I don't disagree with your points, but they are all symptomatic of a systemic failure. As I stated before, the monetary system's fundamental structure is based on greed, corruption, power and control. Its engine is the creation of excess wealth for the few, and very little for everyone else. The system simply collapsed under its own weight. It was inevitable.
Quote:
“The fundamental problem, as Franklin Delano Roosevelt said in 1933, is fear,” Shiller, a Yale University professor, said yesterday on Bloomberg Radio’s “Surveillance.” The Great Depression was deepened by a “sense of lost confidence or animal spirits that was a self-fulfilling prophecy. The worry is that we will have the same kind of issue arising again,” he said.
Yes, I agree, but once again, the above quote speaks to the symptom and not the cause of the collapse. If people lack confidence, it's because of a lack of trust in those greedy corrupt self-serving individuals who caused the collapse in the first place.
Quote:
It's psychology, stupid. Not since World War II has an economic recovery been so hobbled by poor confidence. Every recession leaves a legacy of anxiety and uncertainty. But the present residue is exceptional because the recession was savage and -- more important -- its origins (housing bubble, financial crisis) were unfamiliar. People are super-sensitive to the latest news, for good or ill, because their vision of the future is blurred and their bias is gloomy. Having underrated economic risk during the boom, Americans may be overrating it now. Unfortunately, perceptions can become self-fulfilling.
What you should be asking yourself is, why are the people you've quoted focusing on what's making things worse or why they are slow to recover, and not what caused the collapse.
Perhaps, it doesn't serve their interests to change the system into something that shares the wealth more evenly and protects those they claim to represent.
