Coming Financial Crisis Worse Than ’29?

DixieDestroyer

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Looks like the PTB is finding ways to come after those who don't want to (be fleeced) by (ponzi scheme) "investments"...tied to their fiat dollar.

Secret Gold Tax Snuck into Healthcare Bill

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Dixie, that doesn't even scratch the surface ...
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today, Obongo had a big ol' press conference with400ofhis closest criminal cohorts standing around gleefully as the BIGGEST TAX HIKE IN HISTORY was signed. you can read a quick assessment that was written earlier this month here. and i'll paste it below, just in case it gets, er, disappeared.
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gentlemen, this is not pleasant reading. our Founders revolted over far, far less ...

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<H1>Six Months to Go Until
The Largest Tax Hikes in History </H1>From Ryan Ellis on Wednesday, July 7, 2010 5:27 PM
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In just six months, the largest tax hikes in the history of America will take effect. They will hit families and small businesses in three great waves on January 1, 2011:


(N.B. This version of the document contains even more tax hikes than the original version did)

First Wave: Expiration of 2001 and 2003 Tax Relief

In 2001 and 2003, the GOP Congress enacted several tax cuts for investors, small business owners, and families. These will all expire on January 1, 2011:

Personal income tax rates will rise. The top income tax rate will rise from 35 to 39.6 percent (this is also the rate at which two-thirds of small business profits are taxed). The lowest rate will rise from 10 to 15 percent. All the rates in between will also rise. Itemized deductions and personal exemptions will again phase out, which has the same mathematical effect as higher marginal tax rates. The full list of marginal rate hikes is below:

- The 10% bracket rises to an expanded 15%
- The 25% bracket rises to 28%
- The 28% bracket rises to 31%
- The 33% bracket rises to 36%
- The 35% bracket rises to 39.6%

Higher taxes on marriage and family. The "marriage penalty"Â￾ (narrower tax brackets for married couples) will return from the first dollar of income. The child tax credit will be cut in half from $1000 to $500 per child. The standard deduction will no longer be doubled for married couples relative to the single level. The dependent care and adoption tax credits will be cut.

The return of the Death Tax. This year, there is no death tax. For those dying on or after January 1 2011, there is a 55 percent top death tax rate on estates over $1 million. A person leaving behind two homes and a retirement account could easily pass along a death tax bill to their loved ones.

Higher tax rates on savers and investors. The capital gains tax will rise from 15 percent this year to 20 percent in 2011. The dividends tax will rise from 15 percent this year to 39.6 percent in 2011. These rates will rise another 3.8 percent in 2013.

Second Wave: Obamacare

There are over twenty new or higher taxes in Obamacare. Several will first go into effect on January 1, 2011. They include:

The Tanning Tax. This went into effect on July 1st of this year. It imposes a new, 10% excise tax on getting a tan at a tanning salon. There is no exemption for tanners making less than $250,000 per year.

The "Medicine Cabinet Tax"Â￾ Thanks to Obamacare, Americans will no longer be able to use health savings account (HSA), flexible spending account (FSA), or health reimbursement (HRA) pre-tax dollars to purchase non-prescription, over-the-counter medicines (except insulin).

The HSA Withdrawal Tax Hike. This provision of Obamacare increases the additional tax on non-medical early withdrawals from an HSA from 10 to 20 percent, disadvantaging them relative to IRAs and other tax-advantaged accounts, which remain at 10 percent.

Brand Name Drug Tax. Starting next year, there will be a multi-billion dollar tax assessment imposed on name-brand drug manufacturers. This tax, like all excise taxes, will raise the price of medicine, hurting everyone.

Economic Substance Doctrine. The IRS is now empowered to disallow perfectly-legal tax deductions and maneuvers merely because it judges that the deduction or action lacks "economic substance."Â￾ This is obviously an arbitrary empowerment of IRS agents.

Employer Reporting of Health Insurance Costs on a W-2. This will start for W-2s in the 2011 tax year. While not a tax increase in itself, it makes it very easy for Congress to tax employer-provided healthcare benefits later.

Third Wave: The Alternative Minimum Tax and Employer Tax Hikes

When Americans prepare to file their tax returns in January of 2011, they'll be in for a nasty surpriseâ€"the AMT won't be held harmless, and many tax relief provisions will have expired. These major items include:

The AMT will ensnare over 28 million families, up from 4 million last year. According to the left-leaning Tax Policy Center, Congress' failure to index the AMT will lead to an explosion of AMT taxpaying familiesâ€"rising from 4 million last year to 28.5 million. These families will have to calculate their tax burdens twice, and pay taxes at the higher level. The AMT was created in 1969 to ensnare a handful of taxpayers.

