There’s something strange about the world right now… and most people don’t stop to think about it.
We are living in a time where almost everything runs on debt.
The United States is getting close to 39 trillion dollars in debt.
China is already sitting above 15 trillion.
And globally… the number has crossed 348 trillion dollars.
That number is hard to even imagine. It’s bigger than what the world can realistically produce in the short term.
So it raises a simple question…
If everyone owes money, who is actually lending it?
The answer isn’t a mystery.
It’s banks.
It’s central banks.
It’s large funds.
It’s governments themselves.
It’s the small group that controls the flow of money.
And this is where things get interesting.
The system is built in a way where debt keeps feeding more debt.
More borrowing leads to more money being created.
More money in the system leads to inflation.
And inflation slowly eats away at the value of what people earn and save.
It becomes a loop.
Old debt gets paid with new debt.
Interest is handled by borrowing even more.
And whenever things start to break… more money is printed to keep everything moving.
It doesn’t really stop. It just keeps expanding.
This is exactly why people started looking for something different.
Something that can’t be printed.
Something that doesn’t depend on decisions made behind closed doors.
That’s where Bitcoin comes in.
Bitcoin has a fixed supply. Only 21 million will ever exist.
No central authority.
No money printer.
No way to quietly increase the supply.
While traditional money keeps expanding, Bitcoin stays limited.
And that difference matters more than people realize.
Because every time the system creates more money to survive… the value of scarce assets tends to rise.
This is why some investors pay close attention to debt levels, liquidity, and central bank moves.
Not because it sounds complicated…
But because it quietly shapes the future of money.
And right now, that future feels like it’s standing at a turning point.
