Submitted by Michael Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,
Do you remember the old Saturday Night Live sketches in which comedian Chris Farley portrayed a motivational speaker that lived in a van down by the river? Unfortunately, this is becoming a reality for way too many Americans.
As the middle class has shrunk and the cost of living has increased, a lot of people have decided to quite literally “live on the road”. Whether it is a car, a truck, a van, a bus or an RV, an increasing number of Americans are using their vehicles as their homes. Just recently, someone that I know took a trip down the west coast of the United States and stayed at a number of campgrounds along the way. What she discovered was that a lot of people were actually living at these campgrounds. Of course there are some that actually prefer that lifestyle, but many others are doing it out of necessity.
Earlier this week, Circa.com posted a story about “the van life”. One of the individuals that they featured was a recent graduate of the University of Southern California named Stephen Hutchins. Without much of an income at the moment, he decided that the best way to cut expenses was to live in his van…
“The main expenses are insurance for the van, which is like $60 a month,” said Hutchins. “Then, I have a storage unit for like $60.”
That puts his monthly rent at $120. The van cost him just $125 at an auction.
Living in a van is certainly not the most comfortable way to go, and many of you are probably wondering how he performs basic tasks such as cooking and bathing. Well, it turns out that he makes extensive use of public facilities…
He showers at the gym, cooks on a portable stove on a sidewalk (he stores his butane at his friends’ place nearby) and uses wifi at nearby coffeeshops.
For a while such a lifestyle may seem like “an adventure”, but after a while it will start to get really old. And not a lot of women are going to be excited about dating a man that lives in a van, and you certainly wouldn’t want to raise a family in a vehicle.
Sadly, just like during the last economic crisis many Americans are getting to the point where staying in their homes may not be an option. Just check out the following excerpt from a recent New York Post article entitled “The terrifying signs of a looming housing crisis“…
The number of New Yorkers applying for emergency grants to stay in their homes is skyrocketing — as the number of people staying in homeless shelters reached an all-time high last weekend, records show.
There were 82,306 applications for one-time emergency grants to prevent evictions in fiscal 2016, up 26 percent from 65,138 requests the previous year, according to the Mayor’s Management Report.
I put a couple of phrases in that quote in bold because I really wanted you to notice a couple of things.
First of all, it is very alarming to hear that the number of New Yorkers staying in homeless shelters “reached an all-time high” last weekend. I thought that we were supposed to be in an “economic recovery”, but apparently things in New York are rapidly getting worse.
Secondly, the fact that applications for emergency grants are up 26 percent compared to last year is another indication of how rough things are right now for average families in New York. We all remember what happened when millions of families lost their homes to foreclosure across the nation during the last financial crisis, and nobody should want to see a repeat of that any time soon.
During this election season, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton would like all of us to believe that the economy is doing just fine, but that is not true at all. Even using the doctored numbers that the government gives us, Barack Obama is solidly on track to be the only president in all of U.S. history to never have a single year of 3 percent GDP growth, and he has had two terms to try to do that.
Gallup CEO Jim Clifton is also quite skeptical of this “economic recovery”, and he recently authored an article on this subject that is receiving a tremendous amount of attention. The following is how that article begins…
I’ve been reading a lot about a “recovering” economy. It was even trumpeted on Page 1 of The New York Times and Financial Times last week.
I don’t think it’s true.
The percentage of Americans who say they are in the middle or upper-middle class has fallen 10 percentage points, from a 61% average between 2000 and 2008 to 51% today.
Other surveys have found that it is even worse than that.
For example, a Pew Research Center study from the end of last year discovered that the middle class in America has now actually become a minority in this country.
Here are some other numbers that Clifton included in his article…
- According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the percentage of the total U.S. adult population that has a full-time job has been hovering around 48% since 2010 — this is the lowest full-time employment level since 1983.
