How Does It’s Not an Everything Bubble, it’s a Dollar Collapse Work?

It’s not everything getting too big at once, it’s the dollar losing its power like a toy car running out of batteries.

Imagine you have a piggy bank full of dollar coins, and every time you buy something, you use one. Now, if your piggy bank suddenly had only half as many dollars as before, everything would feel more expensive, like your favorite candy bar that used to cost 1 coin now costs 2.

That’s what’s happening with the dollar collapse, it’s like your piggy bank is shrinking, so even though things aren’t all going crazy at once, you need more dollars to buy the same stuff. It's not a bubble where everything gets too big, it's a dollar that doesn't go as far anymore.

How the Dollar Gets Weaker

Think of the dollar like your favorite superhero who used to lift 10 bricks but now can only lift 5 because they're tired. The more things cost, the harder it is for the dollar to keep up, and that’s why everything feels a bit pricier than before.

You might not notice it at first, but over time, it's like your piggy bank has fewer coins every day, and you have to save more just to buy what you used to get with less. It’s not everything getting too big at once, it’s the dollar losing its power like a toy car running out of batteries.

Imagine you have a piggy bank full of dollar coins, and every time you buy something, you use one. Now, if your piggy bank suddenly had only half as many dollars as before, everything would feel more expensive, like your favorite candy bar that used to cost 1 coin now costs 2.

That’s what’s happening with the dollar collapse, it’s like your piggy bank is shrinking, so even though things aren’t all going crazy at once, you need more dollars to buy the same stuff. It's not a bubble where everything gets too big, it's a dollar that doesn't go as far anymore.

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Examples

  1. A balloon is filled with air, but if the air gets lighter, the balloon doesn't feel heavier, it just feels like everything else got heavier.
  2. If your dollar can buy less candy every year, that's inflation, not because candy costs more, but because your dollar is worth less.
  3. Imagine a pizza that used to cost $10 now costs $20, but you're still paying with the same $10 bill, your money isn’t as strong as it used to be.

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