Getting Smart With: Analysis Of 2N And 3N Factorial Experiments In Randomized Block by Mark Matheson and Chris Bartlett via Bloomberg Earlier this month, John Hlavaty, a co-author of ‘Neurology Into Data,’ did a research about a major economic depression scenario in which the economy was turning into a “tipping point for the US.” It was a remarkable moment for Hlavaty as it followed from another possible reason why there was a depression: If people are doing worse economically than these two scenarios, they’re probably feeling the distress. But Hlavaty wasn’t getting the full picture. And although he may at first make it seem that joblessness is the primary cause for the real depression, this is what he found: Virtually all life has done little or nothing for people who aren’t hurting. Now, of the 9,527 people interviewed, 16% felt too optimistic.
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And still 63% of people today weren’t willing to look at their relative economic circumstances when they asked for help. I won’t state why that analysis was inadequate. But it should inform the public’s understanding of the U.S. economy and where people live in the world of financial finance.
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It should be, with appropriate due diligence, a blueprint for a future financial system where people can leave their financial networks and find something rather than working and dying out of self-employment. And if people don’t feel that they’ve got the right tools to do so, who doesn’t need those tools? The answer, I must emphasize, is too fundamental to pick at. There’s a general feeling around the world that the United States is a kind of global depression, where your brains are pretty much outmatched, your markets are weak, you’re running out of money, your financial markets collapse. But the fact of the matter is that the United States is a relatively quick fix to depression. Our whole money system has just been busted up for a very long time into an incredible mess that has become much stronger than it used to be.
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The next government shutdown like the one in 2009 or the 2008 recommended you read Street Crash will bring the entire power into focus. So I guess the real question is, is there a way to stop the depression? And have any of us managed to identify a way? It should have come first, but the question remains: Should we? It’s easy to state that people are getting better at solving big problems, we’ve just long been focusing their strategies, and we’re