CountryBoy
Market Veteran
- Reaction score
- 48
Good article and puts some things in perspective and gives you some hope that things aren't as bad as being spun by the media and others.
"If you think this recession is the worst since World War II, chances are you weren't born or working during the downturns of the 1970s and '80s, you're listening to President Obama too much or you're a white-collar worker in financial services.
If all three are true, you may even think we’re on the verge of another Great Depression.
At this point, the only thing that may be true is your age and employment status.
The current situation has nothing in common with the Great Depression,” says economist Steve Hanke of the Cato Institute and Johns Hopkins University. “The sooner they [in Washington] stop spinning the bad news story and say nothing, the sooner we’ll be more confident.”
Hanke is not alone in dismissing what appears to be a potent cocktail of misinformation and doom and gloom, wherein the current recession—now in its 13th month—is already considered worse than the 16-month ones of 1973-1975 and 1980-1982."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/29163654
It's the old "if you say it enough, it must be true".
I've always thought that all the harping on bad news and calling it the worst crisis since the depression was overkill and did nothing to help matters. We got over the other recessions and we can get over this one also, only if....
CB
"If you think this recession is the worst since World War II, chances are you weren't born or working during the downturns of the 1970s and '80s, you're listening to President Obama too much or you're a white-collar worker in financial services.
If all three are true, you may even think we’re on the verge of another Great Depression.
At this point, the only thing that may be true is your age and employment status.
The current situation has nothing in common with the Great Depression,” says economist Steve Hanke of the Cato Institute and Johns Hopkins University. “The sooner they [in Washington] stop spinning the bad news story and say nothing, the sooner we’ll be more confident.”
Hanke is not alone in dismissing what appears to be a potent cocktail of misinformation and doom and gloom, wherein the current recession—now in its 13th month—is already considered worse than the 16-month ones of 1973-1975 and 1980-1982."
http://www.cnbc.com/id/29163654
It's the old "if you say it enough, it must be true".
I've always thought that all the harping on bad news and calling it the worst crisis since the depression was overkill and did nothing to help matters. We got over the other recessions and we can get over this one also, only if....

CB