Small business expensing will be slashed and 50% expensing will disappear. Small businesses can normally expense (rather than slowly-deduct, or "depreciate"Â￾) equipment purchases up to $250,000. This will be cut all the way down to $25,000. Larger businesses can expense half of their purchases of equipment. In January of 2011, all of it will have to be "depreciated."Â￾

Taxes will be raised on all types of businesses. There are literally scores of tax hikes on business that will take place. The biggest is the loss of the "research and experimentation tax credit,"Â￾ but there are many, many others. Combining high marginal tax rates with the loss of this tax relief will cost jobs.

Tax Benefits for Education and Teaching Reduced. The deduction for tuition and fees will not be available. Tax credits for education will be limited. Teachers will no longer be able to deduct classroom expenses. Coverdell Education Savings Accounts will be cut. Employer-provided educational assistance is curtailed. The student loan interest deduction will be disallowed for hundreds of thousands of families.

Charitable Contributions from IRAs no longer allowed. Under current law, a retired person with an IRA can contribute up to $100,000 per year directly to a charity from their IRA. This contribution also counts toward an annual "required minimum distribution."Â￾ This ability will no longer be there.


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TwentyTwo

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This is sickening! Guess the Federal Reserve will need to print more $$$ anyway...

I think the U.S. missed the boat with Ron Paul, trying to vote for Cap &amp; Trade McLame instead...I mean who has a chance in 2012 to beat this current administration?? The liberal media would love to throw the inept Palin to the front because they know she has no chance!
 

TwentyTwo

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This is scary stuff! Once all this crap takes effect... do yall think we will see any states secede from the union???Edited by: TwentyTwo
 

Riddlewire

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TwentyTwo said:
This is scary stuff! Once all this crap takes effect...  can any of you see states succeeding from the union???

No. There is very little chance that any state will be able to succeed due to Obamanomics.*

If, however, you were asking if any states might secede, then I would guess that's even less likely. Obama has already demonstrated that while he won't protect Arizona from hordes of foreign invaders, he is perfectly willing to take legal action against the state for trying to protect itself. I can imagine that if any state tried to secede, he would immediately recall as much military might as possible to slaughter the bulk of that state's population.

[*Sorry. I'm not a grammar-nazi, but you left that one wide open.:)]
 

TwentyTwo

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Ha ha you got me Riddlewire
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Too many interputions around the house...posting too quick!

I finally get a nice raise $ at work yesterday....then this stinkin' new tax pops up on the screen here at CF and has me beyond pi##ed!
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Jimmy Chitwood

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Gerald Celente points out the obvious. he adds that the only politician in Washington with any credibility is Ron Paul, which is also obvious.

"The White House lies and the media swears to it,"Â￾ says the trends forecaster. Celente calls the bill a "whitewash for the white shoe boys on Wall Street"Â￾ and states it will do nothing to prevent the coming Crash of 2010.

[tube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWaL3iyaUdg[/tube]

keep in mind the following (and you can see it in the chart below): the total of all debt(government, business and consumer) is nowmore than360 percent of GDP. never before in our nation's history has the US faced a debt bubble of this magnitude. the numbers are far worse than the Great Depression (and that's not even mentioningthe demographic nightmares!).

Total-US-Debt-As-A-Percentage-Of-GDP.jpg
 

DixieDestroyer

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The U.S. dollar continues its downfall (by design) as the (Red) China central banksters move away from the dollar as foreign exchange.

China may switch to currency basket for forex rate
Central bank official suggests move away from dollar as benchmark


By MarketWatch

LOS ANGELES (MarketWatch) -- A top Chinese central bank official suggested switching away from the U.S. dollar as a benchmark for the yuan's foreign-exchange rate, switching instead to a basket of currencies, according to remarks published Thursday.
Is Thailand a good place for investment?

Stock Exchange of Thailand President Charamporn Jotikasthira shares his views on the difficulties of selling Thailand as a destination for equity investment after recent political violence.

In comments posted to the People's Bank of China Web site, the central bank's Deputy Gov. Hu Xiaolian said using a basket of currencies from the nation's top trading partners would allow the Chinese yuan to better reflect trading fundamentals.

"Compared with pegging to a single currency, the exchange-rate regime with reference to a basket of currencies will help adjust exports and imports, current account, and balance of payment in a more effective manner," she said.

China's central bank currently sets a "central parity rate" against the U.S. dollar each day, with that day's trading range confined to 0.5% above or below that level.

But Hu said focusing on the dollar-yuan rate ignored China's bigger trade picture.

"A floating exchange rate has impact on total imports and exports of an economy," she said. "Therefore, the floating cannot be aimed to adjust [only the] bilateral trade balance, and it is not advisable to just look at the [dollar-yuan] exchange rate.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/china-may-link-yuan-trade-to-currency-basket-2010-07-23

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

whiteathlete33

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What exactly caused this recession. Was it the gas prices that went up to 4 bucks a galon a couple of years ago? Was it the significant increase in minorities in the past 10 years? Crooks like Bernie Madoff that swindled investors out of enormous amounts of money? Was it the idiots on Wall Street that were giving out loans to people who were incapable of paying them back?

