ETA: I haven’t seen the new film I referred to in another comment yet, but I’m hopeful that it’s good as well. It may not have the Marxist angle that Second Thought brings, though; we’ll see.
I was right: it spent about 90 seconds on class analysis. For the amount of footage filmed at UMKC, you’d think they’d have stopped by Michael Hudson’s office, but I guess interviewing a Marxian economist would be a bridge too far for normies. Still it was well made and worth a watch.
The Youtube channel 1Dime has a great intro video that has a lot of sources, but Stephanie Kelton’s book The Deficit Myth is generally the most talked about as an intro to the topic.
And does anybody know where to start if I wanted to dive in? (even if it’s just to argue with an annoying friend at Goldman?)
Second Thought: Why The Government Has Infinite Money. As usual his links in the description are also very good.
ETA: I haven’t seen the new film I referred to in another comment yet, but I’m hopeful that it’s good as well. It may not have the Marxist angle that Second Thought brings, though; we’ll see.
:rosa-salute:
I was right: it spent about 90 seconds on class analysis. For the amount of footage filmed at UMKC, you’d think they’d have stopped by Michael Hudson’s office, but I guess interviewing a Marxian economist would be a bridge too far for normies. Still it was well made and worth a watch.
BitTorrent magnet link.
cc: @[email protected]
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
The Youtube channel 1Dime has a great intro video that has a lot of sources, but Stephanie Kelton’s book The Deficit Myth is generally the most talked about as an intro to the topic.
:rosa-salute: