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On its front page Monday, The New York Times takes a whack at a trend that shouldn't surprise anyone that has been paying attention: "Stock Trading Is Still Falling After '08 Crash." This is akin to the constantly recycled surprise that this recovery hasn't behaved like every other post-Depression upturn. Well, no, because the financial crisis was not your ordinary cyclical recession -- it was a financial collapse. Now it's certainly worth noting that "stock trading" has continued to decline, but given years of handwringing from the personal finance media (including said Times) about folks tossing their retirements away on day trading, not to say the uproar over speculative trading on Wall Street, you'd think that this trend would be welcomed. Nope. The failure of stock trading to recover is taken as just another sign of national decline. And, yes, high up in the story appears the paragraph worrying that this just isn't normal, though there's no attempt to consider deeply what "normal" really means when it comes to stocks: "The decline stands in marked contrast to past economic recoveries, when Americans regained their taste for stock trading, within two years of economic shocks in 1987 and 2001."
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