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MarketNeutral
24th April 2010, 09:40 AM
A series of recent studies conducted by the Pew Research Center shed new light on the scope of the economic crisis in the US and the level of hostility the majority of the American population holds for the US government.

Released in March, before the passage of the Obama administration’s health care legislation, a survey entitled “Health Care Reform—Can’t Live With It, or Without It” indicates that 92 percent of Americans give the national economy a negative rating. No fewer than 70 percent of the respondents report having suffered job-related and financial problems in the past year, an increase from 59 percent the year before. Fifty-four percent report someone in their home has been without a job and looking for work in the past year, up from 39 percent in 2009.

The poll saw an aggravation of conditions in every area of economic life studied the year before. Increasing numbers of people are reporting difficulty receiving or affording medical care (26 percent) or paying their rent or mortgage payments (24 percent). More Americans faced problems with collections and credit agencies (21 percent), or had mortgages, loans or credit card applications denied (19 percent).

As could be expected, the poorest Americans are suffering the most. Some 44 percent of those making $30,000 per year or less report difficulty obtaining medical care, compared to 11 percent of those making $75,000 per year or more. A similar gap can be found in the category of rents and mortgages, with 37 percent of those making $30,000 or less reporting difficulty making rent or mortgage payments, compared to 11 percent of those making $75,000 or more. However, the percentage of those facing difficulties paying rent has increased dramatically for both groups since 2009.

Large numbers of workers polled in the study say they have little confidence in job security and prospects for the future, with almost half (49 percent) saying it is “very or somewhat likely” they will suffer “job-related financial stress” in the next year. Twenty-five percent of workers say they expect to be forced to take a pay cut this year, while 24 percent expect to be laid off.

The Pew survey found that 85 percent of Americans reported difficulty finding jobs in their communities. This and other statistics revealing the increasingly dismal employment opportunities facing millions of Americans are provided context in another study released this month by the Pew Economic Policy Group.

“A Year or More: The High Cost of Long-Term Unemployment” reports that no fewer than 44 percent of unemployed Americans met or exceeded the standard measure of long-term unemployment (six months or more) in March 2010. This marks the highest rate for long-term unemployment levels since World War II.

In addition to this, the Pew study reports that “23 percent of the nearly 15 million Americans who are unemployed have been jobless for a year or more.” This translates to 3.4 million people, “roughly equivalent,” the study points out, “to the population of the state of Connecticut.”

These alarming numbers should be considered along with findings in another recent Pew research study entitled “The People and Their Government,” released April 18. This report finds that “by almost every conceivable measure Americans are less positive and more critical of government these days.”

Only 22 percent of Americans say their government can be trusted, according to the new survey. The report puts this among the lowest measures of trust in the government in half a century.

The study also shows across-the-board declines in approval ratings for numerous federal agencies, including the Department of Education, the Food and Drug Administration, the Social Security Administration, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Forty-three percent say the government has a negative effect on their daily life, up from 31 percent in 1997.

While approval ratings for the government are remarkably low, with 65 percent saying the federal government and congress have a negative impact “on the way things are going in the country,” the approval ratings for other major institutions are as low or lower. Sixty-nine percent of those surveyed say banks and other financial institutions have a negative impact on the way things are going in the country, while 64 percent say “large corporations” have a negative impact. Some 57 percent say the national news media has a negative impact, while 49 percent say labor unions have such an impact.

The report states that “more than six-in-ten (62%) say it is a major problem that government policies unfairly benefit some groups while nearly as many (56%) say that government does not do enough to help average Americans.”

Taken as a whole, the Pew studies from March and April offer additional insight into the growing social misery under conditions of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, and the outrage it is generating.

Wide layers of the population, who have seen trillions of dollars funneled from the public treasury into the coffers of Wall Street executives while their own living standards have been assaulted, their jobs slashed, their children’s schools closed, and vital social programs such as Medicare cut by billions of dollars, have no faith in the US government to secure their most basic social needs.

The corporate-controlled news media, along with the major institutions overseeing the nation’s educational needs and basic food and medical resources, are considered corrupt and untrustworthy, contributing to the suffering of millions.

President Barack Obama, continuing to pose as a populist man of the people when he finds it necessary or beneficial, stands exposed as the chief representative of the interests of the American ruling elite and the standard bearer in the assault on the working class.

The restructuring of society taking place, in the direct interests of the corporate-financial elite and at the expense of the working population, is not occurring unnoticed. The American and international working class will inevitably find itself drawn into struggle against the present, untenable form of social organization.
http://1click.indiatimes.com/article/04ou8lIbCf3CT?q=Unemployment

Ponce
24th April 2010, 09:47 AM
"Get ready today for the way that you would like to live tomorrow"... Ponce

To the above you could add "For tomorrow it will be to late"

The above was what I told myself ten years ago when I knew what was going to happen and moved away from Calif and into the woods of Oregon.

Horn
24th April 2010, 10:26 AM
Looks like that "Globalism" is chugging along quite nicely, doesn't it?


:sarc:

mamboni
24th April 2010, 11:08 AM
This excerpt sums it up quite well:

Wide layers of the population, who have seen trillions of dollars funneled from the public treasury into the coffers of Wall Street executives while their own living standards have been assaulted, their jobs slashed, their children’s schools closed, and vital social programs such as Medicare cut by billions of dollars, have no faith in the US government to secure their most basic social needs.

