G
Geo
Well-known member
It's just another "what should I be mad about today" narrative for the soft heads to regurgitate.Ah I see, my mistake. I guess I'd say that the level of anxiety is fairly related to an event's abruptness. Like people do get anxiety over inflation but "normal" inflation is kind of expected, and in that sense it's "minimally anxiety inducing" because people accept it as just kinda how the world works and they can account for it. But when inflation spirals like it did during the pandemic or something, then people freak because it spikes and could actually lead to tangible changes to people's lifestyle and financial futures they didn't predict, etc.
I suppose from that angle, the tariffs feel like a one-two punch of an instant rise in everybody's expenses due to how connected our economy is to the rest of the world, and it happened for seemingly arbitrary reasons and in a way that nobody can predict, just based on whatever numbers the administration thinks sound good at the time, and it seems to be changing significantly all the time. That kind of unpredictability definitely freaks people out.