• bobburger@fedia.io
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      6 months ago

      I don’t know why Biden would cause so much inflation in Canada, England, France, Germany, and just about every other country on earth, but he did. What a dick.

      Obama is also at least 10% to blame. Vote Trump 2024 to teach the Dems a lesson.

  • oxjox@lemmy.ml
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    6 months ago

    The first problem is that one group is talking about one thing and another group is talking about another thing but they both call it the same thing.

    Then when the normal American who believes we’re in a recession is told we’re not in a recession, they look at their bank accounts and resent being told they don’t know what they’re talking about. Resentment breeds a defensive stance and isolationism.

    So many people are told they don’t know what they’re talking about these days. Meanwhile, fringe organizations (or what used to be fringe) are happy to comfort those who’ve been told they’re idiots.

    This isn’t a political aisle or philosophical issue. This is about general intelligence. This is about taking your face out of your screen and looking up and around your environment - or, seeing the forrest for the trees. You may not give a crap about anything other than your wallet but a veiled perspective is going to warp your reality.

    There’s a lot to criticize in politics / everything today. It would be nice if people were using facts to inform their criticism. It would be nice if people weren’t getting their facts from social media and what amounts to today’s version of the check out aisle tabloids.

    • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Facts: workforce participation rate never recovered from 2007, the cost of medical insurance/tuition/housing have all outpaced wage growth of all but the wealthiest people, meanwhile the earning ratio between the lowest paid and high paid workers have exploded.

      You can call me any nasty name you want but we are in a recession. When I start seeing those numbers I listed change is when I will stop saying that.

      • oxjox@lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        Thank you for perfectly illustrating my point. We are NOT in a recession. I don’t know the correct terminology to describe the facts you’ve laid out but “recession” is not it.

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Pretty sure I used the correct word. If economists need a safe space away from it I am sure their banker friends can pay someone else to build it for them, you know with my money.

          • oxjox@lemmy.ml
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            5 months ago

            You’re wrong and ignoring everything you’ve been told to rationalize your feelings and direct your resentment. You don’t get to re-define words because you’re upset.

            “Recession” is a specific word based on specific measurements. https://www.investopedia.com/terms/r/recession.asp

            The problem is that you’re angry at the wrong thing. As I said, there’s a lot to complain about and it would be nice if people knew what it was they were complaining about. Like, you’re yelling at Netflix because you don’t like that HBO is now called MAX.

            • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              No you are wrong. You and your economists friends took a word that had a well known meaning and redefined it to get the result that they wanted. Then have the audacity to demand that we all use the definition they created. They can all go and fuck themselves for all I care.

              Recession: noun, bad shit happening to poor people for a while.

              I get it in a way. They read 1984 and decided “hey this is double plus good way of getting what I want. Rather than deal with the real universe I can just redefine words and declare everyone who disagrees a heretic”. Wealthy = scarcity, peace = war, slavery = freedom, and recession = economic boom.

              It is so so much easier to just attack people compared to solving issues. I can’t wait until the day when your economists friends decide to redefine climate change as normal.

              • oxjox@lemmy.ml
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                5 months ago

                K. You’re just delusional. Again, thank you for very perfectly illustrating my point.
                You’re even doing the defensive thing I described when I’m on your side and agreeing with your frustration.

  • UnpluggedFridge@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    We are not in a recession. The problems with wage stagnation are not some temporary hiccup in the economy. It is a systemic problem. Stop conflating the two, complaining that a macroeconomic term with a very specific meaning isn’t defined the way you want it to be. Stop expecting the problem to heal itself if the fed lowers rates or taxes get nudged up or down or whatever. We know how to fix wage stagnation because we have done it before. Regulation. Labor protections. Minimum wage increases. Wage stagnation occurs in the absence of these things, and they can only be done by Congress.

    • fukhueson@lemmy.worldOP
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      5 months ago

      Agree, while we’re not there, progress is being made.

      https://www.epi.org/publication/bidens-nlrb-restoring-rights/

      Summary: The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) during the Biden administration has supported workers’ rights to form unions and engage in collective bargaining, standing in stark contrast to the Trump administration’s anti-worker record.

      Key findings

      President Biden has nominated experienced worker advocates and increased funding to the NLRB—the independent agency responsible for protecting private-sector workers’ organizing and bargaining rights. The Trump administration, however, appointed corporate lawyers to leadership positions and hollowed out the agency by not filling vacancies.

      President Biden’s appointees have advanced the NLRB’s mission by addressing issues such as employee status under the law, the scope of concerted activity protected by the law, the representation process, and remedies for violations of the law.

      The Biden NLRB has made significant progress in undoing the damage inflicted by the Trump administration’s appointees and in restoring workers’ rights, but more remains to be done.

      Structural weaknesses in the law continue to be an obstacle to workers seeking to organize unions and engage in collective bargaining.