The corporate-controlled news media, along with the major institutions overseeing the nation’s educational needs and basic food and medical resources, are considered corrupt and untrustworthy, contributing to the suffering of millions.

President Barack Obama, continuing to pose as a populist man of the people when he finds it necessary or beneficial, stands exposed as the chief representative of the interests of the American ruling elite and the standard bearer in the assault on the working class.


mamboni comments: The United States, notwithstanding the vampiric effects of the central bankers since 1913 has been the greatest economic success story in history. By the 1950s, Americans enjoyed a high standard of living head and shoulders superior to anywhere else. Since then, with the promulgation of mass media worldwide, others desperately wanted what Americans enjoyed, and committed to the hard work and sacrifice to achieve it. Simultaneously, we Americans started buying into the delusion of “American Exceptionalism," an overarching euphemism for collective entitlement. This was the beginning of the end, as people forgot about the importance of hard work, sacrifice, risk-taking and entrepreneurship. We commenced the ‘feel-good’ society of inclusiveness at any price, as if being prosperous was a right. Accordingly, education and performance standards were progressively lowered until mediocrity became the norm and excellence became stigmatized. Now, fifty years later, we are overweight, lazy, entitled, in debt from conspicuous consumption and discover that suddenly much of the rest of the world has caught up with our standard of living and is even our creditor. What’s worse, we have forgotten how to get back in the race or stubbornly refuse to accept that we are not ‘exceptional.’ Sadly, I believe we are past the tipping point, where a majority want something for nothing, there is no respect for hard work, sacrifice and invention, and the productive of society have gone underground or left entirely. We have passed ‘peak standard of living’ in the United States.

1970 Silver Art
24th April 2010, 07:08 PM
Just ignore the Pew study and just concentrate on the economic green shoots that our wonderful U.S. gov't is telling us about.

People having trouble getting access to medical care? No problem. The HC reform green shoot will solve that problem.

People having problems paying the rent or mortgage? Foreclosures on the rise? No problem. A green shoot will be sent to solve that problem.

People having trouble getting a job? Not making enough? No problem. A Jobs Bill green shoot will solve that problem.

As you can see, the green shoots will save us all. :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc: :sarc:

Horn
24th April 2010, 07:27 PM
What’s worse, we have forgotten how to get back in the race or stubbornly refuse to accept that we are not ‘exceptional.’

It would be exceptional if Congress were dissolved along with it's laws, and my new and patented E-Republic software was installed.

I am me, I am free
24th April 2010, 07:29 PM
Excellent commentary mamboni, and spot on.


Just ignore the Pew study and just concentrate on the economic green shoots that our wonderful U.S. gov't is telling us about.

It isn't just the USG corporation shining us all on, it's the entire corporate state apparatus which includes all mega-corps.

Book
24th April 2010, 08:01 PM
mamboni comments:

...Now, fifty years later, we are overweight, lazy, entitled, in debt from conspicuous consumption and discover that suddenly much of the rest of the world has caught up with our standard of living and is even our creditor. What’s worse, we have forgotten how to get back in the race or stubbornly refuse to accept that we are not ‘exceptional.’ Sadly, I believe we are past the tipping point, where a majority want something for nothing, there is no respect for hard work, sacrifice and invention, and the productive of society have gone underground or left entirely. We have passed ‘peak standard of living’ in the United States.


http://29.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_kvt0tiup7w1qzlezto1_500.jpg

Fifty years from now the tiny never-to-be-mentioned exclusive God's Chosen Tribe will rule over a world entirely of inter-bred goyim even more dumbed down then now. Don't blame the victims.

:oo-->

FunnyMoney
24th April 2010, 08:12 PM
"What’s worse, we have forgotten how to get back in the race " -mamboni

Getting back in the race would mean understanding the corrupt system and throwing it off. TJ and the founders explained where fiat money and central banking would take things. I don't see the world waking up to historic truth anytime soon.

Getting back in the race would require stepping outside the matrix and the ability to remain outside of it. But most people, in the USA and everywhere look to the matrix for their feeding and for the solutions to their problems. History has proven time and again how people would rather let someone else control them than take resposibility and informed action.

There will be no getting back into some race to prosperity. Because "what's worse" is that the global race isn't even the one you think it is. The race, is a race to the bottom and to absolute slavery. Everybody is inside the race already, just as they are inside the matrix. But it's going to take some time, it's going to be a long race, the north korean model will get widespread adoption, just not quite yet.

SunTzu
24th April 2010, 08:50 PM
Just wait until the US dollar loses it's global reserve currency status. That will truly be a collapse of standard of living.

MarketNeutral
24th April 2010, 09:29 PM
U.S. standard of living will collapse because with globilization you can't have an average hourly wage that is still 95% higher then your cheapest competition.

Corporations will pit countries against each other to put forth the lowest wage slaves.

FunnyMoney
25th April 2010, 09:59 AM
Just wait until the US dollar loses it's global reserve currency status. That will truly be a collapse of standard of living.




U.S. standard of living will collapse because with globilization you can't have an average hourly wage that is still 95% higher then your cheapest competition.

Corporations will pit countries against each other to put forth the lowest wage slaves.


I agree.

And it's been going down for the vast majority for quite some time, that trend simply speeds up.