Coach JewelryTo understand American anger, that roiling storm sometimes dubbed our
national “mood,” spend a day with Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart. Since 2006 the unlikely lawman—a tea drinker who listens to Bobby Kennedy speeches on his
way to work—has overseen all foreclosures and evictions in the Chicago area, one of the hardest hit nationwide. The process does not always go well. One
evictee shot himself in the head, remained conscious, and calmly tried to raise the pistol again as deputies battered the front door. But it’s often mundane
details that disturb Dart the most.
“Look at this,” he said during a recent eviction on Chicago’s blighted South Side.
Coach HandbagsHe pointed
to a little boy’s picture on a refrigerator. “It makes you say to yourself, why the fuck does it have to be this way?” Americans are asking the same
thing.
Through wars and recessions, America has remained its unaccountably cheerful self. National happiness peaked during the 1970s, baffling those who assumed
Vietnam, Watergate, gas-station lines, and inflation would dampen the joy. Even today more than 80 percent of the population rates itself “happy” or
“pretty happy,” according to the Pew Research Center, and that figure has held through the downturn.
But reality is beginning to break through. Gas and grocery prices are on the rise, home values are down, and vast majorities think the country is on the
wrong track.
cheap hermes birkinThe result is sadness and frustration, but also an inchoate rage more
profound than the sign-waving political fury documented during the elections last fall. Two thirds of Americans even harbor anger toward God, according to a
recent study by Julie Exline, a psychologist at Case Western Reserve University.
In search of the earthly toll of this outrage, NEWSWEEK conducted a poll of 600 people, finding vastly more unquiet minds than not. Three out of four people
believe the economy is stagnant or getting worse. One in three is uneasy about getting married, starting a family, or being able to buy a home. Most say
their relationships have been damaged by economic woes or, perhaps more accurately, the dread and nervousness that accompany them.
Could these emotions escalate into revolt? Corporate earnings have soared to an all-time high.
cheap nike shoes store Wall Street is gaudy and confident again. But the heyday hasn’t come for millions of
Americans. Unemployment hovers near 9 percent, and the only jobs that truly abound, according to Labor Department data, come with name tags, hairnets, and
funny hats (rather than high wages, great benefits, and long-term security). The American Dream is about having the means to build a better life for the next
generation. But as President Obama acknowledged at a town-hall meeting in May, “a lot of folks aren’t feeling that [possibility] anymore.”
At worst, the result could be the Days of Rage already seen overseas. In Spain last week protesters clashed with police, a violent demonstration against
economic woes and austerity measures—much like those under review in Washington. Earlier this year riots swept the Arab world, exploding out of a volatile
mix of high unemployment and large numbers of educated, ambitious people who feel their dreams have been denied—something with which an alarming number of
Americans can identify.
Coach Leather Collections Nearly one in five men
between 25 and 54 is without a job right now—a bulge of disaffected wall-leaners that New York Times columnist David Brooks worries could have a “corrosive
cultural influence.”
Commentaires
Il n'y a aucun commentaire sur cet article.