It is one position that seems to cross ideological lines. It’s like literally everyone other than people who are very invested in the stock market (and even then) really want to see this thing crash and crash hard.

As someone who lived through and lost a job during the GFC, I think a bit of this is not realizing how bad an economic crash is even if you don’t think it will affect you much. It will. Some people think the residential real estate market will crash too and they can finally buy a house. But that’s hard to do when either you’ve lost your job or your job feels so precarious that you really don’t feel safe emptying your savings and taking out a mortgage. Or if you have a “safe” job, you think you can weather the storm. But in a depression, there are very few “safe” jobs.

But with that caveat aside, I think things are different now because so many people are struggling and barely getting by with their current employment situation. Life already feels so precarious, might as well throw a spanner into the works and see what happens. And that part feels very different than in the run up to the GFC. It affects everyone, regardless of political ideology.

Of course now I’m convinced that because it’s something everyone is expecting and wants to see happen, it will never actually happen. US will just limp along with high inflation, no job growth, and everyone getting slowly squeezed for years.

    • Wheaties [she/her]@hexbear.net
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      8 days ago

      Of course now I’m convinced that because it’s something everyone is expecting and wants to see happen, it will never actually happen. US will just limp along with high inflation, no job growth, and everyone getting slowly squeezed for years.

      Haha yay. Just gonna get old watching NVIDIA and a handful of software companies swap increasingly larger integers of money back and forth, slowly privatizing all the water tables while insisting it’s actually really critical and necessary because the Wire Mother is gonna solve climate change for us.

      Bubble pop sounds way preferable to that.

    • Beaver [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      7 days ago

      People are waiting for the cathartic moment, but it’s going to come that way. Even relatively sharp crashes such as the Great Recession or the Dot Com Crash were prolonged multi-year grinds with lots of dead cat bounces and general confusion.