I don't have to be in a field to see when it functions in a bullshit way. I'm not a biologist but I'll say with certainty that evolutionary biology is true and intelligent design isn't. I'm not a physicist but I understand in layman's terms the problem presented by quantum mechanics and special relativity. And in the same way I can see that economics as it exists is so mired in false pretenses that it isn't useful. I mean, look at the way this conversation has gone. Surely you can't say that everything I've brought up is invalid, even if I'm not an economist, but there's no effort to explain it or suggest how it could be changed. That's where economics is. It's about denial of the externalities and defense of the field's presuppositions.
I want to know what you think should be done, I really do! Because as is there is a clear and all-consuming bias in economics.
As for the terminology drowning comment, that's my response to you using something very specific and field-oriented subjects to try and lock me out of any possible argument. You don't get an "I win" button because you're an economist. Everything is subject to criticism, even if the critic is from the outside and is not as learned on the specifics. Indeed, in a situation where the established truths of a field are organized to protect certain assumptions, which is my central argument here, outside criticism is even more important. The subject you bring up is important, I'll conceed, but how can such things even be dealt with when economists are only taught to consider certain solutions in a way that verges on determinism?