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Americans May Be Getting Poorer, But At Least We Are Getting Fatter And Sicker
TEC ^ | 10/03/2012 | Michael Snyder

Posted on 10/03/2012 11:26:02 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

I know, there really isn't any good news in that headline. Americans are steadily getting poorer, fatter and sicker and yet most people continue to operate under the delusion that things are somehow going to get better. Sadly, not only are we not better off than we were four years ago, the truth is that things have been getting worse for a very long time. Median household income in the United States has declined for four years in a row, and it has fallen by more than $4000 overall since Barack Obama has been in the White House. Yet the media insists that we are in the midst of an "economic recovery". A higher percentage of Americans are obese or severely obese than ever before, and Baby Boomers are much sicker than their parents were at the same age. Yet we are supposedly a "health conscious" nation. Technology is advancing faster than we have ever seen before in human history, but the life expectancy of poor Americans has dropped significantly in recent years. So exactly what in the world is going on here?

It seems like there is a health food store or a vitamin store on almost every corner, and yet as a whole we are in much worse condition than our parents were. The following is from a recent news story by the CBS News affiliate in Washington D.C.....

Obesity among baby boomers is more than double the rate of their parents at the same age, and boomers with three or more chronic conditions was 700 percent greater than the previous generation.

But it isn't just the Baby Boomers that are obese. Sadly, obesity has become a raging epidemic in America and all of the numbers show this.

For example, a study by the RAND corporation discovered that the percentage of Americans that are severely obese rose from 3.9 percent in the year 2000 to 6.6 percent in 2010.

That is a huge increase in just a decade.

And the numbers are even more sobering when you look at the percentage of Americans that are just obese (rather than being severely obese).

As I wrote about the other day, 36 percent of all Americans are considered to be obese, and it is being projected that by 2030 that number will rise to 42 percent.

To put that in perspective, it is important to note that only 13 percent of all Americans were obese back in 1962.

Sadly, not only are we getting fatter, many of us are also living shorter lives.

In a previous article, I quoted a CBS News story that discussed recent research which shows that the lifespans of poor Americans have been dropping rapidly in recent years....

Overall life expectancy has dropped for white Americans who have less than a high school diploma to rates similar to those of the 1950s and 1960s, new research finds.

The study found non-Hispanic white men without a diploma lived on average until 67.5 in 2008, three years less than they did in 1990. The drop in lifespan was even bigger for non-Hispanic white women with low education: They live five years shorter than 1990 rates, from 78 years old to just 73.5.

Why are people not living as long?

Well, our lifestyles certainly are not helping things. The average American watches 28 hours of television every single week. That is not conducive to a long and happy life.

But of course a lot of other factors are at play as well.

When you don't have a lot of money, you can't afford to eat healthy and you can't afford to go see the doctor much.

Unfortunately, average Americans have steadily seen their incomes drop even as the cost of living has continued to go up. The following is from a recent article posted on Investors.com....

Since 2009, the middle 20% of American households saw their average incomes drop 4%. In 2011 alone, they fell 1.7%. The poorest 20% have fared even worse under Obama, Census data show. Their incomes have dropped more than 7% since 2009, and are now lower than they've been at any time since 1985, after adjusting for inflation.

Median household income (adjusted for inflation) fell in 41 U.S. states between 2000 and 2011.

So which state saw the worst decline in median household income during that time period?

Would you be surprised to hear that it was Michigan?

Between 2000 and 2011, median household income in Michigan dropped by a whopping 18.9 percent.

I have written extensively about how Detroit is a perfect example of where most of the rest of the country is headed. The manufacturing facilities are being torn down and Detroit has become a rotting shell of what it once was.

You can see 30 pictures of the ruins of Detroit right here, and you can view a great video of a homeless man giving a very creepy tour of Detroit's abandoned Michigan Central Station right here.

So what part of the country do you think has done the best over the past decade?

If you guessed Washington D.C. you would be correct.

Median household income in Washington D.C. increased by 18.1 percent between 2000 and 2011.

Of course this "prosperity" for the D.C. area can be directly attributed to the explosion in the growth of the federal government.

Members of Congress and government workers are living the high life at your expense, and much of it is being done with borrowed money that we expect our children and our grandchildren to repay.

You would be absolutely shocked to learn what goes on at some of these federal agencies. For example, the following was revealed by a former Social Security Administration employee recently in the Baltimore Sun....

It is not uncommon to see employees taking lunches lasting up to two hours. Often, a day at the office is nothing more than seeing people sleep at their desks or watch movies on their computers. With a few exceptions, employees with goals and expectations of some sort are nowhere to be found inside the walls of SSA.

I once saw an older employee take 10 smoke breaks in one afternoon and do absolutely no work when he was at his desk. He told me he was just waiting it out until he could get more retirement money. Several elderly individuals literally died right at their desks because they refused to retire. A lack of professionalism was obvious in the way the employees dressed and most apparently in their juvenile, non-professional language.

Would you like to have a job where you can sleep at your desk, take two hour lunches and watch movies on your computer all day?

If so, then working for the federal government might be for you.

