|
What, We Worry? Yes. (washingtonpost.com) by w1ld at 12:02 am EST, Jan 18, 2004 |
] The United States is overextended, not just militarily ] but economically. We are trying to do too much, borrow ] too much, spend too much, and sooner or later we will ] have to suffer the consequences. We are a country in the ] beginning stages of what can best be described as ] hegemonic decay. Empires take decades if not centuries to ] wither, a process more clearly viewed through a rearview ] mirror; Edward Gibbon's masterful account of the decline ] and fall of the Roman Empire is perhaps the greatest ] example of this truth. But here and now, we're much less ] inclined to Gibbon's viewpoint than we are to Alfred E. ] Newman's. "What, we worry?" is pretty much the national ] motto when it comes to our finance-based economy and its ] future prospects. Good article by the Bond King on where the US economy is going... |
What, We Worry? Yes. (washingtonpost.com) by Decius at 1:40 pm EST, Jan 18, 2004 |
] The United States is overextended, not just militarily ] but economically. We are trying to do too much, borrow ] too much, spend too much, and sooner or later we will ] have to suffer the consequences. We are a country in the ] beginning stages of what can best be described as ] hegemonic decay. Empires take decades if not centuries to ] wither, a process more clearly viewed through a rearview ] mirror; Edward Gibbon's masterful account of the decline ] and fall of the Roman Empire is perhaps the greatest ] example of this truth. But here and now, we're much less ] inclined to Gibbon's viewpoint than we are to Alfred E. ] Newman's. "What, we worry?" is pretty much the national ] motto when it comes to our finance-based economy and its ] future prospects. Another major investment guru weighs in on the trade deficit. |
|
|