The Mad as Hell Generation: 20 Reasons Why Millions of Americans
Under the Age of 30 Are Giving Up on the U.S. Economy
End of the American
Dream
Millions upon
millions of young Americans have completely lost faith in the U.S.
economy and are mad as hell that their economic futures have been
destroyed. The recent economic downturn has hit those under the
age of 30 the hardest. Today, there are hordes of young people that
should be entering their most productive years that are sitting
home with nothing to do. Many of them have worked incredibly hard
throughout high school and college. Many of them have stayed out
of trouble and have done everything that "the system" asked them
to do. But once they got finished with school, the promised "rewards"
simply were not there. Instead, millions of young Americans are
faced with crushing student loan debt loads in an economy where
they can't find good jobs. When you are in your twenties, it can
be absolutely soul-crushing to send out hundreds (or even thousands)
of resumes and not get a single interview. Most of us grew up believing
that we would "be something" when we got older, and millions of
young Americans are having those dreams brutally crushed right now.
Americans under the age of 30 voted for Barack Obama in droves back
in 2008 because they believed that he would make things better.
Instead, Barack Obama has made things even worse. Significant numbers
of young Americans are starting to wake up and realize that neither
political party is providing any real answers, and they are starting
to get mad as hell about it.
Americans under
the age of 30 don't want to hear that they are not going to be able
to do better than their parents. They don't want to hear that they
are going to have to "pay the price" because of the mistakes of
previous generations. They don't want to hear that the "good jobs"
that have been held out as a "carrot" for them all these years have
disappeared and are not coming back.
Millions of
young Americans want what was promised to them. They want good jobs
that will enable them to enjoy the "American Dream". They want things
to go back to the way that things used to work in America.
If you spend
much time around those in their twenties, you know that many of
them have a look of hopelessness in their eyes. Large numbers of
them have moved back in with their parents. Large numbers of them
are flipping burgers or working retail jobs part-time because that
is all they can find. There are even a growing number of them that
have given up entirely and have completely checked out.
So are we in
the process of creating a "lost generation"?
The following
are 20 reasons why millions of Americans under the age of 30 are
giving up on the U.S. economy....
#1
Only 55.3%
of Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 were employed last year.
That was the lowest level that we have seen since World War II.
#2
Today, there are 5.9
million Americans between the ages of 25 and 34 that are living
with their parents.
#3
The economic downturn has been particularly tough on men. According
to Census data, men are twice
as likely to live with their parents as women are.
#4
Amazingly, less
than 30 percent of all U.S. teens had a job this summer.
#5
Approximately one
out of every five Americans under the age of 30 is currently
living in poverty.
#6
According to one recent survey, only 14
percent of all Americans that are 28 or 29 years old are optimistic
about their financial futures.
#7
Since the year 2000, incomes for U.S. households led by someone
between the ages of 25 and 34 have fallen by
about 12 percent after you adjust for inflation.
#8
The cost of "getting an education" has become increasingly burdensome
in recent years. Average yearly tuition at U.S. private universities
is now up to
$27,293. That figure has increased by 29% in just the past five
years.
#9
In America today, approximately
two-thirds of all college students graduate with student loans.
#10
Millions of young Americans are absolutely being financially strangled
by horrific student loan debt loads. Sadly, the total amount of
student loan debt in the United States now
exceeds the total amount of credit card debt in the United States.
#11
In 2010, the average college graduate had accumulated approximately
$25,000 in student loan debt by graduation day.
#12
One-third
of all college graduates end up taking jobs that don't even
require college degrees.
#13
In the United States today, there are more
than 100,000 janitors that have college degrees.
#14
In the United States today, 317,000
waiters and waitresses have college degrees.
#15
In the United States today, approximately 365,000
cashiers have college degrees.
#16
In the United States today, 24.5
percent of all retail salespersons have a college degree.
#17
As the economy has crumbled, fewer young Americans have been getting
married. Today, an all-time low 44.2%
of Americans between the ages of 25 and 34 are married.
#18
Young Americans are becoming increasingly frustrated as our politicians
stand by and do nothing while our economy is being hollowed
out. The sad truth is that United States has lost an average
of 50,000 manufacturing
jobs a month since China joined the World Trade Organization
in 2001, and top politicians in both major political parties keep
pushing for even more job-killing "free trade" agreements.
#19
Young Americans are becoming increasingly frustrated that pretty
much the only jobs that seem to be available are low paying jobs.
Back in 1980, less
than 30% of all jobs in the United States were low income jobs.
Today, more
than 40% of all jobs in the United States are low income jobs.
#20
Young Americans are becoming increasingly frustrated that previous
generations have saddled them with a 14 trillion dollar national
debt that they are expected to make payments on for the rest
of their lives.
A lot of young
Americans swing back and forth between anger and despair. Many of
them worked like crazy for years because of the promise of a better
life, and now they are being bitterly disappointed. Just consider
the following testimonial that was recently posted on
The Atlantic....
I am
in my mid-20s. I have a university education. I started working
when I was 14. I have chemical burns and scars over my hands from
dealing with caustic cleaning chemicals. I did not want that to
be my life like my uncles. I had to get out. I worked very hard
in high school and volunteered and was the member of clubs and
all of that great stuff. I got into a good university and worked
hard. I took a language course, took things that I loved. I worked
through my degree - I was even a janitor in a building that I
lived in, because I needed the cut in rent. I did that for no
pay.
After
these months of unemployment I have fallen into a pretty major
depression. I live at home, I do chores, I look for work. As much
as I want to get my life together, I have some great mental health
issues to deal with - but have neither the money to purchase medication
that may help me, nor the ability to pay for psychological or
psychiatric help.
So what can
be done?
Well, someone
could wave a magic wand and fix the U.S. economy, but we all know
that is not going to happen.
In fact, there
is all kinds of evidence that the U.S. economy is
about to get even worse.
So should we
just tell our young people that they might as well just give up
and start making rap videos about using food stamp cards like this
one? (*Warning* The video contains some very strong language.)
The number
of Americans on food stamps has increased by 74 percent since 2007.
Millions of young people are learning that the only way to survive
is to be dependent on the government.
It certainly
does not help that our entire education system is deeply broken.
For example, did you know that the verbal scores on the SAT for
the class of 2011 were the
lowest ever recorded?
Our students
have become so "dumbed down" that large numbers of them can barely
even function in society once they graduate.
That is not
their fault.
That is our
fault.
We have failed
young Americans in so many ways that it would take a series of books
to detail them all.
We can say
that we are sorry, but that just isn't going to cut it.
Millions of
young Americans want what was promised to them, but we no longer
have it to give to them.
Anger in this
nation is already starting to boil over in
strange and unpredictable ways. If the economy gets even worse,
we are going to have tens of millions of young Americans that are
mad as hell and that are ready to riot in the streets.
What are we
going to do then?
According to
a recent Gallup poll, 81
percent of Americans are "dissatisfied with the way the nation
is being governed".
That is not
a sign of a healthy nation.
The sad truth
is that the foundations of America are crumbling and we have millions
upon millions of young people that are incredibly angry and incredibly
frustrated.
It does not
take a genius to figure out that is a recipe for disaster.
So please pray
for America.
We are going
to need it.
Reprinted
with permission from End
of the American Dream.
September
28, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 End
of the American Dream
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