Please fix your post so it doesn't show me saying something you said.
No, you don't get to comment on FDR and the new deal and then call a response off-topic.
Going from a major financial crash every 10 to 15 years, to no major financial crash for 50 years (until Reagan deregulation); and providing significant aid to the people is not 'just a little'.
That's how right-wing propagandists talk. They want to convince you the government - the thing that stands up for the people to the wealthy when it works - is bad. So they just twist the facts and go from there.
I thought we were discussing causes of the GD, not FDR and the New Deal.
No, you don't get to comment on FDR and the new deal and then call a response off-topic.
Like I said, the New Deal "helped a little." It was just a short term fix, though.
Look what happened in '37-'38, the so called "Roosevelt Recession." FDR was under pressure to balance the budget and the economy was improving, so he cut funding to New Deal programs. Unemployment went through the roof, the stock market crashed - it was the beginning of the GD all over again.
Roosevelt reinstated them but the economy was not bouncing back quickly at all. These are the conditions Roosevelt would have left the office in 1940 if it were not for the war.
Short term though, sure, they helped a great deal. The Emergency Banking Act, FDIC, WPA, etc. at least stopped the bleeding and more importantly gave people some hope. And a lot of them are still around today, for better or worse.
Going from a major financial crash every 10 to 15 years, to no major financial crash for 50 years (until Reagan deregulation); and providing significant aid to the people is not 'just a little'.
That's how right-wing propagandists talk. They want to convince you the government - the thing that stands up for the people to the wealthy when it works - is bad. So they just twist the facts and go from there.