У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Currency Debasement: The 7-Stage Pattern That Destroyed Rome, Spain & Britain или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
How Rome's Currency Collapse Destroyed an Empire - And Why We're Following The Same Pattern Every empire that debased its currency believed they were different. Rome thought their military made them invincible. Spain believed their gold mines made them permanent. Britain assumed their empire made them untouchable. They all followed the same 7-stage collapse pattern—and we're in Stage 4 right now. In this documentary, you'll discover: → The exact currency debasement strategy that destroyed the Roman Empire over 300 years → Why the Roman denarius went from 95% silver to less than 5% before total collapse → How Spain's massive gold and silver reserves accelerated their empire's decline instead of preventing it → The 7 predictable stages of empire collapse through monetary expansion → Where modern economies are in this historical cycle (and why Stage 5 behaviors are already appearing) → Why every government chooses currency debasement over default—and why that choice guarantees collapse The 7 Stages of Currency Collapse: Stage 1: Surplus turns to deficit Stage 2: Borrowing replaces revenue Stage 3: Debt service exceeds discretionary spending Stage 4: Currency debasement begins (we are here) Stage 5: Trust fractures in the population Stage 6: Systemic breakdown Stage 7: Currency reset This isn't about the Great Depression, Weimar hyperinflation, or 2008 financial crisis. This is about the repeating pattern of imperial decline that spans from ancient Rome to the Soviet Union collapse—and why understanding these stages matters right now. Historical Empires Analyzed: Roman Empire currency crisis (denarius debasement 200-400 AD) Spanish Empire silver coin manipulation (1500s-1600s) British Empire pound sterling decline (20th century) Soviet Union ruble collapse (1991) The fall of Rome wasn't caused by barbarian invasions. The collapse of the Spanish Empire wasn't due to military defeat. The decline of the British Empire wasn't about losing colonies. These were symptoms of a deeper pattern: currency debasement driven by deficit spending, debt accumulation, and the desperate attempt to sustain the unsustainable. When governments enter Stage 4—systematic monetary expansion—they face an impossible choice: trigger immediate collapse by stopping, or guarantee future collapse by continuing. History shows they always choose to continue. Rome debased the denarius over 80 years. Spain debased the real over 150 years. Britain debased the pound across an entire century. The pattern is always the same. Modern Warning Signs: Since 1971, the US dollar has lost over 98% of its purchasing power. Federal Reserve monetary expansion now exceeds trillions annually. Interest payments on national debt surpass $1 trillion per year. These are Stage 4 indicators. Stage 5 behaviors—population loss of trust in currency, movement to alternative assets, acceleration of spending over saving—are beginning to emerge. Understanding monetary history isn't about predicting exact dates. It's about recognizing which stage we're in and what always comes next. Every empire believed the pattern wouldn't apply to them. Their reserve currency status, military power, or economic sophistication would make them the exception. History shows there are no exceptions. Collapse is a process, not an event. It unfolds across years or decades as each stage locks in and makes the next inevitable. The final stages always move fastest because that's when trust breaks completely. #FallOfRome #CurrencyCollapse #EmpireDecline #MonetaryHistory #EconomicCollapse #RomanEmpire #HistoricalDocumentary #InflationCrisis #CurrencyDebasement #financialhistory