Sunday, April 19, 2026

Millions in Cash Leaving Minneapolis Airport Draw Lawmakers’ Scrutiny

(Elyse Apel, The Center Square)  Minnesota lawmakers are raising concerns about reports that hundreds of millions of dollars are leaving Minnesota airports destined for foreign countries.

State Rep. Kristin Robbins, R-Maple Grove, is chair of the House Fraud Prevention and State Agency Oversight Committee in the Minnesota legislature. During testimony this week, she addressed the issue, focusing especially on Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.

Robbins said this issue has been ongoing for decades with no real action taken by either the state or federal government to address it.

“The story of child care fraud back from the 2015 . . . period is when we first learned about suitcases of cash leaving the airport,” Robbins said.

Following a report in 2019 from the state’s legislative auditor that said those claims could not be substantiated, Robbins said many people, including herself, believed that issue had stopped.

“I was shocked in January, 2026 to see a TSA bulletin saying it had tripled,” she said. “In 2024, $343 million left MSP in cash. In 2025, that number grew to $350 million . . . That was a shocking number, and that really galvanized the public on this issue.”

Robbins said Minnesota is “an outlier” as a state in terms of the amount of cash leaving its airports. She stated that, despite the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport being the 16th-largest airport, it has the most cash flowing out of it of any airport in the nation.

“That number, $350 million, leaving our airport in cash, is higher than the cash leaving any other airport in the country,” Robbins said, “Including much larger airports: JFK, LAX, Chicago O’Hare.”

She expressed concern this money flow is directly related to fraud cases in the state, especially within Minnesota’s Somali community.

“This is not a new issue,” she said. “This has been going on in our state for decades.”

Democrats on the committee, including Rep. Steve Elkins, expressed disbelief about the scale of the cash flowing out of the airport.

“It is completely implausible to me that hundreds of millions of dollars could have made it through that process undetected. That is impossible,” Elkins said. “That could not have happened without the TSA’s knowledge.”

Robbins said the transfers are technically legal if the sender files a form for amounts more than $10,000.

“It is absolutely legal, and that’s what we are trying to make sure the public understands,” she responded to Elkins.

A retired TSA agent, speaking anonymously during the hearing, said the official estimates are likely low.

“I really think the money that goes through the airport is on the low end, because we’ve never actually counted the money,” she explained. “They just fill out that form and get through the airport.”

She responded directly to Democrat claims that it was not possible.

“To the gentleman that’s questioning this, I feel like you’re questioning my integrity,” the agent said. “I saw it firsthand. There was millions and millions that added to billions and billions of dollars that went through that airport while I worked there.”

Robbins called for both state and federal law to be tightened.

“It’s incumbent on us to understand the issue, to learn from our federal partners what their jurisdiction is, what’s the jurisdiction of the state, and to think together how we can do better to address this issue,” she said.

This all comes amid increased scrutiny of Minnesota’s taxpayer-funded programs, particularly as Vice President J.D. Vance recently announced he will be leading a federal, nationwide “War on Fraud.”

This hearing is one of many as state Republicans push for stricter oversight and greater accountability to address alleged widespread fraud across the state’s programs. Robbins previously labeled the fraud as a “web.”

“I just feel like we are still missing the mark to dismantle these webs of fraud,” she said earlier this month.

Independent investigators and federal officials estimate the potential loss to fraud schemes in Minnesota could range from $9 billion to $20 billion.

Two Seats Flipped Include Representing Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Home

(Merrilee Gasser, The Center Square)  Democrats flipped two red seats in the Florida Legislature this week, including in President Donald Trump’s home district.

Democrat Emily Gregory secured just over 51% of the vote, winning District 87’s House seat in Palm Beach and defeating Trump-endorsed Republican candidate Jon Maples. The district covers the president’s Mar-a-Lago home.

A small business owner and Army spouse, this is Gregory’s first step into public office.

“House District 87, thank you for the honor of a lifetime to serve as your representative,” Gregory said Thursday.

