> Many of the governed see what policymakers and politicians call 'systemic risk' and 'instability' as a not so unwelcome wildcard considering that the wealthy of today are mostly descendants of wealthy land owners from the times of the Crusades.
I'm curious if you have a citation to support that the wealthy in the US are descendants of wealthy land owners from the times of the Crusades at a substantially greater rate than the general population.
> Where are the Fed , D.C. , the FDIC etc. when a gas station goes belly up?
How much of their going belly up was due to Fed policy? Particularly driving and holding interest rates to near zero through market actions then pushing interest rates to nearly 5%?
I'm curious if you have a citation to support that the wealthy in the US are descendants of wealthy land owners from the times of the Crusades at a substantially greater rate than the general population.
> Where are the Fed , D.C. , the FDIC etc. when a gas station goes belly up?
How much of their going belly up was due to Fed policy? Particularly driving and holding interest rates to near zero through market actions then pushing interest rates to nearly 5%?