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COMEXGPT’s Last Barrage: When the Guns Turn on Their Own Troops
WWI, Germany case in point...
There’s a moment in every failing system when the tools designed to enforce control begin doing the opposite.
History gives us a perfect parallel.
In the final year of World War I, German artillery units faced a nightmare scenario. After years of relentless firing, their cannon barrels were worn out. Rifling was eroded. Accuracy vanished. Shells lost stability.
Instead of landing on Allied positions, rounds began falling short — sometimes exploding among German troops themselves.
The weapons meant to hold the line were now killing the men behind it.
That’s exactly where we are today with silver

Enter COMEXGPT: An Algorithm With a Worn-Out Barrel 🤖💥
COMEX is no longer a place of price discovery.
It’s a price-recovery theater — a machine built to cap, spoof, smash, and discourage.
But like those WWI cannons, the barrel is shot.
Each paper raid now:
Burns credibility
Exposes tighter physical supply
Forces faster rebounds
Transfers metal from weak hands to strong ones
They knock silver down 13 cents and congratulate themselves like it’s a victory parade — while physical disappears, premiums refuse to cooperate, and buyers step in immediately.
That’s not suppression anymore.
That’s friendly fire.
Why the Raids Are Backfiring 🧨
Every modern “raid” now creates the opposite of its intended effect:
1️⃣ Physical Gets Cheaper — Briefly
Real buyers treat dips as gifts. Below-melt deals vanish. Coin shops empty. eBay arbitrage explodes.
2️⃣ Mining Stocks Become the Tell
The paper price dips — but miners stop following. That divergence is the sound of the barrel cracking.
3️⃣ Psychology Has Flipped
What once scared holders now signals opportunity. The raid itself has become the buy signal.
Just like 1918 Germany, they’re still firing — but they’re no longer advancing.
The Battlefield Has Changed ⚔️
In WWI, once artillery failed:
Infantry morale collapsed
Command credibility evaporated
The end came quickly
Markets work the same way.
When price control loses precision, confidence collapses first — and then the structure follows.
Silver didn’t break because of speculators.
It broke because the mechanism enforcing suppression exceeded its design limits.
This Is What a Melt-Up Looks Like 🔥🥈
A melt-up doesn’t announce itself with fireworks.
It starts with failed suppression:
Raids that don’t stick
Dips that get bought instantly
Physical that doesn’t come back
Algorithms repeating old playbooks in a new regime
COMEXGPT is still firing because that’s all it knows how to do.
But the shells are landing behind the line now.
The ECM Is Lining Up for Silver ⏱️⚡
This isn’t random.
This isn’t momentum chasing.
And it definitely isn’t retail hysteria.
According to Martin Armstrong, silver spent decades trapped in a suppression regime — and when those regimes break, they don’t resolve gently. They reprice violently.
The Economic Confidence Model (ECM) doesn’t whisper.
It turns.
Silver is now behaving exactly as Armstrong warned it would when control mechanisms fail:
Paper signals disconnect from reality
Physical demand overwhelms leverage
Old interventions accelerate the move instead of stopping it
Same failed playbook.
Same worn-out cannons.
Different asset — different ending.
The ECM is coming for silver.
And when it arrives, COMEXGPT won’t be running the battlefield anymore.
📘 Book Plug — If You Want the Playbook
If you want to understand why this keeps happening, how cycles repeat, and why suppression always fails at the end, read:
This isn’t theory.
It’s pattern recognition across centuries of markets, empires, and collapses.
Gold.
Silver.
Currencies.
Confidence.
Once you see the code, you can’t unsee it. 🔍
🟡 COMEXGPT fired again
🟡 The shells fell short
🟡 Friendly fire confirmed
The guns are worn out.
The ECM clock is ticking ⏰
And silver is doing what it always does right before control breaks.
Hermano —
raid over, mission still not accomplished 💥🥈