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The current US economic system isn't true capitalism. Through inflation and central banking, wealth is systematically siphoned from the middle and working classes and funneled to asset holders. This mechanism is a political creation, not an inherent feature of free markets.

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Excessive debt forces governments to print money, which inflates asset prices. This process mechanically enriches the asset-owning class while devaluing currency for wage earners, hollowing out the middle class into either the wealthy or the poor.

To fund deficits, the government prints money, causing inflation that devalues cash and wages. This acts as a hidden tax on the poor and middle class. Meanwhile, the wealthy, who own assets like stocks and real estate that appreciate with inflation, are protected and see their wealth grow, widening the economic divide.

Contemporary Western economies often operate under a system of "socialism for the rich." Government interventions, such as restrictive housing policies and monetary inflation, actively redistribute wealth from the working class to the wealthy elite, who have the political power to benefit from these policies.

True capitalism is impossible in a country with a central bank that engages in deficit spending. This practice inherently rigs the economic game, creating artificial capital that leads to inflation, a K-shaped economy, and wealth inequality. This is a core reason why empires with central banks historically collapse.

Wealth inequality isn't primarily driven by corporations, but by government deficit spending and central bank money printing. This inflates asset prices, benefiting wealthy asset owners while devaluing the cash and wages of the working and middle classes who don't own assets.

The core problem for the middle class is a direct chain reaction: national debt leads to money printing (inflation), which forces people to own assets to preserve wealth. Since only 10% of Americans own 93% of assets, the rest are left behind with devalued cash and stagnant wages.

A distinction is made between natural inequality (desirable) and toxic, "K-shaped" inequality. The latter is manufactured by systems like central banking, debt, and deficit spending, which function as a stealth tax on the economically illiterate to transfer wealth upwards. It is a feature of policy, not a bug of free markets.

Contrary to its capitalist branding, the U.S. economy functions as a Keynesian system. It relies on money printing and implicit market support (a 'plunge protection team') to inflate asset prices and maintain the illusion of growth, masking real-term devaluation.

Inflation is framed not just as rising prices, but as a form of secretive theft. Since only a small percentage of Americans own significant assets that appreciate with inflation, the policy mechanistically funnels wealth upward from the working and middle classes to the top 10%, creating vast, systemic inequality.

The widespread feeling that the system is "rigged" stems from specific government policies. Deficit spending and inflation systematically devalue labor and make key assets like homes unaffordable, robbing non-asset holders of their ability to build wealth and achieve upward mobility.

America's Economy Is a System of Politically Engineered Theft, Not Capitalism | RiffOn