With unemployment at 10 percent or more, the number of Americans living in poverty increasing, and corporations sitting on $2 trillion in cash, we should be looking for other alternatives.
Since the Keynesian alternative to consolidated capital has yielded a downward class mobility, the most visible reaction is a conservative popular revolt.
If the probability of class mobility is verifiably down and not up, at least half of American voters are prepared to declare their independence and shape a more favorable alternative that is not exactly Democrat or Republican.
Being treated like so much macro-meat in the marketplace, herded together like cash cows to be parceled into prime and sub-prime, is not exactly flattering, and both parties are going to suffer a stampede of popular sentiment.
Binoms (binomial partisans) are under pressure to resolve the dissonance. This is an overwhelming psychological condition that compels a resolution even on a macro scale (you know the old saying, "there is no resisting an idea whose time has come).
Free-market economics is not dead, its time has come!
It is time for The People to realize, the more free the market, the less political risk in proportion (the less need for government and the probability of being stuck with all the risk, like negative class mobility or negative equity).
The free market measures the proportion of political risk--it may be in your favor today, maybe not tomorrow. Binoms are realizing that ideology does not minimize the risk, it makes it more volatile if anything at this point.
While Keynesian economic policy is supposed to stabilize systemic risk, it makes it more volatile. Toggling between expansion and contraction of the money supply (boom and bust with ever higher frequency and a bias for bust), binoms are prepared to see another alternative that ensures stability--free market economics (deconsolidation of the risk)--with the force and legitimacy of government authority.
Investing in America is a function of ensuring free-market economics in priority (expansion of the commonwealth), not partisan politics.
Investing in America is a function of maximizing the empirical power of popular consent with a bias for boom, not the Keynesian alternative with an empirical bias for bust.
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