Summary of "Mind Probe: When Will The Money Printers Come On?? || Psychic Liz Cross"
Quick recap — premise
A live “mind probe” hosted by Mr. Shakespeare with psychic/remote viewer Liz Cross examined the U.S. economy, money-printing, and how those moves could affect the 2026 midterms. The session consulted and “channeled” a handful of figures (both real and purportedly communicated with) to get timing, policy, and market reads.
Main plot and headline takeaways
- Core question
- Will the Trump team “put money in people’s pockets” before the midterms to secure Republican control? The probe’s answers focused on liquidity and targeted incentives rather than blunt, one-off checks.
- Timing
- A scouted/channeled Treasury figure pins any significant overt or covert money-printing to August 2026 (not October), with incentives designed to hit voters later while still fresh in memory.
- Political risk
- Martin Armstrong warned the planned liquidity moves weren’t large enough — Americans would only feel a modest improvement (a “3/10”). As a result, both the House and Senate are at real risk of flipping to Democrats. Allegedly, Team Trump already knows and is “devastated.”
Economic specifics and policy reads
- General prescription: “Print more” — Armstrong’s view was that the key cure is more liquidity; the administration printed, but apparently not enough.
- Form of stimulus:
- Targeted financial incentives with conditions/targets are expected rather than universal cash checks.
- Tokenization of assets is “on the table” as a policy/financial tool.
- Taxes and tariffs:
- Tariffs are judged to have hurt consumers’ pocketbooks and are seen as a failure in this context.
- Federal tax reductions have been modest and mostly temporary; many incentives are time-limited (2–3 years).
- Student debt and banking risk:
- Wholesale student loan cancellation would be politically attractive but could crash banks/the financial system; the panel strongly advised against large-scale university-debt forgiveness.
- Housing:
- Boomers still hold most real estate. Policies like 50-year mortgages may improve on-paper affordability but don’t solve the underlying affordability and down-payment problems for younger buyers.
Markets and assets
- Dollar
- Expected to weaken between January and October 2026 as federal policy favors a softer dollar to boost exports and asset valuations.
- Precious metals
- Bold price calls were made: gold near $6,000/oz and silver approaching $200/oz by October 20, 2026 (driven by liquidity flows lifting asset prices).
- Market mood
- The market is described as shifting from a bull toward a bear environment: liquidity injections can lift asset prices but won’t fix structural inequality or deeper economic problems.
Technology, education, and structural change
- AI and education
- AI will dramatically alter education and jobs. A channeled Steve Jobs argued many university degrees (e.g., history) will become redundant; universities will contract to focus on hands-on, technical programs (medicine, select engineering).
- Law and some engineering tasks may be automated; the advice: avoid taking on large degree debt unless absolutely necessary.
- Payments and settlement tech
- The ISO20022 migration is not firmly nailed down. More likely near-term moves include upgrading SWIFT and using AI to speed transactions rather than a universal ISO20022 transition.
Big picture / historical framing
- The “Founding Fathers” channel and references to Strauss & Howe’s turnings:
- The session suggested the U.S. remains in a Third Turning (unraveling) and is marching toward a Fourth Turning (crisis) around ~2030.
- The claim: Trump is not the proclaimed “gray champion.” The hosts plan a follow-up probe on this wider historical cycle.
Memorable lines, jokes, and host banter
- Recurring tagline (probe refrain):
“Print, baby, print”
- Other lines and banter:
- The blunt claim that Trump “didn’t print enough.”
- Mr. Shakespeare’s cheeky quips (“aren’t you clever,” “blow me on trumpet”) and a running laugh about “gray champion” vs. “grey goose” (vodka).
- Practical, contrarian advice from Liz and the panel: “don’t get into debt,” “AI will do your homework in five minutes,” and blunt takes on university economics.
Closing
- Conclusion: Liquidity is the critical political lever — large and timely injections can move voter sentiment. Current planned measures, however, are judged insufficient, leaving Republicans exposed in the 2026 midterms. The hosts will return to further explore the turning-era thesis.
Personalities / figures mentioned or channeled
- Mr. Shakespeare (host)
- Liz Cross (psychic medium / remote viewer)
- Donald Trump (questioned / channeled)
- “Scott Bessence” / channeled Treasury figure (named variably)
- Martin Armstrong (economist / forecaster)
- Steve Jobs (channeled for tech/education perspective)
- “Founding Fathers” (channeled group for historical discussion)
Category
Entertainment
Share this summary
Is the summary off?
If you think the summary is inaccurate, you can reprocess it with the latest model.
Preparing reprocess...