During the height of COVID, rental assistance, job assistance, food assistance and more were given to those in need. Student loan payments were paused. The US did not collapse due to these policies. In fact, consumer spending went up.

So, given that these things are possible and even economically favorable, one can only conclude that ending them benefits some small but powerful portion of the populace who wants to keep the rest of us under control and in relative, if not full-on, poverty.

@ubiquity75 Yes, but supply did not go up to match increased spending (partly because of the pandemic), so we got inflation.

But it just means the powers that be are fucked up in a different way.

"We gave poor people money and they bought a lot of food for their kids and now food costs more."

"Should we produce more food?"

"Nah, just give them less money."