By Michael Snyder
There are hundreds of formerly prosperous communities all over
America that are being steadily transformed into rotting, decaying
hellholes. The good paying middle class jobs that once supported those
communities are long gone, and they have been replaced with low paying
service jobs if they have been replaced at all. When you visit those
communities, it is almost as if all of the hope has been sucked right
out of the air. It can be absolutely heartbreaking to look into the
hollow eyes of someone that has totally given in to despair, but
unfortunately the number of Americans that are giving up on the economy
continues to grow. Today, the labor participation rate is the lowest
that it has been in 35 years,
and more than 100 million Americans are enrolled in at least one
welfare program. It is easy to say that they should just “get a job”,
but as I have written about repeatedly,
our economy simply is not producing enough jobs for everyone anymore.
The percentage of working age Americans with a job has remained at the
same level that it was at during the worst days of the last recession,
and meanwhile the quality of our jobs has continued to steadily decline. Median household income has fallen for five years in a row, but the cost of living continues to rise rapidly. The middle class is being systematically shredded,
and poverty is growing at an alarming rate. The U.S. economy has been
in decline for a long time, and the really bad news is that it appears
that this decline is about to accelerate.
We are a nation that consumes far more wealth than we produce. We
are a nation that buys far more from the rest of the world than they buy
from us. We are a nation that has a “buy now, pay later” mentality.
As a nation, we have accumulated the largest mountain of debt in the
history of the world. 40 years ago, the total amount of debt in our
system (government, business and consumer) was about 2 trillion
dollars. Today, it is more than 56 trillion dollars.
The consequences of decades of incredibly foolish decisions are
starting to catch up with us, and it is those at the bottom of the food
chain that will suffer the most.
I could spend the rest of this article quoting 30 or 40 more
statistics that show how bad things are, but today I wanted to do
something different. Today, I wanted to share some quotes from some of
my readers about what they are seeing where they live. The following
are 20 quotes from ordinary Americans about the economic despair that is
rapidly growing like a cancer all around us…
#1 David:
“Yes, the American economy is in the pits. I know five languages,
have three degrees (including two graduate degrees), and have lived
overseas for 16 years and I still can’t find a job in the USA.
Everything is broken in America. Maybe I should give up my American
citizenship.”
#2 Zach:
“I’ve been struggling since I finished college in the summer of 2010.
My dream is to work in the courts, law enforcement but it’s almost
impossible to get a call back for an interview. I interviewed with
Garland, Texas PD for a position in the city jail and I made the final
30 of 300 applicants that applied for the 3 positions.”
#3 Akitawoman:
“I have two Master’s degrees, am 61 years old and earning $10 per hour. What does that say about the current economy?”
#4 Cincinnati Dave:
“I work for one of the banks mentioned in your article. I was in
mortgages. I saw all of this coming, so several months ago I asked to
get into another area of the bank and fortunately, for me, they granted
by request. A lot of people are losing their jobs and there is really no
prospects out there for anything else whereby the same kind of money
could be made. I will make nothing near what I had been earning but am
at the least grateful to be employed. This is all so sad to watch
happen.”
#5 Iceman:
“I used to work for WF processing mortgages. The week that the rates went up, I was out of work, not one extra week of work.”
#6 Tim:
“The U.S. economy is producing mostly part-time, low-wage jobs. These jobs barely pay enough to put food on the table.”
#7 K:
“What I am aware of, is every person I know, who had to switch jobs
in the last five years took a pay cut. The smallest cut among my friends
was 10%, the average was closer to 18%. No we are heading down a bad
road, and we are past the point of no return.”
#8 Makati:
“After spending most of my life in the middle class, I now consider
myself lower class due to age and income. Nothing wrong with that. I am
still able to provide myself with what I need and some of my ‘wants’. I
am like most retirees today.”
#9 Mondobeyondo:
“As many of you already know (but maybe some new members of this blog
don’t) – I live in Phoenix, Arizona. Where you live here, determines
(to a great extent) your economic well being. Those in the “East Valley”
– Chandler, Gilbert, Scottsdale, etc – have the jobs, the opportunities
and the transportation. Those in the wealthier areas of the “West
Valley” also have these benefits.
The remainder – those who live in the older west side of town, and
the south side of town – are mainly forgotten and left to struggle. Many
are hard working citizens who just want a chance. Unfortunately, chance
costs money, in the view of many people, and as far as the municipal
government is concerned, there’s no money for us. It’s cheaper to let
them live in a tent in the park, where the cops at least have an excuse
to evict them.”
