I don't think you got my meaning - I'm sarcastically saying that we must be in a civilized world because there hasn't been (and, I'd bet, probably won't be) a rash of vigilante action against the business executives and past/present government officials responsible for this mess. I don't think that mindless yet murderous bureaucracy is a defining aspect of what we often refer to as "civilization", but people not murdering each other usually is considered as such.Ryan Thunder wrote:No. The proof is that I'm probably going to get fucked over by numbers on a page that I have no control over. And nobody's going to say "fuck that" and fix them so they work.Uraniun235 wrote:the real proof that we are (or aren't) in a civilized world is that no one is circulating lists of addresses of the very people who basically gambled away the world economyRyan Thunder wrote:Oh, and it pisses me off to no end that I can get fucked over by something entirely virtual. Good grief. What is the world coming to, when organizations representing the will of hundreds of millions of people are hamstrung by a few blots of ink on a sheet of paper somewhere...
The big one is whether or not the executive branch of the government understands what is happening. Based on their actions to date you might be initially inclined to say no, but before we assume that I would want to know what their actions would indicate if they actually knew perfectly well what was going on.jmac wrote:So there we have it from the big man. Any questions?
If they don't understand and are proceeding from the assumption of "we just have to ride this out for another year or something", is it a lack of good advice or is it a refusal to listen to their trusted advisers in favor of their political prejudices? (Also, key word there - who do they trust?)
Is there possibly some bit of data (whether true or false isn't terribly relevant, what matters is whether they believe it) that's factoring into their decision making? For example - could they believe that, faced with the hardship of a short and sharp depression, American society would revolt? Or could they believe that there would be no bottom to such a crash, that any such nosedive could only end in total collapse?
The other bit of curiosity is probably the most unknowable - where would we likely be if we had never gone down the path of debt-fueled false economic expansion? Would the economy have developed in different ways and we would be seeing prosperity by now? Is it possible that we were doomed to basically arrive at where we're headed one way or the other, whether by slow stagnation or by a big boom followed by a bigger bust? If so, why, given the enormously cheap energy market of the 90s?
Finally, if it comes down to it and things really bomb out, is it at all possible to shift to a largely command economy where the most vitally needed workers are conscripted into federal service? Or is a society as large and complex as ours unworkable without some sort of market system?