- The number of publicly listed companies trading on U.S. exchanges has been cut almost in half in the past 20 years — from about 7,300 to 3,700. Because firms can’t grow organically — that is, build more business from new and existing customers — they give up and pay high prices to acquire their competitors, thus drastically shrinking the number of U.S. public companies. This seriously contributes to the massive loss of U.S. middle-class jobs.
- New business startups are at historical lows. Americans have stopped starting businesses. And the businesses that do start are growing at historically slow rates.
Once upon a time, America was the land of opportunity.
We were the place where anything was possible and where entrepreneurship was greatly encouraged.
But today we strangle small businesses to death with rules, regulations, red tape and taxes.
If we want a stronger middle class, we need to create a much better environment for the creation of small businesses. Small business ownership often lifts individuals into the middle class, and small businesses have traditionally been the primary engine for the growth of good jobs in this country.
If the middle class continues to shrink, poverty will continue to rise. Previously I have written about how the number of homeless children in the United States has shot up by 60 percent since the last economic crisis, and Poverty USA claims that a staggering 1.6 million children slept either in a homeless shelter or in some other form of emergency housing during 2015.
If you will be sleeping in a warm bed in a comfortable home tonight, you should be thankful. An increasing number of Americans are sleeping in tent cities, in their vehicles or on the streets. These hurting people deserve our love, our compassion and our prayers.
Hell, if this many bad things were happening at the same time anywhere else in the world, you would immediately see those cleavage showing, sleeveless, form fitting dress wearing "news" anchors on TEEVEE squawking endlessly about how that country's collapse was imminent.
If Trump wins the election, that's exactly what you will see. The homeless willl suddenly become visible!
Behold! The Rickyification of America (Trailer Park Boys ref, for the uninitiated)
Are you talking about that dicktree from Rush?
When I was a youngin’ in my early 20’s a van down by the river would have been a substantive upgrade to my lifestyle.
They wouldn’t let me near the river.
Got any change, man?
And… and… and… where the F did you guys find my old VW mini-bus?
Ok.. ok.. just joking.
It is a freaking fact that although from modest beginnings, (I slept on a sofa in the living room of a 1 bedroom city apartment until I was 15)… I did not do half too badly over time.
It’s called work and diligence.
but.. but I did have a VW mini-bus in the very early 70's and I did see Led Zepplin play live for $5.00 at the Kinetic Playground in Chicago... I think that was 1968.
Any woman that would not like me and my Thor does not deserve to go near the river.
America crumbles, yet finds money to prop up racists overseas.
http://bit.ly/2cx8JnY
Damn right, that money should be building apartheid walls in *this* country! Wall off Beanerland, wall off the Africans in our inner cities (to protect them from racist cops, of course), and suddenly you won't have to be a millionaire to live in a peaceful, non-vibrant neighborhood.
And not a lot of women are going to be excited about dating a man that lives in a van, and you certainly wouldn’t want to raise a family in a vehicle.
Who gives a fuck? I can live in a van yet pull 100K a year; you don't like it sweets - move along and find another schlong.
And where's her liberated feminist condo at? I'm assuming she's got a pad?
We're I a billionaire I'd live in a van down by the river - just to weed out the gold diggers...
Added bonus: She won't kick you out of your own house on a whim.
Your only investments should be skills, gold in the hills, guns in a storage locker, a few bitcoin, maybe a hunting lease. Have enough mobility to get on the right side of the DMZ on short notice. Modern women aren't worth building your life around at this point. If you are silly enough to get into a relationship with one, you can support her on your terms or not at all. Don't get married unless you have three passports, including one from a rogue state (other than America).
The bitchez are slowly starting to figure out that corporate America will never love them as much as a family, but there are few men who meet their impossibly high standards. All-female HR mafias have a lot to do with this. They also think that since they can now order up a man like we order up a pizza, it will be easy to get someone to commit at the last possible minute. They don't understand that they are all chasing after the same 1000 douchebags. These guys have no reason to settle down, and they make it impossible to pair bond with the kind of guy who will settle down.
