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PROUD CAPITALIST FREE MARKETS • AMERICAN TARIFFS • FORGING WEALTH THAT LASTS JAXON FORGE

THE FORGE JOURNAL

Stories and advice from Jaxon Forge, Founder of MoneyForged.com

Raw, no-fluff truth on wealth psychology, iron discipline, free-market capitalism, tariffs, and the systems that separate the self-made from everyone else.

CAPITALISM IN ACTION
FREE MARKETS • TARIFFS FOR AMERICA
Jaxon Forge
Psychology of Money • 8 min read

Why Most People Stay Broke Even When They Make Good Money

High income doesn’t equal wealth. Here’s the brutal psychology hack that keeps even six-figure earners trapped in the paycheck-to-paycheck cage.

Discipline • 6 min read

The 3 AM Rule That Separated Me From 99% of Entrepreneurs

The quiet hours when excuses die. How waking at 3 AM three days a week gave me an unbreakable edge.

Psychology of Money • 9 min read

How I Rewired My Brain to Crave Hard Work Instead of Comfort

The exact system I used to make discipline addictive and comfort feel like punishment.

Wealth & Execution • 7 min read

The Silent Killer of Wealth: Comfort masquerading as “Balance”

Why “work-life balance” is the fastest way to stay mediocre forever.

Discipline • 5 min read

The Discipline Tax: Pay It Early or Pay It Forever

The hidden price every high performer must pay—early or late.

Business & Hustle • 8 min read

Why I Stopped Chasing Motivation and Started Chasing Systems

Motivation is weather. Systems are the engine that prints real money.

Wealth & Execution • 6 min read

Why Cash Flow Beats Net Worth Every Single Time

Net worth is a lie. Cash flow is freedom. Here’s the math I live by.

Business & Hustle • 10 min read

The $0 Startup Blueprint That Still Works in 2026

No money. No team. Just relentless execution. My exact playbook.

Free Markets & Tariffs • 7 min read

Why I Support Tariffs for America’s Survival

The capitalist case for protecting American wealth and strength.

Jaxon Forge

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Forging Wealth That Lasts • Jaxon Forge

@MoneyForgedHQ

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Jaxon Forge’s weekly dispatch on discipline, systems, tariffs, and wealth that actually lasts.

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Tag: sound money

  • Bretton Woods Agreement: The 1944 Deal That Killed Sound Money – And the Hard Lessons for 2026 Wealth Builders

    Bretton Woods Agreement: The 1944 Deal That Killed Sound Money – And the Hard Lessons for 2026 Wealth Builders

    Bretton Woods Agreement: The 1944 Deal That Killed Sound Money – And the Hard Lessons for 2026 Wealth Builders | Jaxon Forge

    Bretton Woods Agreement: The 1944 Deal That Killed Sound Money – And the Hard Lessons for 2026 Wealth Builders

    I was pulling six figures with a nice house and truck in the driveway, yet I still felt broke. Then I dug into Bretton Woods and realized why most high earners stay broke even when they make good money. Here’s the raw, unfiltered truth.

    I was sitting in my office at 4:30 a.m. — the same hour I’ve owned for years — staring at a stack of old Federal Reserve notes and a gold coin from 1933. The contrast hit me harder than my first $100k month ever did. That coin? Real money. Backed by something you couldn’t print. Those notes? Promises from men in suits who met in a New Hampshire hotel in 1944 and changed the game forever.

    That meeting was called the Bretton Woods Agreement. Forty-four nations showed up. America walked out with the keys to the global financial kingdom. And most people today — even the ones pulling six and seven figures — have no idea how that single agreement is still quietly stealing their wealth.

    The Setup: Post-War America Flexes

    After World War II, Europe was rubble. America had the factories, the gold reserves, and the biggest stick on the planet. At Bretton Woods, we said: “The U.S. dollar will be as good as gold.” Every other currency would peg to the dollar. The dollar itself would be convertible to gold at $35 per ounce. The IMF and World Bank were born as the referees.

    “We didn’t just create a monetary system. We created the greatest wealth transfer mechanism in human history — one that rewarded government spending and punished savers who actually understood sound money.”

    How It Worked (Until It Didn’t)

    For almost three decades the system held. Countries settled trade in dollars. The U.S. printed just enough to keep the world lubricated. But here’s the part nobody talks about at dinner parties: governments love spending other people’s money. Deficits exploded. Vietnam, Great Society programs, foreign aid — all paid for by printing more dollars while the gold in Fort Knox stayed the same.

    By 1971 the math no longer worked. Foreign governments started demanding gold for their dollars. Nixon looked at the line forming outside the vault and said “nope.” He closed the gold window on August 15, 1971. The Bretton Woods Agreement died that day. We went full fiat. And the silent killer of wealth — inflation disguised as “growth” — was officially unleashed on the world.