Of course this does not happen at all federal agencies. At some agencies the employees actually are very professional. However, there are other agencies that are even worse than the Social Security Administration.

The sad truth is that what is wrong with our society is not limited to the White House and Congress. They are simply a reflection of who we have become. Our problems are very wide and very deep.

So why do you think Americans are getting poorer, fatter and sicker?

Please feel free to post a comment with your thoughts below....



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: obesity; poverty

1 posted on 10/03/2012 11:26:07 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
BWEEP BWOW!!

2 posted on 10/03/2012 11:36:15 AM PDT by I see my hands (It's time to.. KICK OUT THE JAMS, MOTHER FREEPERS!)
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To: SeekAndFind

My town is full of fat poor and homeless people.

There has never been a case of someone starving to death here. So many churches and charities + government pass out so many meals and food stamps, that you dont actually need to get a damn job to feed yourself.


3 posted on 10/03/2012 11:38:23 AM PDT by VanDeKoik
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To: SeekAndFind

4 posted on 10/03/2012 11:38:50 AM PDT by PGR88
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To: SeekAndFind

If you’re making more - a LOT more - than half the people on the planet, you’re not poor.
Our “poverty line” is some 20 times world median income. Raising that bar is not proof of “greater poverty”.

Obesity is the consequence of cheaper calories and/or greater income. $16 buys enough calories to fuel an adult male for over a month. Yes, there may be other aggravating factors (prolific “corn sugar”, compelling flavorings, genetically modified wheat, etc.) but the core remains: over-consumption is EASY when food is cheap, and labor is either profitable (high minimum wage) or prohibited (welfare).

Illness likewise can be the result of cheap and highly effective health care. Fill your body with aforementioned cheap tasty crud, and any ensuing problems are fixed (at least to a sustaining degree) with little cost or effort to the population in question.

So...
Legislating a broad definition of “poor”, make it very easy for those so designated to eat to satiation, and enacting “free” health care - where do you THINK this equation will end up?

(BTW: cheap food and efficient health care is a success of society; legislating away any economic persuasion to use them well is the problem.)


5 posted on 10/03/2012 11:39:06 AM PDT by ctdonath2 ($1 meals: http://abuckaplate.blogspot.com)
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To: SeekAndFind

Cut it out with this “eat this, don’t eat that” bullshit, first off. People think, “Oh, I can ‘eat this,’ therefore I’ll eat it all the time,” and thus, they’re deluding themselves into thinking that one food or food group is acceptable over another. Our predecessors knew that a BALANCED diet of moderate intake is/was key.

Second, revisit the idea that this sliding-scale for obesity/healthy is the de facto standard for testing everyone. I’m 6’3”, 330 lb, but less than 20% body fat. I’m a weight training enthusiast, have a resting heartrate under 70 bpm, and BP under 110/60. I’m healthier than my 6’2”, 200 lb brother by a mile, but I’m “obese” while he’s just “overweight.” Even the creator of the Body Mass Index admitted that he thought it was a lame-brained idea, yet our government’s been using it as scripture for decades.

Finally, do something about jobs and food availability like, oh, I don’t know, cutting taxes across the board? Stop propagating this BS myth that a college education is the high watermark to which everyone should achieve. Millions of teens could live productive, fruitful lives as tradesmen/women if properly trained at an early age and the trades are available in the workplace. You stigmatize those who cannot achieve at an advanced level enough to make it through a college curriculum and turn them into worthless masses of pot-smoking video gamers on mom and dad’s basement couch.

More jobs, lower cost of “healthy” food, et voila! Everybody benefits.

I swear common sense is just dead.


6 posted on 10/03/2012 11:43:17 AM PDT by rarestia (It's time to water the Tree of Liberty.)
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To: SeekAndFind
‘’Yes siree folks, America is the greatest country there is. And someday we'll all be driving to the poor house in the finest of automobiles''.-- Will Rogers.
7 posted on 10/03/2012 12:15:44 PM PDT by jmacusa (Political correctness is cultural Marxism. I'm not a Marxist.)
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To: VanDeKoik

RE: My town is full of fat poor and homeless people.

And in which great state of our fruited plain do you live?


8 posted on 10/03/2012 12:20:51 PM PDT by SeekAndFind (bOTRT)
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To: SeekAndFind

The state unfortunately attached to Detroit.


9 posted on 10/03/2012 12:25:54 PM PDT by VanDeKoik
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To: SeekAndFind

10 posted on 10/03/2012 12:44:50 PM PDT by Uncle Miltie (You didn't build that. The private sector is doing fine. We tried our plan and it worked.)
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To: Uncle Miltie

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=luo40WjBKWI


11 posted on 10/03/2012 12:52:09 PM PDT by TsonicTsunami08
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To: ctdonath2

>>>>>>>>
If you’re making more - a LOT more - than half the people on the planet, you’re not poor.
Our “poverty line” is some 20 times world median income. Raising that bar is not proof of “greater poverty”.
>>>>>>>>

The problem is the world is catching up.
US in not even in a top ten nations in terms of average household income anymore.
It was different 50-40 years ago.


12 posted on 10/04/2012 12:42:03 AM PDT by cunning_fish
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