By Alan
Caruba
Commenting
on the rioting in Baltimore, the Wall Street Journal’s Daniel Henniger was
almost to the end of his April 30 text when he said “On Wednesday morning, the
year’s first-quarter GDP growth rate came in—0.02%. Next to nothing. For the
length of the Obama presidency, with growth significantly below norm,
unemployment for blacks aged 24 and younger has hovered between 30% and 40%.
That’s the real powder key, not the police.”
Most
Americans do not put the state of the economy at the heart of everything else
is occurring. Instead they listen to politicians apply the blame to everything
other than themselves. President Obama spent his entire first term blaming
George W. Bush for the bad state of the economy he inherited, but instead of
addressing it, he increased it by imposing ObamaCare, radically altering how
many would be hired while others were cut to a part-time status. The bill added
a number of taxes as well.
When 2015
arrived in January CNS News reported that “A record 92,898,000 Americans 16 and
older did not participate in the labor force in December, as the labor force
participation rate dropped once again to 62.7 percent, a level it has not seen
in 36 years,” according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Remember
those unemployed young blacks? In March the BLS noted that a record of
12,202,000 black people were not in the labor force. The unemployment rate for
black people in March was 10.1 percent, which is nearly double the overall
unemployment rate of 5.5 percent. For
black teens, age 16 to 19, the unemployment rate was even higher at 25.0
percent, meaning that one in four black teens who were actively seeking a job
did not have one.
By the
beginning of April, the BLS reported that “a record 93,175,000 Americans 16 and
older did not participate in the labor force in March, as the labor force
participation rate dropped to 62.7 percent, the lowest level seen in 37 years.”
Also in
April, the BLS reported that “a record 56,131,000 women, age 16 years and over,
were not in the labor force the previous month, as the participation rate for
this group dropped to 56.6 percent—a 27 year low.
It was no
surprise that the Department of Agriculture reported that “The number of
beneficiaries who receive compensation from the Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (SNAP), otherwise known as food stamps, has topped
46,000,000 for 37 straight months.”
The U.S.
Census Bureau started 2015 with news that one out of five young adults—white,
black, Hispanic—and ages 18 to 34, currently live in poverty! That’s 13.5 million people, “up from one in
seven (8.4 million people) in 1980.”
If all
this strikes you as very bad news, it gets worse. In February, the Daily
Caller’s White House Correspondence, Neil Monro, reported that “President
Barack Obama has quietly handed out an extra 5.46 million work permits for
non-immigrant foreigners who arrived as tourists, students, illegal immigrants
or other types of migrants since 2009.”
“’The
executive branch is operating a high parallel work-authorization system outside
the bounds of the (immigration) laws and limits written by Congress (and which)
inevitably reduces job opportunities for Americans,’ said Jessica Vaughan, the
policy director at the Center for Immigration Studies” which filed the FOIA
request the revealed this travesty.
So it
didn’t matter to Barack Obama that
millions of Americans were out of work while the White House masterminded a
secretive program to provide non-Americans access to the jobs that were available.
We are
living in the midst of an economic disaster and despite the often rosy
headlines the reality is one that Stephen Moore, the chief economist at the
Heritage Foundation, took note of in January in The Washington Times. He
identified “hidden indicators” of the true state of the economy as 2015 began:
“The $1
trillion growth gap. This economic recovery is the lowest in 50 years”
“The
restless recovery. It’s been 10 years since Americans in the middle class got a
pay raise that kept pace with inflation.”
“Inequality
is worse. The Gini coefficient (as measured by the Census Bureau), the left’s
favorite measure of income inequality, rose each of Mr. Obama’s first four
years in office, breaking all-time highs in both 2011 and 2012, and it remains
high.”
“The debt
has grown by $7.3 trillion. When Mr. Obama entered office the national debt was
under $11 trillion. Now it’s more than $18 trillion…it will be $19 trillion
when he leaves office.”
The record
speaks for itself. Americans are worse off today than when Obama took office in
2009. In the years since then he has totally failed to take the best understood
steps to push back against a recession and unemployment. He has expanded the
federal government. He has failed to initiate a reform of the nation’s tax code
to stimulate investment and expansion.
The
nation’s first black President has so poorly served the interests of the
African-American population that they are worse off today. He has practiced
“equal inequality” by afflicting our other demographic groups, younger workers,
woman, and everyone else who has been left unable to afford college and unable
to purchase a home and start a family. These years will be seen in retrospect
as a desert of opportunity.
© Alan
Caruba, 2015
I will see these years in retrospect as I saw them in prospect: "The War of the Insane Left (the radical activist Left)". Also as a time when revenge-minded children were put in charge. Also as a time when the crisis of incompetence in science first became widely known, in the scientific debacle and political tyranny known as "global warming". And as a time when all of our institutions were suborned, to false science and continuous Presidential lies, in all matters, large and small.
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