 F-16s and NATO Drift 10:52 DIY Manpad and Weapons 12:44 Iran War Lessons 14:21 Carriers and Tankers Vulnerable 15:06 Trump Hegseth and War Spin 19:54 Why War Won't End 20:43 War Versus Energy Shock 22:03 UAE Escalation Risks 23:24 Houthis and Red Sea Chokepoints 24:31 Ukraine Strikes and Blowback 25:48 Iranian Resolve and Retaliation 27:15 Israel and Nuclear Escalation 29:32 Oil Flow and Debt Spiral 31:28 Private Credit and AI Bubble 35:40 Markets in Denial 38:54 Gold and Oil Positioning 40:33 Democratized Warfare Ahead 41:28 Wrap Up and Next Episode
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Special Guest: Kevin Bambrough on HydrogGraph and Nanotech 25.03.2026 1t 20minFormer Sprott CEO Kevin Bambrough on Hydrograph: Fractal Graphene, Nanotech's Breakout Moment Podcast hosts interview Kevin Bambrough, author and former Sprott CEO, about why he became a major shareholder in Hydrograph and why he believes graphene—specifically Hydrograph's turbo-stratic, fractal graphene aggregates—solves key industry problems like clumping and poor dispersion that plagued earlier graphite-derived approaches. Bambrough recounts his investing background and explains graphene's sought-after properties (strength, conductivity, EMF shielding) and why Hydrograph's purity and SP2 bonding matter for real-world applications. The panel discusses potential use cases across polymers, coatings, tires, construction materials, batteries, semiconductors, and military needs, plus Hydrograph's patent moat and licensing potential. They cover manufacturing via acetylene/oxygen combustion in a chamber, economics such as a stated $250,000/ton price with far lower required loadings, modular "Hyperion" scaling, work with dozens of companies, and catalysts like EPA approvals, a possible Nasdaq listing, and a Texas gas-plant partnership, while noting execution and IP/theft as key risks. 00:00 Meet Kevin Bambrough 00:32 From Computers to Markets 01:57 Sprott Years and Track Record 03:19 Discovering Hydrograph 05:36 Graphene Hype vs Reality 07:46 Why Graphene Matters 11:21 Hydrograph Fractal Advantage 16:06 Sci Fi Use Cases 20:47 AI Accelerates Innovation 23:26 Moat Patents and Monopoly 26:42 Is the Stock a Bubble 30:59 Flow State Deep Research 35:38 Graphene Types and Construction 40:08 How the Graphene Is Made 41:48 Detonation Cycle Basics 42:34 Fractal Graphene Formation 43:58 Pricing And Battery Value 45:57 Polymer Bottles And Low Loading 49:13 Unit Economics And Scaling 51:59 First Customers And Auto Wins 56:24 Texas Gas Plant Expansion 59:16 Risks Patents And Execution 01:08:51 Catalysts Nasdaq And Deals 01:16:00 Final Takeaways And Wrap
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Doug Casey: This Is "Ultra Serious" 20.03.2026 49minan Supply Destruction, Energy Shortages, and Why Gold Miners Are Still Hated Doug and Matt discuss escalating conflict in Iran, including attacks on production/refining/shipping facilities and the potential closure of the Strait of Hormuz, arguing markets are underpricing the resulting supply destruction and global knock-on effects already seen in Asia (fuel shortages, reduced air travel, four-day work weeks). They criticize Trump's actions and messaging, speculate about political fallout, and note reported U.S. losses and broader regional disruption, including Dubai's tourism/finance and potential UAE banking stress. They react to Trump promoting watches and seeking a commemorative gold coin, then shift to investing: favoring commodity exposure (corn and possibly rice) due to fertilizer impacts, and urging gradual buying of cheap gold miners given extremely bearish sentiment and low P/E ratios. Subscriber Q&A covers Argentina relocation choices, Uruguay conference timing, "Great Reset" debate, drones, Falklands, media sources, short-term cash parking, war propaganda, carbon credits skepticism, mining catalysts (notably drill results in a bull market), and a coming interview with Hydrograph's largest shareholder pitching a potential 100-to-1 case. 00:00 Iran Strikes Escalate 03:42 Energy Shockwaves Worldwide 07:35 Dubai Fallout and Bank Risk 09:07 Trump Watch Ad Controversy 10:44 Coin Proposal and Removal Talk 12:25 War Losses and Ground Invasion Fears 14:36 Spending Blowout and Staff Resignations 19:02 Insulating With Commodities 20:15 Argentina Relocation Picks 21:54 Subscriber Q and Great Reset Debate 25:26 Drone Delivery Future 26:04 Falklands Refuge Reality 27:44 Rubicon Deep State Show 28:13 Assessing Escobar Sources 29:43 Buying Gold Miners Dip 31:46 Learning Markets Slowly 32:27 Red Pilling Youth Ethics 36:52 Parking Cash Safely 37:39 Iran War Propaganda Logic 40:54 Carbon Streaming Skepticism 42:19 Miners Sentiment Catalysts 45:40 Junior Miner 10x Triggers 47:41 Hydrograph Interview Tease 49:09 Weekend Sign Off
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Skynet, The city of London & More 13.03.2026 57minFind us at www.crisisinvesting.com Doug and Matt discuss a Palantir Maven Smart System demo that fuses multiple military data feeds into one targeting workflow, likening it to "Skynet" and warning that removing the final human approval is near. They cover Anthropic's stance on not enabling "evil" uses versus dependence on government contracts, and debate whether massive AI data center spending could become stranded as models advance quickly and projects like "Stargate" fall apart. Member questions address biometric border expansion and the end of travel privacy, lab-grown/transmuted gold and future supply from seawater, kelp, and asteroids, Cuba's likely collapse and negotiations with the U.S., AI data center local costs, offshore gold storage and impending FX controls, City of London conspiracy claims, portfolio implications of Iran-related oil disruptions, gold miners vs juniors, broker access to Canada, stop-loss risks, Uruguay/Argentina as safer regions, and tech/nanotech as hardest to analyze. 00:00 Palantir Skynet Demo 04:24 Anthropic vs Pentagon 06:25 AI Data Center Bubble 10:19 Buenos Aires Round Table 12:59 Tourism Overcrowding 16:00 Air Travel Breaking Down 19:33 Biometrics and Travel Privacy 23:30 Lab Grown Gold Explained 25:54 Cuba Next on the List 28:17 Local Costs of Data Centers 30:04 Data Center Bubble 30:38 Offshore Gold Storage 32:44 City of London Myths 36:18 Oil Stocks and War 38:21 Gold Miners Strategy 41:42 Accessing Canadian Stocks 43:10 Stop Loss Debate 46:05 Uruguay as Safe Haven 49:16 Israel Iran Motives 53:07 Hardest Stocks to Analyze 55:05 Wealth Transfer Prep 56:35 Wrap Up and Next Week
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