Seventeen trillion dollars. That is what American households now owe-and it did not happen by accident.
The debt that defines modern American life was built. Not by market forces. Not by natural economic evolution. By specific decisions, made by specific institutions, designed to serve specific interests at the expense of the people who carry the debt.
The Debt Machine traces the deliberate construction of a system that converted America from a nation of producers and savers into a nation of borrowers. It names the decisions. It identifies the beneficiaries. And it exposes the operational reality beneath the prosperity America was sold.
Inside, you will discover:
This is not a book about personal finance tips. It is an investigation into how the system was assembled, piece by piece, through legislation, court rulings, regulatory decisions, and institutional design-and how every piece serves the institutions that profit from perpetual debt.
The debt you carry is not simply your own doing. It is your individual experience of a system constructed to produce exactly the burden you feel.
The most important truth in these pages is also the most hopeful: the debt economy is not inevitable. It was built. And anything that was built can be understood-and changed.
Grounded entirely in the public record-federal statutes, court decisions, Federal Reserve data, congressional testimony, and institutional reports-this is the book that makes the invisible architecture of American debt visible at last.
If you have ever sensed that the rules were rigged but couldn't say exactly how-this book explains it.