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Full disclosure, I haven't watched the whole video since it's really long. But one of the opening lines got me curious:
It's not uncertain. It's not chaotic. The Trump economic program is actually very well thought out. Think of it as two or three gears in a machine. They're well-meshed, well-oiled, they're functioning, they complement each other.
I don't know who James Rickards is, and I'm highly skeptical of that statement. But I don't think I've seen an hour-long defense of Trumponomics in a collegel-level setting before. So I'm interested in listening to this when I have more time. Maybe some of the ~econ regulars would like to share their thoughts too, though I understand that an hour long video is a big investment.
I’m quite curious about it. I recognize James Rickards’ name but I’m blanking on who he is.
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Goldbug doomer is usually the answer to “Where do I know that name from?”
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69 sats \ 0 replies \ @grayruby 2h
I quite liked his first couple books but then they all seemed to be the same recycled doomerism in a new package.
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Yeh, I may give it a full viewing later when I have some free time or a long drive.
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67 sats \ 3 replies \ @grayruby 2h
He wrote a bunch of books. He is a gold bug doomer, bitcoin skeptic, but his books are pretty good.
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That makes me even more curious why he has positive things to say about Trump's economic plan. Unless he's part of Trump's economic team?
Goldbug doomerism doesn't compute for me with things like 50-year GSE backed mortgages, $2,000 baby bonuses, pressuring Fed to lower rates, and all the other shenanigans that Trump is doing.
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @grayruby 2h
I haven't followed his stuff in years. I read his first three books but grew tired of the same old repackaged doomerism. Calling for a financial and stock market collapse every year and going back on the gold standard.
He is a very smart guy. He just have a pessimistic outlook.
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His typecasting was before the regime change, to influence change you need to articulate what's wrong with the status quo.
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I'm highly skeptical of that statement.
The institutions that shape world's largest economy have effectively unlimited resources to put people in think tanks, gather intelligence via the IC, run psyops, and coerce industry.
Everything happening is part of decades of planning. The enemy gets a vote of course, and optics are important, so there's obviously friction. That's exactly what "war gaming" is for.
It's insanely naive to assume things at this level aren't planned with unfathomable precision, letting people think they're incompetent and just winging it is the most successful psyop ever pulled.
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I suppose you're not a fan of Hanlon's Razor
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Actually, that's very consistent with what has played out.
Stupid, high time preference people, within a poor incentive structure imperiled national security over decades, in many cases under foreign influence. Traitors everywhere, America for sale.
Occam's razor on the simplest explanation:
The government is not a monolith, the national security state's immune system kicked-in to fight the disease.
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @anon 32m
You know, you could be wrong.
And the Trump people could be just a bunch of morons who also happen to be corrupt which is far more likely.
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Morons don't get a seat at the table unless they're put there by the not-morons who control them
Can debate the where/whom on provenance of decision making/planning, but it's an entity a lot smarter than you.
Any bias to the contrary is just cope.
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The first rule in debt management is to stop spending like drunken sailors. Talk about economics means nothing if we keep spending like a firehouse out the back door.
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Well, that's why I'm curious to hear what he has to say. Because, yeah, it looks like we're just spending like drunken sailors with no plan right now.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @anon 28m
Borrowing 2 trillion a year, about 6 billion a day, or about 70 thousand per second.
Tick tock next block
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