As I sat battling the entire long weekend with pesky hardware problems among two different PC systems in addition to household leaks following some record snowfall all while experiencing the joy of feeling my glands swell and my nose turn raw while I also reviewed my tax returns, I couldn’t help but think that if misery loves company, I’ve got a multitude of new pals.
Sure, some Americans are having a decent time of it, but that percentage is literally dropping more everyday. Even among those who identify themselves as mostly maintaining their current living standard in one of the roughest prolonged financial “repressions” in the last century, many agree that not only is the U.S. in trouble economically, but our mental state is suffering, too.
In the last decade, we’ve seen one big change after another; most of them pretty awful. For example, we’re now seeing our first generations in recent American history where working adults are NOT making more than their parents did; where there is grave concern that what little “universal” health care we currently enjoy - Medicare for seniors and Medicaid for poorer kids - is failing badly.
Not since the Great Depression of the late 1920s-1930s have so many Americans:
either lost or are in serious danger of soon losing their homes
seen their paychecks cover less and less of basic living costs
needed to use credit cards more and more to pay for groceries and prescriptions, and basic costs, which is considered usually a very bad sign of economic health
worry that their own kids won’t be able to afford to go to college, own a home of their own, have a job that will cover their basic livings expenses, etc.
Considering so much of this picture has become grim under the Republicans’ watch, how can ANYONE even consider voting for a McCain or a Huckabee in November? As a Democrat, I’m not sure my candidate can bring about enough of a change as quickly as our country needs but I’ll take that concern over choosing one of the GOP disasters.