Expand the discussion, sir. It's a comment meant as a comparison pointing out another example of the beliefs of the "they" crowd.
This world doesn't exist in a vacuum and neither do the beliefs of the people who blame "they" for all their problems.
The beliefs are different, but the "they" crowd is the same. It's a big umbrella and there are lots of people under it.
I asked specific on-point questions quoting the "transitory" comment and the person who popularized the "transitory inflation" theory and is largely responsible for our monetary policy.
I was referred to a nebulous comment about "they" instead of an astute answer on the subject.
And to prove my point, the person who first blamed "they" for not telling the truth proved my point by saying, "
I am not talking about the real people that run the US. I don't know who they are." As if there's a secret cabal behind the scenes pulling the strings that NOBODY has identified or presented specific evidence about.
The "they" crowd loves to point to "they" for everything but has answers or considerate discourse for nothing. Regardless of the subject, it's "they" who are doing it. "They" are always secret and wealthy and powerful and evil and anti-American and are hell-bent on hurting the average person.
I guess if nothing else, we've learned to pick a subject and blame "they" for the problem. There's a lot of money in selling fear and anger; you can even get elected President by doing nothing other than screaming about how you're going to fight "them" and "save" America from somebody nobody can identify.
Okay, notdon, get ready for another comparative example of the ridiculousness of the "they" crowd because "they" are even turning frogs gay ?
If anybody wants to have a real discussion on monetary policy, I'm up for it. If it's somehow more helpful to just rant angry and unchallenged at Fauci and Hillary and Epstein and whatever other bogeyman Tucker Carlson says is responsible for somebody's problems... I don't really see how that's a helpful exercise, but whatever.