#10 2Gary2:
“We are no longer the land of opportunity where anyone can make it.”
#11 GOM:
“There is no middle class here in the Florida Panhandle. Only folks
who have money are the retired and they hate everyone. They own all the
antique stores [big business] and most thriving businesses and
restuarants. Military is big here, they spend every dime they have on
stupid stuff and taxis. Tourist are way down since the spill. Now for
the good news. A major food chain here is going out of business [Food
World] Another is losing 20k a month to theft. Every other property it
seems is up for sale. There are tons of empty real estate [store fronts]
There are thrift stores opening everywhere. People are selling goods on
the streets, only to be run off by the cops. Crime is getting out of
hand. Most don’t go out after dark. Police are beating up the homeless
at the beaches. Panhandling now is mainly younger people. Where did all
the older ones go?”
#12 Rodster:
“In my area which is SW Florida, it’s been getting tighter for my
customers so on a case by case basis I lower my price when they need
auto repairs. I still find road signs advertising homes for sale (cash
only). Many are advertised as foreclosed.
I’ve started seeing people living out of their cars. It’s not a daily occurrence but I have been noticing it.”
#13 Devery:
I have been looking after the homeless now for 4 years. Last winter I
had an encounter where I was told that I could not hand out blankets
and sleeping bags in the dead of winter and that I would be arrested for
trespassing if “me and my friends” didn’t move along.
So, I adopted the policy that I would pull up next to them, have them
get in the car and we would go for a drive. I would find a place to
pull over and give them what they needed then I would drop them off in a
different place.
#14 Robert:
“Around where I live in the SE, things seem ok but I live in a
university town. Go to some of the surrounding small towns and it is
desolate. Car dealerships closed. Entire streets with abandoned stores.
The only activity is a one clerk post office. I know people in our
church who are a paycheck away from going over the edge or going over
due to a spouse dying and losing one of their social security checks. I
see grim. More homeless. A local church is feeding many more including
some folks living out of their cars—lots of children. Mostly minimum
wage jobs in the area. If it were not for the university and its 34,000
students, this place would look as bad as the smaller communities.”
#15 TN Gal:
“Here in southeast TN we have jobs, mostly part-time or low wage. Our
problem these days are so many people dependent on government programs
no one wants to work. They do better on programs than working partying
and paying for insurance. Housing still very depressed. Seeing more
homeless around and local churches straining to provide food. Crime is
up and drugs, which were down, are coming back with a vengeance. Middle
class here are senior citizens on SS, younger retirees not the older
ones. Older ones seem to be struggling. Sad.”
#16 Deb:
Michael, I live in North Central Illinois. About 60 miles southeast
of Chicago. The town we live in has about 8,000 in it. Very “middle
class” farm community. Unemployment is high and so is underemployment.
We know many people living off 2 part time jobs. That seems to be the
norm around here. Or people taking jobs that they would never of
considered in the past, just to get by. My son used to work for CAT in
Aurora, but was “let go” in order to bring in new workers at a lower pay
scale. It took him over a year(which really isn’t bad) to find a part
time job with 3M.
#17 Susan:
“Drive around Los Angeles at 3:00 AM any day and you will see the
devastating and pervasive homelessness from 8 to 80 year olds. And the
massage parlors and hookers on the streets of used to be ‘high-end’
neighborhoods are exploding. No other way to make a living.”
#18 XSANDIEGOCA:
“A couple of years ago it was reported 9K people a night slept in
their cars here in San Diego County. Special car parks are set up in
some church parking lots. The cops look the other way. Wonder what the
figure is now?”
#19 Jimbo:
“My own viewpoint is that a collapse of the current economic system is inevitable and imminent.”
#20 El Pollo de Oro:
“During a conversation on prepping, someone recently said to me, ‘If
things get half as bad as these preppers think they will, I don’t want
to be alive.’ So, how bad will things will get? Real unemployment is
already at Great Depression levels (John Williams’ Shadow Statistics
contradicts the BLS’ bogus figures), but when this depression deepens, I
think we’ll be looking at 50% or 60% unemployment easily. Much worse
than the 1930s. It will be absolute hell for millions of Americans, and
when the money stops flowing down to the man on the street, the blood
will flow in the streets (Gerald Celente). Lots of it.”
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