She ran on issues related to addressing property insurance and improving public schools.

Meanwhile, Democrat Brian Nathan flipped District 14’s state Senate seat in Tampa, which was previously held by Lt. Gov. Jay Collins.

Nathan won with a little over 50% of the vote while his Republican opponent, Josie Tomkow received just over 49% of the vote. Tomkow has served in the Legislature since 2018.

Like Gregory, Nathan is a political newcomer. He previously served in the Navy then went on to become a union leader, according to his campaign website.

His campaign messaging focused on good wages, strong labor protections, and affordable housing.

Democrats heralded the victories as a sign of more wins to come in November and potentially breaking the Republican supermajority in the Senate.

“Florida Democrats won big in Trump’s backyard and sent a clear message that when we organize early, often, and everywhere, we can win anywhere,” the Florida Democratic Party posted on social media.

The shake up comes as Gov. Ron DeSantis has already called for a special session to take place next month where legislators will address congressional redistricting. It’s scheduled April 20-24.

“Democrats flipped a state House seat in Palm Beach that Trump won by 11 points in 2024,” said Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y. “Mar-a-Lago will now be represented by Emily Gregory, a strong Democratic voice. We will crush House Republicans in November if DeSantis tries to gerrymander the Florida congressional map.”

States typically redraw district lines once a decade after census results. However, several states have been looking at mid-decade redistricting.

“Every Florida resident deserves to be represented fairly and constitutionally,” DeSantis wrote on social media at the start of the year. “This special session will take place after the regular legislative session, which will allow the Legislature to first focus on the pressing issues facing Floridians before devoting its full attention to congressional redistricting in April.”

Senate Funds DHS Without ICE or Border Patrol, Heads to House

(Andrew Rice, The Center Square)  The U.S. Senate agreed to fund the Department of Homeland Security early Friday, without including funds for ICE and Border Patrol

The Senate passed the funding bill by a voice vote, where Senators say “Aye” or “Nay” to pass legislation and the chair determines the outcome based on volume of responses. 

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has gone without funding since Feb. 14. Republicans and Democrats have negotiated back and forth for weeks. President Donald Trump on Thursday offered to sign an order that would pay Transportation Security Administration officers as wait times at major airports stretched. 

“We can get at least some of the government opened up again and then we’ll go from there,” said Sen. Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D. “Obviously, we’ll still have some work ahead of us.”

Throughout the shutdown, Democrats asked for a DHS funding bill that did not include Border Patrol or ICE, in order to further negotiations. Democrats have asked to rein in enforcement policies conducted by ICe and Border Patrol. 

“In the wake of the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti, Senate Democrats were clear,” Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said. “No blank check for lawless ICE and Border Patrol.”

Remaining funding for ICE and Border Patrol will go to a party-line reconciliation vote, where Republicans can seek to secure funding for the agencies without needing Democrat approval. 

The Senate now sends funding for FEMA, TSA, the Coast Guard, Secret Service and cybersecurity agencies to the U.S. House of Representatives. Speaker of the House Mike Johnson can either get the legislation passed through a Rules Committee vote or can call a floor vote “under suspension,” meaning he would need to get a 2/3 majority in favor of the funding bill.

Jill Biden’s Secret Service Guard Shoots Himself in the Butt

Note: The Daily Mail initially reported that the agent shot himself in the leg, but journalist Susan Crabtree later clarified that the shot actually hit his butt. The headline of this story has been updated accordingly, but the rest remains unchanged.

(Ken Silva, Headline USA) The Daily Mail reported Friday that a Secret Service agent protecting former First Lady Jill Biden shot himself in the buttocks at the Philadelphia International Airport.

“The agent shot himself in the leg just after 8.30am Friday while on an assignment to protect Biden,” the Daily Mail reported, citing a Secret Service spokesman.

“He suffered a non-life-threatening injury after what the federal agency described as a ‘negligent discharge while handling a service weapon.”

Jill Biden was not present during the incident, nor did the shooting affect her trip. A spokesman said the agency’s office of professional responsibility is investigating the matter.

