OPINION

Obama's Depression by Other Means

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Having used the “D” (depression) word for what we will experience over the next few years instead of the “R” (recession) word, I’ve been inundated with emails and texts that say I’m simply out of touch with reality. 

So, for everyone who disagrees with me, let me provide a clear dose of reality by revisiting the past. 

Most people have an image of the 1930’s and the Great Depression as a time period of monumental job loss, vast family dislocation, widespread famine, and severe uncertainty.  The typical head of household toiled daily in order to put bread on the table and keep a roof over their family’s head.  New clothes were a luxury and an automobile was in many instances, way out of reach. 

Quite frankly, many people are in the exact same situation today.  Uncertainty, fear, and even panic are pervading the land as our economy grinds slower and slower. 

One reason most people cannot make the link between now and the 1930’s is because of the visual image of the soup kitchens. 

Today, we still have this important service, as it seems more and more middle class come to find life’s necessities have become life’s luxuries.  A hot meal and a warm bed are definitely finding a new audience.  But alas, we haven’t seen the lines of people extending around the block like the 30’s. 

Why?  Are things not as bad, or is there something else?

In the 1930’s, either you had money or you didn’t.  There were no credit cards to max and no home equity loans to borrow against.  If you didn’t make your house payment, you were foreclosed on and kicked out of your house. 

Today, we let people exist as squatters in their own home because it’s favorable for the bank’s balance sheet.  However, the main reason it doesn’t feel like a depression to most people is due to the marvel of food stamps. 

Almost 46 million people (a record number) are living on food stamps.  There’s no need for a soup kitchen when you’re receiving $135 per month from the government.  In fact, most recipients receive $285 per household per month.  If food stamps existed in the 30’s, there would have been no need for those long lines that we remember seeing in those old black and white photos. 

Recently, it was announced the latest monthly jump in food stamp recipients was almost 1.1 million people.  Imagine that being the pattern for the rest of Obama’s term. 

Extremely frightening and very sad; that’s a potential of 100 million people receiving the equivalent of a daily soup kitchen pass. 

In addition, the old photos of men and women in those long soup kitchen lines illustrate they were dressed very properly in suits, dresses, and hats.  They were suffering, yet managed to maintain their dignity.  From a fashion standpoint, today is totally different. 

But make no mistake; the suffering is just as severe. 

You can change the way people receive food, but it doesn’t change the simple fact that it was given to them. 

Yes, the overall images and perception of our current economic situation may seem less stark, yet millions of Americans are truly experiencing the 1930’s all over again.

That’s just the reality of the situation.            


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