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But it was when Kudlow labeled the Fed’s policies as “extraterrestrial” that the message truly hit home. The word wasn’t random – it was aimed directly at Jerome Powell and the team in charge of America’s money supply.
Kudlow explained exactly what he meant, and it wasn’t pretty.
“Their regulatory interference is unbelievable. Their monetary experiments are extraterrestrial. Nothing has worked in years. They’re not giving us sound money,” he declared, pointing to years of failed policies.
He didn’t stop there. Kudlow went on to highlight the real-world impact for ordinary Americans:
“They don’t give us a stable dollar. They don’t give us any certainty or reliability that the dollar you have tomorrow will be worth the same as it is today.”
With inflation climbing and family budgets getting hammered, Kudlow argued the Fed has become completely disconnected from economic reality.
The timing of Kudlow’s remarks was no accident. The Fed’s rate cut came just as criticism over their handling of the economy was hitting a fever pitch.
And one of Trump’s newest appointees, Stephen Miran, wasted no time showing he wasn’t afraid to break ranks. Miran cast the lone dissenting vote in favor of a bigger rate cut, demanding a half-point reduction rather than the quarter-point approved by the Fed majority.
Miran had just been confirmed by the Senate in a razor-thin 48–47 vote earlier this week. His dissent shows he’s ready to fight for Trump’s vision of pro-growth monetary policy – even if he stands alone.
Kudlow also blasted the Fed for ballooning its own budget while American families suffer.
He pointed out the Fed’s spending has jumped by “300% rate in the last few years,” with little to show for it when it comes to economic stability or a stronger dollar.
Meanwhile, job reports reveal 911,000 fewer jobs created over the past year than previously estimated, and inflation sits at 2.9% – squeezing wallets across the country.
Here’s Kudlow’s real point: The Fed isn’t just out of touch – it’s protecting its own power while ordinary Americans pay the price.
He’s warned for months that the central bank plays politics while families deal with shrinking paychecks and rising costs.
For many, Kudlow’s call for a “completely different Fed” isn’t radical at all. It’s common sense. And unless there’s real change, he argues, the system will keep failing the people it’s supposed to serve.