"But the - look, I think that this - the United States of America is still the most powerful economy in the world. It is an incredible engine for creativity and innovation. And it has the most - smartest, most effective workforce in the world. So we have a lot going for us, in spite of the fractiousness of our politics"
About this Quote
Carney talks like a man paid to calm the room without admitting the room is on fire. The broken syntax - the stuttered "But the - look, I think that this -" is doing real work: it signals a pivot away from whatever anxious premise preceded it (debt ceiling drama, shutdown threats, a headline about decline) and toward a rehearsed reassurance. Hesitation becomes a rhetorical costume for sincerity. If he sounds like he is searching for the words, the listener is meant to feel the thought is spontaneous, not prepackaged.
The triad is pure institutional optimism: "most powerful economy", "engine for creativity and innovation", "smartest, most effective workforce". Each clause widens the frame. Not just GDP, but ideas; not just corporations, but people. It is boosterism with a democratic varnish, a way to praise markets while flattering voters. The superlatives are also a soft form of discipline: if America is already number one, then criticism starts to look like ingratitude, and reform can be framed as maintenance rather than reinvention.
Then comes the tell: "in spite of the fractiousness of our politics". He names the problem but quarantines it. Politics is cast as noise around the real signal - the "engine" - implying the state can be dysfunctional while the nation remains exceptional. The subtext is managerial: trust the underlying fundamentals, keep investing confidence, do not let partisan spectacle spook you. It is less an argument than a stabilizing gesture, the language of an administration trying to project competence while acknowledging, just barely, that Washington is making competence hard.
The triad is pure institutional optimism: "most powerful economy", "engine for creativity and innovation", "smartest, most effective workforce". Each clause widens the frame. Not just GDP, but ideas; not just corporations, but people. It is boosterism with a democratic varnish, a way to praise markets while flattering voters. The superlatives are also a soft form of discipline: if America is already number one, then criticism starts to look like ingratitude, and reform can be framed as maintenance rather than reinvention.
Then comes the tell: "in spite of the fractiousness of our politics". He names the problem but quarantines it. Politics is cast as noise around the real signal - the "engine" - implying the state can be dysfunctional while the nation remains exceptional. The subtext is managerial: trust the underlying fundamentals, keep investing confidence, do not let partisan spectacle spook you. It is less an argument than a stabilizing gesture, the language of an administration trying to project competence while acknowledging, just barely, that Washington is making competence hard.
Quote Details
| Topic | Optimism |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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