switchskier wrote:jared_7 wrote:Digby wrote:Well, they voted for him I suppose and that's democracy for you. Still if there were a political trophy the equivalent of the Raeburn Shield for the best example of fucktard voting then the UK certainly held it for a short while over Brexit, the US has now comfortably taken the title, and they may hold it for some while unless perhaps France elects Le Pen.
It would seem(too) many people no longer want facts or policies, and simply want someone to bang the nationalistic drum, whether in building walls or imposing massive trade barriers. And really anyone in favour of building the wall should only look at countries like Australia or even the UK which have massive walls of water that don't really seem to stop people from arriving, and frankly the wall is a better idea than a 35% tariff.
The problem is its the same facts or policies that has seen inequality skyrocket, real wages stagnate or fall for 60% of the population over the last 20 years, and house prices double or triple. People are worse off. Thats the problem. But the political establishment and urban elite refuses to accept that is the case, they are completely out of touch.
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Hang on a second, arguably there has never been a better age in which to be an American. U.S. workforce productivity rose by 3.1% in the last quarter alone. Violence and crime have been on a steadily descending trend since the mid 90's. Technology continues to develop and you can argue that schools and arts have never actually been better. You can argue that people are worse off but occasionally pausing and actually looking at the situation can help.
Since when did productivity benefit the average worker?
Like I said, Robert Reich, ex Secretary of Labour under Bill Clinton, who I follow closely posted an article a while ago, sorry I can't find it, that showed real wages since 2000 have dropped for the bottom 50%, stagnated for 50-80, and only increased for the top 20%. Housing costs have risen dramatically, and in the US education, or a good one, has also increased by 200-300%. If you want to go to a decent school you are looking at tens of thousands per semester. The current generation will be the first in human history to have less than their parents.
Regardless of all this, whether you want people to accept how things are because they are better than someone was 50 years ago, people feel pinched. People are told the universal "we" is better off - productivity, GDP etc... are rolled out - but they don't feel it has better off personally.
It comes down to what you value in life. We are better off in terms of consumer goods being cheaper and travel is affordable to the masses, but the big things in life, the basic human needs - a roof over your head, an education, savings for retirement - are more expensive than ever. Disposable incomes have actually reduced over time as more and more is eaten up by rent, before someone else comes in with a "the younger generations spend too much" line.