The Economic Collapse
March 19, 2012
March 19, 2012
No matter how often the pretty people
on television tell us that the U.S. economy is getting better, it isn’t going
to change the soul crushing agony that millions of American families are going
through right now.
The stock market may have gotten back
to where it was in 2008, but the job market sure hasn’t. As I wrote about a few days ago, the
percentage of working age Americans that are actually employed has stayed very
flat since late 2009, and the average duration of unemployment is hovering near
an all-time high.
Sadly, this is not just a temporary
downturn. The U.S. economy has been slowly declining for several decades and is
nearing total system failure. Right now, many poverty are higher than they have
ever been since the Great Depression.
Many measurements of government dependence
are the highest that we have ever seen in all of U.S. history. The emerging one
world economic system (otherwise known as “free trade”) has cost the U.S.
economy tens of thousands of businesses, millions of jobs and hundreds of billions
of dollars of our national wealth.
The federal government is going into
unprecedented amounts of debt in order to try to maintain our current standard
of living, but there is no way that they will be able to sustain this kind of
borrowing for too much longer. So enjoy this bubble of false prosperity while
you can, because things will soon get significantly worse.
As the U.S. economy experiences total
system failure, it will be imperative for all of us not to wait around waiting
for someone to rescue us.
And I am not just talking about the
government.
Today, millions upon millions of
Americans are waiting around hoping that someone out there will hire them.
Well, the truth is that our politicians
have made it so complicated and so expensive to hire someone that many small
businesses try to avoid hiring as much as possible.
Businesses generally only want to hire
people if they can make a profit by doing so. When our politicians keep piling
on the taxes and the regulations and the paperwork, that creates a tremendous
incentive not to hire workers.
Michael Fleischer, the President of
Bogen Communications, once wrote an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal entitled
“Why I’m Not Hiring”. The following is how Paul Hollrah of Family Security Matters
summarized the nightmarish taxes that are imposed on his company when Fleischer
hires a new worker:
According to Fleischer, Sally grosses $59,000 a year, which shrinks to less than $44,000 after taxes and other payroll deductions. The $15,311 deducted from Sally’s gross pay is comprised of New Jersey state income tax: $1,893; Social Security taxes: $3,661; state unemployment insurance: $126; disability insurance: $149; Medicare insurance: $856; federal withholding tax: $6,250; and her share of medical and dental insurance: $2,376. Roughly 25.9 percent of Sally’s income is siphoned off by Washington and Trenton before she receives her paychecks.But then there are the additional costs of employing Sally. In addition to her gross salary, her employer must pay the lion’s share of her healthcare insurance premiums: $9,561; life and other insurance premiums: $153; federal unemployment insurance: $56; disability insurance: $149; worker’s comp insurance: $300; New Jersey state unemployment insurance: $505; Medicare insurance: $856; and the employer’s share of Social Security taxes: $3,661.Over and above her gross salary, Bogen Communications must pay an additional $15,241 in benefits and state and federal taxes, bringing the total cost of employing Sally to approximately $74,241 per year. Sally gets to keep $43,689, or just 58.8% of that total.
Are you starting to understand why so
many businesses are hesitant to hire new workers?
The big corporations can handle all of
the paperwork and regulations that come with hiring a new worker fairly well,
but for small businesses hiring a new worker can be a massive undertaking. That
new worker is going to have to almost be a miracle worker in order to justify
all of the hassle and expense.
But the federal government just keeps
piling more burdens on to the backs of employers. That is one reason why there
is such uproar over Obamacare. It is going to make hiring workers even less
attractive.
These days, most small businesses are
trying to get by with as few workers as possible, and many big businesses are
trying to ship as many jobs as they can overseas.
Sadly, even if you do find a good job
it can disappear at any moment.
The following is from a comment that a
reader named Jeff recently left on one of my articles….
It’s sad what’s happening here in this country. So many lucky ones defend it. In America it’s not exactly about hard work anymore, it’s about who you know always. The ability to keep people stupid as well as in debt was established here well by corporations also. You cannot start a solid hiring business like you could years ago.I know many of folks who don’t break a sweat and earn more money than I ever will in a week. The system is getting crazy only creating two extremes. I fought for this country right after 9/11 as a young naive person. Using my grandfather’s old stories to see the dream that this country was always suppose to have.The company I still unfortunately work for (because other places are worse), 4 years ago they froze our salaries. No raises yet; this is when the company was bought by an investment group for 500 million.Now we are getting sold to Japan for 1 billion. A 500 million dollar profit. Sorry if I may be ignorant in this way of business. But it seems the only one who benefited from this is that group of investors. 400+ well skilled jobs lost, no raises or rewards, a whole lot more work and contract obligations to meet, and less contact with management when problems surface.I just think the United States of America is becoming the world’s poker table.I want out of this country so bad. I don’t even know what happen to people here. The younger generation scares me how dumb they are and everyone seems so easily bought with eye candy.
