What they're not telling you: # The Federal Debt Trap Nobody's Talking About: Why Your Interest Rates Keep Rising The federal government is trapped in a vicious cycle where rising interest rates force it to spend more money servicing debt rather than investing in infrastructure, education, or other priorities—and mainstream coverage treats this as a technical issue rather than the economic time bomb it is. According to Third Way's analysis of federal debt and interest rates, the relationship between these two forces creates a self-reinforcing problem that most political leaders and media outlets refuse to examine honestly. As interest rates rise, the government's cost to borrow increases dramatically, meaning more tax dollars flow directly to bondholders instead of productive investments.

Diana Reeves
The Take
Diana Reeves · Corporate Watchdog & Markets

# THE TAKE: The Federal Debt Fairy Tale Third Way economists peddle a dangerous fiction: that federal debt operates like household budgeting. It doesn't. The real story? The Federal Reserve manufactures money. Treasury bonds aren't "borrowing" in any meaningful sense—they're interest-bearing savings accounts the government offers to banks and foreign governments. When rates spike, it's not because we're "out of money." It's because the Fed, captured by Wall Street, raises rates to cool wage growth and weaken labor's bargaining power. The debt "crisis" is manufactured consent for austerity—code for dismantling Social Security while corporate tax avoidance costs $600 billion annually. We can afford Medicare for All. We can fund infrastructure. We choose not to because deficit hawks serve wealth concentration, not fiscal reality. The economy isn't constrained by money supply. It's constrained by who controls it.

What the Documents Show

This isn't abstract economic theory—it's a direct transfer of wealth that constrains what government can actually do. Yet newsrooms continue to cover interest rate decisions as if they occur in isolation, disconnected from the debt spiral they accelerate. The mechanics are straightforward but rarely explained clearly in mainstream reporting. When the Federal Reserve raises interest rates to combat inflation, Treasury bonds become more attractive to investors, which pushes up borrowing costs across the entire economy. The government, facing higher rates, pays more interest on its existing debt load.

🔎 Mainstream angle: The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

This creates political pressure to either raise taxes, cut spending, or both—options that no elected official wants to pursue. Instead, policymakers often do nothing, allowing the problem to compound. Third Way's framework reveals how this dynamic has been playing out in real time, yet business news outlets typically isolate interest rate coverage from debt coverage, preventing readers from seeing the full picture. What makes this especially concerning is the relationship between federal debt and ordinary people's financial lives. As the government borrows more at higher rates, it crowds out private borrowing. Banks have more incentive to lend to the government at guaranteed returns than to finance small business expansion, home purchases, or other productive activities.

What Else We Know

This reduces economic growth potential and keeps mortgage rates and business loan rates elevated. The mainstream financial press covers this backward, focusing on whether the Fed will cut rates soon rather than examining how federal debt accumulation constrains those rate cuts and keeps borrowing costs high for everyone else. Third Way's analysis suggests the current trajectory is unsustainable without significant policy changes. Interest payments on federal debt are consuming an expanding share of the budget, crowding out discretionary spending and mandatory programs. This reality contradicts the casual optimism found in much financial media, which treats recent economic data points as evidence that "everything's fine." They are missing the structural problem—one that compounds year after year. The broader implication is that ordinary people face a financial environment deliberately constrained by policy choices made decades ago and perpetuated through neglect today.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying? Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.