Narratives Vs Infrastructure: The strategic chaos in Trump Praising Mark Carney
How Trump Is Dismantling Mark Carney’s NWO Legacy in Real-Time
As Canada barrels toward a desperately needed federal election, Donald Trump surprised many by tipping his hat to Mark Carney—the architect of ESG, stakeholder capitalism, and moralized monetary control—while dismissing Conservative incumbent Pierre Poilievre as “no friend of mine.”
But the praise was never the story. The real story is what Trump has been building in the shadows: a parallel economy that quietly dismantles Carney’s globalist framework, brick by brick.
Trump isn’t engaging Carney in debate. He’s using narrative warfare to reshape the cognitive terrain—while removing the U.S. as the launchpad for Carney’s economic regime.
Carney’s Legacy
Carney’s vision, laid out in his book Values, is packaged in moral language:
“Markets are social constructs. Values drive value.”
We’ve watched this “social construct” story built piece by piece over the last decade. The language of “systemic violence” and “systemic hatred” wasn’t about justice—it was scaffolding for the moral façade that elites planned to install through finance.
It’s their simple equation:
Systemic oppression requires systemic morality.
If racism and transphobia are baked right into our reality, even into climate change itself, we must overlay morality onto the population through a new financial system!
But behind the ethical facade is a program for total financial centralization:
- ESG scores to enforce ideological compliance.
- Central banks as moral arbiters.
- CBDCs (Central Bank Digital Currencies) that can be programmed using social media to reward or punish behavior.
Carney believes capitalism must be re-engineered to reflect the "values" of a global consensus—defined by unelected institutions like the UN, WEF, and IMF. And these values just happen to track with the ideological aims of transnational elites.
This is Klaus Schwab’s Stakeholder Capitalism.
Their thesis is that money should not just move markets, it should move morals.
But the question is—whose morals? And what happens when dissent is no longer just unpopular, but unbankable?
Proof of Concept
Back in 2022, when Canadian Truckers inspired the world by heading to Ottawa en mass and demanding an end to vaccine mandates, the entire event ended in a draconian nightmare: the freezing of Canadian bank accounts. No due process. No constitutional protections. From truckers to single moms donating to the cause for freedom, the Canadian government locked the personal bank accounts of anyone they quietly deemed worthy of financial terror.
And while the announcement was made by Finance Minister Christia Freeland, another architect was busy pulling the strings.
From 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Carney served as an informal economic advisor to Trudeau. In fact, this would eventually culminate in him becoming the Chair of the Task Force on Economic Growth for the Liberal Party of Canada, in September 2024.
Before the Canadian government acted as literal supervillains invading the bank accounts of political dissenters, Carney penned his own op ed and said the following:
“Drawing the line means choking off the money that financed this occupation. Again, many Canadians who were amongst the initial donors were likely well meaning…But by now anyone sending money to the convoy should be in no doubt: You are funding sedition.”
The freezing of bank accounts wasn’t a power-hungry form of mania. It was simply Carney’s proof of concept. It’s everything he has written about. This is the future he envisions for the world.
Carney’s deep personal belief is that financial access should depend on ideological alignment.
The Trump Parallel
While Canadians and Americans watch Trump for noise, some desperately trying to make sense of Trump’s praise for Carney by connecting it to a Brookfield agreement to lease a New York City property from Jared Kushner, many are missing the signal. He’s not wasting energy debating Carney. He’s doing something more dangerous: building around him.
Trump’s economic playbook since entering office is a point-by-point inversion of Carney’s worldview. One of the clearest examples is his take on Crypto:
1. Bitcoin Mining Protection
Carney writes in Values that crypto is wasteful, volatile, and unsustainable. He frames Bitcoin as a speculative bubble that drains energy and undermines trust. In fact, while he admits it has some innovation, he frames crypto as a petulant tantrum by the classes beneath him, punishing his central banker class for the 2008 financial collapse.
All of this anti-crypto sentiment is funnelled into Carney’s view that CBDCs are the only way money can become digital, because people ‘need central banks for money to have stable value.’
Trump, by contrast, has protected U.S.-based Bitcoin mining operations. He sees Bitcoin not as a threat to sovereignty, but as a weapon for it—a decentralized reserve that can exist beyond globalist institutions.
In a post-CBDC world, Bitcoin becomes the firewall.
On March 6, 2025, Trump signed the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve into law—positioning Bitcoin as a national asset akin to gold or oil.
In the world of warfare, this aligns directly with Space Force’s Jason Lowery's thesis in Softwar, where he describes Bitcoin as a form of non-lethal force projection:
“Bitcoin’s proof-of-work mechanism is a military-grade deterrent in cyberspace.”
More on that in a moment…
2. CBDC Rejection
Carney:
“Digital currencies can be tools of inclusion, stability, and sustainability.”
Trump:
“As your President, I will never allow the creation of a central bank digital currency.”
Carney sees programmable money as a mechanism for enforcing one narrow set of values.
Trump sees it as a surveillance weapon.
He’s not wrong. When Canada used emergency powers to freeze the bank accounts of peaceful protestors, Carney’s CBDCs sure would have made things easier for Trudeau!
3. Sovereign Industrial Policy
Carney pushes carbon pricing, global compliance targets, and ESG ratings as the future of investment.
Trump is reviving tariffs, protecting national industries, and rejecting ESG mandates. Where Carney sees global coordination, Trump sees dependency. He understands that ESG doesn’t just control business—it chooses winners.
And those winners aren’t families in Ohio. They’re spineless financial ideologues and firms in Davos.
