Washington Just Crossed $38 Trillion in Debt—and You're the Collateral
October 21st came and went with barely a whimper from the mainstream press, but history will remember it as the day the United States government officially crossed the $38 trillion threshold in gross national debt—a mark of unspeakable financial rot. It’s the third trillion-dollar debt milestone this year, and if you blink, you’ll miss the next one.
This isn’t just some abstract number on a government spreadsheet. This is the boiling point of a fiscal time bomb, engineered by decades of bipartisan negligence, corporate welfare, and generational betrayal. The question isn’t whether the house of cards will collapse—it’s when, and who profits on the way down.
Let’s tear off the polite veneer and examine the disease beneath.
The government wants you to believe this runaway debt is the natural consequence of “demographics” and “interest rates.” That’s a deflection. The real story? A regime addicted to overspending, a Federal Reserve complicit in financial repression, and a political class more loyal to Wall Street than to Main Street.
We’re adding $1 trillion in debt roughly every 100 days. That’s not fiscal management—it’s suicidal finance. And what are the "two culprits" the establishment offers as explanations?
But here’s what they don’t say: this system depends on permanent debt. If it ever stopped growing, the whole façade would collapse. Washington doesn’t fear the debt—they fear they might not be able to issue more of it.
The government’s own projections admit what few dare to say: we’re on track for $2.6 trillion in annual deficits by 2035. That means we’re borrowing the GDP of France every decade just to stay afloat.
And what does that buy us?
Every dollar we borrow now has an interest cost tomorrow. Those payments don’t go to firefighters or schoolteachers. They go to bondholders, many of them foreign—including China.
This isn’t investment. This is tribute.
Let’s talk about crowding out, one of the most sinister elements in this economic death spiral. Every dollar spent on interest is one not spent on real national priorities. And what’s worse? When Treasury debt floods the market, it sucks the oxygen out of private lending. Small businesses pay more. Mortgage rates stay high. Credit dries up.
The middle class bears the burden, while the asset-holding elite—those sitting on piles of Treasuries and stocks—get richer. It’s wealth transfer, institutionalized and legalized.
Remember the term “fiscal dominance.” That’s when debt becomes so unmanageable that monetary policy starts bending to its will. The Fed becomes less central bank, more arsonist-turned-firefighter, slashing rates not to protect you, but to protect the solvency of Washington.
That’s how you get permanent inflation, declining purchasing power, and the slow extermination of savings.
Every few years, Congress stages a pageant around the debt ceiling. Headlines scream. Markets wobble. Eventually, they raise it. Every. Single. Time.
These aren’t real negotiations—they’re hostage videos. The Treasury and the Fed are locked in a cycle of mutual dependency. The Fed enables borrowing; the Treasury obliges with endless issuance. The only losers? Taxpayers, retirees, and the unborn.
Rome collapsed not from invasion, but from internal decay and unfunded promises. The Weimar Republic printed itself into political oblivion. Argentina defaults so often it might as well have a calendar for it.
The U.S. isn’t immune.
The 1980s debt boom was supposed to be temporary. So was the post-9/11 spending surge. And the 2008 bailouts. And the COVID trillions. Now we’re in a permanent emergency—with no one at the wheel.
Ask yourself: if America had to earn what it spends, how much would we really be spending?
This isn’t a prediction. It’s a progression. We’re halfway down the slope already.
What would real reform look like?
It won’t be pretty. But neither is collapse.
$38 trillion isn’t just a number. It’s a mirror, showing us what we’ve become: a nation afraid to live within its means, addicted to borrowing, and governed by cowards who keep selling the future for short-term applause.
There will be no soft landing. Only two choices remain: discipline or disaster.
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