My opinion is that it was a combination of all of these things. When this Obama healthcare crap goes into effect it will put us into a much bigger hole.
 

whiteCB

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WOW a tanning tax!! What the hell..not that I go tanning but my girlfriend mentioned it to me the other day and I was like what the f%ck.

So now can I get a tax rebate for buying sunscreen?..the anti-tanning solution!
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DixieDestroyer

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The Hock said:
What demographic is most likely to go to tanning booths? They are really getting cute with that one.

Exactly. Imagine the uproar if they placed a similar tax on hair weave & soul food joints.
 

whiteathlete33

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Anyone who goes to tanning booths is an idiot. Do they really want skin cancer? Do they really want wrinkles and to look 40 when they turn 30? They need to put a tax on c(RAP) music. That should do the trick.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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the mis-information is becoming more and more blatant ...

<H1>HEAD LIE: June Sales of U.S. New Homes Climb More Than Forecast</H1>
<DIV =author>Author: Mac Slavo
<DIV =postdate>- July 26th, 2010




Our latest mainstream media head lie is a doozy. From Bloomberg:
<BLOCKQUOTE>


June Sales of U.S. New Homes Climb More Than Forecast
</BLOCKQUOTE>


As with every mainstream headline, one must venture into the fine print to figure out what is really happening.


This particular headline would have better served the public had it said something along the lines of this:
<BLOCKQUOTE>


Junes Home Sales Number Is Second Weakest Ever Recorded
</BLOCKQUOTE>


You read that right.


Within the actual Bloomberg story is the truth surrounding the June home sales numbers, depicted in this single sentence:
<BLOCKQUOTE>


The rate was the second-lowest in data going back to 1963 after May's downwardly revised 267,000 pace.
</BLOCKQUOTE>


So, we basically have, back-to-back, the lowest ever recorded months for home sales since records have been kept.


But this didn't stop the stock market. In fact, the Dow Jones is up 1% (100+ points) as of this writing. Bloomberg explains why:
<BLOCKQUOTE>


Stocks rose as the housing report and an improved forecast by FedEx Corp. lifted shares of homebuilders and transportation companies. The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 Index rose 1.1 percent to 1,115.01 at the 4 p.m. close in New York. The S&amp;P Supercomposite Homebuilder Index climbed 2.9 percent.
</BLOCKQUOTE>


In our bizarro world, this somehow makes sense.


If you are still buying stocks expecting an economic recovery to take hold sometime in the near future, you are committing financial suicide.


The media can spin this however they like, but facts are facts. And right now, we have increasing job losses, growing foreclosures, declining home sales and we've bitten off more debt than we can chew.


Believe the head lies and you'll pay the price.


Perhaps it's time that Bloomberg news has all of their material screened by the Gatekeeper news watchdog before publishing.
 

white lightning

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"Believe the head lies and you'll pay the price".

That about sums it up. The mediais totally controlled and has been for a long time.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Bank Failures on Two Coasts Stretch Toll for Year to 108. yep, you read that right. 108 bank closures this year ... but we're supposed to believe there's a "recovery."
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in a similarly "wonderful" analysis, What to Expect if Bush Tax Cuts Expire. the Convicts, er, Congressmen in Washington are so desperate for revenue that they will likely reanimate both the higher income taxes and capital gains taxes.this will likelyshut down the economy. some optimists will call it a "double dip" recession. i'll describe it more accurately: stepping off a cliff, a la Wile E. Coyote.
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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Banks Financing MexicanMexico Gangs Admitted in Wells Fargo Deal

Source: Bloomberg



Just before sunset on April 10, 2006, a DC-9 jet landed at the international airport in the port city of Ciudad del Carmen, 500 miles east of Mexico City. As soldiers on the ground approached the plane, the crew tried to shoo them away, saying there was a dangerous oil leak. So the troops grew suspicious and searched the jet.


They found 128 black suitcases, packed with 5.7 tons of cocaine, valued at $100 million. The stash was supposed to have been delivered from Caracas to drug traffickers in Toluca, near Mexico City, Mexican prosecutors later found. Law enforcement officials also discovered something else.


The smugglers had bought the DC-9 with laundered funds they transferred through two of the biggest banks in the U.S.: Wachovia Corp. and Bank of America Corp., Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its August 2010 issue.


This was no isolated incident. Wachovia, it turns out, had made a habit of helping move money for Mexican drug smugglers. Wells Fargo &amp; Co., which bought Wachovia in 2008, has admitted in court that its unit failed to monitor and report suspected money laundering by narcotics traffickers -- including the cash used to buy four planes that shipped a total of 22 tons of cocaine.