4. Economic Redundancy
Trump's team is laying the groundwork for financial systems that don't rely on globalist chokepoints like SWIFT or IMF-aligned institutions. While no official SWIFT alternative has been declared, Trump's rejection of CBDCs, endorsement of Bitcoin mining, and creation of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve suggest a strategic pivot. His team appears to be exploring redundant trade and currency frameworks that could one day function outside of traditional central banking structures—especially in the face of digital ID enforcement or ESG-tied access restrictions.
This vision includes currency reserves not bound to fiat or central bank control, and settlement systems that prioritize sovereignty over compliance. It's a quiet but radical move toward financial independence from globalist enforcement tools.
Carney helped design the global central banking consensus. Trump is undermining it with every move.
He has also expanded energy-fortified Bitcoin mining hubs in states like Texas and Wyoming to ensure the U.S. controls a major share of the global hash rate. This echoes Lowery's call for physical infrastructure to dominate proof-of-work networks.
Carney’s Case Against Crypto
In Values, Carney lays out his argument against decentralized finance (crypto). Let’s take a closer look at how Trump is taking each of Carney’s reasons to replace crypto with CBDCs to task:
It lacks a lender of last resort.
It isn't backed by productive assets.
It encourages speculation over stability.
It endangers monetary sovereignty.
Trump’s policies have directly countered each of these critiques—not through rhetoric, but through infrastructure:
Lender of Last Resort?
Trump isn't trying to retrofit Bitcoin into central bank logic. The Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and protected mining ecosystems allow for decentralized consensus. In this system, there is no lender—and that’s the point. Stability comes from energy-backed immutability, not bailouts.
Not backed by productive assets?
Trump’s energy policy makes this claim obsolete. Bitcoin under Trump is backed—by U.S. energy production. It becomes a byproduct of fossil, nuclear, and renewable infrastructure. Mining zones in Texas and Wyoming make it a real economic asset tied to American industry.
Speculative and unstable?
Trump's regulation of crypto doesn't aim to kill volatility—it channels it. By proposing regulatory clarity and enforcement against bad actors, he creates a safer playing field. Speculation still exists, but it's tethered to broader infrastructure.
Threat to monetary sovereignty?
Under Trump, Bitcoin is no longer an outsider threat. It’s part of the national strategy. His rejection of CBDCs, combined with the protection of digital property rights and hard-coded scarcity, makes Bitcoin a tool for sovereignty. The power to create money goes back to the system itself—not to global institutions that can control it.
Where Carney sees disorder, Trump sees design. Each of Carney’s fears is turned into a feature of the new operating system Trump is building. One that doesn’t need to obey the old logic—because it's already outgrowing it.
Wisdom From Space
Space Force officer Jason Lowery, in his MIT thesis Softwar, argues that Bitcoin’s proof-of-work system functions as a military-grade weapon in cyberspace. He calls it "softwar"—a strategic deterrent in the digital realm, like nuclear arms are in the physical. Trump may not name-check Lowery, but his moves mirror the framework precisely.
Strategic Bitcoin Reserve = decentralized force projection
Energy redundancy = hash rate sovereignty
AI infrastructure = national command over computational terrain
This isn't a coincidence. It's convergence.
In tandem with the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, Trump has also announced energy-redundant AI facilities. These zones don’t just serve machine learning—they double as Bitcoin mining fortresses. AI and proof-of-work mining now share the same strategic backbone: energy-fortified, sovereign infrastructure.
This mirrors Lowery’s vision of a U.S. “hash force”—one where energy, computation, and national defense become indivisible. It’s no longer just about money or machines. It’s about survival in the age of softwar.
So Why Did Trump Praise Him?
Because the Trump economy being built is a counter-intelligence weapon on the global battlefield.
He knows how to play the game. Praise Carney. Tip your hat. Let him think he still owns the board. Use the chaos.
Then flip the table.
Trump’s compliments—posted on Truth Social and in interviews—was cover fire. While Carney coasts on prestige, Trump is digging escape tunnels out of the global financial panopticon.
But there's a deeper strategic layer here: Carney's vision for a global financial system—built on ESG, digital ID, CBDCs, and stakeholder compliance—requires scale. On the global stage, it needs to flow through the U.S. economy. Without the participation of the American market, it cannot achieve global dominance.
Trump’s rejection of CBDCs and his creation of an energy-backed Bitcoin and AI infrastructure don’t just resist Carney’s system—they starve it of the U.S. scale it needs to go global.
By removing the U.S. as a node of implementation, Trump effectively breaks the feedback loop required to globalize the ESG-CBDC regime. He doesn’t just reject the system. He denies it the terrain it needs to survive.
Which is why, as much as Trump is an America-first president, the animosity being fomented in liberal Canadians for what he is “doing to Canada,” fails to see something crucial: he is saving Canada as well.
If the global, financial surveillance state, that saw Canada as a prototype, cannot rely on the US economy, the chances of Carney acting as the keystone for the New World Financial Order begin to fall away.
Even if Carney wins, through psyops on the Liberal Canadians, or outright cheating— or both— the long game Trump is playing is a net win for humanity.
Conclusion: The Fork in the Code
Carney believes the future must be encoded with values—his values.
Trump believes the future must remain *uncoded* enough for freedom to still exist.
This isn’t about personalities. It’s about **operating systems**.
- Carney offers a clean, sanitized, programmable morality enforced through digital currency.
- Trump offers a chaotic, nationalist, open-ended system grounded in human agency.
Choose your OS.
Because you won’t get to run both.
A MASSIVE thank-you for this clarification! The unreasonable hysteria in Canada, being manipulated for gain by Carney, MAY be the necessary lesson and downfall for Canadians to endure in their naiveté, ignorance and basic understanding of economics. I trust in the 'plan' and know Trump's Art of the Deal will prevail. LOTR (Lord of the Rings) is the myth of our time and Carney is "WormTongue". Things are getting worse and worse ~ better and better ~ faster and faster. BREATHE!!