@VitaMan:
You believe that my post challenging you to explain to us why you believe Biden should take a victory lap for the market's new highs was insulting? Seriously? Challenging, yes. (It's a debate, for crying out loud!) Insulting? No how, no way. That seems clear enough to others here.
And no one has "ignored the topic," or created new ones. Consider the interplay between the fiscal policy agenda of 2021-22, the consequent inflation spike, and the markets. Then put all this in political context with regards to whether Biden is "getting credit" for his policies. (Since his approval rating is so low, I submit that he is not. Well, not in any positive way, that is!)
In this thread and a few others you've started on the same topic, you continually insinuate that Biden must be a successful president, since the market made new all-time highs while he was sitting in the Oval Office.
By that line of reasoning, you must surely think Trump was a fine president as well, right?
And Nixon! Didn't the market make new all-time highs when he was prez? Then, by the line of reasoning you seem intent on maintaining through all your Biden/market threads, don't you consider Nixon a fine president as well?
Nixon, too, attempted to run an Okun-style "high-pressure" economy in 1971-72, as he exhorted congress to ramp up spending while pressuring Fed chair Burns to keep the money supply nicely juiced-up. Remember the "Nifty Fifty" big-cap stocks of the early '70s? One prevailing notion then was that you should just buy them and put them away, though by every metric most of them were pretty expensive at the time.
Then do you remember what happened in 1973-74? (The hangover after the attempt to continue pushing the "high-pressure" economy long past its sell-by date was rather painful.)