The admission came in an agreement that Charlotte, North Carolina-based Wachovia struck with federal prosecutors in March, and it sheds light on the largely undocumented role of U.S. banks in contributing to the violent drug trade that has convulsed Mexico for the past four years.


‘Blatant Disregard'


Wachovia admitted it didn't do enough to spot illicit funds in handling $378.4 billion for Mexican-currency-exchange houses from 2004 to 2007. That's the largest violation of the Bank Secrecy Act, an anti-money-laundering law, in U.S. history -- a sum equal to one-third of Mexico's current gross domestic product.


"Wachovia's blatant disregard for our banking laws gave international cocaine cartels a virtual carte blanche to finance their operations,"Â￾ says Jeffrey Sloman, the federal prosecutor who handled the case.

Read Full Article Here...
 

Jimmy Chitwood

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<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="98%" align=center>
<T>
<TR>
<TD =title colSpan=2>22 Statistics About America's Coming Pension Crisis That Will Make You Lose Sleep At Night </TD></TR>
<TR>
<TD =textsmall>Published on08-03-2010</TD></TR></T></TABLE>


By Michael Snyder - BLN Contributing Writer



As the first of the 80 million Baby Boomers have begun to retire, it has become increasingly apparent that the United States is facing a pension crisis of unprecedented magnitude. State and local government pension plans are woefully underfunded, dozens of large corporate pension plans either have collapsed or are on the verge of collapsing, Social Security is a complete and total financial disaster and about half of all Americans essentially have nothing saved up for retirement. So yes, to say that we are facing a retirement crisis would be a tremendous understatement. There is simply no way that we can keep all of the financial promises that we have made to the Baby Boomer generation. Unfortunately, the crumbling U.S. economy simply cannot support the comfortable retirement of tens of millions of elderly Americans any longer. The truth is that we are all going to have to start fundamentally changing theway that we think about our golden years.


Once upon a time, you could count ongetting a big, fat pension ifyou put 30 years into a job. But now pension planseverywhere are failing. State and localgovernments are cutting back and are raising retirement ages. A majority of Americans have even lost faith in the Social Security system, which was supposed tobe the most secure of them all.


The reality is thatwe are moving into a time when there is not going to be such a thing as "financial security"Â as we have known it in the past.Things have fundamentally changed, and we are all going to have to struggle to stay above water in the economic nightmare that is coming.


Part of the reason we have such a gigantic economicmess on the way is becausewe have promised vastly more than we can deliver to future retirees. When you closely examine the numbers, it quickly becomes clear that a financial tsunami is about to hit us thatis going to be so devastating that it will change everything that we know about retirement.


The following are 22 statistics about America's comingpension crisisthat will make you lose sleep atnight"¦.


Private Pension PlansAnd Retirement Funds


1 - One recent study found thatAmerica's 100 largest corporate pension plans were underfunded by $217 billion at the end of 2008.


2 â€" Approximately half of all workers in the United Stateshave less than $2000 saved up for retirement.


3 â€" According to one recent survey, 36 percent of Americans say thatthey don't contribute anything at all to retirement savings.


4 â€" The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation says that thenumber of pensions at risk inside failing companies more than tripled during the recession.


5 â€" According toanotherrecent survey, 24% ofU.S. workersadmit thatthey have postponed their planned retirement ageatleast onceduringthe past year.


State And Local Government Pensions


6- Pension consultant Girard Miller recently told California's Little Hoover Commission that state and local government bodies in the state of Californiahave $325 billion in combined unfunded pension liabilities. When you break that down, it comes to$22,000 for every single working adult in California.


7 â€" According to a recent report from Stanford University, California's three biggest pension funds are as much as $500 billion short of meeting future retiree benefit obligations.


8 â€" In New Jersey, the governor has proposed not making the state's entire $3 billion contribution to its pension funds because of the state's $11 billion budget deficit.


9 â€" Ithas beenreported that the $33.7 billion Illinois Teachers Retirement System is 61% underfunded and is on the verge of total collapse.


10 â€" The state of Illinois recently raised its retirement age to 67 and capped the salary on which public pensions are figured.


11 â€" The state of Virginia is requiring employees to pay into the state pension fund for the first time ever.


12 â€" In New York City, annual pension contributionshave increasedsixfold inthe pastdecade alone andare now so large that they would be ableto finance entire new police and fire departments.


13- Robert Novy-Marx of the University of Chicago and Joshua D. Rauh of Northwestern's Kellogg School of Management recently calculated the combined pension liability forall 50 U.S. states. What they found was thatthe 50 states are collectively facing$5.17 trillion in pension obligations, but they only have$1.94 trillionset aside in state pension funds. That is a difference of3.2 trillion dollars.


Social Security


14 â€" According toonerecently conductedpoll,6 out of every10 non-retireesin the United States believe thatthe Social Security systemwill notbe able to pay them benefits when they stop working.


