I know I said I would have nothing more to say about
Barry’s idiotic State of the Union Address, but it would seem that I just can’t
help myself. Because try as I might I
simply could not get past how it was that during his ‘Statist’ of the Union
address, Barry referenced the "growing" U.S. economy at least three
times, but "recovery" only once.
Specifically, he claimed that "thanks to a ‘growing’ economy, the ‘recovery’
is touching more and more lives."
For him to put forth the argument that a recovery is underway was pure
politics? And I would argue that no such
recovery is underway because the economy is not growing, at least not in any
meaningful way.
The recovery of which Barry spoke, and begrudgingly acknowledged
is still in progress 5-1/2 long years after we were told the recession was to
have ended, would seem to have a great deal more "touching" to do. Because it was on January 12, that the
National Association of Counties (NAcO) released a detailed study which most of
those in the state-controlled media ignored, but which would have been front-page
news in a Republican administration. The NACo report showed that only 65 of the
nation's 3,069 counties have recovered from the recession. That's bad enough,
but even with that ugly statistic, the results involved are much worse than
they appear.
Because the 2014 County Economic Tracker shows that only
a mere 65 counties of the nation’s 3,069 have met or surpassed prerecession
levels in four measured, and very important, categories: jobs, unemployment
rate, economic output and home prices. And
as it just so happens, there are some very interesting extenuating
circumstances in that these ‘recovered’ counties are largely located in
energy-rich areas and have very small populations. You see, of those 65 recovered counties, 24
are in Texas and 16 are in North Dakota. The others are generally in the middle
of the country, including nine in Minnesota and eight in Kansas.
Not one of the recovered counties has more than
500,000 residents. Far more important, a
detailed look at 2013 Census data using the bureau's interactive tool indicates
that none of the recovered counties has more than 200,000 residents. Also, as seen in the chart at the very top of
this piece, 34 of the counties, or over half, have populations of under
10,000. The 65 fully-recovered counties
represent just over 2 percent of all U.S. counties, but their total population
of under 1.4 million is less than one-half of one percent of the nation's
total. This means that 99.56 percent of Americans live in counties which have
not come back to where they were in 2007.
And yet, Barry “Almighty” and his many acolytes in
the state-controlled media continue to crow about how well the economy is
going. It’s simply unreal. We’ve all seen how the numbers have been, and
continue to be, manipulated in order to present a false picture of where our
country is when it comes to our economy and our continuing employment problem. For instance, something Barry never talks
about is how we have over 90 million people who are no longer in workforce. The American workforce is the smallest that it
has been since the late 70s, while at the same time we have more Americans than
ever before dependent upon government.
We are constantly being told that we are in the
midst of some great, albeit a slow moving, economic recovery. Yet over the course of his presidency, there
is not one thing, not one, that Barry and his Democrats have done that had the
specific purpose of making our economy stronger or getting people back to
work. Because to do such a thing would
run completely counter to the political/economic philosophy possessed by their
party. Because, you see, the goal of the
Democrats has always been to create an environment that has its net result, increasing
the number of unemployed and to then entice them into becoming increasingly
dependent upon government.
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