Congratulations, puppetmasters. Between frivorce, outsourcing, over-regulation, welfare, political correctness and cultural degeneracy, you have created an army of tens of millions of intelligent but rootless men with a whole lot of time on their hands and nothing to lose but their chains. Chaos is coming.
P.S. I spent over a year living in vehicles and it's pretty sweet if you're in a scenic area with decent climate at the time. Try BLM land out west. I hear they are starting to gate it off now though.
Exactly. Mobile, so you can go where the work is/trouble and riots aren't. Fuck owning a house and being a tax donkey. See also the tiny house movement - van living for hipsters.
Here here! Work has its own private gym and shower. Why drive home and risk getting pulled over by the civil forfeiture, citizen shooting po-po when I can simply sleep in my van in the company parking lot? Boss sees me as the last to "leave" every day and the first to "arrive" as well. With no house payments, I'll be retiring to life as a king in one of those second world countries in no time. Bye bye USSA! Thanks for all the fish!
'Zactly.
When Trump is elected, all he is going to have to do is publish the REAL unemployment numbers just once and the whole "economy" will come to an abrupt end.
No evidence for that bro.........we need a new direction......not the DemoRat war/crony capitalist machine....
Can't do that here, No sirree bub! Got to get hILLary elected, praise the lord. Must spin the facts to make everything sound glorious, no matter the suffering.
Obamanomics works!
Near complete destruction of America's middle clas....."Yes we can!"
While at the same time flooding the US with H-1B visa holders, illegals, rapefugees, and turd worlders.
millions live in vans and tent cities, meanwhile hundreds of thousands of overfinancialised houses lie empty. Or are 'fallowed' (bulldozed) like half of detroit.
The only thing reversing this equation is courage. The ethics of money are certainly no barrier - if Wells Fargo can make 2 million accounts without permission and we have a tough time sending any of the thousands of staff involved to prison, why should ANY homeless person in america feel the slightest shame about squatting?
The housing cost statistic offered by BLS also fails to capture the financial distress being imposed on millions of Americans by Wall Street hedge funds and private equity funds that are scooping up homes in distressed neighborhoods and hiking rents far above fair market rates. In a report last Fall, American Prospect Magazine found the following:
“…in areas where Wall Street investors own a significant number of these single-family homes—including Atlanta, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Miami, Tampa, Orlando, Charlotte, Dallas, Chicago, Detroit, Denver, and Los Angeles and nearby Riverside—their practices have harmed tenants and undermined long-term neighborhood stability.
“In April of this year, for example, one-quarter of all home sales were to cash-carrying investors. Since 2010, institutional investors backed by Wall Street have purchased a total of 528,369 single-family homes nationwide, led by Florida (78,155), California (52,802), Georgia (46,914), Arizona (35,979), and North Carolina (34,769), according to RealtyTrac…Together, these Wall Street entities have raised close to $70 billion to buy these homes.”
http://wallstreetonparade.com/2016/09/dont-believe-the-fed-the-u-s-consu...
The entire problem is zero percent interest. Holding these properties off the market isn't costing the banks anything. They're MAKING money on it because of the new, higher loans on other nearby properties. This shit is ridiculous. If we had normal interest rates, the houses would be sold promptly, prices would drop back to in line with incomes, and people could buy houses to live in instead of letting them rot.
because (like in Greece) - most Americans are PUSSIES.
I saw this first hand 3 years in a row when I would visit Stanford University. I began to notice the same vans and campers parked along the road leading up to the back side of the campus ( where they would practice soccer ). Last year when I was there I walked to the campus from a hotel not far away early one morning. Actually spoke to one of the guys who came out of his old VW Vanagan with the pop-up tent top. He said he was contracting out some computer work but couldn't afford rent. He knew some of the folks in the RVs were students and others were "undocumented workers".
Van life....like back in the 70's.....without the shag carpet, the dope, the chicks and the rad paint job of wizard riding a dragon.
Oh look, another article by Michael "The Sky Is Falling" Snyder
Don't kill the messenger.........
A good messenger doesn't negatively-bias the message.