15 â€" Avery largepercentage of the federal budget is made up of entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare that cannot bereduced without a change in the law. Approximately 57 percentof Barack Obama's 3.8 trillion dollar budget for 2011 consists of direct payments to individual Americans or is money that is spent on their behalf.


16 â€" 35% ofAmericans over the age of 65 rely almostentirely on Social Security payments alone.


17 â€" According to the Congressional Budget Office, the Social Security system will pay out more in benefits than it receives in payroll taxesin 2010. That was not supposed to happenuntil at least 2016.TheSocial Security deficits are projected to get increasingly worse in the years ahead.


18 â€" 56 percentof current retirees believe that the U.S. government will eventually cut their Social Security benefits.


19 -In 1950, each retiree's Social Security benefit waspaid for by16 U.S.workers. In 2010,each retiree's Social Security benefit is paid for by approximately3.3 U.S. workers. By2025, it is projected that there will be approximately two U.S. workers for each retiree.


20 â€" The shortfall in entitlement programs in the years ahead is mind blowing. The present value of projected scheduled benefitssurpasses earmarked revenues for entitlement programs such as Social Security and Medicare by about 46 trillion dollarsover the next 75 years.


21 â€" According toa recentU.S. government report,soaring interest costs on theU.S. national debtplus rapidly escalatingspending on entitlement programssuch as Social Security and Medicare will absorb approximately 92 cents of every single dollar of federal revenueby the year2019. That is before a singledollar is spent on anything else.


22 â€" Right now, interest on the U.S. national debt and spending on entitlement programs like Social Security and Medicareis somewhere in the neighborhood of15percent of GDP. By 2080, those combined expenditures are projected to eat up approximately 50 percent of GDP.
 

DixieDestroyer

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Jobless millions signal death of the American dream for many

Even the criminals have fallen on hard times in America's poorest city as the long-term unemployed struggle to keep a grasp on normality.

Richard Gaines is one of the best-known faces on Camden's Haddon Avenue. It is a rough-and-tumble street, lined with cheap businesses and boarded-up houses, and is prey to drug gangs. Gaines, 50, runs a barbershop, a hair salon and a fitness business. He works hard and is committed to his community. But Haddon Avenue is not an easy place to make a living in the best of times. And these are far from the best of times.

Just how badly the great recession has struck this fragile New Jersey city, which is currently the poorest in America, was recently spelled out to Gaines. In happier times â€" whatever that might mean for a city as destitute as Camden â€" local businesses on Haddon Avenue could at least rely on a bit of trade from those who made their money on the street.

Young men bought flashy clothes and got sharp haircuts and always paid in cash. But no longer. The economy is now so bad in Camden that even the criminals are struggling and going short. "Even the guys who got money from illegal means really don't want to spend it," Gaines said.

Such a development, though, is just a snapshot of the deep problems still hitting the wider American economy. Growth rates are stuttering and a recovery is struggling to take hold. It may even now be showing signs of going backwards again, as countries such as Germany start to power forward. Joblessness has taken hold in America, with the numbers of long-term unemployed reaching levels not seen since the Depression of the 1930s. The figures are frightening and illustrate a society that remains in deep trouble.

The headline jobless figure of 9.5% is bad enough but does not begin to convey the problem as it fails to measure those who have stopped looking for work. Over the past three months alone more than a million Americans have fallen into that category: effectively giving up hope of finding a job and dropping out of the official statistics. Such cases now number some 5.9 million and their ranks are likely to grow as millions more find their jobless status becoming a permanent state of hopelessness. Surveys show that with each passing week on the dole their chances of finding a job get slimmer.

Though corporations, especially in the banking sector, are posting healthy profits, they are not hiring new workers. At the same time, government cuts are sweeping through city and state governments alike, threatening tens of thousands of jobs and slicing away at services once thought vital. Schools, street lighting, libraries, refuse collection, the police, fire services and public transport networks are all being scaled back.

America appears to be a society splitting down the centre, shattering the middle class that long formed the cultural bedrock of the country and dividing it into a country of haves and have-nots. "A once unthinkable level of economic distress is in the process of becoming the new normal," warned Nobel-prize winning economist Paul Krugman in a recent New York Times column. Or, as Steven Green, an economics lecturer at Baylor University, put it to the Observer: "We are really in a tough spot right now."

There is a new name for those falling down the black hole of joblessness that has opened up in America's economy. They are the 99ers.

It is a moniker that no one wants. It refers to the 99 weeks of benefits that the jobless can qualify for in America. Government cash helps those laid off keep a tenuous grip on a normal life. It keeps a roof over their heads, pays a phone bill, puts food on a table and petrol in a car. But once the 99 weeks are up the payments stop â€" as is happening now for millions of people â€" and they are 99ers.