    The Brutal Psychology Lesson Most High Earners Still Miss

    This is where it connects to everything I teach on MoneyForged.com. Remember the story in “The Psychology of Making Money”? I was pulling six figures, nice house, nice truck, but I still felt broke. Not poor — broke in that deep, anxious way where freedom feels like a myth. That feeling wasn’t random. It was the same psychology that Bretton Woods unleashed on an entire planet:

    • Easy money feels good — until it doesn’t.
    • Lifestyle inflation is just personal fiat currency.
    • When the rules change overnight (like Nixon did), the people who had systems and discipline kept their edge. Everyone else got crushed.

    I stopped chasing motivation and started chasing systems the same year I realized the dollar was no longer backed by anything real. That’s not coincidence. When money itself became a political tool instead of a store of value, the only defense left is personal discipline and hard assets that governments can’t print.

    How I Rewired My Brain to Crave Hard Work Instead of Comfort in a Fiat World

    Back when I was still trading time for money, hard work felt like punishment. I’d grind because I had to, not because I wanted to. The second the pressure eased, I’d default to ease: scroll, Netflix, sleep in. Motivation would spike for a week after a big win, then fade. I chased that high like a junkie.

    Then the business stalled. Savings thinned. I sat in the dark at 2 a.m. angry at myself for letting comfort creep in so deep. That’s when I made the decision: no more waiting for motivation. I was going to rewire the system so effort felt rewarding and ease felt uncomfortable.

    First step was brutal but simple: I engineered discomfort on purpose. I started waking up at 4:30 a.m. every single day — no exceptions, no snooze. Three seconds from alarm to feet on floor. Cold water on face. No thinking. Just action.

    At first it was pure misery. But over days and weeks the resistance got quieter. The mind started associating early rising with power. I finished deep work by 7 a.m. while the world was still asleep. That quiet victory hit different. Dopamine from accomplishment, not from comfort.

    I applied the same principle everywhere: cold showers, heavy lifts, saying no to easy money that didn’t align. I weaponized boredom. Walked without earbuds. Drove without the radio. Those empty moments became fuel for ideas and breakthroughs.

    After months of this, hard work stopped feeling like a tax and started feeling like oxygen. Skipping it left me restless. I had flipped the script: comfort became the punishment.

    The Discipline Tax: Pay It Early or Pay It Forever

    Bretton Woods made fiat easy. Easy money makes comfort easy. Comfort makes you soft. That’s why I reversed lifestyle creep ruthlessly. Any raise, bonus, or new revenue stream had to fund freedom first — extra principal payments, more investments, bigger emergency fund — before it funded upgrades.

    Friends kept upgrading while I kept driving the same truck. They looked richer. I was richer. Comfort zones are cemeteries for ambition. You don’t die in them overnight. You just slowly stop growing until the version of you that could have built real wealth is buried under layers of “deserved” ease.

    Why I Still Love Tariffs for America’s Survival

    Free markets work when money is honest. After 1971 money became a weapon. Trade deficits ballooned because dollars could be printed without consequence. Other countries bought our debt, we bought their goods, and the middle class got hollowed out.

    Tariffs aren’t “anti-free market.” They’re a correction in a world where the monetary system itself is rigged. I support them the same way I support paying the discipline tax early — because protecting American production and American savers is how self-made men actually stay self-made.

    What Separates Self-Made Men From Everyone Else (It’s Not Talent)

    It’s not talent. It’s the willingness to pay the discipline tax while everyone else chases the next shiny object. In a post-Bretton Woods world, the winners are the ones who:

    1. Own assets that can’t be printed — gold, silver, productive businesses, cash-flow real estate.
    2. Build systems that generate revenue whether you “feel motivated” or not.
    3. Stay hungry. Comfort is still the silent killer, even when the dollar is worth 98% less than it was in 1971.
    4. Grind in silence instead of posting wins online.

    That’s why I fire clients faster than I acquire them. Why I love boring niches more than sexy ones. Why I turned one boring skill into multiple income streams. The fiat system rewards the disciplined. Everyone else stays broke even when they make good money.

    The Moment I Stopped Caring What People Think (And Started Making Real Money)

    When I stopped posting every win online and started grinding in silence, everything changed. No more performing for the audience. Just producing. The results spoke louder than any thread ever could. That same silence is what built the moat around my personal brand.

    The Bretton Woods Agreement was sold as stability. It delivered the greatest monetary experiment in history — and proved once again that governments don’t forge wealth. They print it until it breaks.

    Self-made men don’t wait for the next reset. We build our own moat. We pay the discipline tax early. We crave the hard work. We own the boring assets. And we never, ever call comfort “balance.”

    — Jaxon Forge
    Founder, MoneyForged.com
    Still waking up at 4:30 a.m. because comfort is still the enemy.
    Proud capitalist. Huge supporter of free markets and tariffs that protect American wealth.

  • The Federal Reserve: The Silent Architect Behind Your Wealth (or Your Broke Reality)

    The Federal Reserve: The Silent Architect Behind Your Wealth (or Your Broke Reality)

    The Federal Reserve: The Silent Architect Behind Your Wealth (or Your Broke Reality) | Jaxon Forge – MoneyForged.com
    CENTRAL BANKING EXPOSED

    The Federal Reserve:
    The Silent Architect
    Behind Your Wealth
    (or Your Broke Reality)

    An in-depth historical account — what we know, what we still don’t grasp, and why free markets + iron discipline will always beat central planning.

