We Are Pawns in Obama's Fiscal Cliff Game
Politicians playing chicken not only with people's jobs and livelihoods, but their mental and, quite possibly as a result, physical well-being.
It angers me.
This isn't the NHL lockout where the two sides can play "politics," stall and stalemate in a battle of egos.
The impact of something as relatively insignificant as a hockey work stoppage drives home the magnitude of what the fiscal cliff can do to Americans -- and people around the globe -- even if we never jump off of it.
With no hockey, middle-of-the-road wage earners get hurt.
In the grand scheme of things, it's not that big of a deal if Molson Coors (TAP) sees a decline in Canadian revenue.
However, don't tell that to the guy who works at a brewery in St. Johns, Newfoundland or Moncton, New Brunswick. The guy who might lose his job -- and if he lived in the United States, his health insurance -- when Molson Coors reduces staff.
As usual, Twitter broadcasts opinions and fuels emotion. One of TheStreet's Real Money contributors, Kate Stalter and CNBC personality Carl Quintanilla posted pretty simple, but effective Tweets. Both go a long way to explaining this spectacle.
It is very Y2K, in that it will likely end up being all of this for nothing. But, with Y2K, like a hockey lockout, it didn't matter quite as much to nearly as many people.
No hockey, we buy less beer.
No Y2K, no problem. You have a few extra cans of beans in your pantry. If you're really extreme, you bought some special computer software, unplugged your VCR and maybe built a bunker in the background.
But this fiscal cliff is real.