The Big Picture right now is a world on the verge of a massive global financial system crisis, economic depression and wars everywhere.

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by mark000

In August 2008 what was about to happen? A GFC and the plunge stage of the Great Recession. And 99% of people were blissfully unaware even as the other 1% could see it inevitable arrival, just waiting for when. It is the same situation right now, October 2023.

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A Hallmark Of The Federal Reserve are Crisis Events

Elevated risks loom over the U.S. economy as the Federal Reserve navigates a highly leveraged financial environment amidst its “higher for longer” strategy. Historically rooted patterns suggest the intersection of surging debt and restrictive financial conditions may steer towards a crisis, particularly given prior instances where rate hikes and yield curve inversions precede recessions. The heightened policy misstep risk amidst slowing economic growth and rising borrowing costs signals caution for potential crisis onset in the near future.

UMich Inflation: Record 49% Of Americans Say “High Prices Are Wiping Out Living Standards”

October’s UMich data reveals a troubling economic outlook: inflation expectations soared to a disconcerting 3.8%, the highest since May 2023, while consumer sentiment plummeted to 63.0 from 68.1 due to rising inflation fears. A stark 49% of consumers report eroding living standards due to escalating prices, and the economic news index nosedives, reflecting increasing concerns about unemployment and price hikes.

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At the Current Pace, the U.S. Would Add $1 Trillion in Federal Debt Every 45 Days

The U.S. Federal debt is skyrocketing, recently escalating by $40 billion in a single day, reaching a staggering $33.55 trillion. With an astounding pace of potentially adding $1 trillion to the debt every 45 days, the financial future appears precarious. From 2008, the debt has catapulted by $24 trillion, now 3.8 times its initial size. Despite already increasing by over $2 trillion since the resolution of the debt ceiling crisis, with the ceiling now effectively uncapped until January 2025, the ultimate scale of U.S. debt remains alarming.

US must be ready for simultaneous wars with China, Russia, report says