by Michael Snyder Economic Collapse Blog
When is the economic collapse going to happen? Just open up your eyes and take a look around the globe. The next wave of the economic collapse may not have reached Wall Street yet, but it is already deeply affecting billions of lives all over the planet.
Much of Europe has already descended into a deep economic depression, very disturbing economic data is coming out of the second and third largest economies on the globe (China and Japan), and in most of the world economic inequality is growing even though 80 percent of the global population already lives on less than $10 a day.
Just because the Dow has been setting brand new all-time records lately does not mean that everything is okay. Remember, a bubble is always the biggest right before it bursts. The next major wave of the economic collapse is already sweeping across Europe and Asia and it is going to devastate the United States as well. I hope that you are ready.
The following are 10 scenes from the economic collapse that is sweeping across the planet…
#1 27 Percent Unemployment/60 Percent Youth Unemployment In Greece
The economic depression in Europe just continues to get worse with each passing month. According to the Daily Mail, the unemployment rate in Greece has nearly tripled since 2009…
Greek youth unemployment rose above 60 per cent for the first time in February, reflecting the pain caused by the country’s crippling recession after years of austerity under its international bailout.
Greece’s jobless rate has almost tripled since the country’s debt crisis emerged in 2009 and was more than twice the euro zone’s average unemployment reading of 12.1 percent in March.
While the overall unemployment rate rose to 27 per cent, according to statistics service data released on Thursday, joblessness among those aged between 15 and 24 jumped to 64.2 percent in February from 59.3 percent in January.
#2 Detroit, Michigan Is Insolvent And Is Rapidly Running Out Of Cash
I love to write about Detroit because it is a perfect example of where the rest of the country is headed. They have just gotten there first. At this point, Detroit is essentially bankrupt, and the new emergency financial manager is saying that Detroit may totally run out of cash next month…
Detroit may run out of cash next month and must cut long-term debt and retiree obligations, according to emergency financial manager Kevyn Orr’s preliminary plan to save Michigan’s largest city from bankruptcy.
Orr’s report says the cost of $9.4 billion in bond, pension and other long-term liabilities is sapping the ability to provide public safety and transportation. He listed cutting debt principal, retiree benefits and jobs among his options.
“No one should underestimate the severity of the financial crisis,” Orr said yesterday in a statement. He called his report “a sobering wake-up call about the dire financial straits the city of Detroit faces.”
#3 Economic Despair In France
France is going down the same path that Greece, Spain, Portugal and Italy have gone. The following is an excerpt from a recent article in the Economist…
HELDER PEREIRA is a young man with no work and few prospects: a 21-year-old who failed to graduate from high school and lost his job on a building site four months ago. With his savings about to run out, he has come to his local employment centre in the Paris suburb of Sevran to sign on for benefits and to get help finding something to do. He’ll get the cash. Work is another matter. Youth unemployment in Sevran is over 40%.
#4 7,000 Abandoned Buildings In Dayton, Ohio
All over the upper Midwest, there are formerly great cities that are dealing with thousands of abandoned buildings. Dayton, Ohio is one example…
Like many urban cities in recent years, Dayton still finds itself knee-deep in abandoned, dilapidated properties as the result of the foreclosure crisis and economic downturn five years ago.
Boarded up buildings that appear to be on their last legs litter the city as it attempts to recover.
Kevin Powell, the city’s acting manager of housing inspection, says officials plan to use $5.2 million — half from the state’s Moving Ohio Forward program and a matching grant from the city’s general fund — to raze 475 abandoned properties by the end of September.
That will scratch the surface of an estimated 7,000 abandoned property problem that is growing.
#5 Overwhelmed By Squatters In Spain
In Spain, unemployment is rampant and people have become incredibly desperate. In fact, in some Spanish cities you can now find entire apartment buildings that are being overwhelmed by squatters…
A 285-unit apartment complex in Parla, less than half an hour’s drive from Madrid, should be an ideal target for investors seeking cheap property in Spain. Unfortunately, two thirds of the building generates zero revenue because it’s overrun by squatters.
“This is happening all over the country,” said Jose Maria Fraile, the town’s mayor, who estimates only 100 apartments in the block built for the council have rental contracts, and not all of those tenants are paying either. “People lost their jobs, they can’t pay mortgages or rent so they lost their homes and this has produced a tide of squatters.”