For many, that moment, which America's politicians have refused to extend, represents the moment of destitution; a sort of modern American version of the old Victorian trip to the workhouse. There are now more than a million 99ers and the number gets bigger each week.

But who are they? Despite Republican attempts to paint them as feckless or job-shy, they are usually anything but. The 99ers are people like Anne Strauss, 58, who spent 35 years working as a PR professional on Long Island. Despite spending every day hunting for work, she has not had a job since June 2008. She and her husband are now living on credit cards watching debts mount as they stare into the abyss. "Looking for a job is the hardest I have ever worked," she said with a smile that conveyed no humour or happiness, only the deep stress that is common to many 99ers.

Strauss, along with about 50 other 99ers, protested on Wall Street last week, demanding an extension of the benefits that could keep them out of poverty. As bankers and financiers strode into the flag-draped Stock Exchange they chanted: "Shame! Shame!" and told their stories. It was a litany of middle-class lives shattered by the recession. There was Connie Kaplan, a corporate librarian who was desperate to resume her career. "We are not bums, we are hardworking," she said. Or Lori Ghavami, a New Jersey financial analyst in her 30s, who had once worked on Wall Street itself and now was staring at landlords' bills she was scared she could not pay. Or New Yorker Steven Bilarbi, 62, who had worked for the same employer for 37 years, until 2007. He has not worked since, despite refusing to spend daytime hours at home and engaging in a permanent job hunt. He is now living off savings and depleting his pension.

"I go to job fairs. I don't feel like staying home. What would I do? Watch game shows and soap operas?" he fumed.

Meeting 99ers is to tap into a deep well of anger at lives that have been knocked off course, shattering the enduring vision of the American dream that many had felt they had achieved. Just take Donna Faiella, a 53-year-old New Yorker who lives alone in Queens. She spent 28 years working in film post-production and video-editing. She was successful and had a career. Now she is desperate for a job, any job. But she cannot find one. "I will do anything. I will sweep floors. You think I look forward to collecting unemployment? It is f**king degrading," she said, almost quivering with anger.

Faiella is in dire trouble. Joblessness has eaten away at her sense of identity. "I feel like we are worthless. We are lost in the world. I don't know what to call myself. I don't have a title any more. What do we do? What do we do?" she implored. Faiella has one week of benefits to go. Then her 99 weeks will be up. She will have a title again. But not one she expected. She will be a 99er. "I am petrified. Do I become homeless?" she said, adding that she has begun making inquiries at local shelters.

If the 99ers are coming to symbolise a human segment of society that America is slowly abandoning to its fate, then Camden is the geographic expression of that marginalisation. Large stretches of the once bustling river port city seem to epitomise urban blight. Vacant lots and burned-out abandoned houses line many of its streets.

Its 79,000 residents have the lowest median household annual income of any city in the US at just $24,000 (£15,000). In terms of crime rates it was the nation's second-most dangerous city last year. Some estimates reckon that about a third of Camden's houses are empty. A third of its people are in poverty and a fifth are unemployed.

It is a deeply grim picture and it is getting worse. Camden's city government is facing the prospect of massive cuts as its cash-strapped resources have run out and it has built up huge debts. Services have already been cut and only a last-minute rescue last week saved Camden's three public libraries from being closed.

In a city that has had it tough for decades these are hammer blows to its residents. One woman who has watched in dismay as the recession unfolded outside her door is Dorothy Allen, 81, who has lived near Haddon Avenue for almost four decades. Known by almost everyone as "Mom", she calls herself "the mother of the block". She has never known anything like the area's current troubles. "I have been here since 1971 and it's the worst it's ever been," she said. Yet to listen to America's politicians many would think recovery is just a matter of time. Yes, they say, the recession has been hard, but America will pull through and everything will be as it once was. Last week New Jersey senator Robert Menendez visited Camden, stopping at a local health clinic. He spoke of the achievements of the Democrats in staving off economic disaster.

Job creation was coming, he told his audience of health executives: "It is not going fast enough to get people back to work but it's a dramatic turnaround." It does not feel that way for millions of Americans all across the country. Camden is far from unique in slashing its services. In Colorado Springs more than a third of street lights have been switched off to cut the municipal electricity bill. The city has also sold off its police helicopters.

In Hawaii schoolchildren were told to stay at home for 17 Fridays to save costs. In a suburb of Atlanta local bus routes were closed, at a stroke wiping out public transport for thousands of people who relied on it to get to precious jobs.

Whether it's the poor of Camden or Colorado Springs or Atlanta, or among the growing throngs of the 99ers, millions of Americans are discovering that working hard, doing the right thing and obeying the rules are no longer enough.

