SmoothTalker said:
Honestly, I don't think you have any comprehension about how shockingly bad life use to be, or how bad it still is in much of the world. Even your poorest, while I would never want it, have it good by comparison.
I readily acknowledge that, SmoothTalker, get your point, and am well aware of how bad things are in places like Liberia. And you know who really made them that way? Those who brought "civilization" to them. But that's a whole different issue and story, connected though it is.
But it's still damn hard for someone who's stuck on the hamster wheel to get out, unless they're very brilliant and driven. I don't see why people in such a bountiful nation as mine should have to
struggle so hard. Not all squander their money on luxuries they can't afford, not by a long shot (But, as a parenthetic note, is it not the very market-driven advertising that helps induce this senseless consumption, anyway?). I can remember very clearly when it was much easier for most working class Americans.
In the US, there is an entire "underclass" that doesn't even register in the economic statistics, which makes up a sizable % of the population.
How many is hard to determine, because it's hard to count the "invisible." At least there are charity options for everybody here in the form of homeless shelters, soup kitchens, etc., so yes, it’s not as bad as 18th century France, present-day Liberia, or what not.
My point is not comparing levels of misery. I just happen to think it's
inexcusable for a nation with the resources we have in the US to not guarantee everyone who wants to put forth an honest effort to do their part a comfortable, secure living. I
know it's well within our means. Above and beyond that, let people have the opportunity to rise as high as their abilities take them, as long as they don't take or trash what rightfully belongs to someone (or everybody) else (which includes the environment).
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All this talk about “being in a recession” makes me laugh.
We’re in a weird combination of hyperinflation and deflation, so the stats appear to be more-or-less balanced, and fool many people. Many things that are conveniently left out of the “inflation” statistics are inflating at
astronomical rates: junk fees, late fees, surcharges, insurance premiums, to name a few. "Nickel and diming," basically. Funny that these almost uniformly involve transfer of money from poorer to richer people. Other things are deflating or not increasing, such as rates for many services. Most of these happen to put money in the pocket of the small business owner or individuals.
Economic statistics are worse than useless: they’re outright
misleading, for the most part.