Looking at it from a different perspective, a recession may not necessarily be a bad thing.



Just look at American history — after interest rates break 5%, a recession is almost inevitable. The pain is real, but this is the fastest way to cool down inflation. Otherwise? Inflation and the economy are like a tug of war, neither willing to give in.

It's like having a tumor. Conservative treatment sounds gentle, but in reality, dragging it out is the most dangerous. Cutting it with surgery may be painful, but only by removing it completely can the root cause be truly addressed. Sometimes, the market doesn’t need a placebo, but a thorough cleansing.
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CoffeeOnChainvip
· 12-12 12:27
The pain points are heartbreaking, but we really have to go through this hardship. Procrastination treatment methods will only get worse and worse.
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StrawberryIcevip
· 12-11 08:54
Painful short-term clearing is much better than an indefinite inflation hell, there's no fault in this logic. --- Wait, if you say it like that, what about ordinary people's wallets? Cut losses? --- The tumor analogy is brilliant; the market indeed needs someone to take a hit. --- So now the question is whether to hold or to run, that's the real issue. --- That's what they say, but if a recession really hits, who will save the unemployed? --- Eliminating bad money sounds great, but it really hurts when doing it. --- Inflation can't be dragged out, I agree with that, but how to hedge the risks? --- Another story of "short-term pain for long-term prosperity," I've heard it too many times. --- Compared to the procrastination-like market rescue, I trust this approach more.
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defi_detectivevip
· 12-11 08:52
A recession is like taking a loss, but if you don't cut, the decline will just continue, and that is truly a dead end. History has made this very clear.
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AirdropHuntressvip
· 12-11 08:46
Data shows that a recession is indeed the cure for inflation, but the problem is—who bears the cost of cutting? Looking back at history, the burden always falls on the lower classes.
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AltcoinHuntervip
· 12-11 08:37
This wave of rhetoric sounds quite smooth, but I think the problem is — most people can't bear that "pain." Over the past two years, I've seen many brothers go all-in on coins at the bottom, but when the downturn came, they were immediately back to the Stone Age. It's correct to talk about clearing out, but in reality, only a few can survive and scoop up bargains in the cold winter; the rest become sacrifices.
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RektButAlivevip
· 12-11 08:36
The pain point hits the mark; indeed, it's stronger than chronic depletion.
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