To be sure, essays on long-term income and asset disparities can make compelling reading, but they won't hold a candle to the inevitable daily drumbeat of reports about families struggling with $5 dollar a gallon gasoline. Unwittingly Bernanke (and by extension Obama) has positioned himself to take the blame for the inflation that looks to be coming on fast.
Investor Marc Faber put it most bluntly this week, accusing Bernanke of "murdering" the middle class in America by his excessive printing of money in recent years.
He argues that all that money is ending up in the wrong places. As Faber told King World News: "Money printing doesn't go into housing because we have an oversupply of housing, but it goes ... unfortunately into commodities. And this is lifting the cost of living of the median household. Mr. Bernanke is a murderer, he is a murderer of the middle class and the working class."
The question is, are "the inevitable daily drumbeat of reports about families struggling" really inevitable? The media, which flipped out when gas prices went into the $3- range under Bush, has been surprisingly mute about the $4+/gallon gas we are seeing now. Occasionally they will make note of it, but never, ever, do they place the blame on the president. And as we know, last week when Barack Obama mocked a citizen for complaining about the high price of gasoline, the AP and related news sites quickly scrubbed the anecdote from their stories, leaving web searchers to look for cached versions or saved screenshots of the president's bizarre retort.