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The Future For Most Americans: Pathetic Jobs, Bad Debts And A Crappy Economy
The American Dream ^ | 9-7-2011

Posted on 09/07/2011 9:15:35 PM PDT by blam

The Future For Most Americans: Pathetic Jobs, Bad Debts And A Crappy Economy

September 7, 2011

Sorry to break this to you, but the future for most Americans is going to be pretty crappy. Unless you are independently wealthy, the chances are good that you will have a low paying job, that you will be drowning in a sea of bad debts and that you will have to go on government assistance at some point.
Most American families are completely dependent on their jobs for income, and right now good jobs are disappearing at a frightening pace. Over the last couple of decades, millions of high paying manufacturing jobs have been shipped out of the country and they are being replaced by low paying service jobs. Small business creation is being absolutely crushed by the federal government, and millions of illegal immigrants have been allowed in to the country and they are now competing for the limited number of jobs that are still available.
The vast majority of the money and the vast majority of the power in this country are now in the hands of either the big corporations or the government. Together, the big corporations and the government are absolutely crushing everyone else. If you are not part of the "privileged class", there is a good chance that your job is serving them. Perhaps you are bringing them lunch or cutting their hair or stocking shelves for them.
Once upon a time, America was "the land of opportunity", but now that has all changed. Tomorrow morning, millions of Americans will get up and go to pathetic, low paying jobs and millions of others will wonder why they can't find anyone to hire them.
Sadly, if nothing is done to reverse the long-term trends that are destroying our economy, the number of "working poor" is going to continue to increase.

Our founding fathers never intended for this to happen. Our founding fathers intended to set up a capitalist system in which the power of the central government and the power of corporations was greatly limited. The idea was that individuals and small businesses should be given the chance to grow and thrive in a free market system.

But that is not what we have today. Instead of capitalism, what we have today is much more aptly described as "corporatism". There are very few areas of the economy where the corporations and the government do not totally dominate.

For a while things worked fairly well because the big corporations were providing millions and millions of good jobs for American workers. But now the big corporations have figured out that they don't really need expensive American workers and they are shipping millions of our jobs out of the country.

But the mainstream media keeps insisting that everything is going to be okay if we all just have a positive attitude.

I had to laugh when I read the following line in an article posted on USA Today recently....

Chances are your negative state of mind has a lot to do with the double-dip crowd's Weather Channel-like warnings of another catastrophic economic storm bearing down on the USA.

Look, chanting positive affirmations over and over is not going to zap good jobs into existence out of thin air.

Right now there is intense competition for any good jobs that happen to become available. For example, last month approximately 17,000 people applied for 600 jobs that came open at Ford's Louisville Assembly Plant. So those that applied were facing 27 to 1 odds.

The sad thing is that those jobs only paid 15 dollars an hour. Back in the old days, a job at a Ford plant could easily support an entire family. One of my grandfathers worked at a Ford plant for years. Now, such a job will barely get you out of poverty.

But those Ford jobs are far better alternatives than working at Wal-Mart or flipping burgers down at the local Dairy Queen.

When I was growing up, they told us in school that we were becoming a "service economy". At the time I had only a vague idea what that meant.

Now I know that it means lots of crappy, low paying jobs for everyone.

The following chart shows the growth of service jobs since 1940. As you can see, we now have almost 6 times as many service jobs in our economy as we did back in 1940....

Now let us take a look at a chart that shows the growth of manufacturing jobs. As you can see, we now have less people employed in manufacturing than we did 60 years ago even though our population has absolutely exploded since then. The decline in manufacturing jobs has become especially pronounced over the past decade....

In general, true wealth is created when something comes out of the ground or when something is made.

So if we are importing far more natural resources than we are exporting and if we are not making much of anything in this country anymore, what does that mean for the future of America?

Every single month, we send far, far more money to the rest of the world than they send to us.

That means that we are getting poorer.

Meanwhile, we are also getting into much more debt as a nation every single month.

That is also a huge drain on our national wealth.

The size of the "American pie" is continually getting smaller, and the people that are suffering the most from it are those on the bottom of the food chain.

Right now, unemployment in the United States is at epidemic levels and the number of "working poor" is absolutely exploding. Last year, 19.7% of all U.S. working adults had jobs that would not have been enough to push a family of four over the poverty line even if they had worked full-time hours for the entire year.

