 
Elon Musk Warns of America's $36 Trillion Dollar Debt Bomb The system is crumbling, protect your wealth or suffer the fallout. Elon Musk has avoided two major financial crises before. He pulled Tesla and SpaceX back from the brink of collapse and built two of the most valuable companies in history.
Now, he's sounding the alarm about America's $36 trillion debt time bomb that could destroy the fabric of our society. While head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) under President Trump, Musk exposed just how bad things are:
✅ Runaway government spending has pushed national debt to unsustainable levels ✅ The Federal Reserve's rate hikes are squeezing the economy, making inflation irreversible ✅ The stock market is on shaky ground, putting traditional 401(k)s, IRAs, and TSPs at risk
With Trump back in charge, major spending cuts are coming. While necessary, these cuts may send shockwaves through Wall Street, creating unpredictable market turbulence.
That's why financial elites aren't waiting to react, they're moving their wealth now.
For the everyday American who's worked hard to build their nest egg, Trump preserved a IRS loophole that allows you to protect your retirement savings before billions in American wealth are lost.
Download Your Free 2026 Wealth Protection Guide and execute the simple steps to protect your future.
History proves those who act first always fare best. Will you be ready? >>Get Your Free WEALTH PROTECTION GUIDE<< 
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This Month's Bonus Story 3 Standout ETFs With a Proven Track Record of SuccessAuthored by Nathan Reiff. Article Published: 2/23/2026. 
Key Points- In the last five years, three ETFs have generated returns of 150% or more.
- These funds include a unique angle on the Greek economy, a broad uranium and nuclear energy play, and an equal-weight approach to the U.S. energy sector.
- External factors suggest that momentum might continue for each of these funds into the foreseeable future.
- Special Report: Have $500? Invest in Elon's AI Masterplan (From Brownstone Research)

The world of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) is expanding rapidly, with investors funneling more than a trillion dollars into these products each year amid a steady stream of new fund launches. It's easy to get lost in the noise. One way to narrow the field is to focus on long-term results. Seeking ETFs with a strong five-year record can help avoid the short-lived blips common to flashy, trend-driven funds. Past performance is never a guarantee of future results, but the funds below stand out for their solid track records. GREK Provides Unique Exposure to the Ups (and Downs) of the Greek EconomyThe Global X MSCI Greece ETF (NYSEARCA: GREK) remains the only pure-play Greek ETF, offering exposure to roughly 30 companies domiciled in Greece. Unlike many single-country funds, GREK can be highly volatile alongside the Greek market, which is often unstable. Recently, however, the Greek economy has performed well, and projections of 2.2% growth in 2026 could outpace many other European nations. Close to half of GREK's portfolio by weight is concentrated in just four stocks, all from the financials sector and representing some of the largest banks in Greece. Other sectors heavily represented include industrials and consumer discretionary names. Because the fund leans on banking stocks, GREK can deliver outsized gains when the economy is booming—returning an impressive 193% over the last five years—but it can also stumble during broader European economic upheaval. That volatility may make GREK a better tactical allocation than a buy-and-hold core holding. The fund also pays a dividend yield of 3.21%, an attractive supplement given its financial-heavy weighting. NLR is a Costly Nuclear Bet, But Many Factors Point to Continued GrowthAfter an outstanding rally throughout much of 2025, the clean-energy-focused VanEck Uranium and Nuclear ETF (NYSEARCA: NLR) dipped heading into 2026. That hasn't stopped it: the fund has returned about 11% year-to-date and more than 196% over the last five years as nuclear energy expands amid renewed regulatory support in the United States and elsewhere. Unlike some niche nuclear ETFs, NLR takes a dual approach—providing exposure to the broader nuclear power industry while also targeting uranium producers—so it covers multiple corners of the nuclear space. Still, NLR's portfolio is relatively concentrated at just over two dozen positions, though those holdings span many regions, including the United States, Canada, Australia, and China. NLR stands to benefit from growing interest in cleaner nuclear sources for AI and data-center power needs. Loosening regulations that accelerate nuclear adoption could further boost the fund. In that context, NLR's expense ratio of 0.56%—higher than many ETFs—may be reasonable for investors seeking this specific exposure. Equal Weighting Approach to the S&P's Energy NamesThe Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight Energy ETF (NYSEARCA: RSPG) has returned more than 153% over the past five years, driven by its near-equal-weight approach across the energy constituents of the S&P 500. Although the roughly two-dozen holdings in RSPG are not perfectly equal-weighted, they are close, which prevents the largest names—like the $637-billion Exxon Mobil Corp. (NYSE: XOM)—from dominating the fund's performance. Because the energy sector includes exploration and production firms, refiners, storage and transport companies, and more, RSPG does not take a pronounced sector tilt beyond the S&P's composition. That broad exposure means the fund tends to benefit when the energy sector as a whole is strong. The fund also pays a dividend, with a yield of 2.11% that may appeal to longer-term investors.
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