Message from @The Enlightened Shepherd
Discord ID: 302593071730917386
do you know how investment operated before the 20s?
this is kind of my area actually
It truly is the truth what they say, that 1914 was the year when man lost control of his fate
TLDR: prior to the 1920s, people only invested in bonds, only rich people were allowed to even invest in stocks as it was considered extremely risky
as a millenial I can relate to your theory
they opened the stock markets to the common man, then EVERYONE bought into it and the market skyrocketed, forming a huge bubble
as it skyrocketed people bandawgoned onto it
so "roaring 20s" boom, then bust
the average idiot did it
yes but why one sucidial policy after another
I don't know exactly, but I think it was probably damage control
and above all, all of these policies completely erratic
clymatic
what are they going to say, "Sorry everybody, you're all idiots so you're not allowed to invest anymore"?
now we will go to war
now we will turn whole society upside down with bail out plans and public works
now we will legalise tons of completely stupid things
now we will invite half of Israeli diaspora
now we will invite all of italy
now we will invite whole world
how does that happen, when society is still 95% White and segregated
I haven't looked into the history much
I can come up with some ideas, for sure
I mean even my leftism theory earlier
what happened? in the depression society verifiably went to shit
why wouldn't that predispose them to becoming leftist underdog worshipers and commies in the same fashion?
of course I don't know the history, but I can speculate
ever since 1917, American society was manipulated, especially it's Protestant portion, using the dirties kind of propaganda
That much is at least evident
All of these policies were to an average working American, something too mysterious for his comprehension
@diversity_is_racism : http://www.realitymaps.com/2006/04-falsegurutest.html apply to Mr. Squawk
They were too big, too wordly, too difficult to explain
For an average American, to find himself suddenly at war with a distant Japanese Empire must've been a proper shock back then
Yet when you read history books, it all kinda happened naturally
That's how perspective of the contemporaries is always missed
And consider that American press was then like the only source of information, and it worked probably even worse than it works today
Consider this whole business how completely separated it is from society in any way you want
abstract or not
There is no hierarchy there existing of any sort