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_aavaa_ 3 days ago

For starters we have cancelling and ripping up clean energy projects, introducing serious uncertainty about tarrifs, increasing unease for any immigrant (and even non-white citizens).

frugalmail 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

Courtesy of AI

Avg monthly "clean energy" jobs so far: - 2023: ~3.38M - 2024: ~3.45M - 2025: ~3.42M

Any impact to the economy due to "green job project cancellations" wouldn't have surfaced yet.

Uncertainty about tariffs: it was already on the books to earn $2.3T (conventional) / $1.5T (dynamic) over the next 10yrs, and inflation is far more under control than it was last year despite the tariffs. Of course legal challenges have disrupted it now. This is also completely ignoring the massive investment foreign countries/companies are making on US Soil to employ US employees.

jshen 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Those are bad things. It doesn't mean there aren't other contributors to our economic challenges.

mikestew 3 days ago | parent [-]

So where’s your list of these “other contributors“? People answered your question, and your response was “wrong, try again.”

jshen 3 days ago | parent [-]

Debt cycles would be one example that's not a policy decision. https://youtu.be/SoKr0QVCLPA?si=kKcXNetb-kAPr1S8

Edit: having said that, "these economic problems are ENTIRELY the result of bad policies". That's a very bold claim, which warrants some strong evidence. No one has provided any strong evidence that it's ENTIRELY from bad policies.

mikestew 3 days ago | parent [-]

Re: your EDIT - fair enough, thanks for the additional information.