#6 The Collapse Of Chinese Power Consumption
Energy consumption tends to closely mirror economic activity. That is why the recent collapse of Chinese power consumption is so alarming. The following is from Zero Hedge…
According to CLSA’s Chris Wood using NEA data, China’s monthly power consumption (the most accurate proxy for underlying economic strength according to the current premier) growth slowed from 5.5% YoY in Jan-Feb 2013 to 1.9% YoY in March, the slowest growth rate since May 2009 (as discussed in-depth here).
#7 Horrible Economic Data Coming Out Of The Second Largest Economy On The Planet
The economic data that has been coming out of the second largest economy on the globe has been quite alarming recently…
For starters, China’s recent economic data, as massaged as it is to the upside, is downright awful. China’s PMI numbers were the worst in two years. Staffing levels in the Chinese service sector decreased for the first time since January 2009 (remember that year).
China’s LEI also shows no sign of recovery. If anything, it indicates China is heading towards an economic slowdown on par with that of 2008. And if you account for the rampant debt fueling China’s economy you could easily argue that China is posting 0% GDP growth today.
#8 One Out Of Every Five U.S. Households On Food Stamps
Back in the 1970s, about one out of every 50 Americans was on food stamps. Today, even though we are supposedly in the midst of an “economic recovery”, food stamp enrollment continues to soar to new highs. The following is from CNS News…
The most recent Supplemental Assistance Nutrition Program (SNAP) statistics of the number of households receiving food stamps shows that 23,087,886 households participated in January 2013 – an increase of 889,154 families from January 2012 when the number of households totaled 22,188,732.
The most recent statistics from the United States Census Bureau– from December 2012– puts the number of households in the United States at 115,310,000. If you divide 115,310,000 by 23,087,866, that equals one out of every five households now receiving food stamps.
#9 Child Hunger In America
Those that work for the big banks on Wall Street may have no problems feeding their children, but overall there is a rapidly growing child hunger crisis in America today. Just check out the following statistics from one of my previous articles…
*For the first time ever, more than a million public school students in the United States are homeless. That number has risen by 57 percent since the 2006-2007 school year.
*In Miami, 45 percent of all children are living in poverty.
*In Cleveland, more than 50 percent of all children are living in poverty.
*According to a recently released report, 60 percent of all children in the city of Detroit are living in poverty.
#10 The Tremendous Suffering Of Hundreds Of Millions Of Desperately Poor People That We Never Hear About
There are billions of people around the globe that are deeply suffering but that do not have a voice. We usually never hear about the desperate poverty that these people are living in, but that doesn’t mean that they don’t exist. The following statistics that Stephen Lendman recently compiled should shock and alarm you…
At least 80% live on less than $10 a day. Over three billion people live on less than $2.50 a day. More than 80% live in countries where income disparity is increasing.
The poorest 40% of world population has 5% of global income. The bottom fifth has $1.5%. The top 20% has 75%.
According to UNICEF, 22,000 impoverished children die daily. They “die quietly in some of the poorest villages on earth, far removed from the scrutiny and the conscience of the world. Being meek and weak in life makes these dying multitudes even more invisible in death.”
An estimated 28% of children in developing countries are underweight, malnourished and/or stunted.
How can so many people be living like that in a world with such wealth?
Sadly, things are going to get much worse. The economic and financial systems of the world are rapidly breaking down, and in a few years these are going to look like “the good old days”.
And a growing number of people are starting to realize the direction that things are headed. For example, according to a survey that has just been released, 48 percent of all Americans believe that the best days of America are now behind us.
So what do you think?
Are our best days behind us, or are they still ahead of us?
Please feel free to post a comment with your thoughts below…

59 comments… read them below or add one
Recently our financial planner told us that all those US banks that our government (and we the taxpayers) bailed out during the recent housing/mortgage fiasco are sitting on vast amounts of financial reserves rather than lending the money to US citizens at reasonable rates. Makes you wonder what the fat cats are planning to do with all that horded money. Maybe wait until there is a really big economic collapse here in the US so they can buy up properties cheaply (or foreclose) and further fatten the portfolios of their major stock holders?
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Linda,
Part of it might be that the banks realize that if they release too much money, too fast, and too cheaply, it will start an inflationary spiral (look up, “Velocity of money”). Many of them also got burned with loans to unqualified buyers (at the behest of the government), and the effects of the Dodd Frank banking legislation is also putting a damper on some of the lending. Caution is at least part of the issue.
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You’re giving the banks too much credit!
