Let’s start with the numbers. Global sovereign debt has reached historic highs, with the Institute of International Finance (IIF) reporting world debt at over $313 trillion in 2024, more than 330% of global GDP. The United States alone has surpassed $34 trillion in national debt, while the EU, Japan, and China are not far behind. This is not a new trend: every major war or crisis in modern history has been preceded by a debt binge, followed by a “reset” that wipes the slate clean for the powerful, while ordinary people pay the price.
If you believe the headlines, the world is simply a chaotic place: wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, tensions in Taiwan, riots in the US, and a parade of “unexpected” disasters. But what if these are not just accidents, but moves in a calculated game? The theory goes like this: when the debt becomes unpayable, the system needs a reset. But to justify the pain of that reset, loss of savings, new controls, a new currency, you need a crisis of epic proportions.
What will it be this time? Nuclear war? A deadlier pandemic? 5G? Famine from food scarcity or GMO?
