@Matt5sean3 @chrisisgr8 Hmmm. I have to counter that it was precisely the economics on steroids the Chicago school was pushing that ultimately turned the tide of the public's imagination. We were just slow to understand what the banksters were up to. I mean, Freidman got his Nobel in 1976. By the early 80's the "big brains" saw the writing on the wall -- that western ideology was winning the battle for hearts and minds. Reagan felt bold enough to break up the Air Traffic controllers in 1981.It seems to track pretty well with that timeline.
Apropos of nothing, I did a bit of web searching and found the following link. I've read other Mirowski writings, such as More Heat Than Light. He's a gem.
https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.4159/9780674495111-005/html?lang=en
@LeftistLawyer @chrisisgr8
That I could potentially see agreement with, but it necessarily says the outward perception of the power of the Soviet Union differs from the power of a spectre of communism, at least as it pertains to the US domestic sphere. That makes some sense too given radical organizations that draw inspiration from the Soviet Union seem to be in relatively bad shape by the early '80s, but I'm not as well informed on that era so I could just be wrong about the facts on that.