The mainstream media wants you to believe it’s manageable. “Oh, the bankruptcy levels are rising, but don’t worry—we’re still not back to 2008.” That’s like saying your house isn’t fully on fire yet, just the kitchen. The truth is far uglier: 2025 is on track to witness the most corporate bankruptcies since 2010. According to S&P Global Market Intelligence, 655 significant firms have already folded by October. Stretch that trend through December, and we’re talking nearly 800 bankruptcies in a single year—a blistering pace not seen in over a decade.
This isn't just cyclical turbulence. This is systemic rot.
While media hacks hide behind charts and “context,” they won’t admit the obvious: the American economic machine is grinding itself to dust under the weight of bad debt, hollowed-out industries, and an interest rate regime that’s breaking more backs than it’s saving.
Let’s not forget who’s bleeding the most—small businesses. You know, the folks who don’t have lobbyists, offshore accounts, or BlackRock board seats. Over 2,200 small enterprises filed for Subchapter V bankruptcy in 2025, a record high. These aren't your trendy startups burning venture capital in San Francisco lofts. These are Main Street mechanics, dry cleaners, independent truckers—the people who once made this country work.
And they’re getting buried.
Carol Fox, a trustee on the front lines, puts it plainly: “Creditors are breathing down their necks.” Translation: the wolves are loose, and no one is guarding the flock. The Fed's interest rate hikes, intended to “cool inflation,” have instead iced access to capital for thousands of working-class entrepreneurs who were already hanging on by their fingernails.
But hey, the Dow's up, right?
This isn’t just about small fry. Spirit Airlines. Claire’s. Nikola. When names like these start filing Chapter 11, it tells you the rot has metastasized. We’re not in the warm-up act anymore—we’re watching the second act of a financial tragedy unfold.
Industrials and consumer discretionary sectors are getting slammed—the very sectors that build, move, and sell the things Americans used to make and buy. What happens when that infrastructure crumbles? When the domestic supply chain becomes a graveyard of bankrupt factories and boarded-up strip malls?
Let me tell you what happens: import dependency, skyrocketing unemployment, and another manufactured excuse for Wall Street to centralize more power.
Some try to blame this collapse on AI and automation—as if machine learning algorithms are out here repossessing trucks and foreclosing on office buildings. Let’s be clear: AI is a tool, not a tyrant. The real culprits are the corporate boards and financial institutions that are exploiting this technology to slash payroll, inflate stock prices, and collect executive bonuses while millions of workers are cast aside.
An MIT study warns that: AI could replace 20 million American jobs. But why is that allowed to happen without national discussion, oversight, or a plan? Simple—because the ruling class doesn’t care if you work, as long as you comply.
And what about those college grads? As Nikki Haley’s own son admitted, none of his friends can land a job, despite following all the prescribed steps—degrees, internships, debt loads that would make a loan shark blush. These kids are competing with foreign labor, AI automation, and a job market that's been deliberately gutted.
Nine months after being laid off, a former Meta worker—a single mother—can’t find work in tech. That’s not a fluke. That’s structural decay. And it’s only getting worse.
Let’s talk survival. Redfin’s data shows that retail workers make less than half what they need just to rent an apartment. The so-called “working class” can’t afford to live. So what are the options?
This isn’t a fringe issue—it’s the mainstream reality. Millions of Americans are one missed paycheck away from economic annihilation.
As the foundation cracks, the skyscrapers above rise ever higher. The top 1% added $4 trillion to their collective wealth this year. The top 0.1% nearly doubled their net worth since the pandemic. These aren’t just numbers—they are evidence of a parasitic system that siphons value upward while letting the base crumble.
Every bankruptcy filing below is another digit in the ledger above.
And yet, we’re told the system is working. Sure it is—just not for you.
The mainstream wants to calm your nerves with this stat: “Hey, most companies aren’t closing, they’re just reorganizing.” Great. So they’re not dying—they’re limping along with fewer workers, gutted wages, and bankruptcy courts shielding them from debt collectors while your neighborhood gets hollowed out.
Reorganization doesn’t mean recovery. It means corporate triage, where only the pieces that serve shareholders are stitched back together. Everyone else? Thrown to the wolves.
They want you to believe this is just another downturn. But the data doesn’t lie: every pressure point—jobs, wages, debt, business survival—is breaking simultaneously. What we’re seeing is not a normal correction. It’s a controlled demolition of the middle class, orchestrated by central banks, corporate behemoths, and a complicit political class bought and paid for.
This isn’t a doomsday prophecy—it’s a battle cry. If you're waiting for the cavalry to arrive from Washington or Wall Street, you’re already toast. The solution won’t come from the top.
It comes from:
The system is showing you its teeth. The only question now is—what are you going to do about it?
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