Can you imagine that?
Can you imagine your boss walking in
one day and declaring that the business has just been sold to foreigners and
that you are about to lose your job?
In America today, it can be absolutely
soul crushing to lose a job. It isn’t as if you are going to run out and get
another fantastic job in a week or two.
When you are unemployed, people look at
you differently. It gets to the point where you don’t even want to interact
with other people because you know that your unemployment is probably going to
be the number one topic of conversation.
When you are out of work for six months
or more, it is easy to feel like a failure ~ especially when so many other
people are looking at you as if you are a failure too.
But in most cases, individual Americans
are not to blame for not being able to find work.
Rather it is the entire system that is
failing all of us.
The U.S. economy is bleeding good jobs
and the middle class
in America has become a bizarre game of musical chairs. When the music stops
each round you might lose your spot. You just never know.
Looking for work in the United States
in this economic environment can be a demoralizing endeavor.
For example, a recent Esquire
article described what one unemployed man named Scott Annechino
found when he attended a job fair in San Francisco:
A glass elevator carries him to the third floor, where the front-desk girl, who knows it’s her job to be cheerful, told him the job fair is supposed to be.A pasty kid, maybe thirty, in a too-big shirt and a cheap tie, greets him and tells him the companies are set up in rooms along the hall and that he should definitely visit all of them. Annechino, forty-four years old, wearing his best suit and shined black shoes, walks to the first exhibitor: Devcon, a home-security company. The door is closed, no one inside. Annechino looks around for an explanation. “Oh, I just got an e-mail from my contact there saying they wouldn’t be able to make it today,” the pasty kid says, fingering his BlackBerry.A couple of other potential employers who were supposed to be here didn’t make it, either ~ Konica Minolta, Santa Clara University. “Yeah …” the kid says. Annechino moves to the next room.State Farm. They’re looking for people who can put up fifty grand to start their own insurance agency. The Art Institute is next, mostly looking for people who might want to go to art school. New York Life.The U. S. Army, where men wearing fatigues and combat boots offer brochures.That’s it.
If you want to check out the rest of
the sad unemployment stories in that article, you can find them right here.
But even if you do have a job, that
doesn’t mean that everything is just fine. Average American families are
finding that the prices of the basic things that they need are rising much
faster than their paychecks are.
According to one recent
study, more than half of all Americans feel as though they are
really struggling to afford just the basics at this point.
“Every retailer wants to think ‘Everything I sell is worth it! Shoppers will love it’, but the hard reality is 52% Americans feel they barely have enough to afford the basics,” said Candace Corlett, president of WSL/Strategic Retail.
Just buying food and gas is a major
financial ordeal for many families these days. On average, a gallon of gasoline
in the United States now costs $3.83. Many
Americans burn up a huge chunk of their paychecks just going back and forth to
work in their cars.
So what is the solution?
Well, according to the Obama
administration the answer is even more government dependence. The federal
government is now actually running ads encouraging even more people to go on food stamps.
Can you believe that?
Apparently having 46.5 million
Americans on food stamps is not enough. The federal government is spending our
tax money on advertisements that try to convince even more Americans that they
need to be on food stamps.
What the American people really need
are good jobs, but those keep getting shipped out of the country.
Meanwhile, people are becoming increasingly
desperate.
For example one Colorado man was
recently caught stealing parts from toilets in public restrooms.
Donald Allen Citron, 48, faces 18 charges, including burglary and theft. He’s accused of stealing toilet parts from several locations, including Southwest Plaza Mall, University of Denver, and Craig Hospital.Most of the crimes happened in just a few minutes, but police Citron is a plumber and all he needed was a wrench and a screw driver to steal pipes and the plumbing in toilets. The items he’s accused of stealing are valued at around $6,400.
They are calling him “the crapper
scrapper”.
Other Americans are not willing to
stoop to crime and instead suffer quietly and anonymously.
A reader named Katie recently left the
following heartbreaking comment on one of my articles….
