The Forgotten Law That Could Revalue Gold Overnight

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Hand-Picked Opportunity (ad)

Is Hantavirus the next “PLANDEMIC?” 
(NewMarket Health Publishing) In 1934, the government executed a legal order that transferred billions in wealth overnight. 

Most Americans had no idea it was coming. 

A small group who saw it early protected everything they had. 

Everyone else paid for it. 

Trump has the identical legal authority today. His advisors have discussed it publicly. The Mar-a-Lago Accord. A dollar reset. A gold revaluation. The mechanisms exist. The authority exists. And the motivation exists. 

If it happens, it happens fast, and the window to be on the right side of it is already closing. 

The SpaceX IPO is pulling every eye on Wall Street toward one shiny object. That’s exactly the kind of moment when the system makes its biggest moves in the background. 

We put together a free 2026 Gold Guide that explains exactly what this authority is, why the timing points to now, and the one step ordinary Americans can take to position themselves before it happens. 

It costs nothing. Takes 30 seconds to request. 

The people who moved early in 1934 didn’t have a warning. 

You do. Send Me My Free Guide Now >>

This is an advertisement America’s Gold Company 601 Heritage Drive, Suite 211, Jupiter, FL 33458 Click here to opt out America’s Gold Company does not provide investment, legal, retirement planning, or tax advice. Individuals should consult with their investment, legal or tax professionals for such services. 

Fructose doesn’t just add calories. New research says it actively pushes your body toward fat storage.

A new review published this week found that fructose disrupts metabolism in ways that go far beyond its caloric content — and the source doesn’t matter as much as you might think.

73g

average daily fructose intake for American adults — well above what the liver handles well

10x

faster glycation rate of collagen from fructose vs. glucose — affects skin and joints

1 in 4

Americans has non-alcoholic fatty liver disease — most cases linked to fructose overconsumption

■ THIS WEEK IN NUTRITION SCIENCE

Sugar is not sugar. The type you eat determines where it goes — and what it does when it gets there.

A comprehensive review published this week confirmed what researchers have been finding for a decade: fructose is metabolically distinct from glucose and should not be treated as equivalent. When fructose reaches the liver, it bypasses the normal regulatory checkpoints that glucose must pass through — meaning the liver converts it to fat regardless of whether the body needs energy or not. This is why high-fructose diets consistently produce fatty liver disease even in the absence of significant caloric excess.

The sources that matter most: high-fructose corn syrup in processed foods and beverages, agave syrup (90% fructose — the highest of any common sweetener), fruit juice (same sugar load as soda without the fiber), and in large quantities, whole fruit consumed as a dominant part of the diet. The fiber in whole fruit slows absorption significantly — but it doesn’t eliminate the fructose load.

Separately, researchers this week identified glycyrrhizin — a compound found naturally in black licorice — as a potential treatment for inflammatory bowel disease. In testing thousands of compounds against a stem-cell-based model of the human intestine, it was among the most effective at reducing inflammation in IBD tissue.

“Fructose doesn’t just add calories — it actively drives fat production in the liver, independent of how much you’re consuming overall. The body has no off-switch for this process.”

— 2026 fructose metabolism review, peer-reviewed journal

■ PRACTICAL SWAPS — REDUCING FRUCTOSE WITHOUT ELIMINATING SWEETNESS01  Replace agave and honey with pure maple syrup or coconut sugar — lower fructose ratio02  Eat whole fruit — never juice it. Fiber is what separates fruit from sugar delivery03  Check any “sports drink,” flavored yogurt, or sauce label for high-fructose corn syrup04  Berries over tropical fruit — blueberries, strawberries, raspberries have far lower fructose content

■ WHAT AMERICA IS TALKING ABOUT

GEOPOLITICS · TODAY

Trump meets Xi in Beijing today — Iran is the central agenda item

The U.S.-China summit begins today. Trump is asking Beijing to pressure Iran into a ceasefire after the 14-point proposal collapsed. Iran vowed to continue fighting. If China declines to intervene, the Strait of Hormuz stays closed — and analysts project gas hitting $5.50+ nationally by June. The outcome of this meeting directly affects what Americans pay for fuel and groceries this summer.

MARKETS

S&P held near record highs despite hot CPI — Nvidia reports May 20

The S&P 500 absorbed the 3.8% CPI print without a major selloff — a sign that markets are betting the Iran conflict resolves before inflation becomes entrenched. Nvidia reports May 20, and it remains the most anticipated earnings call of the quarter. Tech sector up 35% in two weeks. A miss from Nvidia could trigger a significant correction.

SCIENCE · SPACE

NASA’s Psyche probe slingshotted around Mars yesterday at 12,000 mph

NASA’s Psyche spacecraft completed a dramatic flyby of Mars yesterday — skimming just 2,800 miles above the planet at 12,000 mph to gain a gravitational boost toward its destination: a metal-rich asteroid that may be the exposed core of an ancient planet. The maneuver saved years of travel time. Psyche is now on course to reach its target in 2029.

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