Debt Is the New Chains: How the Federal Reserve Quietly Enslaved the Working Class
A Broken Economy Dressed Up in Statistics
Let’s walk through the numbers.
According to the New York Fed’s latest report, total household debt rose by $197 billion in the third quarter of 2025. That brings the national debt burden to a record $18.59 trillion.
Mortgages made up the largest portion of that increase—$137 billion. Credit card debt jumped by $24 billion. Student loans increased by $15 billion. Auto loans remained steady, though delinquency rates are starting to tick up.
Most notable? Student loan delinquency surged to 9.4%. That’s nearly 1 in 10 borrowers falling behind—many just months after the federal government resumed reporting missed payments to credit bureaus. These are largely younger Americans, many of them low-income, trying to get ahead in an economy that keeps moving the goalposts.
The Fed’s own economists admit what the ruling class won’t say out loud: the economy is splitting in two. Those at the top are still spending, still buying, still insulated. Meanwhile, working families are shifting to discount brands, cutting back on groceries, and missing payments.
That’s not growth. That’s economic fragmentation.
What This Debt Really Represents
Let’s be clear: debt is not just a financial term. It’s a control mechanism.
You can’t speak freely when you’re buried under loans. You can’t quit a toxic job when your mortgage is overdue. You can’t organize, protest, or push back when every paycheck is spoken for before it hits your account.
This is why the system protects the banks. It’s not about productivity. It’s about leverage.
And now the Federal Reserve is steering us into deeper waters. They’ve cut interest rates twice in 2025, trying to juice a slowing economy. But at what cost? These cuts come despite persistent inflation and historic layoffs, with corporations citing AI and “cost-cutting” as excuses while they slash jobs and offshore labor.
The working class is absorbing all the risk. The banks are still getting paid.
The New Normal Isn’t Normal
The Fed’s statement frames the rising debt as a technicality. They call it "stabilizing." But this kind of stabilization is like duct-taping a cracked foundation. It might hold for a while—but eventually, the whole house gives out.
People aren’t just borrowing more. They’re borrowing to survive. To pay for rent that’s doubled. To cover grocery bills that have quietly jumped 30%. To stay afloat in a system where saving is impossible, and ownership is slipping further out of reach.
And now, behind the scenes, the central planners are building something even more dangerous: a cashless system that gives them full control. Tools like FedNow and digital currencies are already being normalized. They sell it as “efficiency.” But what they’re really selling is compliance.
They’ve already buried Americans in debt. Now they want to bury them in code.
This Is the Tipping Point
We can’t keep pretending that record debt is a side issue. It’s not. It’s the core issue.
America wasn’t built on debt. It was built on ownership—on property, on independence, on freedom. And you can’t be free when you owe everything to someone else.
This isn’t about left or right anymore. It’s about who owns what—and who pays for it.
Right now, the American people are doing all the paying. And the elites are doing all the owning.
If you want out of this trap, you’ve got to start with knowledge. Start with action.
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—Sam Clemons



