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They were poor, and our formative years were hard. Today most inherit fair amount from parents and relatives, even if only a property, but in many cases, cash as well. My good lady and I hope to keep the cash inheritance to our children as low as possible, by spending it, but our house value alone is more than either of us saw as a lump sum in our lives. Outlook not as bad as many claim. |
I think the future is very bright for our young people, but only if the young person understands that you need to have knowledge and education to get a good paying job. If you have decided to leave school and hang out on the corner doing drugs etc, you are doomed unless you are lucky enough to meet a real do gooder who will give you a start in life.
Having said that I believe much of what happens to you in life is self inflicted. My granddaughter works in the medical field in a job dealing with suicidal drug addition. She is employed by a major hospital in the Northeast and every night they are inundated with people begging for help with drug addition. They do what they can and hope they have helped, but the next night the same person is back. She told me she has to get out, it is soul destroying to see people literally killing themselves for drugs. I truly believe much of what you make of your life is learned at home during your formative years and if you are unlucky enough to have parents who use drugs (either pills or alcohol) it is very difficult not to follow their example. So we are right back to the haves or have nots. |
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Sure, we are doing great, .....not. If you are on a static pension, then you are losing money every year and the little raise in Social Security won't be enough to pay the increase in your private health insurance premium. By the way, the price of a dozen eggs is twice what it was in 2000. |
Nothing New
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So we've actually way more than doubled the number of new entrants to the labor force --even accounting for retirees -- while the participation rate stayed the same. And here's the telling part of the story. Where have all the "new jobs" come from? The SERVICE INDUSTRY. You know -- the maids, lawn service, and fast food jobs that citizens take as 2nd jobs, or "migrants" take for any wage they can get. There simply is no "good news" in this economy beyond the hope that it might get better someday. But Good News, everybody! The Great Depression did finally end, after 10 years of gooberment meddling that merely made it worse. Of course, it took the worst war in history and the deaths of millions to do it. |
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Much has changed since this article was written almost a year ago. Inflation is down to 3;1%. Gas prices are way down. Wages are up, even adjusted for inflation. Stock market is way up. Unemployment is at historic lows. Sadly, corporate profits are at historic highs. Tax rate cuts by republicans have created higher deficits. Reagan voodoo trickle down has been proven wrong over the last 50 years.
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When I bought my first house in 1980 mortgage interest rate was 17.5%. Everyone went yahoo years later when you could refinance your mortgage to 8%.
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