The U.S. Congress is gearing up to pass yet another spending bill this week—and yeah, it's loaded with billions in earmarks. When governments keep pumping money into budgets like this, it feeds into broader inflation concerns and currency devaluation narratives that directly affect how traders think about digital assets. More government spending typically means more pressure on traditional currency stability, which historically correlates with increased institutional interest in alternatives like Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 11h ago
Once again, they are going to print money. The US dollar is about to decline...
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MEVHunterZhang
· 01-13 07:49
Here we go again, a bunch of banknotes devaluing. This time, Bitcoin should take off, right?
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GasSavingMaster
· 01-13 07:41
Here we go again, printing money like this is really incredible
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ArbitrageBot
· 01-13 07:32
Another round of astronomical spending, BTC should go up now, right?
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SchrodingersPaper
· 01-13 07:31
Here we go again? Every time I see news like this, I want to go all-in on Bitcoin, but then I start questioning life... Is it really true that the government is going to print money this time?
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AirdropHermit
· 01-13 07:29
Here we go again? The Federal Reserve's printing press is about to go into overdrive. BTC is bound to take off now.
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TokenVelocity
· 01-13 07:24
Here we go again, the US is about to print more money, Bitcoin is about to take off.
The U.S. Congress is gearing up to pass yet another spending bill this week—and yeah, it's loaded with billions in earmarks. When governments keep pumping money into budgets like this, it feeds into broader inflation concerns and currency devaluation narratives that directly affect how traders think about digital assets. More government spending typically means more pressure on traditional currency stability, which historically correlates with increased institutional interest in alternatives like Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.