Well, if you had a government in any form that people trusted - they might be more inclined to believe that. I don't see it. You have no idea if the bail out will work and it's doubtful that it will work entirely. People who have lost their jobs and their homes already know the US has been in a recession despite what Bush, McCain and Paulson kept telling people. If it works - the upswing will most certainly be temporary and global economists are predicting that but they every one of them predicts a long, harsh recession - perhaps running years - with a high predicatability of a depression no matter what is done.
I haven't heard anyone in the government say 'gee, it's costing us 10 billion a month in Iraq (minimum) - let's leave now and put that money back into the American disaster relief fund" - that's 120 billion a year. I did hear them commit a million here and 12 million there..a billion over there - that doesn't equate in any way with trying to save families because that would have to start at home...sammieswife.
I understand your point. But my point is, people are taking that distrust way too far for their own good. You are absolutely correct to say that I have no way to know if the bailout will work, but there is enough support from both parties to at least see that there exists some ring of truth to the fear being generated by the politicians over this. Again no one in the US wants a $700 billion liability. I, for one am not willing to take the risk of not going along with the plan, here.
It's easy for those who are already out of work to say "The hell with it all, tell the govenment to go f*ck off!" But that really just seems to show a great deal of jealousy for the the other 95% in the US that are working. Surely you can figure that out. Do you really want to risk another Great Depression? Wouldn't it be better to at least try to avoid it?
j