Back at the 99er rally on Wall Street, Anne Strauss felt that way. During her working life she had refused to claim benefits to which she was entitled as she thought she was doing just fine. Now, as a newly minted 99er, she was looking for help from the country that she had always believed in. But the help was not forthcoming. It is hard to see how the version of the American dream that Menendez described could now ever apply to her. For Strauss, living on credit, desperate to work, but with no job in sight, that dream looks a thing of the past, not the future. "This is not the country I grew up in," Strauss said.
Case study: 'This is my last $260 and barring a miracle I'll be sleeping in my car'

Alexandra Jarrin, 49, worked for a small technology company near New York City, earned $56,000 a year, had petrol in her car and a roof over her head. She was enrolled in a graduate business school. Then, two years ago, she lost her job .

She received her last unemployment payment in March, putting her among the first wave of "99ers" who have come to the end of their 99 weeks of entitlement to benefits. When interviewed by the New York Times, she was living in a motel in Brattleboro, Vermont, having paid $260 she managed to scrape together from friends and from selling her living-room furniture â€" enough for a week-long stay.

She said she wept as she left her old life. 'I thought, you know, what if I turned the wheel in my car and wrecked my car?' Her vehicle is now on the verge of being repossessed. Jarrin has contacted her local shelter, but was told there was a waiting list. "Barring a miracle, I'm going to be [sleeping] in my car," she said.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/aug/15/jobless-millions-death-american-dream

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

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whiteathlete33

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Here is an list of states with the lowest unemployment rates. All the states listed, with the exception of Hawaii, have very high white populations and few minorities. I suspect tourism is what keeps Hawaii on this list.


First, a broad look at America's situation

Unemployment Rate: 9.5%

The economy: Agriculture (1.2% of GDP), Industry (21.9% of GDP), Services (76.9% of GDP)

Education: 27.5% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher.

Now, the Top 10 States For Jobs

1. North Dakota: Powered by agriculture and commodities

Unemployment Rate: 3.6%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 5.9%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Agriculture, petroleum, food
processing, and tourism dominate the nation's most job-friendly state.

Education: 25.7% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Lower than average)

2. South Dakota: Gets a big boost from government, but also has services and agriculture

Unemployment Rate: 4.4%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 5.1%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: The service sector (especially
retail, health, and finance firms) dominates South Dakota's economy,
although government-related enterprises also form a large chunk of the
GDP. Ellsworth Air Force Base is the second-largest single employer
here. Agriculture also contributes heavily to the economy, but its
influence is waning.

Education: 25.0% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Lower than average)

3. Nebraska: An agricultural and transport hub, with some diversity as well

Unemployment Rate: 4.7%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 4.8%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Another state reliant on its
agricultural sector, Nebraska also specializes in freight transport,
telecommunications, manufacturing, information technology, and
transportation. And, not to mention, it has the nation's
third-wealthiest person amidst its GDP rank.

Education: 27.5% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Average)

4. New Hampshire: Powered by agriculture, tourism, manufacturing, and a highly educated population

Unemployment Rate: 5.8%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 3.7%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Another agricultural
heavyweight (dairy products, cattle, and apples dominate on the list of
products), New Hampshire also produces machinery, electric equipment,
rubber, and plastic products. Due to its famous ski slopes, the state is
also a tourist hub come winter. New Hampshire also doesn't have a state
income or sales tax and boasts one of the nation's highest median
salaries.

Education: 32.5% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Higher than average)


5. Vermont: Driven by agriculture and industries utilizing the state's highly educated population

Unemployment Rate: 6.0%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 3.5%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Farming (especially dairy
production and logging) is the bread and butter of Vermont's economy,
although manufacturing, insurance, tourism, and quarrying are also major
players. Vermont's housing is also quite affordable, as the state ranks
17th in mortgage affordability nationwide.

Education: 33.6% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Higher than average)

6. Hawaii: A tourism magnet with a large population of affluent Americans

Unemployment Rate: 6.3%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 3.2%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Tourism dominates this
tax-heavy state while food and apparel exports play more minor roles
(given the distance of the islands from all other land source). Also,
rich folks apparently love to camp out in Hawaii as much as they might
like Florida (the state had the highest percentage of millionaires in
the general population).

Education: 29.2% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Higher than average)

7. Kansas: Powered by agriculture, energy, and aerospace

Unemployment Rate: 6.5%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 3.0%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Kansas isn't the land of
Dorothy anymore, although it is still a major grain producer and retains
its agricultural roots. These days, the state is also a major oil and
natural gas producer and is also a hub of the aerospace industry.

% of adult population with a Bachelor's degree or more: 28.8% (Higher than average)

8. Wyoming: Riding commodities, tourism, and perhaps its tax policies. Doing well despite low levels of education.

Unemployment Rate: 6.7%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 2.8%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Mineral extraction,
agriculture, and tourism drive Wyoming's largely rural economy. The
tourism industry alone accounts for over $2 billion of the state's
annual revenue. The state is also known for its unusual tax policies --
no individual or corporate income tax and only a 4% sales tax on select
items.

