NFTArtisanHQ
By 2026, the US debt scale has hit a new all-time high, and the growth rate is the fastest since World War II. Now, the United States faces only two options:
One is to confront directly and default on its debt. But doing so would destroy the country's creditworthiness, and the global financial markets would collapse as well. Don't even think about it.
The other is much more realistic: keep printing money. By accelerating liquidity release and using devalued dollars to pay off old debts—seems like a solution, but in reality, it's a form of breach of contract. Debt pressure is eased, but the pur
View OriginalOne is to confront directly and default on its debt. But doing so would destroy the country's creditworthiness, and the global financial markets would collapse as well. Don't even think about it.
The other is much more realistic: keep printing money. By accelerating liquidity release and using devalued dollars to pay off old debts—seems like a solution, but in reality, it's a form of breach of contract. Debt pressure is eased, but the pur