by spot5050 » Fri 20 May 2005, 15:08:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MD', 'S')everal problems:
First: The "trigger" was referencing an oil shock, not debt.
Second: You argued against one analogy(oil shock as a trigger)using another unrelated analogy (debt as a switch). There is no relation between them, therefore the argument, in that context, has no meaning.
Third: Since it was mine, I will explain what I meant by the reference. There currently appears to be a problem in the US, sometimes referenced as "debt bubble". There has been serious questions raised as to the sustainability of the current debt situation. It has also been suggested that a moderate oil shock could very well push the "debt bubble" past the level of sustainability, which in concert with oil shock could then seriously disrupt the US economy. Thus the somewhat loose, but I thought nice sounding "fuse, bomb, target" like "oil, debt, economy" analogy. *shrug*
I take all your points.
I still object to the way you use emotive words like 'bubble', 'shock', 'fuse', 'bomb' etc. That's all I'm trying to say.
Language is important, it paints a picture. Reading about 'shock', 'bomb', 'crash' etc leaves a very different impression to reading about 'slowdown', 'upward pressure', 'downward pressure', 'easing off' etc. Do you see what I'm getting at?
The language you use matters. If you use inappropriate language, you create a false picture. Some people use emotive language deliberately, some accidentally; but either way the result is the same - a distorted worldview is created, full of imaginary switches, precipices, crashes, bangs, pops, bubbles, exploding bubbles etc etc.
Language is important. You can use it to help you get to the truth, or you can twist it for your own ends. You can either shoehorn the world into your belief system, or remodel your belief system to match reality.