The Daily Mail reported that police tape was roping off Terminal C near the American Airlines ticketing desk.

“Officers were seen surrounding a black Chevy Suburban inside the cordon. The vehicle’s trunk and front passenger-side door were left open,” the outlet said.

“A medic unit responded to the scene, but then left, followed by a police car.”

Friday’s incident comes about 18 months after another Secret Service officer shot himself in September 2024–on the heels of two assassination attempts on Donald Trump. In that case, a Secret Service officer reportedly shot himself in the foot while he was near the Israeli ambassador’s residence in Washington DC.

“According to USSS, the agent was on duty during the ‘negligent discharge’ while he was handling his weapon shortly before 8 p.m. in the area of 32nd and Fessenden streets Northwest,” a local DC news station reported at the time.

“His injuries were not life threatening, and the officer was taken to a hospital for evaluation and treatment. USSS says no one else was injured in the incident.”

Ken Silva is the editor of Headline USA. Follow him at x.com/jd_cashless.

BREAKING: Pro-Iranian Hacking Group Claims Credit for Hack of FBI Director Kash Patel’s Personal Account

(Headline USA) A pro-Iranian hacking group claimed Friday to have hacked an account of FBI Director Kash Patel and has posted online what appear to be years-old photographs of him, along with a work resume and other personal documents. Many of those records appeared to be more than a decade old.

“Kash Patel, the current head of the FBI, who once saw his name displayed with pride on the agency’s headquarters, will now find his name among the list of successfully hacked victims,” said a message posted Friday from the group Handala.

The message was accompanied by more than a half dozen photos of Patel, including ones of him standing beside an antique sports car and another with a cigar in his mouth. The group also said that it was making available for download emails and other documents from Patel’s account. Many of the records appeared to relate to his personal travels and business from more than 10 years ago

“The FBI is aware of malicious actors targeting Director Patel’s personal email information, and we have taken all necessary steps to mitigate potential risks associated with this activity,” the FBI said in a statement. “The information in question is historical in nature and involves no government information.”

It was not clear when the hack claimed by Handala might have occurred. News reports from December 2024, before Patel was confirmed as director, said that Patel had been informed by the FBI that he had been targeted as part of an Iranian hack.

Handala is a pro-Iranian, pro-Palestinian hacking group that earlier this month claimed credit for disrupting systems at Stryker, a Michigan-based medical technology company. Handala said the attack was in retaliation for suspected U.S. strikes that killed Iranian schoolchildren. They’re a prominent example of the proxy groups that carry out cyber attacks on behalf of Iran.

 

The Justice Department singled out Handala in an announcement last week in which it said it had seized four web domains tied to Iranian hacking schemes and the threatening of dissidents.

The Trump administration is offering a reward of up to $10 million for information leading to the identification of members of the Handala hacking group.

Adapted from reporting by the Associated Press

 

Turkey Sells 60 Tonnes of Gold to Backstop Lira

(Mike Maharrey, Money Metals News Service) We know one of the reasons there has been so much downward pressure on gold since the beginning of the Iran War. Turkey recently sold and swapped 60 tonnes of gold to support its currency.

The Iran War is temporarily giving the U.S. dollar a new lease on life as it throws markets into chaos. As energy costs soar, nervous investors are selling everything (stocks, bonds, and commodities have all charted significant declines) and moving into cash positions. We see this reflected in dollar strength.

It appears some central banks are also being forced to sell assets to stabilize their own currencies and fund oil purchases as prices skyrocket.

The Central Bank of Turkey has been one of the biggest central bank gold buyers over the last several years. It added to its gold reserves for 23 straight months through the end of October 2025. Now it is tapping into those reserves to support a struggling lira.

According to data analyzed by Bloomberg, Turkish gold reserves showed a 6-tonne decline during the week of March 13 and 52.4 tonnes the following week. In total, the Turkish central bank lowered its gold reserves by around $8 billion.

