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Re: Ball so Hard.
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if the guy is so clearly heading us at a brick wall why does the market not react? |
Re: Ball so Hard.
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People do not want redistribution. They want work. They want to feel like they can fend for themselves. Sure, some are handout junkies ("Hands off my Medicare!" sorts). But most don't want a handout from our table. They want a chance to have a seat at it. Are they deluded? Sure. But they have the vote. So you and I would have been better served to have placated them a bit in the past, with some protectionism. I didn't want to, so I'll take blame for it. You're ducking your own by saying you'd have happily given them some crumbs from your growing wealth. We all like a system where we who are doing alright succeed and the masses can be kept happy via redistribution. But it's impossible. Your argument is as selfish and realistic as the GOP's, "Fuck it. Globalization's inevitable. Take your medicine and shut up, little guy" position. Quote:
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WE could do a New New Deal and really help this country. But I don't see the warring factions of imbeciles in both parties and the administration getting it done. It takes way too much forward thinking and actual business acumen. Trump's people could figure it out, but they'll never sell it to the politicians. |
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Re: Ball so Hard.
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The market has climbed a wall of worry and sustained itself on buybacks, consumer cannibalizing labor cost-cutting, and financial alchemy since 2008. The market will always climb a wall of worry and sustain itself on buybacks, consumer cannibalizing labor cost-cutting, and financial alchemy. If it ever actually does start crashing, they're going to have to halt trading for a week. "Everybody knows," as Mr. Cohen sang. They "stand hand in hand," as Melville wrote, in the realization of our fragility, and once it can no longer be stifled or pretended away, that "shock of recognition will run the whole circle round." Like lightning. |
Re: Ball so Hard.
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I'm not wasting my time advising you of the stats on what percentage of our labor force will likely be automated in the next two decades, how many US households are one job loss from insolvency, how many live paycheck to paycheck, why retraining and education are feel good bullshit fixes, how wage stagnation has persisted since the 80s, why U3 unemployment is as relevant as the comics section of the paper, or why my 85/15 split is actually generous to those holding your views. But I will talk about a guaranteed wage if you'd like. |
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Meanwhile, we're going to at minimum scale back if not eliminate entirely the New Deal (and New Deal legacy) programs that helped make sure that everyone benefits. Quote:
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The current bank system is, at least for small businesses and consumers, a fucking disaster. Loan officers are now of the mindset, compliance first, profit second. Trump's going to be excellent for small to mid business lending. I've got a couple situations where clients can't give personal guarantees (for other regulatory reasons). Last year, that required one to go into the private lending market. This year, banks are asking for a few months time, at which point their compliance department expects to be able to much more liberally negotiate terms. |
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http://www.epi.org/publication/chart...ge-stagnation/ Now, you go along and cherry pick those for an argument. You have thirty minutes. Clock starts... now! |
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You say that people don't want redistribution, they want work. Well, they want things like jobs building roads and airports and train tracks, and better jobs than an education gets you, and jobs in health care and at businesses near national parks. Republicans have worked very hard to cripple the government's ability to supply these things. Quote:
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You don't need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.
Ok, I think I'm going to take my talents to the Fashion Board (as I promised my imaginary little sister some time ago). But before I do leave, I give you this:
1. Go to swingleft.org to help change control of the House in 2018. A GOP controlled Congress is enabling and protecting Trump because they are getting everything they want re social and fiscal policy. We are in the Pence Administration with a veneer of Trumpism. 2. Call - don't email - your senators to urge that they reject confirmation of (at least!) DeVos and Sessions. 3. March. Protest. Bodies on the street count. 4. Don't be a purist. So the woman who organized the big Women's March in DC has views on the Mideast that suck. So what? I didn't see any "Zionism is Racism" signs. Heck, the Catholic parish I occasionally attend sent a huge group of mostly anti abortion women to DC. Why? Because there is no litmus test in opposing fascism. Yes, there were lots of people complaining in all directions about the politics of the attendees and the concept of marching with white women, trans women, etc. Get over it. I could have said "these chicks are crazy" when I read the intersectionality arguments, but I didn't. Instead, I marched in my town. 4. Keep reminding yourself that this is Not Normal. |
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You'll get no argument about wage stagnation and income inequality, but we just elected a governemnt that intends to do all it can to make those issues worse. |
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