I’m almost homeless. Through no fault of my own I’d like to point out. I don’t drink, smoke, or do drugs. I don’t even eat fast food unless I have too.Four years ago I had a house, car, family, stuff, an IRA, and really everything that people in this country aspire to. I had a great job that I enjoyed so did my boyfriend. Even our relationship was great.We didn’t get hit by the economy right away. We were in Katrina damaged parts of the country and there was still a lot of construction going on and the economic boom that comes with it.Then I got laid off. Doesn’t seem to matter that I go to interview after interview. I use indeed, monster, craigslist, and newspapers to search for jobs even outside my area.Now my boyfriend has passed away suddenly, and his family got everything. I personally have only a living father left, who hasn’t the room but I’m camping in his yard. All my friends say they don’t have the room either. Which makes me wonder just how much of friends they are. Considering if the situation was reversed I have in the past and would open my home to anyone that needed help.If something happens to father I really don’t know what I’m going to do. I need to get on my feet and I know that jobs are hard to come by. I’m sick of the people who have jobs saying ‘get a job you lazy bum’. I’m hardly lazy and I’m trying desperately to be employed; not being homeless would be rather awesome in my opinion.I’m not picky, regardless of my degree I’ll pick up trash or clean toilets. McDonald’s, Taco Bell and the other fast food places don’t even bother with a call back. And when I call to inquire about my application it’s always the same, ‘we will call you when we make a decision’. Such a cop-out.So no. In my (granted meaningless opinion) the economy is not getting better. To even suggest that when unemployment is so high or the rate of food stamps is utterly ludicrous at best. I notice that those talking heads on the cable news and radio never seem to mention that the homeless shelters have a higher occupancy level than ever before. Nor would they mention the fact that we have those shelters in abundance now across the country in comparison to the Great Depression.I’m getting real tired of hearing how great the economy is doing. When obviously it’s not. All you have to do is open your eyes and see. Businesses are not coming back yet and foreclosed homes sit empty everywhere. The unemployment rate only counts the people who are getting unemployment benefits. So the people who fall off the unemployment benefits don’t get counted. Because they must have gotten a job, right? Hardly. In fact the homeless in this country are almost never counted correctly. It’s too hard to count them all, or at least that’s the excuse.I know it’s meaningless, especially to those who see homeless and immediately have a bias, but that’s my opinion on the current state of our economy. You can count me in the 80%. Only a fool would see this as a recovery.
Please say a prayer for Katie and the
millions of other Americans just like her. It can be absolutely soul crushing
to lose everything that you ever worked for and not see any light at the end of
the tunnel.
Unfortunately, the U.S. economy is not
going to be improving in the long run. What we are experiencing right now is about
as good as it is going to get. The truth is that it is pretty much downhill
from here.
It is fairly simple to figure out what
is happening to us as a nation.
You can’t keep buying far more than you
sell.
You can’t keep spending far more than
you bring in.
You can’t keep running up debt in
larger and larger amounts indefinitely.
The U.S. economy is running on borrowed
money and on borrowed time.
At some point, both are going to run
out.
Are you ready for that?
from the article:
ReplyDelete"The stock market may have gotten back to where it was in 2008..."
with inflation factors considered, the 2008 u.s. stock market level was in reality at the same level as it was in 1966 ... (so, today it might be around 1970 levels)
Obamacare (which was Hillary care, which was - all the way back to its origin - Marxist (talmudic) health care - because it's nothing to do with health and well being, but everything to do with just one more way of taking away from those that have and giving it to those who have more than any human ever needs) will be one of the final nails in the u.s.a.'s coffin; with the fines and imprisonment regulations (secretly written into the healthcare laws) millions of people who now have no job, little to no money, will be unable to pay - hence will face jail time (FEMA camps here we come) for failure to pay for talmudics'-health care (think this was not planned to go exactly the way it's heading?).
taxation (u.s.a.): it's not coincidental that the "internal revenue service" (the national level tax collectors) was created at the same time as the creation of the "federal reserve" (privately owned central bank of the u.s.a.)
and the "federal reserve" system, which produces "money" from thin air (talmudic alchemy - pieces of paper traded for real wealth - like land, physical items, etc.) means exactly that the u.s.a. can and does (as official policy) "keep running up debt in larger and larger amounts (almost) indefinitely
the main reality of this situation is that none of this had to happen - not just to the u.s.a., but to any and all other nations
the economic situation is exactly what it has been planned to be - miserably destructive to current world order
for the purposes of bringing about the "new world order"
a related topic (because what is happening to Egypt, Greece, etc. is on the way to the rest of the world - north america will not be spared)
ReplyDeletenot only is this an excellent article on what is really happening to Egypt, but it is one of the best explanations of "austerity" and how the criminal cabal of banksters and politicians work their judeo-masonic-tamudic magick with their fake money (debt instruments of mass destruction)
"The Bankers Re-Enslave Egypt"
http://wakeupfromyourslumber.com/blog/heydrich/bankers-re-enslave-egypt
among other of the usual horrors to be imposed on Egyptian people is the new IMF loan about to be handed over to the controllers:
"Why $3.2 billion? Because that is the amount the USA has been sending to Egypt each year since 1979 as a bribe to secure Egypt’s obedience to Israel. Egypt’s politicians will continue to pocket $3.2 billion for the same purpose, but from now on that $3.2 billion will come as loans via the IMF. No longer will it be grants."
the burden of loan repayment is only, exclusively on the people - not the politicians nor their bankster masters