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You know what I remember about the 90s?
Anti-globalization protests and mucho hand-wringing about “Affluenza”.
We were just too darned rich. All that wealth was bad for our health and needed to be curtailed.
Amazing how things change (or don’t change, depending on your point-of-view).
The problem with Hillary running on Bill’s record is that recreating the 90’s would mean essentially repudiating the entirety of Barack Obama’s presidency. Bill Clinton was the most shamelessly poll tested president of my lifetime. He was a man who took the 1994 midterm election as the repudiation it was, and moved to the center. The refusal to do this is precisely what is exciting the Democrat base about Obama, and a suggestion to return to that would doom Hillary in the primaries.
Speaking of the Matrix.
What if I told you the 90s were great because the dot-com bubble hadn’t burst yet?
Sure, there were real gains in the 90s from the peace dividend, lowering regulation, lower marginal rates, all that fun stuff. But a lot of it was fluffy optimism that came crashing down when we figured out that adding .com to your company name didn’t actually raise the value of your company by 500%.
No mention of Newt.
In manufacturing, all of the debottlenecking and increase in production capacities was due to installing new digital controls and replacing the old analog and/or pneumatic ones. That is how 1991 and 1992 kicked off the decade. The contractors who did this were almost exclusively from Louisiana where in the previous decade the state had opened new trade skills schools for process controls training.
I think the strongest point in that most concise explanation is that conservative policies work, and they work over the long run. I may be way off, but Keynesian theory used to at least be seen by the left as a short term fix (stimulus etc), but 2008 should have disproved that for this generation. The work of deregulation and making the tax code less progressive in the 80’s boomed in the 90’s.
Conservatives get the albatross hung around our neck because the market does exactly what we say it will, boom and bust.