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1) It's possible that they don't know--not because the evidence or information is unavailable to them, but because they are "Double Highs"-- authoritarian personalities who also very much want social dominance. To question such a fundamental part of their reality structure is alien to the authoritarian mindset, and in fact seemingly unrelated to (or even damaging to) their central task-- to gain control.
2) They know- but the conclusions and policy options that emerge from that knowledge are so heretical, so fundamentally scary that they continue to opt for the band-aid box. These candidates have given their lives to playing a game. Play long enough, and you come to believe. Now, that game is rapidly emerging as just another fantasy- a narrative- that has an inexorable life of it's own, and a lousy ending.
Will they opt for real change? Can it be done? FDR swam upstream like a champ. Maybe Obama can too.
But--- What was it that Krugman said? "Hope is not a plan".
The Geeze says: "Hope, like life, is better than the alternative." Capitalism searches out the darkest corners of human potential, and mainlines them.
Boy, Frank-- I disagree.
Economics as a "discipline" is (and should be) a servant of politics--yes--since economists in general make lousy policy- too narrow a point of view, too lost in pandering. But from the perspective of the voter (who, after all, is the central figure here), economics and it's real-life consequences are fundamental, and merge with--are the life blood of-- politics. Most Americans have no dough in shares, view Wall Street as fundamentally "broken" anyhow, and would happily attend a CEO roast, if the main dish was one of those guys who make 2,000 times what a line worker makes, and just ran the cfompany intocv the ground---or moved it to Singapore.
It's only the Media who dare not speak ill of Wall Street. Capitalism searches out the darkest corners of human potential, and mainlines them.
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