So you accuse Austrian economists of being indoctrinated and ideological
No, I accused people who blindly follow Austrian economics as indoctrinated and ideological. The economist is aware of its limitations and is less preachy about the whole thing.
yet you make the sweeping assumption that anyone who mounts an argument based on Austrian economics is automatically full of shit.
Well the person who cannot articulate by themselves why they think the way they do and instead throws in the thoughts Austrian school in the same way as a christian refers to the bible is indeed full of shit. Same thing goes for a Marxist who does the same for Das Kapital, or a Keynesian with the general theory.
You have provided no evidence or explanation as to why you think Austrian economics is wrong, just a bunch of personal attacks on Austrian economists based on assumptions you just made up.
I have not attacked the Austrian school, or its economists. As I stated earlier, I have not sought to engage in the debate. I am only expressing my frustration at people who don't know two fifths of fuck all using Austrian economics to go on an anti-government rant that is driven by nothing more than ideology and indoctrination (from sources other than economics).
Ironic that you call Austrian economists indoctrinated when Neoclassical, Keynesian and Marxist economic theory constitutes almost the entire economics curriculum of high schools and universities, while Austrian economics is almost entirely ignored by these institutions and not treated seriously if it is mentioned.
Hah, here we go. Do we need another senate enquiry about a left wing conspiracy? High school economics largely omits any discussion on the various schools of thought within economics, and certainly nowhere in the syllabus does the HSC course prescribe marxist or keynesian teaching. It is a qualitative course that emphasizes the motivation behind government policy and this necessarily includes the countercyclical tendencies of governments, as well as the free market reforms of the last thirty years. At the university level students are exposed to the evolution of economic thought ranging from the classical economists right through to monetarism and modern DSGE approaches. To claim otherwise is a little bit of an exaggeration. Austrian economics as with marxism is not taught because they are not mainstream. However given any HET or contending perspectives course they will be discussed in their historical context. Claiming that it should be taught is like a christian claiming that creationism should be taught because it is an alternative to evolution (im sorry to keep picking on christians).
You would in fact find that most Austrian economists have discovered this alternative through independent research which they have undertaken because of a dissatisfaction with mainstream economic theory. So in fact many Austrian economists have done exactly what you advocate and "spent a considerable amount of time forming your own opinions and asking questions about the world we live in." Its just they have formed different opinions to you.
And most of them are dead.
You claim to be an economist who is skilled enough to be worth paying for your tutorings services, yet in an interesting discussion about interest rates, all you have managed to contribute is long winded ad hominem.
I think you have got your knickers in a twist over nothing. You seem to think that I am making an attack on your beloved Austrian economics. At no point did I ever seek to engage in that debate (as I have now said multiple times). My attack (if there was one) was necessarily personal (although not aimed at anyone specifically in this thread) as I was making the point that blind faith and ideological indoctrination make someone fulll of shit.
I am far from a skilled economist which is precisely why I know my limitations. Thats why I neither hold the view that Austrian economics is right and everything else is wrong (or vice versa). How can I possibly know all the answers when people who are are both more intelligent and dedicated to finding the answers are no closer to finding them. That is my problem with the whole 'austrian economics says this' approach to economics. It is completely void of thought, and seems to place faith in something that most people don't even understand. to re-iterate, I have the same bone with people who do the same for any other school of thought in any other discipline.