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Oldokie,
Hyperinflation will kill their business also, and potentially open them up to even more scrutiny under Dodd Frank. It’s not credit, just self interest.
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Linda,
If you were a bank, would you loan money into an economy where the risk is high that the borrower would default?
Their fear currently overpowers their greed. If that switches they will start loaning again.
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They can make “safe” return on their borrowing and paying back to the Fed, they don’t have to do anything else to make profits…talk about a paper tiger economy.
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I’m only going to comment on one item: “#8 One Out Of Every Five U.S. Households On Food Stamps”.
Although this is listed as a symptom of the upcoming economic crisis, and I think that may have some validity, I personally think it is more s symptom of our “taker vs. maker” cultural shift. When I was growing up (in the 1950’s & 60’s) and well into my post college years, I knew many families that qualified for food assistance, which went by many different names, but the great majority of those folks would rather do without and work an extra part time job, than accept assistance, because they still had both integrity and pride, something that I find all too lacking in our current culture. One of my best friends and MAG member told me that his family was one of those, with a father who would rather work than take.
I suspect that many of you have seen people in line ahead of you buying the cuts of meat, or the live lobsters (I personally saw this one), or the unhealthy snacks being paid for by food stamps or the EBT card, or some other government assistance. If these folks were really down on their luck, they’d be purchasing bread, peanut butter, jelly, bologna, and other staples to feed the family, and not splurging on things I can’t afford, and making me pay for it.
I was listening to the radio a few weeks back (Rush Limbaugh IIRC) and a caller told a personal story of accepting supplemental food assistance. He had been laid off for quite some time, worked two part time jobs, and had a wife who worked another part time job. When he applied for assistance, he was counseled on how much extra assistance he could get if he quit one of his jobs, and the counselor (social worker?) was amazed when he turned down her offer, and informed her that he did not plan to take the assistance any longer than necessary. This is the state of our culture, where some people take without a bit of shame; although I suspect when you point it out to them, that they know they’re picking someone else’s pocket, and really don’t care.
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I am now in my 50′s but I remember when I was 18, I worked as a home health aide, and I had to go shopping for the person who needed aide. She handed me her book of food stamps and gave me her list. I remember being at the store and looking around to make sure nobody was there who would recognise me because I was mortified to be seen buying something with food stamps. I even made a comment to the cashier about the stamps not being mine!
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umpalumpa69,
Yep. Pride & Integrity.
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Actually they should be MAKING their bread, buying it is expensive and it’s pretty worthless. Bologna isn’t cheap either and not good for you at all. Buying meat or chicken on special and using it sparingly would be better. Beans and rice are great meal stretchers. Of course so many people think cooking is popping a frozen dinner in the microwave so they don’t even know how to cook from scratch, which in itself would save them a lot of money or make those EBT cards go a lot further. Am I being old-fashioned????
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Linda in NE;
No you are not being old-fashioned. If you try to teach someone how to cook from scratch or give them a cook book they look at you like you are from another planet. It means that they have to put an effort into what they want to eat, and it is so much easier to open a box, or stick it in the microwave, and the best of all they go to the junk food place to eat every day.
Don’t get me wrong we eat out maybe once a month, if we are lucky. Usually we look at each other and say “it is so much cheaper to eat at home”. That means we can spend that money on something else we really need.
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Linda +1!
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Yup. I was in a grocery store in Miami with my BF, and the older gentleman in front of us had a 12 pack of Heineken in his cart … that was it. The cashier rang it up and he paid for it with one of those gov cards. Made me so angry. I was there buying what I needed to make dinner, and I’m buying him beer. Grrr!!!
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FarmerKin – I don’t know how it is in Miami, but here in California people can’t buy cigarettes or alcohol with foodstamps. If the cashier chooses to ring up those things with foodstamps, well, I don’t know if it is even possible in our super-computerized cash registers… but some mom & pop store? That’s another story. Not legal, but whose to say it isn’t done?
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Um if he paid with a Govt card for alcohol it was either a VA disability card or SS account card [ie earned money]. They don’t send checks anymore because of theft & fraud.
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A week or so back I had to laugh at my financial advisor and hurt his feelings. I was telling him how I hate being forced into playing by the govt rules with my retirement savings (or give half of it to the govt) and that I know in the near future it’s all going to collapse and I’ll have nothing. He proudly said I am gauranteed I will not loose my principle. I told him my principle will be worthless when the dollar is worthless so that’s no comfort to me. He just couldn’t understand that logic and I’m sure he thinks I’m crazy.
