Unemployment, hunger, survival

NWOU has been trying to put a human face, not a statistical face, on the global economic crash, but without much success. Recently we’ve come across more stories about hunger. This is part of the higher unemployment rates we’ve been experiencing in the past months.

From Forbes, 34 million people are receiving food stamps.

From CNN, the new face of hunger in Detroit.

From Huffington Post, food banks in Washington, D.C.

A couple of notes on unemployment:

John Williams’ Shadow Statistics points out that the real unemployment rate is over 20 percent in several states, and nationwide is about 16 percent. Here is the quote:

Current Economic Downturn Is Worst Since Great Depression

• Recession Started a Year Earlier Than Official Reckoning • Business Contraction Triggered Systemic Solvency Crisis, Not the Other Way Around • Still Heavily Gimmicked, Post-Revision GDP Shows More Realistic Numbers • Economic Crisis Is Far from Over.

• The U.S. economy is in a multiple-dip depression. The grand benchmark revision of the national income accounts on July 31, 2009 confirmed that the U.S. economy is in its worst economic contraction since the first downleg of the Great Depression, which was a double-dip depression. The current economic downturn increasingly will be referred to as a depression, and it is far from over. There will be intermittent blips of new activity, such as the current cash-for-clunkers automobile giveaway program that appears to be generating a one-time spike in auto sales. Yet, this downturn will continue to deteriorate, proving to be extremely protracted, extremely deep and particularly nonresponsive to traditional stimuli.

• Current Recession Now Longest Since Great Depression

• June U-6 Unemployment Rate Topped 20% (25% SGS) in Michigan, Oregon, Nevada, California, South Carolina and Rhode Island

• Inflation Signs Begin to Surface

• The U.S. economic and systemic solvency crises show no signs of abating, despite the happy hype out of Washington and Wall Street. While the pending second-quarter GDP estimate likely will show a narrowing quarterly contraction, such will be against a deepening annual downturn and revisions that should show the recession to have been not only longer and deeper than previously reported, but also the most severe recession since the shutdown of war production after World War II. Irrespective of media excitement around the fluttering of often statistically-insignificant or seasonally-warped monthly numbers, annual growth rates in key series have been holding at or pushing to new historic or post-war lows.

Mish observes that the social safety net is masking the effects of the Depression. Other posts on this site describe wage freezes and cuts, grocery store price wars, and other anecdotes about responses to hard times.

If hard times have found you, SurvivalBlog might help.


About The Author

I read over 500 books on the history of the New World Order, but you only need to read one book to make up for the poor education they gave you in the public schools. The Hidden Masters Who Rule the World is a scholarly history that will take you beyond all parties, all worldviews, all prophecies, and all propaganda to an understanding of the future that the global controllers have planned for us.

Comments

2 Responses to “Unemployment, hunger, survival”

  1. food stamps are great because it is instant food and you can consider it also as free lunch “-,

    No you can’t because other people pay for it.

  2. Food Stamps are nice and handy if you want some fast meals.”~-

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