The United States National Debt surged past $38.5 trillion on Saturday, as Bitcoiners celebrated âGenesis Day,â the day the first block was mined on the Bitcoin network by pseudonymous Bitcoin (BTC) creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
US government debt at the time of this writing is about $38,561,900,451,378, according to the US National Debt Clock.
âLie, cheat, steal, and print relentlessly. Itâs the playbook of fiat currency, and it weakens the money until confidence in that currency ultimately fails,â market analyst James Lavish said in response to the rising debt.

Nakamoto mined the Bitcoin Genesis Block on January 3, 2009, and included a newspaper headline titled âChancellor on brink of second bailout for banks,â referencing the UK governmentâs monetary stimulus in response to the 2008-2009 financial crisis.
âHappy Bitcoin Genesis Block day,â Paolo Ardoino, the CEO of stablecoin issuer Tether, said, while Sam Callahan, the director of strategy and research at BTC treasury company OranjeBTC, echoed the message.
The Bitcoin community often touts the headline embedded within the Genesis Block as a symbol of the Bitcoin protocolâs core value proposition: money resistant to inflation or debasement due to decentralization and a maximum supply cap.

Related: Bitcoin helps USDâs reserve status âin a strange wayâ: Coinbase CEO
US debt spirals out of control, driven by fiat money printing
The US government was adding about $6 billion per day, on average, to the national debt in 2025, according to Congressional data, meaning $2.2 trillion was added to the total debt in a single year.
For context, it took over 200 years for the US national debt to cross $1 trillion, which it did in October 1981, according to the US House of Representatives Budget Committee.Â
The Federal Reserve M2 money supply, a metric used as a proxy for the total amount of US dollars in circulation, continues to rise, reaching $22.4 trillion at the time of this writing, according to data from the St. Loud Federal Reserve.

Inflation of the fiat money supply lowers the value of that money by eroding its purchasing power, reducing its price relative to goods and services, which are finite.Â
Bitcoin solves this by having a fixed, maximum supply cap of 21 million that is produced on a steady supply schedule, becoming deflationary over time and increasing purchasing power relative to goods and services, according to Bitcoin advocates.Â
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