Brad Delong asks a few pertinent questions about the sinister calm in our nation's capital as jobless Americans suffer:
"Have decades of widening wealth inequality created a chattering class of reporters, pundits and lobbyists who've lost their connection to mainstream America? Has the collapse of the union movement removed not only labor's political muscle but its beating heart from the consciousness of the powerful? Has this recession, which has reduced hiring more than it has increased layoffs, left the kind of people who converse with the powerful in Washington secure in their jobs and thus communicating calm while the unemployed are engulfed in panic? Are we passively watching an unrepresented underclass of the long-term unemployed created before our eyes?"
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Rob Johnson is a Senior Fellow and the Director of the Project on Global Finance at the Roosevelt Institute.