How would you feel if you worked as hard as you could all year and your family was still living in poverty?

Sadly, unless something dramatic is done, the number of working poor is going to continue to increase.

Back in 1980, less than 30% of all jobs in the United States were low income jobs. Today, more than 40% of all jobs in the United States are low income jobs.

Perhaps you are reading this and you have a low income job.

Do you want to know where your good job went?

It was likely shipped out of the country. The corporations have figured out that they can make much larger piles of money if they make stuff on the other side of the globe where they can legally pay slave labor wages to the workers.
The United States has lost a staggering 32 percent of its manufacturing jobs since the year 2000, and over 42,000 manufacturing facilities in the United States have been closed down since 2001.

But that is only part of the story. The Obama administration recently announced that it will not be deporting most illegal aliens any longer. Only convicted criminals and "security risks" will be targeted from now on.

So now blue collar American workers will have even more competition for the few remaining jobs.

Once upon a time in this country, you could support an entire family very well with the income from one construction job.

Today, that is no longer true. Competition from illegal aliens has massively driven down construction wages in many areas of the country.

But you know what? Large numbers of blue collar workers will run out and vote for Obama once again in 2012.

He may be shipping our jobs out of the country, but he sure does deliver a good speech. The following is from a speech that Obama gave at a union rally in Detroit on Monday....

"That’s why we chose Detroit as one of the cities that we’re helping revitalize in our “Strong Cities, Strong Communities” initiative. We’re teaming up with everybody -- mayors, local officials, you name it -- boosting economic development, rebuilding your communities the best way, which is a way that involves you. Because despite all that’s changed here, and all the work that lies ahead, this is still a city where men clocked into factories.
This is the city that built the greatest middle class the world has ever known. This is the city where women rolled up their sleeves and helped build an arsenal for democracy to free the world. This is a city where the great American industry has come back to life and the industries of tomorrow are taking root.
This is a city where people, brave and bold, courageous and clever, are dreaming up ways to prove the skeptics wrong and write the next proud chapter in our history." Doesn't that sound nice?

I know that I was a little bit inspired when I read that.

But where are the jobs?

I have written extensively about the lack of jobs in this country. It is not a great mystery what is happening to them, and it is not a great mystery about what is needed to start getting them back.

But sadly, very few of our major politicians are even addressing the real issues.

On Thursday, Barack Obama is going to unveil his latest "jobs plan". It will almost certainly be some rehashed nonsense that involves even more government spending.

Look, if you gathered together all of the unemployed people in the United States, they would constitute the 68th largest country in the world.

We have a national crisis on our hands. We need very real solutions to our very real problems.

According to John Williams of shadowstats.com, when you factor in all of the short-term discouraged workers, all of the long-term discouraged workers and all of those working part-time because they cannot find full-time employment, the real unemployment rate is now approximately 23 percent.

Things appear even more frightening when you look at the number of Americans that actually do have jobs. Right now, only 47 percent of the U.S. workforce is "fully employed" at this point.

Things wouldn't be so bad if millions of unemployed people could run out and start their own businesses. But in America today, it is incredibly difficult to start a small business. The federal government, our state governments and our local governments have piled mountains of ridiculous regulations on to our businesses.

Big corporations that have teams of attorneys on staff can handle all of the regulations.

Most individuals and small businesses can't.

But even if you are able to successfully navigate all of the red tape, you will still likely find yourself struggling to survive as you compete against the big corporate machines.

The big corporations have spent decades stacking things in their favor, and competing against them is not easy.

Millions of Americans are sitting at home today wondering why their businesses failed or why their careers went up in smoke. Meanwhile, their bank accounts continue to go down and their bad debts continue to pile up.

As bad as things have been, you would think that the big banks would show just a little bit of compassion on all of us.

But sadly, that is just not the case. In fact, they are becoming more insensitive than ever.

It turns out that the big financial institutions will come after your relatives even after you are dead. An article on CNN recently described the letter that Denise Towley received just two weeks after her mother passed away....

"We have recently learned that [your mother], a valued Discover Card customer, has passed away. Please accept our sincere apologies," stated the letter from Discover, which Townley sent to CNNMoney.

It then offered her or another family member the "opportunity" to assume the balance on her mother's credit card and offered a special introductory APR of 0% for the first six months (the APR would increase to 13.24% after that). If Townley wasn't interested in taking over the account, then the bank wished to discuss how the estate planned to pay off her mother's credit card balance.

