When disaster strikes, like a fire, flood, hurricane, or an epidemic, and utilities and supply chains get disrupted, you might see much higher prices for goods that yesterday were cheap. This is called price gouging. For instance, in 2017 after hurricane Harvey struck Texas, in some locations gas prices shot …
From a brain so smooth it could be used to define the kilogram
There was a good post on r/leftwithoutedge a while back that completely refuted this concept from a socdem perspective. Although if you don't confine yourself to a reformist perspective, it isn't really a thing that needs to be refuted: it's a psychotic idea that is proof of the idiocy of capitalism
There was a good post on r/leftwithoutedge a while back that completely refuted this concept from a socdem perspective. Although if you don't confine yourself to a reformist perspective, it isn't really a thing that needs to be refuted: it's a psychotic idea that is proof of the idiocy of capitalism