Bloomberg reported that the Turkish gold drawdown exceeded the amount of metal that flowed out of gold-backed ETFs it tracks during the same time period.

The Central Bank of Turkey sold a small amount of gold outright and used the rest to secure foreign exchange via swap agreements.

As Bloomberg noted, “It’s not uncommon for central banks to sell spot gold and simultaneously agree to buy it back in the future via swap agreements, effectively granting them cheap dollar funding using the precious metal as collateral.

Rising energy prices due to the war are straining the Turkish central bank’s ability to maintain its strategy of slow lira depreciation. As energy prices rise, it increases demand for dollars (given that most oil contracts are priced in the U.S. currency). This increases the downward pressure on the lira. By intervening with dollars, the Turkish central bank can maintain lira strength.

The process works like this.

The Turkish bank sells gold for dollars or euros. It then uses those currencies to buy lira. This increases demand for the lira and supports its value.

The influx of dollars also gives the country a cushion to deal with rising energy costs.

TD Securities commodity strategist Daniel Ghali told Bloomberg the war will likely force other central banks to tap into gold reserves. It could also derail some banks’ plans to increase their gold holdings.

“Outright sales are not out of the question, although we expect the broader trend to be a step-change lower in the pace of central bank accumulation for the time being.”

Turkey’s fire sale reveals just why central banks hold gold. It serves as a long-term reserve free from counterparty risk. But from time to time, central bankers will liquidate gold for dollars as a short-term intervention tool, as Turkey just did.

Turkey has played this game before. In 2023, the Turkish central bank sold around 150 tonnes of gold in the course of just a few months after the country temporarily suspended gold imports. This caused a spike in domestic demand for physical gold. The lira was also under stress at the time, and the gold sale indirectly eased the downward pressure.

Long-Term Ramifications

Ironically, Turkey was accumulating gold to reduce its exposure to dollar-denominated assets. This de-dollarization trend has been evident since the U.S. and Western powers slapped aggressive sanctions on Russia after it invaded Ukraine. Many saw this weaponization of the dollar as a warning and have scrambled to diversify their reserves with more gold.

Turkey’s move underscores the fact that while many have become wary of the U.S. currency, it still dominates global trade.

Financial consultant Laurent Lequeu summed it up in a post on X.

“The irony is exquisite: Ankara spent years aggressively accumulating gold to reduce its dependence on the dollar and has now pledged that same gold as collateral to borrow U.S. dollars. The de-dollarization strategy, one notes, has been temporarily suspended for dollar-denominated emergencies.”

I think the key word in that analysis is “temporarily.”

Turkey is doing what it thinks it needs to do with the best asset available – gold. But in the long run, don’t you think the world would prefer to avoid these “dollar-denominated emergencies” completely?

In other words, while the Iran war may lead to further central bank gold sales and swaps in the near-term, it could drive a boost in gold reserves in the future as central bankers learn lessons from the war – dollars are a problem.

As a result, the war could speed up de-dollarization as countries become even more wary of holding dollars in the long term.

We’re already seeing an uptick in non-dollar oil sales. Indian oil transactions are increasingly being carried out using non-dollar currencies, circumventing the “petrodollar.” In practice, Indian customers deposit rupees into overseas bank accounts. The funds are then converted to yuan or UAE dirhams to complete the purchase. Sources say Indian banks with limited offshore presence are facilitating these trades.

Turkey’s gold sale underscores the value of gold. It is the backstop of last resort. People don’t just hold gold for the sake of holding gold. Not only do people understand that gold will protect their wealth from devaluing fiat, but they also know that it will be there in the event of an emergency. They know they will be able to quickly liquidate it. Everybody might not want dollars, or euros, or yuan, but everybody wants gold.


Mike Maharrey is a journalist and market analyst for Money Metals with over a decade of experience in precious metals. He holds a BS in accounting from the University of Kentucky and a BA in journalism from the University of South Florida.

