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A Radical Plan To Save America’s Economy In One Year

Posted by freedomforall 6 months, 1 week ago to Economics
157 comments | Share | Flag

Excerpt:
"The policy measures I suggest are a kind of fiscal time machine – A way to turn back the clock on collapse. Some might consider them “radical” but they are only policies that America USED TO value and that we have been pressured to forget. Can the modern American brain with its steady exposure to big government and socialist programs handle such a shift? It’s hard to say.

I think if people are desperate enough they’ll accept any solution that they feel works. And for now the elites that created the crisis are the only group offering a way out (a false way out). If I could snap my fingers (or if I was king for year), this is the list of actions I would undertake to save the American economy before the end of 2025 (or at least set it on the the path to resurrection)."


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  • Posted by term2 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    The problem was the regulations and price fixing the government did. It promoted inefficient operation, and when the high prices weren’t mandated anymore. Of course companies were hurt.
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  • Posted by 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    They are recently left-biased. When the banking cartel gained power in 1913 they had no such bias.
    They just wanted power and wealth and controlling government was the way to get it.
    That was especially true when the country was being founded and the Constitution excluded a Bill of Rights.
    The federalists favored strong central government and a national bank; some wanted a monarchy.
    Fortunately Jefferson and anti-federalists opposed them or the country would have been bankrupted in the
    18th century instead of the 20th.
    Wall St. and the banking cartel have been thieves for centuries before they leaned left.
    That's where control was easier to obtain recently so that's where they corrupted.
    They aren't bound to any ideology.
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  • Posted by 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    Why did many of the male children of the gentry in England seek their fortunes in the military?
    Did they have to prove themselves to get respect or they'd never be able to feel self respect?
    Read any Kipling?
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  • Posted by 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    From wiki:
    "British joint-stock company founded in January 1711, created as a
    public-private partnership to consolidate and reduce the cost of the national debt. "
    Just another government approved con.
    Sort of like Wall St. and the banking cartel. Special laws for "special people."
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  • Posted by 6 months ago in reply to this comment.
    I agree. The experts being appointed today might not have made the cut at all 30-40 years ago when there was at least some weighting on experience and merit.
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  • Posted by 6 months, 1 week ago in reply to this comment.
    Unfortunately, yes, there are often irrational discussions.
    Sometimes that is the case with discussions of monetary policy by "experts"
    in monetary policy, likely due to the 'human nature' of the "experts." ;^)
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