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Fire him.
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+1
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What good would it do to fire him? I haven’t talked to FA yet that thinks there is anything wrong with the almighty dollar or our country’s economy, or one that thinks PMs are worth having. I know enough to have a portion of savings in PMs but one has to have the dollar to live for the time being anyway.
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Oldokie,
Ha ha…. Yep, people thought I was pretty crazy back in the 90s when gold dropped from 500 to under 300 and I bought some up. Somehow it doesn’t feel so crazy now, eh.
If we keep on the way we’re headed, soon it won’t matter how many dollars we’ve got. it’ll be mostly useless paper anyway. those PMs will come in handy ’bout then.
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Oldokie, how old is your advisor? Seems like anyone old enough to have had even their first job in the 70s would remember the inflation and going off the gold standard.
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Another snippet I saw the other day was talking about corporations who, with no consistent policy from the government and no good place to invest (they see the same things discussed here) are buying back their own stock at record levels. This does reduce their cost of operations in a declining economy, just like us reducing our personal debt.
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JP,
True. When they pay a quarterly dividend, the money goes back into their own coffers, and allows internal reinvestment into their operations.
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My concern is the fed’s are forcing banks to loan to those who can not make mortgage payments(again), we went through this once before, & look where it took our nation. Does any one here the toilet flushing?
The bottom is coming, we all can see the handwriting on the wall. I believe it is like a freight train, it is coming sooner than we expect or want, whether we are ready or not.
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As a retiree, I’m very focused on this issue. We’ve always been frugal, focusing more on what we NEEDED and less on what we WANTED so that we could survive our retirement years. Now all that careful planning is being jeopardized by clueless politicians worldwide and I don’t see any easy solutions on the horizon.
We’re all victims of a “gimme dat” population that politicians are eager to exploit for votes, handing out freebies to those who produce little or nothing. It simply can’t continue and I think we retirees will feel it even more than most because we have less recovery time after the crash.
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And many retirees are physically past being able to work any type of job or raise a garden or hunt & fish or cut wood for a wood stove. What happens to us then??? And don’t say go in to a nursing home. At $5-6K a month that just isn’t an option. Move in with the kids?? They will be struggling to feed their kids & keep their homes. They’ll probably be looking to us for help. We’re the only ones with a paid for home. I don’t see it ending well for anyone.
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i guess we’ll have to get used to life like “the waltons” again. three generations under one roof was common back then.
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I have three generations under my roof right now.
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Exactly right. We can stock up on food, water, medical supplies, personal defense stuff, etc., but there are limits on what we can do beyond that. If everyone’s savings and investments were to disappear in a worldwide crash, we’d all be in the same boat. I honestly don’t see gold or silver magically becoming a standard medium of exchange in that circumstance.
All you can do is all you can do.
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No, Owl, it won’t. If you hold out your hands, one filled with gold, the other filled with food, guess which one the hungry family will take?
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The answer to that question is simple, Survivor. They will take both! :-)
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Well….. They could try
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We all need minions for the manual labor….lol.
Seriously though, I’ve had to find easier ways to do things as my arthritis worsens. Replaced tools with ones that are easier on my hands, changed the way I garden, the way I cut and split wood, the way I mow the yard (Heh, heh Got the Boss helping with that one now. She likes riding the mower and listening to her audiobooks. Though I doubt she’ll like the scythe or the reel mower when the powered mower is no longer an option). Even the way I hunt has had to change. I’m lucky to get an hour a day cutting brush and briars, might have to start renting a bush hog or get a goat or two to take up that slack. I’ve bartered some for day labor but that has it’s own inherent OPSEC risks. In the end it’s learning to be the tortoise instead of the hare that has enabled me to make the most of my dwindling capabilities. Do what you can, when you can, for as long as you can, then stop. The rest will be there tomorrow to chipped away at. Even though stopping is harder than working myself until my hands fold up and quit and can’t do a thing for a couple of days all because I want to get a job finished.
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Add a hog to the goats. Throw a handful of corn into the brush and let the hog loose. He’ll root up the entire area and get every kernel. The goats will eat the brush.
I got this idea from the Foxfire series…
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Or was that Firefox……
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Survivor,
It’s Foxfire and it’s a great set of books.