JD Vance Warns of Nuclear Suicide Bombers

(Dave DeCamp, Antiwar.comVice President JD Vance on Thursday attempted to justify the continued US-Israeli war against Iran by implying that Iran could potentially turn a nuclear bomb into a suicide vest, a claim not grounded in reality.

Vance made the claim during a cabinet meeting while discussing military and diplomatic “options” that the US has regarding the conflict with Iran. He has continued to portray the war as being necessary to prevent Iran from making a nuclear weapon, though there was no evidence that Tehran had decided to build a bomb either before the June 2025 war or the current war that was launched on February 28.

“What we have now that we didn’t have when the president took over, just a little over a year ago, is the ability to use every tool at our disposal to ensure that Iran doesn’t get a nuclear weapon,” Vance said.

“Because when I say options, I think it’s important the American people know options for what? And it’s options to ensure that Iran never has a nuclear weapon,” the vice president added. “You talk about people who walk into a crowded supermarket and have a vest on, and they blow up the vest and a couple of people get killed, and that’s a terrible tragedy. What happens when what’s on the vest is not something that can kill a couple of people, but can kill many, many tens of thousands of people?”

A nuclear bomb could not be miniaturized to the point where it could be worn as a vest, and if Vance was alluding to a “dirty bomb” that uses some nuclear material, such a weapon at that size would not cause tens of thousands of casualties. Plus, in recent decades, the overwhelming majority of suicide bombings in the region were carried out by Sunni Muslim extremists, not Iran and its Shia allies.

Before the US and Israel launched the war, Vance became one of the leading voices in the administration, making the claim that the coming conflict was about preventing Iran from developing a nuclear bomb, contradicting President Trump’s insistence that US airstrikes in June 2025 “obliterated” Iran’s nuclear program. At one point, Vance even claimed there was evidence Iran was trying to “rebuild a nuclear weapon,” something Iran has never had.

This article originally appeared at Antiwar.com.

Minn. AG Ellison Returns Proceeds from Fraud

(Luis CornelioHeadline USA) Embattled Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison returned thousands of dollars in donations from five individuals tied to the state’s sprawling COVID-19 meal fraud scheme.

Ellison, who told Congress under oath in February that he had not accepted the funds, later refunded the contributions through his 2028 re-election campaign, according to a filing with the Minnesota Campaign Finance Board.

The refunds totaled $12,500, as reported Wednesday by the nonprofit American Experiment, which has closely tracked the scandal.

The donors had met with Ellison to complain about state regulators withholding taxpayer-funded reimbursements meant for businesses providing pandemic meals to those in need.

Federal investigators later revealed through multiple grand jury indictments that some of those meals were never actually served.

One returned donation — $2,500 — came from Gandi Yusuf Mohamed on Dec. 20, 2021, just one week after his sister, Ikram Yusuf Mohamed, met with Ellison.

Ellison refunded that donation in May 2025, around the time audio from the meeting with Ikram Mohamed surfaced.

Ikram Yusuf Mohamed pleaded guilty to her role in the scheme in March, while Gandi Yusuf Mohamed is scheduled to stand trial next month.

The refunds came after Ellison insisted to Sen. Josh Hawley during a tense hearing that he had not accepted any money tied to the fraud.

BLM Fraudster Ordered to Pay Restitution

(José Niño, Headline USA) A federal judge has ordered Monica Cannon-Grant, the Black Lives Matter activist who once received Boston’s highest civic honor, to repay more than $224,000 that she siphoned from her nonprofit organization to fund a lavish personal lifestyle, per a report by The New York Post. The ruling this week marks the financial reckoning in a fraud case that has become one of the most notorious scandals to emerge from the 2020 racial justice movement.

Judge Angel Kelley issued the restitution order after Cannon-Grant had already received her sentence in January. That punishment included four years of probation, six months confined to her home, and 100 hours of community service for her crimes, which encompassed wire fraud and falsifying tax returns, according to WBUR.

The $224,000 figure breaks down into two components. Approximately $180,000 represents money that Cannon-Grant diverted directly from Violence in Boston, the non-profit she founded supposedly to feed children and organize demonstrations against police brutality. The remaining amount covers rental assistance payments and federal pandemic unemployment benefits that she fraudulently obtained.