But that example is nothing compared to the next one that you are about to read.

Bank of America recently called one grieving widow up to 48 times a day to remind her that her husband's debts needed to be paid. The following is an excerpt from a recent article in the Daily Mail....

The bank told the widow that it was unable to stop the calls until the debt was paid as they were computer generated.

Mrs Crabtree claimed that the calls began the day after her husband died of cancer.

She told the bank that she only had $5,000 cash to hand, which was needed for food and to bury her husband, but debt collectors told her that she must use it to pay them.

Mrs Crabtree said she and her family spent her husband's wake repeatedly hanging up the phone on calls from the bank.

Can you believe that?

These are yet more examples of why I encourage everyone to get out of debt as fast as they can. The banks are not nice and they are not going to show you any mercy.

But isn't the government doing something about the banks? After all, the federal agency that watches over Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac has filed lawsuits against 17 major financial institutions, right?

Well, yes, some of those financial institutions are going to get slap on the wrist.

But nobody is going to go to jail.

Rather, this is all about the federal government getting a cut of the action.

That is how this kind of thing works. Everyone gets a cut.

The federal government is not going to give the homes back to the victims of mortgage fraud.

The federal government is not going to take the money and give it to the people that lost everything.

No, any money from the future settlement will go right into the pockets of the government.

This is not going to fix anything for the large numbers of Americans that were defrauded.

Tonight, there are countless numbers of families all across America that are one step from living on the street. According to the Daily Mail, "millions of Americans" are now living in budget motels because they are out of other options....

They are known as the last resort. Millions of Americans are staying in budget long-stay motels as the country's economic problems get worse.

The grisly rooms are seen as the lowest of the U.S. housing ladder, only just above a cardboard box.

In tiny rooms with paper-thin walls and nylon sheets, vulnerable Americans are making their homes for a few hundred bucks a month.

I write a lot about how the middle class is being destroyed in this country, but it cannot be stressed enough.

We are literally watching the slow destruction of the greatest middle class that ever existed.

The poverty that we are now witnessing in some areas of the nation is absolutely jaw-dropping. For example, approximately one-third of the entire population of Alabama is now on food stamps.

Faith in the government is rapidly diminishing. A recent Washington Post poll found that only 26 percent of Americans believe that the federal government can solve the economic problems that we are now facing.

Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans seem to have any real answers these days.

A lot of Americans have given up hope and have become deeply pessimistic. According to one recent poll, 39 percent of Americans believe that the U.S. economy has now entered a "permanent decline".

Sadly, they are right. The U.S. economy has entered a permanent decline.

If our politicians were trying to do the right things, we might have half a chance.

But with the way things are going, the vast majority of Americans are going to be facing a very bleak future.

Ignoring the truth is not going to change it. The U.S. economy is slowly dying and nothing is being done to fix it.

The frightening thing is that this is about as good as things are going to get. From here on out, the economy is generally going to get progressively worse.

An economic storm is coming.

You better get ready.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: americanindustry; economy; jobs; unemployment
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To: HiTech RedNeck

I’ve wondered if the recent crisis hasn’t effectively lowered standards, because apartment managers and banks do need customers; employers need employees (eventually). I’ve managed to keep our credit clean and reasonable; apparently, THIS is now out of the ordinary.


21 posted on 09/07/2011 10:50:33 PM PDT by The Antiyuppie ("When small men cast long shadows, then it is very late in the day.")
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To: CowboyJay

How do you compete against cheap, unskilled labor without tariffs which further hurt your competitiveness?


22 posted on 09/07/2011 10:54:50 PM PDT by D-fendr (Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
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To: The Antiyuppie
"I’ve wondered if the recent crisis hasn’t effectively lowered standards, because apartment managers and banks do need customers; employers need employees (eventually). I’ve managed to keep our credit clean and reasonable; apparently, THIS is now out of the ordinary.

LOL.

I once had a bank credit official tell me that I was the most qualified customer he had ever had ask for a loan.

Up till then, I thought I was just average/ordinary.
I got the 'good credit' trait from my (depression era) dad.

23 posted on 09/07/2011 11:00:50 PM PDT by blam
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To: jeffc

“I remember hearing all this doom and gloom in the late 70’s, and look what happened in the 80’s.”