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unless it was thinking in Russian and stealing planes then it wasn’t Firefox.:)
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Not quite as easy as it sounds, but it’s definitely worth using animals as minions if possible.
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Linda, I believe there are many things older folks can do to add quality of life after SHTF. You may not be able to cut or split firewood, but you can keep the fire going. While you’re keeping that fire going you can tell stories and entertain the babies. You may not be able to tend the garden, but you can peel potatoes and snap peas. You may not be able to hunt or fish, but you can dress the carcass and cut it up. Every little bit you do is something the younger folks don’t have to, freeing them up for other stuff.
One does what one is able to do. We live in a society today where the old are thrown away to nursing homes. My Mom used to work in a nursing home where I would visit her when on leave. The very old were bed bound and curled up in fetal positions 24/7. They didn’t know who they were or where they were. It broke my heart. I could imagine them as young adults running around, dancing, kissing, loving and taking care of their families.
We come full circle. We are born helpless and most of us go out that way. That is the reason for the fourth Commandment in your Bible, “Honor thy Mother and Father”. Parents honored their children by bringing them into this world, taking care of them body and soul, and giving them the tools required to survive on their own. It is up to the children to honor parents by taking care of them when they need it the most.
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The fourth commandment is remember to keep the Sabbath day holy. FYI.
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May I suggest getting involved in a Bible teaching church community? God loving people help others who need it.
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Thank you Donna, but no…
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Very true, us retired folk will be hit hard, it’s always the very young and the old that can suffer the most. But like Tommy2rs says you do what you can when you can and stop. Personally, if things get as bad as they can get I don’t think I will last very long at all. But, on the plus side, I know that and I have accepted it. It really dosen’t bother me too much since I expect it. Then again, my wife and I may thrive but either way we win.
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Well, I noted GM…you remember them, don’t you? The ‘too big to fail’ corporation the taxpayers of this country bailed out, yea, those guys. They’re building a 1.3 BILLION dollar facility…in China. The government also sold the GM stock WE bought at a significant loss. How do we thank them? I’ll never buy another GM product again.
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Yup your next Cadillac is going to be coming from Mexico……..they were making them in Mexico.
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Guess my next Cadillac of vehicles will be a Ford truck.
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Yep, never again. This is what happens after they receive that large bail out–jobs outside the U.S.? What a joke!
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As a person with disabilities I seldom ever get good jobs or fair pay.
So this is one other nail in the coffin for me. Clothes I wear doubled in prices my jobs pay rate cut my hours by 23% due to Obamacare. Fast food jobs took the hit big time your forced into welfare at this rate the economy is going.
My question to you all is what are you going to do to fix it? Will anyone even try?
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I didn’t vote for ZERObama twice in a row…does that help?
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Draq. I do not know the depth of your disabilities, but it starts with you as well. This is going to take everyone doing more than they thought possible, ever to get through this. So if you are asking this group what we are going to fix it? Start figuring out what you can do to fix it as well………
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Draq wraith,
I have a disability (vision impairment) but do my best to not make it a handicap. Sometimes it’s the attitude of what you can do, instead of what you can’t do. In my case, as an engineer I still make a good living; but, had I been a truck driver, I would have had to look for some other career. I don’t know your specific disability or how impaired you are, but often attitude can make a big difference.
As for what I’m doing about it. I belong to a local 9/12 Tea Party style group, I call & write my congresscritters, I try to educate as many people that will listen, and I vote. This may not turn things around, but it’s what I can do, without asking your question, “My question to you all is what are you going to do to fix it?”m but instead ask the question, “My question to you all is what am I going to do to fix it?”
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+1
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It is hard enough to get a job and in perfect health where I live, but it is best to dwell on your abilities, not disabilities. What are you going to do?
We vote, we write our congress, we voice our opinions, we say we don’t like it or we do, we try to change what we can and accept the things we cannot change. And what we can’t change, we pray and prepare to make it less an impact on us. Amen.
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I also lost my 19 hour job per week due to obamacare, and the uncertainty…You are not in that boat alone…Ideas to stretch the dollars you do have..find a craft you can do, and make items for gifts, they can be sold , or given to those you love.
. buy nothing new that you can get serviceable at a well reduced price. Know the sizes, of products you buy often, what it costs per ounce…big containers are not always bargains., and neither are the smallest ones usually. We buy 90% of our clothing and shoes thru thrift/ re-cycle shops. We commonly pay 2$ for a new or lightly worn, blouse, 99C for a t shirt..3- 5$ for a pair of Jeans. This alone can free up several hundred dollars in a short time.
