Rob Cunningham: When Money Stops Being Debt and Starts Being Truth
2-28-2026
Rob Cunningham | KUWL.show
@KuwlShow
When money stops being debt and starts being truth, everything changes.
Ending fractional-reserve lending means banks can no longer multiply promises out of thin air. Ending Federal Reserve Notes (FRN) means currency must earn trust instead of demand it.
Capital flows toward productivity instead of leverage.
Savings regain meaning.
Transparency replaces opacity.
Settlement becomes instant instead of rented.
Nations compete through integrity, not inflation.
This shift isn’t political.
It’s architectural.
From debt-based control to asset-backed consent.
The global monetary system doesn’t collapse.
It upgrades.

Source(s): https://x.com/KuwlShow/status/2027486471200887228
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Courtesy of Dinar Guru: https://www.dinarguru.com/
Bruce [via WiserNow] …what is making this doable now finally? It is because Iraq, with our help, has sealed their borders…and that means nobody coming in…no foreign currency coming in, no USD currency coming in – no currency going out. Basically, it’s a closed system until the exchanges get started like Tuesday or Wednesday, probably. So that’s good news. And you know what was said about that. That was the last thing that had to happen before we go…the sealing of Iraq’s borders.
Frank26 [Iraq boots-on-the-ground report] FIREFLY:The television is showing the United States Envoy Barack is here for a while but he’s meeting with Maliki. He’s meeting with the Coordination Framework people but mainly just Maliki. They’re also saying the Coordination Framework still has Maliki as their candidate… FRAMK: IMO this will be the last time the United States sits and talks with Maliki. There will be no more conversations in the future with him after this meeting.
CBI Makes Announcement about IQD Issue
Edu Matrix: 3-1-2026
The Iraqi dinar has been facing a significant challenge in recent times, with a growing disparity between the official exchange rate set by the Central Bank of Iraq (CBI) and the actual market rate observed on the streets.
The CBI attributes the widening gap between the official and market exchange rates to a combination of factors, including political instability, trade disruptions, and a high demand for U.S. dollars within Iraq.
The scarcity of dollars on the street has driven up their price, making the dinar appear weaker in the unofficial market. This phenomenon is largely driven by supply and demand dynamics and market psychology, as fear and uncertainty prompt people to hoard dollars.
With the economy already under strain, the widening gap between the official and market exchange rates could have serious implications for the country’s stability.
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