Well, the WWII generation was starting to retire, for one thing - and their low-skill, good-paying jobs went with them as they were replaced with automation, here or overseas.

I’ve worried that the years 1950-1975 were an aberration and not sustainable, in terms of having a large middle class. A lot of the world didn’t entirely recover from WWII until the 80’s (or in the case of Germany, this decade). The playing field is much more level now, because “theirs” was blown up.


24 posted on 09/07/2011 11:18:19 PM PDT by The Antiyuppie ("When small men cast long shadows, then it is very late in the day.")
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To: Will88

If we undid regulations and also hired people who wanted ot work, rather than just draw a paycheck to fund their dream lifestyle, quite frankly we would be in a lot better of a place, even now. The mentality as well as the amount of goods we produce has to change, not just finding an invention.


25 posted on 09/07/2011 11:37:26 PM PDT by Niuhuru (The Internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
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To: The Antiyuppie

Too many view a job as a way to get a check, not to make a living and produce for a company. Companies are treated like a new home/haven and a place to be supported, not hired and a place to work.


26 posted on 09/07/2011 11:38:57 PM PDT by Niuhuru (The Internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
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To: D-fendr
you know, $15 dollars/hr would be a sustainable wage for a family man IF he didn't get soaked by income/Ss/sales/property taxes, didn't get dinged for huge insurance premiums, and a tax or a fee on almost anything he or his family did, and if he didn't have to worry about saving $100,000 minimum for his child's college education....

look at car insurance.....illegals don't pay this...but our working young people have to and the insurance companies are scandalous in what they charge....

a young legal American is at a huge disadvantge against the illegals....

but beyond that, we have to get back to a basic notion....that most people do not get rich, nor near rich, nor sort of rich.....most times in America people were working class and happy about it...

now everyone needs a fancy phone, a huge tv, two cars, a couple of college degrees, and eats out several times a week and that is just to be like everyone else....

27 posted on 09/07/2011 11:39:03 PM PDT by cherry
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To: cherry

Those are good points.

Thanks.


28 posted on 09/07/2011 11:45:40 PM PDT by D-fendr (Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
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To: The Antiyuppie

“and their low-skill, good-paying jobs went with them as they were replaced with automation, here or overseas”

A lot of Americas are also not learning useful skills; they are not learning about how to really make things to be self sufficient. A person trained in phlebotomy can actually end up succeeding better than someone who has an art degree in this economy. As things become more automated and efficient, people should have started training for real skills and not suing companies into bankruptcy. Knowing a real trade is the only way for people to really survive the adapting economy, any adapting economy.


29 posted on 09/08/2011 12:08:04 AM PDT by Niuhuru (The Internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
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To: Niuhuru

It would seem that medicine would be the next promising area — if it didn’t have Obamacare to cr@p all over it, that is.


30 posted on 09/08/2011 12:58:07 AM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (There's gonna be a Redneck Revolution! (See my freep page) [rednecks come in many colors])
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To: HiTech RedNeck

Yes; as long as Obamacare is where it is and so long as we push our smart to carry the stupid (and the numerous children they breed) we are going ot stagnate, and then collapse as a country. The Soviet Union collapsed because it couldn’t go anywhere and so will the US. As it is, the business part of our country is beginning to collapse; our medical industry is next, just you wait. The finance aspect of our industry has collapsed and bailouts are not going to save it. So, it goes without saying that business is next, then medicine.

All the while, the underclass continues to wantonly breed like rabbits who have an iv filled with Viagra attached.


31 posted on 09/08/2011 2:02:58 AM PDT by Niuhuru (The Internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
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To: The Antiyuppie

The thing is, after WWII there was so much out there, that if it had been managed smartly, there would still be more than enough for us out there. Instead it was squandered. In the fifties, and to the seventies, society rewarded the right people and had a solid set of rules and customs that what made America successful in the first place. People followed them and like it or not, there was success as a result. After WWII we were at the top and if we had continued to be practical as a nation, we would not be in this mess.

The reason it could continue to work is because we didn’t pay people fat checks to have kids out of wedlock and we rewarded those who were responsible and law abiding. We have been one of the few nations on earth to have it all and literally blow it via the citizenry, not the government. In the past it was the cronies in politics that sacked the treasury, but this time around, the citizens themselves have bankrupted the country through their own irresponsibility and then also ran themselves entirely into debt.

