It's very obvious that is circling the drain now, but clearly this didn't just happen in a vacuum. It must've started crumbling at some point... but when?
Some people might say it started after 9/11, others might say it goes back to the Raegan administration. A few might even say it started after losing the Vietnam War, or when they went off the gold standard. Or maybe even earlier...
What do you think?
Manufacturing has been in decline for a long time. NAFTA was one of the last nails in that coffin. But the tech boom of the 90s+ injected a few decades of growth and international status. I'll put my "point of no return" collapse date at Y2K
I feel like the subprime mortgage crisis broke something deeper. I can’t put my finger on it, but it seems like this is the point when political power completely capitulated to finance capitalism.
In 2020 they literally increased the money supply by like 20% by printing trillions of dollars and just handed it out to corporations to do stock buybacks. It certainly was completely captured by that point
There was also the bailout of Silicon Valley Bank last year. It was a blink-and-you'll-miss-it headline, but man. Like Lehman Brothers, but the Federal
Bankahem Reserve stepped in before the bankruptcy actually hit the stock markets.Yeah the response to the 2020 crisis was unsurprising. That war had already been fought and lost (or won, if you’re a finance ghoul)
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