by Michael
All over America, our core urban areas are teeming with tent cities, hordes of homeless drug addicts, and vast throngs of newly arrived migrants that don’t have anywhere to go. When I wrote about this topic one year ago, homelessness in the U.S. was at an all-time record high, and it was increasing at the fastest pace ever recorded. It was going to be hard to top that, but somehow we did. Fast forward to today, and homelessness in the U.S. has reached another all-time record high, and it is increasing at an even faster pace. We are literally in the midst of the worst homelessness crisis that our federal government has ever measured, and there is no end in sight.
When the rest of us discuss the economic pain that we are experiencing, many on the high end of the economic spectrum wonder what all the fuss is about because things still seem pretty good to them.
But for many of those on the low end of the economic spectrum, it feels like a full-blown economic collapse has already begun.
On Friday, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development revealed that the homeless population in the U.S. jumped 18 percent in just one year…
Homelessness in the United States soared to the highest level on record, according to government data released Friday.
More than 770,000 people experienced homelessness in 2024, an 18% increase from 2023, the US Department of Housing and Urban Development reported. It was the largest annual increase since HUD began collecting the data in 2007 (excluding the jump from 2021 to 2022, when the agency didn’t conduct a full count due to the Covid-19 pandemic).
If homelessness is at the highest level ever and it is rising at the fastest rate ever, your economy is not okay.
Let’s just be real for a moment.
I am so sick and tired of the Biden administration and the mainstream media telling us that everything is just fine.
More than three-quarters of a million Americans are homeless, and that is just the ones that they are able to find and count.
The true number is certainly far higher.
We are being told that the spike in homelessness is happening because we don’t have enough affordable housing and because we are not able to absorb all of the migrants that have been pouring over our borders.
In fact, in 13 communities that have been heavily impacted by migration, “family homelessness more than doubled”…
Migration had a particularly notable impact on family homelessness, which rose 39% from 2023 to 2024, according to the report. In the 13 communities that reported being affected by migration, family homelessness more than doubled.
When we think of the homeless, we tend to think of older men with addiction problems.
But the truth is that approximately 150,000 children are living in the streets at this point…
Massively concerning is that 150,000 children experienced homelessness, a 33% jump in 2024 when compared to the prior year.
What is wrong with us?
Why can’t we get this crisis under control?
Our politicians like to give speeches about affordable housing, but housing just continues to become more unaffordable…
Rents have continued climbing since briefly dipping lower during the pandemic, as well. As of 2023, nearly half of renters spend more than 30% of their income on housing, qualifying them as cost-burdened, according to the US Census Bureau.
Every day, more precious people on the low end of the economic spectrum are being evicted from their homes.
Every day, the homeless population in this country just gets even bigger.
And now we have entered a time when finding a decent job is going to be quite a bit more difficult…
US private sector full-time jobs have DROPPED by nearly 2 MILLION over the past year.
Such a drop has never happened outside of recessions.
The only gain in full-time jobs has been in the government sector.
We aren’t buying the propaganda any longer.
They keep trying to convince us that everything is just fine, but that clearly isn’t the truth.
When Don Lemon tried to convince a random man that he was interviewing that the economy “is actually better under Biden”, the man responded with a “hearty laugh”…
“Four years ago it was a lot better. I made a lot more money than I do now,” the man said.
Incredibly, rather than try to understand the man’s perspective, Lemon argued with him.
“I know you feel that way, but that’s not actually what the record shows,” Lemon said. “The economy is actually better under Biden.”
That prompted a hearty laugh from the interviewee.
We can see the tent cities that are popping up like mushrooms all over our major cities.
We can see the hordes of people that are sleeping in their vehicles in retail parking lots at night.
And we can see that prices at the grocery store are far, far higher than they used to be.
According to a national survey that was just released, approximately 70 percent of U.S. adults believe that the U.S. economy is in poor condition right now…
About 7 in 10 U.S. adults rate the country’s economic state as very or somewhat poor, up slightly from about 6 in 10 in October. Self-identified Democrats are primarily driving the recent negativity. About 6 in 10 Democrats described the U.S. economy as “good” in October. With Republicans on the verge of controlling the executive and legislative branches, only about half of Democrats say that now.
That same survey also discovered that about a third of all U.S. adults are either “extremely” or “very” concerned about being able to “afford groceries over the next few months”…
The new AP-NORC poll shows about one-third of Americans say they are “extremely” or “very” concerned about their ability to afford groceries over the next few months. About 3 in 10 are highly worried about being able to afford holiday gifts, gas or electricity.
There are tens of millions of Americans that are barely holding on from month to month.
Next month, more of them will lose their grip.
We really are in the midst of a slow-motion economic collapse, and poverty and hunger really are growing all around us.
But for now, those on the high end of the economic spectrum are still living the high life, but it is just a matter of time before they experience severe economic pain too.
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