Comment Re:If he had bought a serialized gun from a dealer (Score 1) 111
Those numbers look less good; both in terms of their present state and what direction all the trendlines point in.
It's extra tricky to tell a satisfying story in the American context; both because the period of heavy industrial employment looks particularly good in hindsight because it coincided with both most of the foreign competition borrowing a lot of American money to set their own industrial base on fire and because it coincided with the last period of vaguely plausible external communists, which inclined the plutocrats of the day not to push their luck too hard; but the same general problem sets in in general: there's an easy feel-good story to tell about going from children with bloated bellies and flies, too mired in (sub)subsistence agriculture to even be market participants any useful sense; to going through the bit of industrialization that is kind of downer but at least generates something resembling a middle class; to what happens after that: where the storyteller may not exactly be lying about the wondrous state of the GPD and all(though, with the percentage of it that's financial sector you are inclined to doubt); but they simply aren't talking about the fact that no matter how well "we" are doing real wages and real costs of living just seem to be wiggling toward one another in deeply concerning ways and all 'innovation' and 'efficiency' have to show me is that I could totally buy an 80 inch TV when my parents would have had to put a 20 inch CRT on layaway; but when it comes to the things that actually cost money, like a house, or a doctor, or 4 years of school I'm hilariously worse off than they were and everyone's got a pointed finger and no answers.
Sure, if "we" all got the GDP divided by the population I'm sure "we" would all be happy about how the invisible hand was doing a bang-up job. Tell us more. But if you are sufficiently ignorant, whether by some amazing feat of avoidance or by sheer stubbornness, to think that it's actually that, not the actual nature of the distribution, and its change over time; then I think you have nothing useful to tell us here.
Sure, North Koreans and mud farmers are starving for want of capitalism; go forth and preach the good word; but don't pretend that having a good story for zero to 10k is a terribly transferrable skill when speaking to those who ended up poorer(or richer on paper but oddly unable to afford more of anything except transistorized toys, than their parents) or watching their children on the path to being so; it either reflects badly on your own intelligence or is an insult to that of your audience.