Food..shop sales, buy enough oatmeal for breakfast every day for two months this month., change the flavor up by putting strawberry Jam, or cinnamon in it for variety.( many more things you can put in it.)…next month buy another single item in amount to last two months, maybe find pork loin on sale and buy one or two, divide it up into portions and freeze, or dehydrate and dry can. Cook your own food from scratch, it tastes better, is healthier,and cheaper.
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We (DH and I) consider ourselves lucky. He is retired military (22 years) and a state retiree (33 years) I am a state retiree (25 years). When we were young we bought an annuity that will expire in three years. Since after that we will depend for our income mostly on the federal and a state governments, we will be at the mercy of the powers that be. I have been a prepper before there was such a thing. The house is paid for, no debt card (ever), all cars paid for. We have food and water for at least one year and adding to it every month. Cook all my meals from scratch but we go out for a diner or breakfast every so often when I get tired of my own cooking.
We live in a town in the middle of Florida population about 60,000 or more. All main roads out of south Florida go right through the middle of town. We are dead ducks if something hit he fan. We chose this town because it has never been hit by a major hurricane and is 60 miles from the Atlantic and 45 miles from the Gulf, and is only 83 miles from our children and grand-children, we feel we are blessed. If our current income is removed we would eventually would run out of money, and the children might have to help us.
Now, we are both 77 years old. We can move with one of our children but where they live is a megalopolis and it would be even worse. We might be able to relocate to some acreage but the family is against this because of our age. They worry about health problems. Unless we could find a place where other people of the same persuasion (preppers) lived nearby, we are sheltering in.
We worked very hard, saved and now we might be out of luck through no fault of our planning. We never gave a thought that our government would fail us.
This is not a rant or complain “why me?”. It just to say “all plans of mice and men often go astray”.
Just do the best one can and let God help you and guide you in your
prepping. As far as me and DH we are doing the best we can and trust in God to take care of us.
God bless, Linda Lou
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Nice timely article Mr. Snyder. Thank you for all your work and for sharing it with us. :)
Well the heights being reached by the DOW doesn’t exactly surprise me. The value of the dollar keeps going down. I was recently urged to buy some stocks because I would own that many shares of those companies so it would not matter if the dollar declines. “Put your money in the stock market!” he advised me. “It can only grow at this point.”
Folks are taking advice like that, especially when their savings accounts (like mine) are only earning a laughably insignificant amount. “Your money in savings is constantly devaluing!” This investment adviser was persistent. “Would you put your drinking water in a big bowl outside and let it evaporate?”
“Have some common sense Dan!”
Since this investment salesman was my nephew, I listened politely and asked a few questions ………. before I threw him out and told him to never call me again.
He also told me that all my preps represented ‘dead’ money and zero earnings. That pushed me over the edge……
TEOTWAWKI comes and I will deal with him especially harshly if he comes a knockin’. After all…he’s kin. ;)
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SD,
This reminds me of a time before my mother passed… I have a cousin that has ‘dabbled’ in investments, insurance and other business ventures. One day he approached my mom living on what she and my dad had accumulated over the years, 73 years old at the time, and he convinced her to invest in a business he was starting, and she gave him the $120,000 he was asking for as long as they had a contract for repayment.
Long story perfectly endless… business and cousin went bankrupt and when my mom died 17 years later she never saw a dime of the money she invested in him.
Moral of the story… do not invest money with family members (unless it is your spouse).
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I am waiting for how this will all play out. An economic guru who uses numbers and history in forcasts, 5 years ago said how the market will collapse with a great depression. What we didn’t know 5 years ago is happening and this man knew. The first warning he said was printing money with no value because we would be too far in debt to pay anyone back. The second warning was over valued stocks built up because there was no other place to make money investing. Third warning was trading over 15,000.
I won’t be flocking to the city. Thois is not the depression our parents and grandparents knew.. The pentagon has unilatterally granted itself authority to take over when civil unrest happens in the cities and guess who the commander in chief is?
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One of the most annoying trends in the UK is the way the government manipulate the official figures.
Unemployment, national debt, borrowing, immigration, etc.
Most know the country is in the mire yet every time someone else from the EU or even the US says that the UK is in crisis, some UK government weenie monkeys round with the figures and “proves” that everything is looking better.
One long catalog of lies and it’ll all catch up with us eventually.
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