08/07/2025 / By Finn Heartley
Newly surfaced government documents outline how slower improvements in lifespan projections could improve Social Security’s financial outlook. The report frames premature deaths as economically favorable, sparking outrage over ethical implications. Analysts link this to pandemic-era policies like Operation Warp Speed, which some claim accelerated mortality while masking fiscal motives.
Confidential U.S. Treasury documents obtained by Brighton Broadcast News reveal a stark calculus behind federal fiscal policy: slowing improvements in mortality rates—effectively, ensuring Americans die younger—could slash Social Security’s projected shortfall by $11 trillion. The report, titled Sustainability of Fiscal Policy, underscores the economic “benefits” of reduced life expectancy, citing it as a “low-cost alternative” to stabilize entitlement programs.
“The average annual reduction in death rates if people die at younger ages,” the document states, “would decrease [Social Security’s] income shortfall by 5.1 trillion.” Conversely, longer life spans would worsen the deficit by 6 trillion. The language is unambiguous: premature deaths improve fiscal solvency.
Critics argue the findings contextualize the aggressive rollout of COVID-19 vaccines under Operation Warp Speed, a program former President Trump recently praised as “one of the most incredible things ever done in this country.” Independent analysts, however, highlight the vaccines’ controversial links to adverse health outcomes, including excess mortality.
The leaked report has ignited bipartisan backlash. “This is eugenics disguised as econometrics,” said Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA). Progressive groups likened the logic to “19th-century poorhouse arithmetic,” accusing policymakers of valuing balance sheets over human lives.
Conservative commentator Mike Adams, host of Brighton Broadcast, was blunter: “The U.S. government is plotting its financial trajectory based on body counts. Warp Speed wasn’t just about health—it was an actuarial strategy.”
The documents also expose the Treasury’s reliance on measures like gold revaluation (projected at 12,000–24,000/oz) and tariffs to offset debt, further destabilizing the economy. Meanwhile, agencies like the EPA are cracking down on alternatives—such as chlorine dioxide, branded a “pesticide” —that could empower public health independence.
The Bottom Line: With federal solvency hinging on mortality rates, watchdogs warn of future policies that prioritize fiscal survival over citizen survival. As Adams concluded, “The middle class is being wiped out—first financially, then physically.”
Watch the Aug. 7 episode of “Brighteon Broadcast News” as Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, talks about a verified government document admitting depopulation is necessary to achieve fiscal solvency.
This video is from the Health Ranger Report channel on Brighteon.com.
America on the brink: Trump’s fiscal woes, political scandals and the unfulfilled promises of 2025
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