Let me break this down: your gas bill just went up again. Your rent might be next. It's not like it hasn't happened before, but with each new spike in prices, you start to wonder how the economy got so out of hand. And don't even get me started on what they're calling 'inflationary pressures.'

So here we are, another day and yet another announcement from the Biden administration that it's just trying to help us all out. But let's be clear: this isn't about helping you or I. This is about them pushing their agenda no matter what the consequences are for real people.

The latest round of inflation has hit like a hammer, and guess who foots the bill? You do. They've got this spending spree that looks more like a binge than a plan to stabilize the economy. And it's not just about throwing money around, they're also choking off growth with overreach in regulations.

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Now you might hear them say 'transitory,' which is code for 'it'll go away on its own if we ignore it long enough.' But here’s a fact: the buried number in their reports—where they hide the real inflation—is telling another story. It's not transitory; it's structural.

It's like when you're trying to watch TV and your favorite show keeps getting interrupted by ads for stuff you don't need or can’t afford anyway. That’s what Biden-era policies are doing to your budget: interrupting your life with costs that keep going up while the benefits stay far, far away.

Nobody is going to tell you this on CNN because they have their own agenda too. But I've been watching this for years, and I know how it works. And it doesn't work in your favor, unless you count 'wishing' as a strategy.

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The real figure that matters here is the one that shows exactly what's being taken out of your paycheck to pay for all these new programs and regulations that are supposed to help everyone but actually benefit very few. It’s not just inflation; it’s about who controls the money and how they use it against us.

So, what do you do? You protect yourself, protect your family. Look at where your money is going, cut back on non-essentials, maybe even start thinking about that emergency fund if you haven’t already. The last thing you want to be is a statistic in someone else's economic crisis story.