Trump: I hope [the economy] crashes in the next 12 months

Discussion in 'The Red Room' started by Ancalagon, Jan 9, 2024.

  1. Ancalagon

    Ancalagon Scalawag Administrator Formerly Important

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    “We have an economy that’s so fragile, and the only reason it’s running now is it’s running off the fumes of what we did,” Trump said. “It’s just running off the fumes.”

    Trump added: “And when there’s a crash — I hope it’s going to be during this next 12 months because I don’t want to be Herbert Hoover. The one president I just don’t want to be, Herbert Hoover.”

    https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4396467-trump-says-he-hopes-economy-crashes-in-next-12-months-i-dont-want-to-be-herbert-hoover/

    American First!!!1!

    :enty: :banana: :enty: :banana: :enty:
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  2. Bickendan

    Bickendan Custom Title Administrator Faceless Mook Writer

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    So he saying Hoover sucked? :chris:
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  3. Thoughts and Prayers

    Thoughts and Prayers Fresh Meat

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    I don't get it. These kind of jokes can't exist in a vacuum.
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  4. Bickendan

    Bickendan Custom Title Administrator Faceless Mook Writer

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    That blows.
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  5. Peach Wookiee

    Peach Wookiee Fresh Meat

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    He already was Hoover!
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  6. Tuckerfan

    Tuckerfan BMF

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    But did he swallow?
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  7. MikeH92467

    MikeH92467 RadioNinja

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    He’s been swallowing his own bullshit for quite a while :brood:
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  8. NAHTMMM

    NAHTMMM Perpetually sondering

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    More of a Nero, really, since Trump lit/fanned the fire himself and then did nothing about it.
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  9. Peach Wookiee

    Peach Wookiee Fresh Meat

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    He ignored COVID until the stock market tanked. I also haven’t forgotten that he, unlike Hoover, seems to think that because a state didn’t give him electoral votes, no one voted for him there. So he threatened to withhold aid to fire victims in my state, and those fires were in areas where he had strong support.
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  10. NAHTMMM

    NAHTMMM Perpetually sondering

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    I'm thinking more in terms of one big fire, and Trump's comments on Mexican immigrants as an example of fanning the flames.
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  11. Jenee

    Jenee Driver 8

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    How his supporters overlook that is beyond my comprehension.
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  12. We Are Borg

    We Are Borg Republican Democrat

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    We really need a *groan* smiley.
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  13. MikeH92467

    MikeH92467 RadioNinja

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    They don’t overlook it: they revel in it :brood:
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  14. RickDeckard

    RickDeckard Socialist

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    Well, he's wrong about the fumes. But the existing economy absolutely is unstable, it is just a matter of time before there is such a crash and the regulatory decisions of the Trump administration as much as anything else will be responsible.
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  15. AlphaMan

    AlphaMan The Last Dragon

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    Honestly, is anyone shocked by this narcissistic orange asshat? He hopes that you lose your job so he can blame Biden and win an election. Yes, YOU.
    I’m not sure he has any supporters left here on WF, but I’m curious as to what @Steal Your Face thinks about this.
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  16. Ancalagon

    Ancalagon Scalawag Administrator Formerly Important

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    What’s unstable about it?

    Keep in mind that prior to the Trump-COVID Recession the US had experienced its longest expansionary period IN HISTORY.
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  17. RickDeckard

    RickDeckard Socialist

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    How long have you got? This is a problem that goes back 40 years. Look at the frequency of financial crises before the neoliberal era started and afterwards. It's just a regular thing to be expected in this system and there are certainly more to come, big and small.

    None of the problems that caused the 2008 crash have been properly sorted. The limited (and insufficient) Dodd-Frank legislation that was put in place to mitigate against the risks of casino banking was partially repealed by the Trump Administration.

