Summary

President Joe Bidenā€™s economic achievementsā€”lowering inflation, reducing gas prices, creating jobs, and boosting manufacturingā€”are largely unrecognized by the public, despite his successes.

His tenure saw landmark legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act, CHIPS Act, and major infrastructure investments.

However, Bidenā€™s approval ratings remain low, attributed to inflation backlash, weak communication, and a media landscape prone to misinformation.

Democrats face a ā€œpropaganda problemā€ rather than a policy failure, with many voters likely to credit incoming President Trump for Bidenā€™s accomplishments due to partisan messaging and social media dynamics.

  • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    biden getting flak over inflation is fucking hilarious.

    The fed is literally irrelevant to the president, the president does not control inflation. Sure maybe his spending increased inflation. But the entire global economy was at a practical stand still. If you think getting a seized ICE working again is hard, try it with a global economy.

    You can bitch all you want about inflation, but at the end of the day, nobody really knows what the right solution here was. We couldā€™ve gone through another great depression event if not for global stimulus. And a few years of bad inflation and high costs will beat literally starving.

    • Formesse@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      The only reason Biden gets some slack is when the reaction was needed to take place hard and fast was under trump. And we have had the knowledge of how to stop the spread of an epidemic/pandemic for centuries.

      1. Stop interactions between people.
      2. People showing signs or symptoms should quarantine.
      3. If you can avoid contact with people - you do so. In the past this was the wealthy who could go out to the country side and largely avoid contact with masses of people. But there is documentation of towns shutting down interaction with outsiders to avoid risk of disease spreading either into, or out of the town.

      But when every single country fails to take actions - it isnā€™t a single case of ONE bad leader. Itā€™s a case of systemic issues - and that is the case throughout the west: The west is infected by economist bean counters who are insistent on ā€œnumber go upā€. That is Canada, the US, UK, France, Germanyā€¦ the list goes on. And that attitude has gutted the western spirit, economy, and more. This idea that we need immigration - when immigration is a bandaid to a much deeper problem that starts in and around 1965, but really has itā€™s first signs in 1967 in the US, and that is spiraled out of control with the end of the gold standard.

      Yes: That is where the problems stem from.

      The fact is: Biden has been in politics, for basically the entire run of problems stemming and bubbling over. And he has been right smack dab in the middle voting basically for every measure that continued the problem forward. Making promises that were inevitably funded with printed money - printed money that created inflation, that required interest rates to go up, that drove people out of home. Economic conditions that enabled and even encouraged manufacturers to offshore US manufacturing to places like China - destroying US jobs in the process.

      Who benefited?

      If there is a politician to blame: It is Biden. He has been there practically every step of the way.

    • AntiOutsideAktion@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      biden getting flak over inflation is fucking hilarious.

      Why? He did literally nothing to address it.

      The fed is literally irrelevant to the president

      ???

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chair_of_the_Federal_Reserve

      The chairman serves a four-year term after being nominated by the president of the United States and confirmed by the United States Senate; the officeholder serves concurrently as a member of the Board of Governors. The chairman may serve multiple terms, pending a new nomination and confirmation at the end of each term; William McChesney Martin (1951-1970) was the longest serving chair, with Alan Greenspan (1987-2006) a close second. The president may not have the legal authority to dismiss a chairman before the end of a term, although this assumption has never been tested in court.[3]

      ???

      You can removed all you want about inflation, but at the end of the day, nobody really knows what the right solution here was.

      Price controls? Ronald Reagan?