There is a economic bad moon on the rise

Credence Clear Water ear worm for you.

I see the bad moon arising
I see trouble on the way
I see earthquakes and lightnin’
I see bad times today . . .

Unfortunately, it is true the nation overall is heading for bad economic times under the leadership of Tr_mp and his followers who are afraid of him. Republicans should know better; but, they are too afraid of Tr_mp . . . and will say or do little and/or nothing.

“No interest rate tweak can undo that damage” as caused by economic mismanagement.

Jacquez’s colleague Liz Pancotti, (managing director of policy and advocacy at Groundwork), similarly said Wednesday; “President Trump promised to lower prices on day one and be ‘the champion of the American worker.’ Yet his economic agenda has delivered higher prices, a stalled job market, and sluggish growth. He’s leaving families and workers high and dry. No move by the Fed will save them.”

The president has been pressuring the US central bank to slash its benchmark interest rate, taking aim at Fed Chair Jerome Powell, whom Trump appointed during his first term. Powell remained in the post under former Democratic President Joe Biden.

The new appointee “was the only Fed official to dissent from the decision,” the outlet noted. “Miran called for twice as large a cut in borrowing costs, and the Fed’s economic projections suggest that one official—likely Miran—would support jumbo-sized rate cuts at the next two meetings as well—an estimate that is conspicuously lower than the other 18 estimates.”

Hornung highlighted that “an equal number of members favor hiking, no further cuts, or one cut to the number of members who favor two more cuts, and one outlier member—presumably, President Trump’s current Council of Economic Advisers chair—favors the equivalent of five cuts.”

Recent polling has also exposed how working people are suffering under Trump’s second administration. One survey (conducted by Data for Progress for Groundwork and Protect Borrowers) shows:

“American families are trapped in a cycle of debt,” with 55% of likely voters reporting at least some credit card debt, and another 18% saying they “had this type of debt in the past, but not anymore.”