Cannon-Grant and her husband Clark Grant operated what amounted to a confidence scheme disguised as charitable work. They solicited donations from individuals and organizations who believed their money would support social justice causes and community programs. Among the victims was a Black Lives Matter group that contributed $3,000 to what they thought was a legitimate cause.

Instead of serving the community, the funds paid for the couple’s rent, automobile expenses, clothing purchases, food deliveries, visits to nail salons, and even a summer getaway to Maryland. The fraud continued for years before federal authorities caught up with them.

In September, Cannon-Grant entered guilty pleas to 18 separate charges. When she did so, federal prosecutor Leah B. Foley laid bare the extent of her deception, per a report by The New York Post. “Cannon-Grant used donations to satisfy her own greed, while falsely portraying herself as a legitimate nonprofit organizer,” Foley stated. “She betrayed the trust of everyone who donated and the public who supported her fraudulent charity.”

Boston Globe Magazine bestowed upon her its Bostonian of the Year distinction in 2020. That same year, the Boston Celtics honored her with their Heroes Among Us award. These recognitions positioned her as one of the most celebrated activists in Massachusetts.

As Headline USA previously reported, federal authorities charged both Cannon-Grant and her husband in 2022. Clark Grant never faced trial. He died in a motorcycle accident in 2023, leaving his wife to answer alone for their joint scheme.

José Niño is the deputy editor of Headline USA. Follow him at x.com/JoseAlNino 

The U.S. Government Is Insolvent; Yes, That Matters

(Mike Maharrey, Money Metals News Service) The U.S. government is insolvent. This isn’t hyperbole.

In fact, you could call it an understatement.

The Treasury Department recently released its consolidated financial statements for fiscal year 2025. Uncle Sam ended the year with $6.06 trillion in total assets against $47.78 trillion in total liabilities.

For you non-accountants out there – that’s not good.

To put it in simpler terms, the federal government has $7.90 in liabilities for every dollar in assets.

If the U.S. were a private business, it would be in bankruptcy court.

The release of these financial statements got virtually no attention in the mainstream financial media. Forbes was one of the few publications to highlight the numbers. As that report put it, America’s abysmal financial condition was met by “near-total media silence.”

Based on Forbes’s reporting, the U.S. government’s financial position deteriorated by $2.07 trillion in fiscal 2025. The balance sheet now stands at an unfathomable -$41.72 trillion.

Don’t skip over the negative sign. That carries the entire weight of this story.

The federal financial position was further eroded last year by a $2 trillion increase in the national debt and interest expense payable (now at $30.33 trillion), coupled with a $438.8 billion in federal employee and veteran benefits payable.

By the way, this does not include the unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare. I’m not even going to get into that, but ugly is the first word that comes to mind. Unsustainable is the second.

Forbes did a nice job of putting the financial statements into context by dividing each number by 100 million (essentially dropping eight zeros) to make the data comparable to a household budget.

“That household earns $52,446 and spends $73,378 — running a $20,932 annual deficit. Its total liabilities and unfunded promises amount to $1,361,788 against just $60,554 in assets, leaving it $1.3 million in the hole. Uncle Sam, by any accounting standard, is insolvent.”

If you think the word “insolvent” is an exaggeration, just read the definition.

“A financial state where an individual or company cannot meet debt obligations as they fall due (cash-flow) or has liabilities exceeding assets (balance sheet).”

The U.S. government has both.

Forbes argues, “The reckoning, long deferred, is becoming impossible to ignore.

And yet the mainstream continues to ignore it. As already noted, the Treasury released the data to the sound of crickets.

When we get these shocking reports, a few people sit up and take notice, but most people shrug. They just continue as if everything were fine.

Ladies and gentlemen, everything is not fine.

Sure, from time to time, the media points out the problematic fiscal situation. Sen. Rand Paul, Rep. Thomas Massie, and a few like-minded colleagues bring up the issue in Congress. Democrats sometimes use the national debt as a prop to simp for a tax increase. But that’s about it.

