(kinda) A great website to share if you have no idea how to explain the downfall of the US economy.
Edit: Thanks to everyone who provided insight on this website. I’ve had this in my bookmarks for a very long time and was curious how it held up.
(kinda) A great website to share if you have no idea how to explain the downfall of the US economy.
Edit: Thanks to everyone who provided insight on this website. I’ve had this in my bookmarks for a very long time and was curious how it held up.
Bullshit libertarian take. And in the wrong community.
What take? It is just a bunch of graphs.
This may be the first time I’ve seen anybody say that facts have a libertarian bias.
That is not the way I read the data.
I see the boomers hitting the labor market and people with capital getting rich off the depressed price of labor.
It’s a common homepage linked by libertarians in an argument.
Also: read the Hayek quote at the end. This homepage tries to sell youesomething and it an’t graphs.
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ah ya, “facts”, sure many of these graphs can be based on real data, hell maybe even all of them, but then you take a step back and look at these graphes, are the fun arrows and lines at 1971 actually meaningful? or are they there to try and use the data to shape an opinion? taking advantage of the average person’s statistic illiteracy, to push some form of partisan agenda?
such as the first graph, we have a nice little arrow and a dot with the number 90.84% but the actual diverging of the variables doesn’t start until later, when exactly? you can’t tell because the graph only labels three data points on the X axis!, and this isn’t the only deliberately misleading graph here, that the authors are using to openly lie about the data to those who aren’t well versed in this stuff.
facts don’t have a Libertarian Bias, but Libertarians sure are prone to spreading lies.
I’m not a libertarian, but something did go awry around that time. You can see it when you watch reruns of game shows like the price is right. Automobile prices double after a year, and then keep doubling.
??? I’m going to use a Dodge Dart as my basis because a 70 Dart was my family car.
1970 Original MSRP $2,261
1972 Original MSRP $2,528
https://www.jdpower.com/cars/1970/dodge/dart-swinger/2-door-hardtop
That’s 7% annual inflation, not 100%.
A base 2013 Dart was $16K MSRP. At that rate it doubled once every 13 years or so from 1970…certainly not every year like dudebro said