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To: ClearCase_guy

Yeah, I see you understand the situation but some people seem to think that unemployable middle aged folks are laying around at home collecting welfare from taxpayers or something, they’re not. That they’re too lazy to go find a job, they’re are not. The jobs aren’t there for millions of them.

They’re in as dire a shape as people during the depression and many have nowhere to turn if they don’t have relatives that will help. I don’t see any quick solution for them. Do you?


33 posted on 07/05/2011 11:27:46 AM PDT by Bullish (The golfer takes all the credit and gives the jet fighter pilot all the blame.)
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To: Bullish
About the only thing I'm sure of these days is that there are no quick solutions.

Back in the Great Depression, a lot of people understood how to grow food, make clothes, fix things, or do manual labor. Rough times, but people got by. And, let's face it, life expectancy (emphasis on "expectancy") was short. If you could "get by" until age 50 or 55, then you did OK and people didn't make a big deal out of it when you keeled over.

Today? So many people cannot produce food, makes clothes, or fix anything. And just about everyone feels they are above manual labor. And everyone expects (there's that word again) to live to be 75, while vacationing at their beach house and taking the occasional trip to Europe.

People want to act like it's 1998, but it's really 1933. We are not prepared. I think when it really hits home, a lot of heads will explode -- "What do you mean? I thought we had green shoots!"

37 posted on 07/05/2011 11:34:06 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (The USSR spent itself into bankruptcy and collapsed -- and aren't we on the same path now?)
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