    By Jaxon Forge • Founder, MoneyForged.com April 2026 • @MoneyForgedHQ

    I used to think the Federal Reserve was just some boring government building in Washington. Then I watched six-figure checks disappear into thin air while my lifestyle stayed the same. That’s when I realized: the Fed isn’t neutral. It’s the silent architect of wealth transfer — and most people are on the wrong side of the transfer.

    Welcome to the raw, unfiltered history of the Federal Reserve. No textbooks. No central-bank spin. Just the facts I’ve studied, the patterns I’ve lived through, and the systems I built to stay ahead of their games. Because if you want to forge real, lasting wealth, you have to understand the machine that’s quietly taxing your savings every single day.

    Pre-1913: The Banking Panics That Gave Them the Opening

    America’s money system before the Fed was messy but honest. Panics in 1873, 1893, and especially 1907 showed the system had problems. Private bankers like J.P. Morgan stepped in and stabilized things. But the big players saw an opportunity: create a central bank “to prevent future panics.”

    What most people still don’t grasp? The same bankers who “solved” the 1907 panic were the ones who wrote the Federal Reserve Act.

    Jekyll Island 1910: The Secret Meeting Nobody Was Supposed to Know About

    In November 1910, six of the most powerful bankers in America boarded a private rail car (disguised as a duck-hunting trip) and met on Jekyll Island, Georgia. They drafted what would become the Federal Reserve System. Senator Nelson Aldrich led it. The Aldrich Plan became the Federal Reserve Act.

    What we know: The meeting happened. The bankers wrote the bill. Congress passed it on December 23, 1913 — right before Christmas when most lawmakers had already gone home. Woodrow Wilson signed it that night.

    What we still don’t fully grasp: The exact degree of influence these private bankers retained behind the scenes for the next century. The Fed was sold as “independent.” In reality, it has always been a public-private hybrid that protects the biggest banks first.

    1913–1933: The Fed’s Early Years and the Death of Gold

    The Fed was created to provide an “elastic currency.” Translation: print money when the big banks wanted it. It helped finance World War I. Then came the 1920s boom, the 1929 crash, and the Great Depression.

    The Fed’s own policies — tight money in the early 1930s — turned a recession into a depression. In 1933 Roosevelt took America off the gold standard domestically. The Fed now had full control over the dollar.

    1971: Nixon Closes the Gold Window — The Ultimate Wealth Heist

    By 1971 the U.S. could no longer honor foreign governments’ requests to redeem dollars for gold. Nixon shut the window. The dollar became pure fiat — backed by nothing but trust in the Fed.

    That single decision unleashed 50+ years of inflation. Your grandparents’ dollar is now worth about 12 cents. That is the silent tax no politician ever votes on.

    2008–2026: QE, Zero Rates, and the Greatest Wealth Transfer in History

    The Fed printed trillions after 2008 and again during COVID. Asset prices exploded while real wages stagnated for everyone not already in the asset class. Stocks, real estate, and private equity soared. The bottom 90% got higher grocery bills and rent.

    This is the Cantillon Effect in action: the new money flows to the connected first. Everyone else gets the inflation later. I watched it happen in real time while building my own businesses.

    “I remember the exact month in 2021 when my revenue hit record highs… yet my purchasing power felt lower than ever. That’s when I stopped calling it ‘inflation’ and started calling it the discipline tax the Fed forces you to pay every day.”

    — Jaxon Forge

    What We Still Don’t Fully Grasp (And Why It Matters)

    • 01 The exact ownership structure — The regional Fed banks are “owned” by member banks. Who really controls policy?
    • 02 Future monetary experiments — CBDCs, yield curve control, or negative rates? The Fed has tools we haven’t seen yet.
    • 03 The political capture — Every administration wants low rates until inflation bites. The Fed pretends to be independent while bending to political pressure.
    • 04 The alternative — A true free-market money system (gold, bitcoin, or competition) has never been fully tested at scale in the modern era.

    My Advice: How to Forge Wealth Anyway

    The Fed isn’t going away. But you don’t have to be its victim. Here’s what actually works in 2026:

    • Pay the discipline tax early — live below your means and invest the gap.
    • Own cash-flowing boring businesses and real assets that rise with inflation.
    • Build your own “Screw You” fund and 6–12 months of runway.
    • Love tariffs when they protect American industry — free trade only works when it’s actually free.
    • Study the psychology of making money. Comfort is the silent killer. Systems beat motivation.

    The Fed can print dollars. They can’t print your discipline, your systems, or your iron will.

    That’s why I still wake up at 4:30. That’s why I still grind in silence. That’s how you forge wealth that lasts.

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    Written by Jaxon Forge, founder of MoneyForged.com
    Stories and advice for those who refuse to stay broke even when they make good money.