Edit: I see I was downvoted. That's alright. I've been watching his screams that "Armageddon is nigh within 24 hours" since 2009.
Yes I believe we're on a collision course with Great Depression II, but I don't scream at every inkling of bad news and ignore any good news.
But then some people like to read Sorcha Faal.
Could you describe your interpretation of good news followed by some examples.
I'm waiting, with pregnant anticipation, to hear this good news of which you speak. Personally, I'm doing great and enjoying life, but apart from the Wall Street, .gov, and tech crowds, most people seem to be sucking.
Hi Tactical, You could remove tech from your vision. They are doing badly since this year's beginning. More Tech jobs have been lost than in Y2K in the last 9 months and continue to plunge. IBM, Apple. Microsoft, all are firing in thousands!
Tech Wreck - 100+K Jobs Gone and More Cuts ComingIndia Witnesses Major Job Cuts Despite Having Fastest Growing Economy
Read more: https://sputniknews.com/business/20160919/1045462128/india-job-cuts.html
This is sad, and this is Bacuck OBummer's legacy.
She looks like she voted for Obama also.
Maybe they'll learn. Maybe not.
Well, if you think a TOW missile costs about $60000 and Obama has supplied many thousands of them to his terrorist army in Syria, well somebody has to pay right?
Anybody living in van is not part of the middle class. They merely had access to credit facilities that enabled them to live a middle class lifestyle.
1989 ford econoline 9 passenger club wagon here.. It is way cool and when I go to jobs and live in it you actually do get a weird sense of freedom.
Ford E-150 Cargo Van
I live in it 3-5 nights a week when I work 2 hours away from my rural acreage in contract software jobs in the city. Been doing it for 3 years now. It rules making good bucks and not paying city taxes or rent.
That bus deal is not a bad way to save a buck while building a business.
When I was a kid we all moved into old shacks together and worked hard all day and fucked and partied hard all night.
Every one of our gang of poor to middle guys made out pretty good in the long run.
Quit whining and think like that kid.
hell yea. I pull onto the job site, they have the portable shitters on all of them for that morning coffee crap. Showers at truck stops or join a health club. I do have a portable I rigged up from an rv water pump.. heat the water and find a spot you can get nekid and it works like a charm. Compared to staying in motels or renting space in an rv park. YUGE savings..
PS- Wetones type baby wipes are your best friend.
Amen Brother
It's all on purpose, all of it. It's going to come to an end soon. When it does, there will be hell to pay. Everything they took from us will be confiscated, one way or another.
First of all, it is very alarming to hear that the number of New Yorkers staying in homeless shelters “reached an all-time high” last weekend.
New All-Time Highs!
I'm wondering if rental car theft is up. Anyone know where I could possibly find stats on that? Rent a car, keep it... Hmmm.
Looks like I may be correct in my assumption, take this link... http://6abc.com/news/major-car-theft-ring-busted-in-philly;-dozens-arres...
Standard Disclaimer: But I had to laugh at this line in the article: Williams identified the alleged masterminds as Jihad Miller and ...
........ Infidel Schwartz
Old school buses are a great deal.
It worked for the Partidge family.
At least those PhDs, masters and bachelors living in a van know how to drive.
Matt Foley for Fed Chairman!
That's a shame, but seems like a rational adaption to a bad situation. Of course this means moving, to remain in a Mild, Temperate climate year round: not too hot, not too cold, not too wet. And access to "the river".
Too bad that houses cost so much, and that people have to pay property taxes. There are plenty of countries, where there are NO PROPERTY TAXES.
Yesterday I got an email from Doug Casey, that had the list of these countries. Imagine my "surprise, surprise, surprise!", when I saw that ISRAEL HAS NO PROPERTY TAXES.
not really. tho I wouldn't want to live in a van @ -50. I have a -15 rated sleeping bag and by the time I get my coffee made on the propane burner, it is quite comfortable inside. I have spent more than one night at subzero weather.
They steal/exhort enough from the usa so they can forgo such 'hardships' (for now).
as far as I know neither does Serbia