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What do you expect him to say, or any prez? The surest way for a prez to guarantee a recession is to deliver some econ version of "We're all gonna die!" Or put on a cardigan sweater and talk about a "national malaise."
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Bottom line, anyone who takes their economic and finance cues from politicians of any stripe deserves whatever they get - good and hard.
What do you expect him to say, or any prez? The surest way for a prez to guarantee a recession is to deliver some econ version of "We're all gonna die!" Or put on a cardigan sweater and talk about a "national malaise."
![]()
Reading this I'm reminded of the scene from the Lord of the Rings: Return of the King when Denathor (sp?) screams out "Abandon your posts! Flee! Flee for your lives!" I couldn't help but laugh, then and now.
Or "Holy Grail" when the killer rabbit appears: "Run away! Run away!"![]()
I can definitely see Bush finishing up his announcement, walking behind the stage, looking at his top aide and muttering "We're so fucked."![]()
Kind of like Clinton in 2000?
PS to my previous:
Oh and BTW - anyone who still believes that deficit spending on political public works boondoggles, tax "rebates," and all the other components of a so-called "stimulus" package will have any positive effect on the economy - or even that any pols even think it will rather than just having positive effects on their individual reelect chances thanks to the ignorance of the boobeoisie - probably also still believes that ethanol has something to do with "saving the planet" and acheiving "energy independence." Or that 20-somethings will get a positive return on the social security money that's being raked off from their paychecks.![]()
Seriously, on the economy we're not necessarily so fucked, but if Congress keeps behaving the way they've been, and pardon my partisan slam but if one of the Dem candidates is elected and actually does on taxes what they say they're going to do, then we reallly will be fucked, and I mean that in all sincerity and not just as a partisan dig.I can definitely see Bush finishing up his announcement, walking behind the stage, looking at his top aide and muttering "We're so fucked."![]()
What do you expect him to say, or any prez? The surest way for a prez to guarantee a recession is to deliver some econ version of "We're all gonna die!" Or put on a cardigan sweater and talk about a "national malaise."
![]()
Bottom line, anyone who takes their economic and finance cues from politicians of any stripe deserves whatever they get - good and hard.
Frankly, it looks like we're heading for a replay of the 1970s stagflation, and that really is so fucked. God I remember that, and it was depressing. The cure was really painful, too - the recession of 1981-82, when Paul Volcker turned off the money spigot. The most surprising thing in the world was when it all turned around, because of Volcker's bitter medicine, and some major tax changes (which I won't specify because I've already invited enough partisan teeth-gnashing with this post, but will mention that the tax measure I'm referring to was passed with a lot of Dem votes).
Seriously, on the economy we're not necessarily so fucked, but if Congress keeps behaving the way they've been, and pardon my partisan slam but if one of the Dem candidates is elected and actually does on taxes what they say they're going to do, then we reallly will be fucked, and I mean that in all sincerity and not just as a partisan dig.
Frankly, it looks like we're heading for a replay of the 1970s stagflation, and that really is so fucked. God I remember that, and it was depressing. The cure was really painful, too - the recession of 1981-82, when Paul Volcker turned off the money spigot. The most surprising thing in the world was when it all turned around, because of Volcker's bitter medicine, and some major tax changes (which I won't specify because I've already invited enough partisan teeth-gnashing with this post, but will mention that the tax measure I'm referring to was passed with a lot of Dem votes).
Iraq is expensive, but it's just a drop in the ocean of the total US economy. Total military spending as a percentage of GDP is well within the range of the last couple decades. There may be lots of arguments against Iraq, and the expense is one, but it's a red herring to claim that it plays any decisive role in whether the US enjoys economic growth or recession, inflation or price stability.Naw, it's not Congress. It's the administration. Until they get their heads screwed on right and realize that they are flushing the U.S. economy down the Iraq drain, we will continue to hemorage. Imagine what we could have done repairing the infrastructure with all of those stupidly frittered-away resources.
Iraq is expensive, but it's just a drop in the ocean of the total US economy.
Iraq is expensive, but it's just a drop in the ocean of the total US economy. Total military spending as a percentage of GDP is well within the range of the last couple decades. There may be lots of arguments against Iraq, and the expense is one, but it's a red herring to claim that it plays any decisive role in whether the US enjoys economic growth or recession, inflation or price stability.
But you are wrong, I think, to imagine that throwing away a trillion bucks has no effect. I think it was Eisenhower who said that every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies in the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. The glory of empire is read out in a script of starving bodies.