Sound bites and cliches are irritants, not impediments
I strongly disagree with this
. Words matter. People absorb soundbites and cliches, and you see and hear them use the same ones themselves, on here and elsewhere online, in conversation and in vox-pop interviews. Many of them are meaningless in the context they are used, however.
That is my point, which is not concerned with irritating phrases, such as 'look', or 'let me be clear', (which could, IMO, have an interesting thread of their own). We all use cliches at times, but I believe that as well as being shorthand for politicians they are deliberately used to limit the scope of arguments by being reductive. 'The economy will fall off a cliff if Truss's budget goes ahead, and the country will be on its knees' can close down a conversation, in a way that 'if taxes are reduced without being funded the Office for Budget Responsibility and the IMF will object, there will be a run on the pound and the UK will lose status across financial markets. This will result in the need for the BOE to bail out pension funds and there will be a rise in interest payments that will cause the cost of living to rise exponentially, meaning that the public will suffer a massive loss in buying power' (phew!) will not.
My explanation takes longer to say, is more complicated and less 'catchy', but it is explicit and can be questioned and argued for or against. IMO politicians should be talking to us in ways that are explicit and can be argued against, particularly in the run-up to elections. As long as we let them get away with soundbites, and as long as people parrot the soundbites without picking them apart, they will be seen as truisms and there will be no debate.
I do take your point that what you see as a misunderstanding of economics often underpins political viewpoints, but you are insisting on one perspective on the subject which is disputed by many (economists as well as posters) being the only one we can use.
With respect, we can't all bow to one perspective whenever we discuss any aspect of politics, language use or on any 'state of the country' threads. That is akin to asking everyone to view the world in terms of owners and non-owners of the means of production and accusing those who don't see it like that of having false class-consciousness to close down debate. That view is not a million miles from my own, but other ways of seeing the world exist, and have to be allowed (and respected) if there is to be any meaningful discussion. Insisting that 'you disagree, ergo you don't understand' - like any other insistence on toeing a philosophical line - just squashes debate.