Was the political decision to return America’s economic environment to the same status as was its economic environment during the Great Depression a well thought-out decision?
Did America’s press inform America’s ombudsmen(voters) of the possible gravity of such a decision? Did everyone on America’s payroll earn their pay? Did anyone dare TELL AMERICA that bank laws would be as impotent in 1999 as they were in 1930? Who was looking out for America – neocons?
What, in America’s 1999 economy, indicated that a return to the Great Depression era economic environment was due? What, in America’s 1999 economy indicated that a return to the past would work fine this time? And what-if this political decision failed, who would suffer the consequences?
It sure looks like somebody did not do a quality job for America’s ombudsmen(voters). It is terribly difficult to believe that America’s ombudsmen(voters) would have stood mute over what 1999′s attack on America’s economy could potentially do to that economy.
And why didn’t the 1999 political party also roll-back government protection of Americans’ personal bank accounts? The press could have taken a press holiday and Americans would still have been warned of a political attack on their economy. But the political party did not kill protection of America’s personal bank accounts. That means the political party did not notify America of the attack on its economy. Notifying America was a task left to America’s press.
And the press has some notable men to its credit – among them Walter Cronkite, Jack Anderson, and don’t forget the news delivery boy. On the streets of America, there he was: yelling “wuxtra, wuxtra, read all about it…” . And back then it was relatively safe to turn your “common sense” latch off – while reading some of the press accounts.
But today, America’s greed has grown while its ethics has not. And today, some just see America as:
The Goose That Laid The Golden Eggs?
Tags: 1930, 1999, america's press, attack on america's economy, economic environmen, goose that laid the golden eggs, great depression, political decision, quality job for america