100 Trillion debt ia USA

The Silent Exodus: Why the Dollar’s Days as Global Reserve Are Numbered **America’s Debt Crisis: A Ticking Time Bomb** The total indebtedness of the United States—combining both public and private sectors—has now surpassed an astonishing $100 trillion. While headlines focus on the $38 trillion national debt, the real story is the unprecedented scale of overall liabilities. This debt mountain is unsustainable, and history teaches us that empires built on excessive borrowing always face a reckoning. **The Dollar’s Reserve Status Is Not Forever** For over 75 years, the US dollar has been the world’s dominant reserve currency. But global institutions, central banks, and asset managers are quietly reducing their exposure to dollar-denominated assets. BlackRock’s recent move to shift $2.1 trillion out of America is just one example of this silent exodus. History shows that reserve currencies are always replaced—first Spain, then the Dutch guilder, the British pound, and now, the dollar is at risk. **What Happens Next: Extreme Dollar Devaluation** When a reserve currency loses trust, the result is rapid and extreme devaluation. Inflation surges, interest rates spike, and the middle class is wiped out. The signs are already here: foreign holders are selling US Treasuries, and capital is fleeing to safer havens like gold and other hard assets. **Investment Strategy: Avoid US Companies** Given these risks, investing in US firms is no longer prudent. The coming dollar crisis will erode the value of US equities and bonds. Instead, consider diversifying into international markets and real assets that historically survive currency collapses. **Conclusion** Empires don’t fall overnight—they fall predictably. The US dollar’s reign is ending, and those who ignore the lessons of history risk losing decades of wealth

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