How the Federal Debt Is Costing You Money Right Now

Book Cover Full Size.pngFebruary 2026 • Straight talk, no spin

The U.S. government has exactly two ways to pay for what it spends: it can tax you today, or it can borrow and tax you tomorrow.

Politicians almost always choose the second option. Raising taxes is political suicide; borrowing feels free — until the bill comes due.

That bill is the federal debt. Every dollar borrowed today is a promise that someone will pay it back later. That “someone” is you, your kids, and your grandkids.

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Managing Public Sentiment: The Hidden Pillar of National Economic Policy

Book Cover Full Size.pngIn the grand theater of modern economics, governments no longer merely set interest rates or adjust tax brackets. They have become the unseen directors of a far more intimate production: the management of public emotion. What the public believes, fears, hopes, or expects about the economy has become a policy lever as powerful as any fiscal tool. This is not conspiracy theory. It is standard operating procedure across every major economy on Earth.
The practice rests on four strategic pillars. Each one is designed to align the collective mood with the priorities of those who actually steer the ship.
1. Consumer Confidence and Spending
Governments know that when citizens feel secure, they spend. When they feel threatened, they hoard. So the machinery of information control swings into action. Bad news is softened, delayed, or reframed. Official narratives are crafted to keep wallets open even when the underlying data scream “slow down.”
Censorship—sometimes overt, more often subtle—removes the raw numbers that might alarm the household budget planner. Cheery press releases and carefully worded interviews take their place. The citizen who senses something is wrong is told, in soothing tones, that everything is fine. The result? People spend when they should save, borrow when they should deleverage, and march happily toward the very cliff the insiders quietly exited months earlier.
This is the exact opposite of a free market, where accurate price signals and honest information allow individuals to make rational choices. Here, the public is deliberately kept in the dark while the elite operate with perfect information. The ancient human instinct to trust authority is weaponized against the very people it once protected.
2. Inflation Expectations
Nothing destroys savings faster than the quiet conviction that prices will keep rising. Yet governments routinely insist that inflation is “transitory,” “under control,” or “peaking” long after ordinary families have noticed the grocery bill doubling.
The citizen who trusts his own eyes is gaslit by institutions that benefit from the very inflation they deny. Pension funds, banks, and asset owners who positioned themselves correctly profit handsomely while the middle class watches its purchasing power evaporate. The message is clear: your lived experience is wrong; the official story is right. Doubt yourself, not the experts.
3. Market Stability
Markets hate uncertainty more than they hate bad news. A single ambiguous statement from a finance minister can trigger billions in capital flight. So governments have learned to “pre-announce,” leak, and choreograph economic signals like a ballet.
This choreography began in earnest during the Reagan years with the deliberate management of market psychology. Every administration since has refined the technique. Bubbles are inflated with optimistic rhetoric, then quietly deflated by insiders who sell at the top while retail investors, intoxicated by the same narrative, buy at the peak. When the crash comes, the public is told it was “unexpected.” The cruelty is breathtaking.
4. Political Capital for Painful Reforms
Austerity, energy transitions, pension reforms—none of these can succeed without public buy-in. Governments therefore manufacture consent in advance. They frame necessary suffering as patriotic duty, temporary inconvenience, or moral imperative. “We’re all in this together” becomes the soundtrack while the sacrifices fall disproportionately on those least able to bear them.The public is positioned, quite literally, to fall on its own sword for the nation—while the architects of the policy remain comfortably insulated.
The Tools of the Trade
Spin and Rhetoric “Transitory inflation,” “economic headwinds,” “soft landing,” “vibrant recovery.” These are not neutral descriptions; they are loaded weapons aimed at perception.
Direct Intervention Subsidies on fuel, bread, or energy are handed out not merely for humanitarian reasons but to keep the national mood from souring. Central planning dressed up as compassion.
Selectively Transparent Statistics Data is released, but always with the most favorable framing. Revisions come later, quietly, after the political moment has passed.
The Deeper Truth
Human beings are wired to trust authority. Dogs trust their masters; citizens trust their governments. A well-trained dog will follow commands even when they lead to its own harm. Modern economic management treats citizens the same way—training them through narrative, repetition, and selective information to act against their own long-term interests in service of someone else’s short-term gain.
This is not governance. It is domestication.
When the state decides what the public is allowed to know, when it deliberately misleads to extract spending, investment, or political compliance, it crosses a bright red line. The road to totalitarianism is not always paved with tanks and secret police. Sometimes it is paved with smiling press briefings, optimistic GDP forecasts, and the quiet, relentless shaping of what millions of people are permitted to believe about their own economic reality.
The question is no longer whether governments manage public sentiment. They do. The only remaining question is whether the public will continue to accept the role of loyal, obedient dog—or whether it will finally demand the right to see the numbers, hear the unvarnished truth, and make its own decisions in the marketplace of both goods and ideas.

Who Benefits From Democracy

Democracy favors any group or person who has political power.

Here is a general idea for how this works out.

15% of the population controls 90% of the wealth. This group uses the principles of democracy to pass laws that benefit them alone and dictate policy to our government. This causes a wide income gap between the super rich and everyone else.

The upper 15% have the most money. They use their money to manage public opinion. The public, therefore, does not mind.

The bottom 85% have enormous potential power and could easily change the system so that democracy serves them. Why don’t the people use that power for their own benefit?

Citizens treat government as if it were their guardian. They unwittingly think that their representatives are working on their behalf, trying to do what is best for society.  They are not. Elected representatives act out of self interest just like other human beings. This is human nature.

Plain and simple, democracy works for those with political power, provided that they have the will to use it to pursue their interests

 

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The Game of Dominance and Subservience

The Game of Dominance and Subservience  PDF

Would it not be nice to have a board game called Dominance and Subservience? Perhaps if enough people played the game, it would come to light that life exists in a system of dominance and subservience.

It is the job of each species to dominate and make use of as many other species as possible. Dominate all of the other species and have them serve mankind. They don’t all get a bad deal. Dogs volunteer to be dominated and get a decent deal in return. Dogs end up trading freedom for comfort and are content when able to do so. Continue reading

What to Expect in an Economic and Political Crisis

What to Expect in an Economic and Political Crisis PDF Version

Evil does not recognize itself because, to it, lies are the truth.
We have to remember that ,what is evil, is becoming exposed, each and every day..
People can either believe the lie or be fooled into complacency. .

By election day, fewer will believe the lie, and as hardships accumulate, complacency will wane. Unpleasant things will happen but they won’t be in line with popular  predictions. The fact is that we don’t know what those unpleasant things will be, but, chaos and confusion for sure.

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