Really, I am so curious about this. Why did this happen?
Is it really outsourcing?
So it is the loss of manufacturing jobs?
I know some professional jobs have moved overseas. Was it really enough to make such a difference?
Has the decline of unions played a role?
I guess I think economies can really shift and change and develop--but you have to have infrastructure and you have to have education and you have to have people willing to take risks and having hope for the future and all that...and that's just what you don't have right now.
Health care costs are a drain. I don't get why there is this sudden attack on education. Isn't that how we got to the prosperous economy in the first place? The innovation and development and growth?
This is all just me in my armchair. I wish I knew the real answer. I am burning with curiosity.
Is there some book by (a) a trained economist with a PhD that's (b) accessible with proof and real data that explains all this?
One thing I find interesting: We have lost wealth but as a country, most people are basically OK. Try going to a really poor place to see not OK. But we're AT EACH OTHER'S THROATS. It's really interesting...It's the expectations that is making us crazy.
My gut feeling is this is produced by inequality and insecurity. That's where a social safety net would be useful, as people would be less terrified and then less angry. Things seem like they are getting very crazy all in the quest to conceal the actual situation from people. But they feel it--they feel the situation--instead of facing it and thinking about it in a reasonable way, there is much lashing out. This seems very dangerous to me.
It's so much worse to have reduced options here in the US because then you become really a nonentity. See how many people on this board are OK without means when they simplify their lives? But they are willing to give up on some illusions. Some people have nothing but illusions to fall back on.
I worry more about the political climate than the economic one, because we can survive the economic problem if we work together--but our politics is preventing that.
Is it really outsourcing?
So it is the loss of manufacturing jobs?
I know some professional jobs have moved overseas. Was it really enough to make such a difference?
Has the decline of unions played a role?
I guess I think economies can really shift and change and develop--but you have to have infrastructure and you have to have education and you have to have people willing to take risks and having hope for the future and all that...and that's just what you don't have right now.
Health care costs are a drain. I don't get why there is this sudden attack on education. Isn't that how we got to the prosperous economy in the first place? The innovation and development and growth?
This is all just me in my armchair. I wish I knew the real answer. I am burning with curiosity.
Is there some book by (a) a trained economist with a PhD that's (b) accessible with proof and real data that explains all this?
One thing I find interesting: We have lost wealth but as a country, most people are basically OK. Try going to a really poor place to see not OK. But we're AT EACH OTHER'S THROATS. It's really interesting...It's the expectations that is making us crazy.
My gut feeling is this is produced by inequality and insecurity. That's where a social safety net would be useful, as people would be less terrified and then less angry. Things seem like they are getting very crazy all in the quest to conceal the actual situation from people. But they feel it--they feel the situation--instead of facing it and thinking about it in a reasonable way, there is much lashing out. This seems very dangerous to me.
It's so much worse to have reduced options here in the US because then you become really a nonentity. See how many people on this board are OK without means when they simplify their lives? But they are willing to give up on some illusions. Some people have nothing but illusions to fall back on.
I worry more about the political climate than the economic one, because we can survive the economic problem if we work together--but our politics is preventing that.
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