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Daily Math
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Daily Math
@MathDailyHQ
Welcome to "Daily Math". If you want to learn a little math each day, this is the place to be.
Beigetreten Ekim 2025
594 Folgt446 Follower

Debt is money that is borrowed when an individual or entity spends more than it brings in and still needs to cover that gap. The United States does this on a yearly basis, typically spending more than it collects in taxes. The last time the U.S. ran a surplus was in 2001, when the national debt was around $5.66 trillion. The government spends money on things like the military, infrastructure, and programs such as Social Security, but tax revenue alone is not enough to fully fund all of this, so it must borrow money to make up the difference. The government borrows by issuing bonds through the U.S. Treasury. These bonds are essentially agreements where investors lend money to the government in exchange for repayment with interest. U.S. debt is divided into two main categories: public debt and intragovernmental debt. Public debt is owed to outside investors such as individuals, banks, pension funds, and foreign governments like Japan, while intragovernmental debt is money the government owes to its own programs, such as Social Security. The Federal Reserve does not directly fund government spending but can influence interest rates and buy government bonds in financial markets to help stabilize the economy.
Congress does not treat the debt as an immediate crisis because the ability to manage it depends on the size and strength of the economy. A useful comparison is that a wealthy individual can handle more debt than someone with a low income. Similarly, the United States can sustain a large amount of debt because its economy is very large. As long as the economy continues to grow and the government can make its interest payments, the debt remains manageable, though not risk-free. Another reason is that investors have strong confidence in the U.S. government’s ability to repay, which keeps demand for its bonds high and borrowing costs relatively low. The Federal Reserve also provides a degree of stability by influencing interest rates and supporting financial markets.
The debt is unlikely to ever be fully paid off, not because it is ignored, but because the system is structured around continuously managing it rather than eliminating it. The government regularly “rolls over” its debt, meaning it issues new bonds to pay off old ones as they come due. This keeps the system functioning without requiring a massive one-time repayment. Unlike a person, the United States does not have a fixed lifespan, so it can continue operating and managing its debt indefinitely. What matters most is that the economy grows at a pace that allows the government to keep up with its obligations.
Paying off the entire debt all at once would not be practical or desirable. It would require extremely large tax increases, major spending cuts, or both, which could severely harm the economy. In addition, U.S. government bonds are a foundational part of the global financial system, serving as one of the safest and most widely used investments in the world. Eliminating them suddenly would disrupt financial markets and remove a key asset relied upon by investors and institutions worldwide.
My previous explanation was off a little related to the Federal Reserve, so I used AI to fix everything up.
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Ridiculous
How can the US debt seriously ever be paid back.
It’s laughable.
Barchart@Barchart
U.S. Debt projected to hit $150 Trillion within 30 years says the CBO 🤯👀
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@em_Lazzy If you are a trader, I would keep an eye on the Foreign Exchange. This kind of stuff seems like something that would cause a significant difference in that.
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@IllimitableMan_ They play with their hair seems to be a big one. They show more of themselves around you.
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@rushicrypto I am sure not long after the bank runs they realized.
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@MrT82499765 @nates_motel I was not paying attention to the engine swap. I had a one track mind.
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@mikefaulkn41033 @nates_motel Yeah. The car looks nice, but that engine swap.
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@MathDailyHQ @nates_motel It’s a classic car today. It’s not going to decline in value especially in that pristine condition.
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@SgtStackerrr @nates_motel I was tripping before. That was only the cover. Still, the Corvette LS3 swap.
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@nukedagain_15 @nates_motel Yeah, it is. The tires can send you on an Apollo mission.
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@MathDailyHQ @nates_motel It’s not a car mate, it’s a rocket ship
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@ywomendeservles This reminds me of a post I saw a few days ago that said something like, "if a woman says "a real man", she will proceed to spew some nonsense". This verifies the fact. I'm all for trying to work with your significant other through problems, this isn't one of them.
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@ywomendeservles LOL I actually tried that. I forgave her and told her we could move past it. i told her it would be over if she ever cheated again. Guess what? 😂
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@tragicbirdapp Then it stops until your presentation in your English class later that morning.
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This wasn’t tough at all get the fuck outta here 😭😭😭
Glock9Dorito@Glock9Dorito
The toughest decisions we faced in 2012
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@MathDailyHQ @mahouteq I mean I feel like that might be at least a small factor
Compared to the other 2 REEngine Remake(and even 1R) it feels like a very big pit on the record.
But yeah I doubt that's the only or even main reason
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@KooNti10 "We are supposed to cook nine eggs, right boss?"
"Nein"
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@Starbonnie7 @mahouteq Yeah, that is right. I don't know why they made that one cheaper. Maybe they did because not as many people have bought it relative to the others, not because the developers themselves don't like it.
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