In 2020, when the U.S. economy came to a standstill, the government turned to a quick fix — printing $6 trillion out of thin air. What seemed like a rescue plan at first has proven to be a long-term economic burden.

That flood of new cash flowed into financial markets, institutions, and local programs, with limited direct support for everyday citizens. The short-term boost looked like relief — but it quietly rewired the system.

Once, capitalism rewarded resilience: weak businesses failed, and strong ones thrived. But over time, bailouts became standard practice — and by 2020, nearly every sector relied on them.

The aftermath is clear:

🔥 Soaring inflation

📈 Artificial market growth

💰 Trillions in additional debt

Instead of facing the root issue — unchecked money creation — the blame shifted toward supply chains and corporations. But money printing doesn’t create real wealth; it distorts value over time.

What happened in 2020 wasn’t a rescue — it was a reset on borrowed time.

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