Every time the United States goes to war, the same machine turns on. Not the one that builds missiles or moves carriers into position. The one that prints money.
With tensions between the U.S. and Iran escalating again, the conversation has shifted to military strategy, oil prices, and geopolitical alliances. All valid. But the part most people ignore is the part that hits your wallet directly: how wars get funded, what that does to the dollar, and why Bitcoin keeps showing up in the conversation every time it happens.
This isn't about picking sides on foreign policy. It's about understanding what happens to your purchasing power when a government decides to spend trillions it doesn't have.
This one’s for Night Owl members
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