I hate to break this to you.
But you may know already.
Sometimes even very successful investors are horrendous economists.
Example: Warren Buffett.
But here's something interesting.
Most people don't know that Warren Buffett's father was Howard Buffett, a laissez-faire, sound-money United States congressman from Nebraska.
Congressman Buffett's views on the economy couldn't have been farther removed from what his son's would one day be.
He didn't yet know that, though, when he wrote to Mr. Libertarian, Murray Rothbard, asking how he might get his son a copy of Rothbard's book The Panic of 1819. "I have a son who is a particularly avid reader of books about panics and similar phenomena," he said.
Buffett also said he was reading through Man, Economy, and State, Rothbard's thousand-page treatise, and asked how he might assist in getting wider circulation of that work.
Unfortunately, the apple fell far from the tree.
The point of this story?
Learn what you can from everyone. If someone is great at X and terrible at Y, learn X from that person. Do not indignantly block your ears because of how terrible he is at Y.
This will no doubt be true of some of the interviews in the important Crisis Investing docu-series. These people have highly valuable information for you. Some of them will also be completely hopeless on the economy as a whole.
Keep the good, and chuck the bad.
The series has begun. Go watch while it's still free, and don't let the virus -- or the government's response -- destroy you: