18 Signs That America Is Rotting Right In Front Of Our Eyes

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
So you said you had "Hope"..and you wanted "Change".....and barry was going to take care of all of it ....LOL...How is that workin for you !?!?


18 Signs That America Is Rotting Right In Front Of Our Eyes

18.08.2010
18 Signs That America Is Rotting Right In Front Of Our Eyes - English pravda.ru

Sometimes it isn't necessary to quote facts and figures about government debt, unemployment and the trade deficit in order to convey how badly America is decaying. The truth is that millions of Americans can watch America rotting right in front of their eyes by stepping out on their front porches. Record numbers of homes have been foreclosed on and in some of the most run down cities as many as a third of all houses have been abandoned.

Unemployment remains at depressingly high levels and the number of Americans on food stamps continues to set new records month after month. Due to severe budget cuts, class sizes are exploding and school programs are being eliminated. In some areas of the U.S. schools are even going to four day weeks. With little to no funding available, bridges are crumbling and street lights are being turned off in many communities.
In some areas, asphalt roads are actually being ground up and turned back into gravel roads because they are less expensive to maintain. There aren't even as many police available to patrol America's decaying cities because budget problems have forced local communities across the U.S. to lay off tens of thousands of officers.

Once upon a time, the American people worked feverishly to construct beautiful, shining communities from coast to coast. But now we get to watch those communities literally crumble and decay in slow motion. Nothing lasts forever, but for those of us who truly love America it is an incredibly sad thing to witness what is now happening to the great nation that our forefathers built.

The following are 18 signs that America is rotting right in front of our eyes....

1 - Due to extreme budget cuts, school systems across the United States are requiring their students to bring more supplies with them than ever this year. In Moody, Alabama elementary school students are being told to bring paper towels, garbage bags and liquid soap with them to school. At Pauoa Elementary School in Honolulu, Hawaii all students are being required to show up with a four-pack of toilet paper.

2 - According to the American Association of School Administrators, 48 percent of all U.S. school districts are reporting budget cuts of 10 percent or less for the upcoming school year, and 30 percent of all U.S. school districts are reporting cuts of 11 to 25 percent.

3 - In Chicago, drastic budget cuts could result in an average class size of 37 students.

4 - The governor of Hawaii has completely shut down that state's schools on Fridays - moving teachers and students to a four day week.

5 - According to the Federal Highway Administration, approximately a third of America's major roadways are already in substandard condition.

6 - All over the United States, asphalt roads are being ground up and are being replaced with gravel because it is cheaper to maintain. The state of South Dakota has transformed over 100 miles of asphalt road into gravel over the past year, and 38 out of the 83 counties in the state of Michigan have now turned some of their asphalt roads into gravel roads.

7 - According to the U.S. Department of Transportation, more than 25 percent of America's nearly 600,000 bridges need significant repairs or are burdened with more traffic than they were designed to carry.

8 - In a desperate attempt to save money, the city of Colorado Springs turned off a third of its streetlights and put its police helicopters up for auction.

9 - The state of Arizona has eliminated funding for full-day kindergarten and has shut down a number of state parks.

10 - Over the past year, approximately 100 of New York's state parks and historic sites have had to cut services and reduce hours.

11 - In Georgia, the county of Clayton recently eliminated its entire public bus system in order to save 8 million dollars.

12 - Elsewhere in Georgia, 30,000 people recently turned out to pick up only 13,000 applications for government-subsidized housing. A near-riot ensued and 62 people were left injured. The amazing thing is that all of this commotion was just to get on a waiting list. There are no aid vouchers even available at this time.

13- In the city of Philadelphia, rolling fire station "brown outs" recently cost a 12 year old autistic boy named Frank Marasco his life.

14- Oakland, California Police Chief Anthony Batts says that due to severe budget cuts there are a number of crimes that his department will simply not be able to respond to any longer. The crimes that the Oakland police will no longer be responding to include grand theft, burglary, car wrecks, identity theft and vandalism.

15- The sheriff's department in Ashtabula County, Ohio has been slashed from 112 to 49 deputies, and there is now just one vehicle remaining to patrol all 720 square miles of the county.

16 - Of 315 municipalities the New Jersey State Policemen's union recently canvassed, more than half indicated that they were planning to lay off police officers.

17 - Not that the criminals are doing that much better. Things have gotten so bad in Camden, New Jersey that not even the drug dealers are spending their money anymore.

18 - Almost everyone knows someone who has been severely impacted by this economic downturn. A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey has found that 81 percent of American adults know someone who is out of work and looking for a job.


So can't the states just step up and start spending more money and fix these things?

Well, no. The truth is that the states are absolutely broke. Quite a few of the states are actually on the verge of default, and there is no getting around the fact that budget cuts that are much more severe are going to be required in the years ahead.

So can't the U.S. government step in and bail out the states?

Well, yes, but as we have detailed previously, the U.S. government is literally drowning in a sea of red ink. The U.S. government is already spending an amount of money equivalent to approximately 25.4 percent of GDP this year.

How much more money can the U.S. government possibly spend?

To get an idea of just how bad things are already, the IMF says that in order to fix the U.S. government budget deficit, taxes need to be doubled on every single U.S. citizen.

Are you ready to pay double the taxes?


No matter how you slice it, the U.S. is in a massive amount of financial trouble and the American people are starting to realize this fact. In fact, one new poll found that nearly two-thirds of Americans believe that the U.S. economy will get worse before it gets better.

But unfortunately things are not going to get "better" - at least in the long-term. The decay and the rot that have already set in are only going to get worse.

These problems did not appear overnight and they are not going to be solved overnight. Our leaders have been making very bad decisions for decades, and all of those bad decisions are starting to catch up with us.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Pravda? Really?

Most of these budgets cuts are necessary because the states have been spending too much money, a lot of it wasted. Now they have to learn how to live within their means, same as the rest of us.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
Why not Pravda?? As for why or what the states need to do, the point is barry told america HE was going to fix it ALL..HIS CHAGES were what we needed....:rolleyes:
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
I get so d*mn sick of this crap, no offense Chef.

Part of the issues is this idea that the teachers and the state had an agreement on a pension but it seems that these people are costing us too much in the way of funding our kids education. Maybe this agreement should be treated the same as Social Security where there is no agreement and maybe we need to return to the concept that teachers and administrators work for the public, not the public work for them.

BUT one of the problems with the schools are finally being recognized and experiments are being done to see if returning the schools back to a basic structure will work.

Here in my state, an unbelievable thing has happened, there is a school with one administrator and their sole function is to plan and monitor the finances. The teacher have control over everything else. There were previous experiments and much of them were deemed a failure but after reading what happened in those cases, this one has a chance to succeed because of the different approach used.

Regardless, public school is a mess and outdated. There is no reason why we need more administrators in a school than there are grades.
 

Turtle

Administrator
Staff member
Retired Expediter
Why not Pravda?? As for why or what the states need to do, the point is barry told america HE was going to fix it ALL..HIS CHAGES were what we needed....:rolleyes:
Well, why not Pravda is that it's a publication that goes out of their way to find, and exaggerate, the bad things about America, then puts a negative slant on that. As to the point where Obama said he was going to fix it all, well, no he didn't, but even if he did there's no way it's going to get fixed within one or two terms. So just because he hasn't fixed everything already doesn't mean he won't. The fact that he can't, and never actually said he could or would, is irrelevant.

Did you know that there are counties in this country, all across the nation, in fact, that have been going from asphalt to gravel for many years, well before Obama took office. Going from asphalt to gravel on less-traveled roads is not the same as rotting, it's being fiscally responsible. If you go out west a lot one thing will be immediately clear, they don't waste a lot of money on asphalt out there on roads that see very little traffic. States and counties back east are beginning to see the virtue in that.

As to the schools, what Greg said. :) My mom worked at the Board of Education a long time, and I've seen the perverted politics and idiocy that is pervasive in the school systems. Educating children is almost an afterthought. And, I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but Obama did nothing to cause that.
 

skyraider

Veteran Expediter
US Navy
Well guys,,,that was uplifting and exciting for all, lol:D If u will send me 10 bucks each and 5.95 for shipping and handling, I will send u my free report of Obama Con economics in a beautifully bound all leather book. For an additional 1.00 I will send u a 12 inch handle wheel well brush to clean out those hard to reach areas in the shower,,lol aaaamen.:rolleyes::D
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
Turtle wrote:

Well, why not Pravda is that it's a publication that goes out of their way to find, and exaggerate, the bad things about America, then puts a negative slant on that.

As long as barry is in office, it fits the agenda perfectly....:D

Turtle wrote:

Did you know that there are counties in this country, all across the nation, in fact, that have been going from asphalt to gravel for many years, well before Obama took office.


Oh I totally understand, I live close enough to monroe county Mich where they have been doing this since the 80's...and I didn't say that any of it was barrys fault, I just said he told america he was going to fix what was wrong with America..and pointing out what he said and what is actually happening, even if it is marginally close to what he said...again it fits the agenda...as he 'fails"...:D

Oh and i understand that there is enough of what he said that he can't and won't do to point out, but again, it fits the agends...:D

Rick wrote:

It's the unions and the pensions destroying this country, period.

yes indeed....
 
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