Education: 23.4% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Lower than average)

9. Minnesota: A state with manufacturing, raw materials, and high education

Unemployment Rate: 6.8%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 2.7%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: Again, the theme here is
diversity. Minnesota's economy is home to a variety of firms in the
finished products, services, and raw materials sectors and 33 of the
nation's top 1000 publicly-traded firms have headquarters in the state.

Education: 31.0% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Higher than average)

10. Iowa: Outperforming with a diverse economy plus agriculture

Unemployment Rate: 6.8%

Lower Than America's Unemployment Rate By: 2.7%

Major
Industries Driving The State's Economy: While commonly perceived as an
agricultural hub, Iowa actually boasts a surprisingly diverse economy
with jobs in the manufacturing, biotech, finance, insurance, and
government services -- all of which contribute to a strong hiring
market. The S&amp;P gave the state a Triple-A rating in 2009 (only one
of nine to hold the position then).Education: 24.3% of the adult population has a Bachelor's degree or higher. (Lower than average)
 

DixieDestroyer

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More than 400 US Banks Will Fail: Roubini

Published: Friday, 3 Sep 2010 | 3:00 AM ET

By: Patrick Allen
CNBC Senior News Editor
Even if the US and European economies manage to avoid a double dip, it will still feel like a recession, while more than half of the 800-plus US banks on the "critical list" are likely to go bust, according to renowned economist Nouriel Roubini of Roubini Global Economics.

The second half of the year will remain weak as tailwinds become headwinds, Roubini told CNBC on the shores of Lake Como, Italy at the Ambrosetti Forum economics conference.

"In the second half, fiscal policy becomes a headwind, no more cash for clunkers," Roubini said. "The positive scenario is that growth will be below par."

Roubini recently said the chance of a double-dip recession in the US was now more than 40 percent.

"The big risk is that there will be a downturn in markets that could impact the bond, the equity and the credit markets," he said.

"Job losses have been higher, the US jobs number will show that. There is no private sector jobs growth," he said. "Consumption is weak, exports are weak and housing is weak."

"If there is no final sales and no final demand, companies will not invest," he added.

* Watch the full interview with Nouriel Roubini here &gt;&gt;&gt;

New Normal Coming and More Banks Will Fail

Roubini said he believes hopes of decoupling will be dashed as the slowdown in the US impacts China, Japan and the euro zone.

"In Europe, Germany is strong but the rest of the continent is pretty dismal," he said. "The rest of the world cannot cope without the prop of the US consumer. Chinese growth in the second half will be 7 percent."

"Get used to it," Roubini said. "Deleveraging has to continue as governments and consumers deleverage in the developed world."

"The biggest banks have been backstopped, but 800-plus small- and medium-sized banks in the US remain on the critical list and half of those will go bust."

Nouriel Roubini -
Roubini Global Economics

"We have to expect the new normal," he added. "We do not need a double dip for it to feel like recession."

"The biggest banks have been backstopped, but 800-plus small- and medium-sized banks in the US remain on the critical list and half of those will go bust," Roubini said.

Roubini said corporate and consumer debt problems will get worse and that there are more problems ahead in the commercial and residential property market.

"Policy makers are running out of bullets, the problem is we need fiscal consolidation, fiscal policy is constrained by the debt problem, monetary policy is becoming ineffectual," he said.

Roubini, known as Dr. Doom to most and voted as Roubini the Realist by CNBC.com readers, said further quantitative easing is pointless as interest rates are already low.

"We are in a liquidity trap and we have insolvency problems," he said.

"What we need is credible spending plans over the medium term on health care, welfare and retirement age," Roubini said. "This will create a fiscal constraint lasting well into next year."

"The best growth over the next 18 months will come from the domestically-focused Brazil, which will outgrow China for the first time in 20 years," he added.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/38986777

Edited by: DixieDestroyer
 

white is right

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The Hock said:
What demographic is most likely to go to tanning booths? They are really getting cute with that one.
The cast of Jersey Shore, and middle aged Jewish men that want a concubine 20 years younger than their age....
smiley2.gif
Edited by: white is right
 

white is right

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whiteathlete33 said:
What exactly caused this recession.  Was it the gas prices that went up to 4 bucks a galon a couple of years ago?   Was it the significant increase in minorities in the past 10  years?  Crooks like Bernie Madoff that swindled investors out of enormous amounts of money?  Was it the idiots on Wall Street that were giving out loans to people who were incapable of paying them back?My opinion is that it was a combination of all of these things.  When this Obama healthcare crap goes into effect it will put us into a much bigger hole.
Everything like you stated. That's why this hole is really a sinkhole that could last for 10 years. It's not a "normal recession" because it wasn't one thing that caused this. It really mirrors 29 and the feeding frenzy that led to that crash.
 
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