The last straw for the Irish was summary executions of the insurrectionists and the ravages of the Black and Tans -- like ICE but with arsonists and criminals, but without masks. The US will be fortunate if the parallels remain only financial.
For me it's much simpler to articulate:
Human relationships are build on trust and mutual respect. Once that is gone, the relationship goes out the window as well and it's not coming back.
Counter intuitively, relationships between countries seem to function mostly the same way, instead of being based strictly on interest and practicality as one might expect.
Once trust is strained until it breaks, it's not going to be the same from then on.
Much more impressive he wrote this 50 years ago, but he might as well have been alive today. History certainly rhymes.
For a long time that was because people were justifiably convinced that the US would honor those debts, which it could do because it kept producing even more stuff every year, and would never even think about threatening to default. Here in 2026 I cannot imagine why they are continuing to, except inertia.
Because there is no where else for that debt to go. No one else wants to take on so much debt.
Meanwhile there are a bunch of asset managers who are paying the mortgage on their beach home in the Caribbean with the bonuses they earn by investing in US debt. If the US defaults on that debt 10 tears from now that means they still earned 9 years of million dollar salaries, and anyways they won’t be blamed for something the entire industry suffered from at that point.
If they do the prudent thing and ask for a higher price they will end up investing fewer dollars which reduces their 2% commission on invested capital, money that might go to their international equity golfing buddy instead.
Entities where the money is managed by the investor itself (for example, foreign national governments) do indeed appear to be cutting back.
People will stop using your currency as a reserve currency if you abuse it too much.
- Gold and De-Dollarisation: Is the US Dollar Losing Its Safe-Haven Status? - https://www.royalmint.com/invest/discover/market-news/gold-a...
- Is the gold boom a sign of de-dollarisation? - https://unherd.com/newsroom/is-the-gold-boom-a-sign-of-de-do...
but interesting to see this flagged...
Thus can be concluded, the moment a empire acts only in self interest, abandoning all its services to the global public, the debt it holds becomes real.