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ရှင်းလင်းချက်- ပြင်ပအဖွဲ့အစည်း၏ ထင်မြင်ယူဆချက်များ ပါဝင်သည်။ ဘဏ္ဍာရေးဆိုင်ရာ အကြံပေးခြင်း မဟုတ်ပါ။ စပွန်ဆာပေးထားသော အကြောင်းအရာများ ပါဝင်နိုင်ပါသည်။
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Red Packet Giveway679
@Square-Creator-2d7f2fca9981
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ဖန်တီးသူထံမှ ပိုမိုလေ့လာပါ
$BTC Once upon a time, in a huge house called United States, the family living there had a wild habit: they loved to throw massive parties. Every weekend, they’d invite the whole neighborhood, hand out fancy food, fireworks, and free stuff. All funded with a magic credit card. One day, the youngest child, curious and smart, asked: > “Mom, how do we afford all this?” The parents laughed and said: > “Oh honey, we don’t pay—we just borrow. See, Uncle China, Aunt Japan, and some friends in Europe lend us money. They love us!” The child raised an eyebrow. > “But don’t we owe a lot?” The dad whispered: > “Yeah… like, $34 trillion. But don’t worry. We’re the USA. We just keep raising our credit limit. It’s called the debt ceiling. We lift it like a champ.” Then one day, the lenders started getting nervous. Uncle China muttered: > “They’re spending like drunk sailors. Maybe we stop lending?” Aunt Japan added: > “They’re even printing their own money to pay us back! What if their dollar crashes?” But the U.S. family kept partying. Soon, their house was filled with IOUs, and the interest payments were so high they had to borrow money just to pay interest. The child asked again: > “What happens if no one lends to us anymore?” The parents paused. Then they laughed nervously and said: > “Well… we’ll probably just print even more. Or maybe default. Or… we’ll raise taxes and blame the neighbors.” And so the party continued. Until one day… the power went out, the neighbors stopped coming, and the family realized: > “Oops. Maybe this wasn’t free after all.”
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Explore my portfolio mix. Follow to see how I invest! Once upon a time, in a huge house called United States, the family living there had a wild habit: they loved to throw massive parties. Every weekend, they’d invite the whole neighborhood, hand out fancy food, fireworks, and free stuff. All funded with a magic credit card. One day, the youngest child, curious and smart, asked: > “Mom, how do we afford all this?” The parents laughed and said: > “Oh honey, we don’t pay—we just borrow. See, Uncle China, Aunt Japan, and some friends in Europe lend us money. They love us!” The child raised an eyebrow. > “But don’t we owe a lot?” The dad whispered: > “Yeah… like, $34 trillion. But don’t worry. We’re the USA. We just keep raising our credit limit. It’s called the debt ceiling. We lift it like a champ.” Then one day, the lenders started getting nervous. Uncle China muttered: > “They’re spending like drunk sailors. Maybe we stop lending?” Aunt Japan added: > “They’re even printing their own money to pay us back! What if their dollar crashes?” But the U.S. family kept partying. Soon, their house was filled with IOUs, and the interest payments were so high they had to borrow money just to pay interest. The child asked again: > “What happens if no one lends to us anymore?” The parents paused. Then they laughed nervously and said: > “Well… we’ll probably just print even more. Or maybe default. Or… we’ll raise taxes and blame the neighbors.” And so the party continued. Until one day… the power went out, the neighbors stopped coming, and the family realized: > “Oops. Maybe this wasn’t free after all.”