The US has been engaging in self destructive behavior and we are now just beginning to feel the consequences of our failure to act responsibly as a nation. At some point, there will finally be a complete collapse and then there will be a final reckoning for all those who chose to be impractical at best and irresponsible at worst.


32 posted on 09/08/2011 2:19:08 AM PDT by Niuhuru (The Internet is the digital AIDS; adapting and successfully destroying the MSM host.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Now, whether the trash that this leaves in your credit file will keep you from getting a future job or an apartment or whatever, that depends on the policy of the employer or landlord.

I tried to tell my now 26 year old grand son, that there are more consequences to having terrible credit, than just not being able to get credit any more.

Now he's having a tough time just getting an insurance company to give him a quote for auto insurance and they all give their reasons in detail, in writing. Too many attempts to get credit cards, whether he actually got them or not (he didn't), collection action against him within the last 5 years, too many open accounts with positive balances. Nothing at all about his driving record, it's fairly clean.

He's an educated idiot who voted for Obama.

33 posted on 09/08/2011 5:18:06 AM PDT by Graybeard58
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To: Nick Danger; surfer
Agree with your comment, and love your tag line!

BTW, a friend wanted me to ask you, “Who is Regnad Kcin?”

And to think I thought your real name was Nick Danger! :)

See you soon!

34 posted on 09/08/2011 7:30:49 AM PDT by seekthetruth (A President is sworn to uphold the Constitution. If he doesn't, IMPEACH him!)
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To: D-fendr
"How do you compete against cheap, unskilled labor without tariffs which further hurt your competitiveness?"

Tariffs hurt the competitiveness of domestic firms? How? They're a defacto subsidy. The few healthy industries we have left benefit from quite a bit of protectionism here in their home market.

We need hefty tariffs on finished goods coming across the border.
35 posted on 09/08/2011 7:52:46 AM PDT by CowboyJay ("Rick Perry has more red flags than a May Day parade." - fieldmarshalj)
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To: CowboyJay

Tariffs raise the costs of your equipment/materials and thus making you raise your product or service prices making it harder for you to compete.


36 posted on 09/08/2011 9:11:40 AM PDT by D-fendr (Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

Well, I do have voice mail and caller ID that posts on my TV screen, but not because I am in a hole (praise God). I just don’t like to be bothered with people calling me when I am working or relaxing.

My job is afe for a while and high paying (I am the sole employee of my own consulting business) My skills are in demand now, with some pressures, but really should be stable enough for the next 5 - 10 years — enough time to get my kids through college and established.

I just wonder if I am going to need to provide them with substantial support into my retairement...


37 posted on 09/08/2011 9:37:44 AM PDT by L,TOWM (Once you see that it is all Kabuki Theater, you are free to quit wasting your time on politics.)
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To: D-fendr
"Tariffs raise the costs of your equipment/materials and thus making you raise your product or service prices making it harder for you to compete."

That's the line from the laissez faire absolutists, but that's not real life. What actually happens in practice is that domestic firms get a boost from having protection in their home market. They use that to benefit not only from economy-of-scale, but when their margins are healthy on domestic sales, they have some leeway to more competitively price sales for export.

Tariffs should not be applied to raw materials. Only goods.


38 posted on 09/08/2011 12:00:45 PM PDT by CowboyJay ("Rick Perry has more red flags than a May Day parade." - fieldmarshalj)
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To: CowboyJay
Tariffs should not be applied to raw materials. Only goods.

The cost of producing a product or service also includes finished goods. For example a transportation firm uses "finished' vehicles.

My business uses a great deal of finished goods, my "raw materials" are finished goods. If these prices go up, my costs go up, the cost of the service my customers receive from me goes up, their costs go up… and I and they become less competitive against those not burdened by tariffs.

39 posted on 09/08/2011 12:17:04 PM PDT by D-fendr (Deus non alligatur sacramentis sed nos alligamur.)
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To: D-fendr

If you’re in the transportation industry, you don’t have to worry about foreign competition. If you do business in foreign markets, I’m assuming the vehicles would be either built or imported there for use anyway, so they wouldn’t be subject to US tariffs. Last time I checked most heavy transportation vehicles in use in the US were still manufactured here.


40 posted on 09/08/2011 12:38:44 PM PDT by CowboyJay ("Rick Perry has more red flags than a May Day parade." - fieldmarshalj)
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