    Then there's the fact that since 2008 investment in the real economy has been stalling. Central bank money has been keeping things going and has had the corollary of providing cash for share buy-backs to inflate asset prices instead. So there are potential for bubbles to form (and therefore to burst) in any number of sectors. Big tech was exposed recently as soon as inflation pushed interest rates up, seeing as none of those companies ever actually make any money. External shocks could tip things over at any time.

    Trump is being a dick but this is a major structural issue, not a partisan one.
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  18. Ancalagon

    Ancalagon Scalawag Administrator Formerly Important

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    Again, you seem to be behind the times.

    As I just pointed out we just witnessed the largest expansionary period in our history. The business cycles are lengthening not shortening.

    As to investment in the real economy stalling what the fuck are you smoking?

    We are in the largest manufacturing construction boom in the last half a century!


    IMG_0750.jpeg


    I think you need to update your talking points.
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  19. Ten Lubak

    Ten Lubak Salty Dog

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    Oh so he's just like @Steal Your Face
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  20. matthunter

    matthunter Ice Bear

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    Only without the latter's wit, charm and intellect.
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  21. shootER

    shootER Insubordinate...and churlish Administrator

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  22. RickDeckard

    RickDeckard Socialist

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    These things are completely irrelevant to what I pointed out. The stability of the financial system is not a function of economic growth.

    However, they are also incorrect. The pre-COVID period was not the largest expansionary period in your history. Apart from the fact that growth levels were actually quite low, it lasted for around 10 years. There were booms that were both longer and larger in the 1960s (ending with the oil crisis) and the 1990s-2000s (ending with the financial crisis.)

    I'll give you that Bidenomics has changed the picture somewhat in some sectors. But the manufacturing construction boom is driven to a certain degree by government spending and subsidy, and the issues remain in the rest of the economy.
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  23. Ancalagon

    Ancalagon Scalawag Administrator Formerly Important

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    I’m sorry but you are just wrong. It is a simple fact that at 127 months the July 2009 to January 2020 Obama expansion was 7 months longer than the March 1991 to March 2001 expansion which was until then the largest expansionary period in US history.

    It’s just a fact. :shrug:
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  24. Thoughts and Prayers

    Thoughts and Prayers Fresh Meat

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    I deserve that.
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  25. RickDeckard

    RickDeckard Socialist

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    There was not a technical recession in 2001. Look it up. But it's academic since it's irrelevant to the point I made.
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  26. Ancalagon

    Ancalagon Scalawag Administrator Formerly Important

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    Feel free to argue with the Fed Billy.

    IMG_0753.png
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  27. Raoul the Red Shirt

    Raoul the Red Shirt Professional bullseye

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  28. RickDeckard

    RickDeckard Socialist

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    Yeah, they categorise it as a recession. I'm not sure why, since it didn't meet the technical definition - two successive quarters of negative growth. See below. Like I've said, it's academic anyway. That growth happens does not obviate the existence of casino banking and the instabilities that brings.

    [​IMG]
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  29. Ancalagon

    Ancalagon Scalawag Administrator Formerly Important

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    @Bailey you got this one?

    Anyway the fact that the two longest growth cycles in US history have occurred in the last three cycles tends to point to increasing stability not decreasing.

    Fun fact. Before the Federal Reserve Era the US had not experienced five years without a recession.
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  30. RickDeckard

    RickDeckard Socialist

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    That's not how risk works unfortunately.

    There were effectively zero banking crises from the end of World War II until the 1970s. (And despite some recessions, the average rate of growth was higher.)

    Since casino banking was let loose as part of the neoliberal reordering of things, there have been crises in the US financial sector of various sizes in:
    1989: Savings & Loans
    1990: Rhode Island Banking Crisis
    1994: Bond Market Crisis
    2000: Dot com bubble
    2008: Subprime lending.
    2023: Tech banking

    And that's not getting into the many similar events in other economies.

    Not all of these led to a general economic crash but they all threatened to, and would have in many cases were it not for intervention. The risk is an ever-present feature of how the economy is structured, which is why Trump is talking about it, albeit in his usual stupid way.
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