In the past 24 hours, Washington has been taking some aggressive actions—not routine maneuvers, but more like a carefully orchestrated "policy blitz."



From tariff adjustments to energy exploration, from military cutbacks to regulatory resets, this set of moves has a clear goal: to pull the economy back to the crucial milestone of 2025 that they must hold.

Take a look at these seven actions:

1️⃣ Cancelled the 40% tariff on Brazilian agricultural products—directly suppressing inflation expectations
2️⃣ Opened up 34 oil and gas regions in Alaska—increasing production, lowering costs
3️⃣ Approved the "never promote list" for Ukrainian military officers—cutting war spending, stabilizing debt pressure
4️⃣ Abolished the previous administration's energy-saving department—focusing on increasing production, not saving
5️⃣ Established a special anti-fraud task force—rectifying public finances, rebuilding market trust
6️⃣ Replaced the ATF Deputy Director—officially launching the "anti-regulation storm"
7️⃣ Stopped minority outreach programs in the military—controlling public opinion, avoiding social division

These seven steps cover inflation, energy, public finances, regulation, and social sentiment—not a scattergun approach, but a targeted, systematic strike.

Why act now?

· The US stock market has stalled and needs a policy catalyst
· US national debt is at $38 trillion, with $1 trillion in annual interest; any further delay risks collapse
· The 2026 midterm elections are approaching, and good economic data is needed to set the stage

What might we see next?

· Larger-scale energy expansion plans
· Further loosening by regulatory agencies like the SEC and EPA
· Tax cuts 2.0 or manufacturing reshoring subsidy policies

It's not just policy that's moving now—expectations are also being repriced. Global capital is reassessing the value of US assets.

Is this round of action full of real substance, or just pretty words on paper? How will BTC and the crypto market react?

What do you think? Share your thoughts in the comments.
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BrokenRugs
· 2025-11-23 17:33
The pressure of 1 trillion in debt interest feels unbearable, action must be taken.

Policy shift and fund repricing—I believe in this logic.

Liberalizing energy + tariff adjustments may suppress short-term inflation, but what about the long term?

SEC's relaxation is a strong signal; regulatory easing is indeed positive for crypto.

Is this a real move or just for show? Let's see if Tax Cut 2.0 can truly be implemented.

This round is mainly driven by expectations of manufacturing reshoring; BTC should continue the anti-inflation narrative.

With RMB depreciation pressure, will US capital revaluation drain global liquidity?

The tariff move is actually aimed at stabilizing inflation data to score points for the election, but it feels like borrowing from the future.

The regulatory storm has begun; this time, the crypto market might really have a chance to break through.
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PumpDoctrine
· 2025-11-23 16:53
The selling points are all in the front, what else can be speculated on later? This set of combination punches is still fundamentally to support the U.S. stock market, while BTC is just waiting for the release of pressure from U.S. bonds.
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LeverageAddict
· 2025-11-23 16:45
The 38 trillion debt is the real killer, really can't hold on anymore.

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Policy blitz? I think they're just betting on whether this wave in the US stock market can be pushed up, otherwise it's game over.

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Deregulating energy + reducing oversight, this combo is basically firing a signal flare for BTC.

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Looks like a market rescue, but in reality, it's just delaying the collapse. They have to hold out until the midterm elections.

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The anti-fraud special task force is a genius move—it's obviously about brainwashing retail investors to rebuild trust.

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The manufacturing reshoring subsidies haven't even been implemented yet; they're just trying to cover up the debt crisis for now.

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US Treasury interest is 1 trillion per year. As soon as I hear that number, I know for sure they'll resort to unlimited money printing.

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The regulatory crackdown has truly started. The SEC might really be stepping back this time.

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Waiting to see if the crypto market will follow and surge. With such relaxed policies, it should be able to pump.

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A lot of what they're saying looks good on paper, but the real hard measures depend on whether follow-up subsidy policies come through.
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MysteryBoxBuster
· 2025-11-23 16:34
Wow, the interest on US debt is a trillion every year? That number sounds nerve-wracking, no wonder they're so eager to bleed money.

Is this true? The Department of Energy is useless now, so who's in charge of carbon neutrality? Or is it that nobody cares about this at all?

With this set of punches, short-term inflation can be suppressed, but the US debt issue can’t really be fixed, right? It feels like we’re still betting on expectations.

Is BTC about to da moon? With the anti-regulation trend, encryption should benefit, but it’s hard to say how long this wave can last.

Regulatory agencies are being sidelined, and it feels like that’s not necessarily a good thing in the long run. Short-term speculation is fine, but whether to enter a position still depends on one’s courage.
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