There is no real effort to deal with the fiscal malaise. (No, raising taxes on the rich won’t solve it.) The sad truth is virtually nobody in Congress or the current administration is serious about tackling the root of the problem – government spending.

In fact, spending just keeps going up.

In total, Uncle Sam spent $3.1 trillion through the first five months of fiscal 2026. That was up about 2 percent over the same period in fiscal ‘25.

A 2 percent increase in spending might not sound significant. But weren’t we told there would be spending cuts?

To be fair, there were some cuts.

The increased spending comes despite cuts to the EPA and the Department of Education budget that are now showing up in the data. Lower disaster spending also helped moderate spending levels through the first two months of fiscal ’26.

Looking at the big picture, the spending trajectory is up. Even with all the hype about DOGE and some lip service to cutting spending during the early days of the Trump administration, the U.S. government spent just over $7 trillion last year. That’s an average of $583.3 billion per month or $19.2 billion per day.

And now there’s a war.

Naysayers will read this and say, “Well, Mike, you know you can’t compare a government to a household. After all, the U.S. has a credit card with no real limit, and it can print money. Furthermore, since the dollar is the reserve currency, it can print and borrow to its heart’s content.”

If you’re telling me this to ensure I understand the nuances of government finance, thanks. Got it.

But if you’re saying this just to make America’s fiscal malfeasance seem more palatable, just stop. Anybody with an ounce of sense (and no political axe to grind) understands that the U.S. fiscal situation is unsustainable.

I’m not even talking about something drastic, such as a default. Even if the government can keep kicking the debt can down the road for years, the fiscal situation has ramifications.

First is the interest problem. The massive debt and the relentless deficits are precisely why the Federal Reserve can’t raise interest rates to battle inflation.

Interest on the national debt cost $1.2 trillion in fiscal 2025. That was up 7.3 percent over 2024. Interest is the second-highest spending category after Social Security. The federal government is already spending more on interest payments than it is on national defense or Medicare.

This is one of the reasons why I believe the Fed will continue to cut interest rates this year despite rising CPI and oil price shocks. If they don’t, the Debt Black Hole will eventually suck the life out of the U.S. economy.

That leads to the second problem – who wants to loan the U.S. money?

I’ve written extensively about de-dollarization. America’s fiscal irresponsibility is one of the factors driving the so-called debasement trade. This is reflected in declining demand for Treasuries and rising yields.

Beyond raising interest rates, the central bank will also need to run quantitative easing operations (it already is) to create artificial demand for Treasuries.

Both rate cuts and QE mean higher inflation. And inflation is already on the upswing. (I’m not talking about price inflation – I mean inflation as historically defined as an increase in the supply of money and credit.)

This is the part of the equation that your Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) people and others who pooh-pooh worries about the national debt miss. Sure, the government can print money to its heart’s content. However, it is constantly devaluing the currency to the detriment of its own people. That’s not a sustainable strategy.

And as I’ve said repeatedly, the dollar doesn’t even have to lose its reserve status to create significant problems for the U.S. economy. Even a modest de-dollarization spells disaster. If the world needs fewer dollars, they will begin to return to the U.S., causing a dollar glut. This will increase inflationary pressure domestically as the value of the U.S. currency further depreciates. In the worst-case scenario, the dollar could collapse completely, leading to hyperinflation.

So, go ahead. Act all superior and laugh at Forbes’s unsophisticated comparison between government and household finances. You might be technically correct. But you’re missing the point.

Everything isn’t fine. The debt matters, and those proverbial chickens will eventually come home to roost. Just because it hasn’t caused a problem yet doesn’t mean it won’t.

The problem with playing “kick the can down the road” is that you eventually run out of road.


Mike Maharrey is a journalist and market analyst for Money Metals with over a decade of experience in precious metals. He holds a BS in accounting from the University of Kentucky and a BA in journalism from the University of South Florida.