I think this:
• The federal budget deficit is currently the only thing preventing a slide into a calamitous deflationary spiral and depression.
• Greatly increasing the deficit short-medium term is necessary to have any hope of restoring consistent growth above 3% or unemployment under 8% any time soon.
Some disagree with those two statements, of course. Republican psychos all disagree. A lot of self-styled "serious" Democrats also disagree, ranging from Blue Dogs to chronic middle-of-the-road trimmers like the President to even a surprising numbers of liberals who have to face the voters any time soon.
Those folks are wrecking America and it appears they will be given carte blanche to wreck it a lot more.
The anti-deficit thing is a mass hysteria. Nobody cites any evidence of the relative harm the deficit is doing or will do
in the context of the real economic world as it exists today. (Nor could they... there isn't any.) The attitude is boot-strapped from greed/ideology into a rolling "argument from authority."
If Greenspan says it then maybe I should say it... if Obama supports it it can't be off the rails crazy...
Next thing you know Robert Rubin is on TV talking about how more stimulus is bad because it might create uncertainty! Well, insofar as it might change the reliable 1% GDP 10% unemployment path we are probably locked into, yeah. It might create uncertainty.
Is it possible that a majority of solid mainstream people can set aside all facts and logic to embrace a mass hysteria that promises only ruin for America? How likely is it that I am right about the economy while Rubin and Summers and Greenspan and all business leaders and a plurality of Democratic leaders are insanely, delusionaly, disastrously wrong?
Well, when we consider that the view ultimately benefits the top 1% of parasitic rich it isn't quite as random as it seems. There are some who actually gain from 0% inflation and high unemployment. They are like Dick Cheney in 2002 vis-a-vis Iraq. There were some who wanted to invade Iraq independent of the WMD fantasy.
The perversely disaster-interested provide the seed of respectability. They pressure their friends to join in. Academics and experts are bribed with grants and TV time. People who wouldn't believe Cheney if he said water was wet find themselves taking a serious look because now respected experts are involved. Next thing you know the madness has become a "serious" viewpoint. Then everyone rushes to embrace it because whether it is true or false it has the ring of the sort of thing the electorate is easily conned into believing. And so on.
I might be more chastened to consider that maybe 2+2=5 because so many smart people say so if it were not for the fact that seven years ago I saw the clear majority of foreign affairs and military and intelligence experts and all Republicans and half of Democrats line up behind the proposition that we had to invade Iraq.
Same... fucking... deal.
Indefensible gibberish and obvious falsehoods boot-strapped into the conventional wisdom with no evidence beyond the fact that everyone was in a race to not be the last person to join in the mass hysteria. To remain mainstream.
Yes, I know more about the economy that Greenspan and Rubin. I shouldn't. That is a preposterous development. I'm not even an economist.
But I wasn't an expert on weapons proliferation when I dismissed Colin Powell's UN presentation about Iraqi WMD. I was just a guy with a working brain and no reputational skin in the game. Having no public need to be considered "serious" I could just watch the presentation with a somewhat innocent eye. (And viewed with that perspective one noticed things, like that the two photos Powell presented showing the Iraqis taking stuff out the back door of a facility while the UN inspectors came to the front door were plainly dated
months apart. It was printed right on the freaking pictures!)
Boot-strapped. "If Colin Powell believes it... if John Kerry believes it... if the Clintons believe it..."
No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No. No.
Any concern for the terrible downside of the deficit is, at this point in time, no smarter or even notably less destructive than concern about Iraqi WMD was in 2002-2003.
And worst of all... We have seen the same pattern of the people who said there were no WMD being dismissed as crazy
even after they were proved right! The Krugman / Roubini / Stiglitz type economists have been proved right at every turn but are still dismissed.
What they said in 2008 was outside the mainstream, hence they were crazy. They turned out to be right. But craziness is a socially defined phenomenon... it is about level of conformity. So even though they were obviously RIGHT they still showed a willingness to be "crazy" at the time and are thus perma-dismissible.
Meanwhile, the tea-baggers are the group most opposite to Krugman / Roubini / Stiglitz type economists. They are not notable economic thinkers (or spellers). They are risible Klansman in less impressive outfits. But they are held by the media to represent a serious view!