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Explore my portfolio mix. Follow to see how I invest! Once upon a time, in a huge house called United States, the family living there had a wild habit: they loved to throw massive parties. Every weekend, they’d invite the whole neighborhood, hand out fancy food, fireworks, and free stuff. All funded with a magic credit card. One day, the youngest child, curious and smart, asked: > “Mom, how do we afford all this?” The parents laughed and said: > “Oh honey, we don’t pay—we just borrow. See, Uncle China, Aunt Japan, and some friends in Europe lend us money. They love us!” The child raised an eyebrow. > “But don’t we owe a lot?” The dad whispered: > “Yeah… like, $34 trillion. But don’t worry. We’re the USA. We just keep raising our credit limit. It’s called the debt ceiling. We lift it like a champ.” Then one day, the lenders started getting nervous. Uncle China muttered: > “They’re spending like drunk sailors. Maybe we stop lending?” Aunt Japan added: > “They’re even printing their own money to pay us back! What if their dollar crashes?” But the U.S. family kept partying. Soon, their house was filled with IOUs, and the interest payments were so high they had to borrow money just to pay interest. The child asked again: > “What happens if no one lends to us anymore?” The parents paused. Then they laughed nervously and said: > “Well… we’ll probably just print even more. Or maybe default. Or… we’ll raise taxes and blame the neighbors.” And so the party continued. Until one day… the power went out, the neighbors stopped coming, and the family realized: > “Oops. Maybe this wasn’t free after all.”
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Explore my portfolio mix. Follow to see how I invest! Once upon a time, in a huge house called United States, the family living there had a wild habit: they loved to throw massive parties. Every weekend, they’d invite the whole neighborhood, hand out fancy food, fireworks, and free stuff. All funded with a magic credit card. One day, the youngest child, curious and smart, asked: > “Mom, how do we afford all this?” The parents laughed and said: > “Oh honey, we don’t pay—we just borrow. See, Uncle China, Aunt Japan, and some friends in Europe lend us money. They love us!” The child raised an eyebrow. > “But don’t we owe a lot?” The dad whispered: > “Yeah… like, $34 trillion. But don’t worry. We’re the USA. We just keep raising our credit limit. It’s called the debt ceiling. We lift it like a champ.” Then one day, the lenders started getting nervous. Uncle China muttered: > “They’re spending like drunk sailors. Maybe we stop lending?” Aunt Japan added: > “They’re even printing their own money to pay us back! What if their dollar crashes?” But the U.S. family kept partying. Soon, their house was filled with IOUs, and the interest payments were so high they had to borrow money just to pay interest. The child asked again: > “What happens if no one lends to us anymore?” The parents paused. Then they laughed nervously and said: > “Well… we’ll probably just print even more. Or maybe default. Or… we’ll raise taxes and blame the neighbors.” And so the party continued. Until one day… the power went out, the neighbors stopped coming, and the family realized: > “Oops. Maybe this wasn’t free after all.”
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Explore my portfolio mix. Follow to see how I invest! Once upon a time, in a huge house called United States, the family living there had a wild habit: they loved to throw massive parties. Every weekend, they’d invite the whole neighborhood, hand out fancy food, fireworks, and free stuff. All funded with a magic credit card. One day, the youngest child, curious and smart, asked: > “Mom, how do we afford all this?” The parents laughed and said: > “Oh honey, we don’t pay—we just borrow. See, Uncle China, Aunt Japan, and some friends in Europe lend us money. They love us!” The child raised an eyebrow. > “But don’t we owe a lot?” The dad whispered: > “Yeah… like, $34 trillion. But don’t worry. We’re the USA. We just keep raising our credit limit. It’s called the debt ceiling. We lift it like a champ.” Then one day, the lenders started getting nervous. Uncle China muttered: > “They’re spending like drunk sailors. Maybe we stop lending?” Aunt Japan added: > “They’re even printing their own money to pay us back! What if their dollar crashes?” But the U.S. family kept partying. Soon, their house was filled with IOUs, and the interest payments were so high they had to borrow money just to pay interest. The child asked again: > “What happens if no one lends to us anymore?” The parents paused. Then they laughed nervously and said: > “Well… we’ll probably just print even more. Or maybe default. Or… we’ll raise taxes and blame the neighbors.” And so the party continued. Until one day… the power went out, the neighbors stopped coming, and the family realized: > “Oops. Maybe this wasn’t free after all.”
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