Monday, July 28, 2025

The Economic War: The Middle Class Has Been Exterminated and Our Cities Have Turned into Battlefields


The Economic War on the American People:


For years, we’ve witnessed the slow-motion collapse of the American economy. Now, we’re watching the collapse accelerate. World War III is not just approaching — it has already begun, quietly, through economic warfare, digital control, and engineered shortages. History shows us that it took one of the largest industrial booms in history, driven by a global war, to pull the U.S. out of the first Great Depression. The same playbook is being used again — and the result will be catastrophic.

In 1929, America was brought to its knees by a lethal combination of corporate greed, political delusion, and speculative mania. And if that sounds eerily familiar, it should. The signs today are even more extreme. U.S. household debt has exploded to over $18 trillion — more than the combined economies of Latin America and the European Union. The average American worker is earning the same or less in real terms than they did decades ago, while home prices have soared beyond reach. People are drowning in debt just to survive.

And it’s not just individuals who are exposed. Regional banks are failing, one after another. They’ve been replaced by speculative bubbles — crypto scams, AI stock cults, and meme IPOs. The financial system has turned into a circus — and it has broken records five years in a row. But this isn’t a sign of strength. It’s a symptom of terminal sickness.

The same economic forces that led to the 1929 crash are back — and worse. What took weeks or months to collapse then can now cascade globally in seconds. Leverage isn’t just high — it’s everywhere. Government debt, corporate debt, student loans — all are at historic highs. Unlike the 1930s, this collapse is starting from weakness, not strength. We are already stretched to the breaking point.

The ruling elites who orchestrated the 1929 collapse are back — only this time, they have more tools, more control, and less resistance. This is the same pattern: more leverage, more fragility, more risk. But now, it’s not just America that’s exposed. In 1929, the financial system was still somewhat insulated — backed by the gold standard, with simpler trade agreements. Today, the world is fully interconnected. Supply chains, investments, currency flows — all are globally synced. A collapse in the U.S. won’t stay in the U.S. It will infect the planet like a virus.

There is no “reset cushion.” There is only more debt, more instability, and less room to maneuver. Leadership? Gone. Roosevelt’s New Deal created jobs, rebuilt infrastructure, and restructured banking. Today, Congress is a dysfunctional puppet show. In the 180th Congress, only 1% of proposals became law. Nothing gets done. It’s all spectacle, no substance.

The Federal Reserve is trapped in a suicide spiral: raise interest rates and crash the economy, or lower them and unleash hyperinflation. Either way, millions of American families are left to rot. Inflation is still sky-high. Wages lag far behind. Every trip to the grocery store is a shock. Every rent payment feels like extortion. While policymakers talk about “metrics,” families are quietly budgeting in fear. This isn’t theory. This is survival.

There is no longer a warning. This is a forecast. If this fragile system breaks — and it will — the landing won’t be soft. It will be a hard reset. A full-scale collapse. Market crashes that wipe out savings. Business failures. Mass layoffs. Mortgage defaults. Homelessness. And worst of all, a complete loss of faith in the economy, the government, and each other.

History rhymes. The 1929 Great Depression was not inevitable. It was caused by negligence, greed, and refusal to act. Today’s elite are repeating every mistake — only with more arrogance, more technology, and less humanity. And the depression we are about to enter will be far more violent, far more hopeless, and far more permanent.

Collapse Is Not Coming. It’s Already Here.

The consequences are already visible. This isn’t a prediction. It’s observation. Debt is ballooning. Inequality is extreme. And the people in charge are either asleep or complicit. The average American now has the same purchasing power they did in 1978 — while the cost of college, housing, and healthcare have gone to the moon.

Student debt is at $1.8 trillion — not a statistic, but a generational curse. Entire families go into lifelong debt just to access what used to be a basic right. And the more debt they take on, the higher tuition rises. It’s a trap, a Ponzi scheme dressed up as “education.” As long as people keep chasing the American Dream, the universities keep raising prices — and families keep digging.

This is not growth. This is survival on borrowed time.

Inequality is at 1929 levels. The richest 1% now earn 150 times what the bottom 20% earn. Wages don’t keep up, so most Americans are sprinting just to stand still. Morale collapses, and motivation evaporates. Productivity declines. The system is devouring itself.


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