I live in the USA, and our future seems more bleak than it ever has. Is not about politics, although politicians do have an impact on it. It’s really about our quality of life, and cost of living, which has not changed for the better, it seems, in a really long time. The cost of living keeps going up higher and higher, and much of our country still believes that even with increased cost of living, there is never any reason whatsoever to pay people more. So for instance, a job that paid 10 bucks an hour in the year 2002, that same job might still pay $10 an hour now. But I think we all know that the cost of living has dramatically gone up from 2002 to now.

Even White collar jobs though seem to be threatened to now, which is not something I’ve ever seen before. Positions like analyst, engineer, business intelligence, revenue management, whatever you want to think of. Any corporate office job, people are suffering. The cost of living is absurd, buying a house is simply out of reach unless you have dual income and it better be nearly six figure dual income…

I just don’t see how Americans at large are going to survive the next 30 years?

  • NeoToasty
    link
    fedilink
    34 hours ago

    Americans need to budget better and get used to some sacrifices. If you can’t ride the waves, you’re bound to fall off.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      8
      edit-2
      4 hours ago

      This is a very insensitive and honestly silly comment to make. What makes you think people aren’t budgeting? They would have to in order to survive in the world that we live in now but there are major costs that we can’t control for example rising housing and rent. Even if we stopped dining out every single day forever, and never got sodas or drinks or anything like that, it would still be a struggle to survive because the price of groceries keeps going up due to corporate greed, it has absolutely nothing to do with people not budgeting. When you budget, and things keep rising in that budget, that’s a huge issue

      For example, if I budgeted 100% of my income out as 30% groceries, 70% savings, from the year 2005 to 2024, The percentage for groceries would dramatically increase. It would go 30% groceries in 2005, 45% groceries in 2015, 57% groceries in 2024. As you can see, in this simple example, I’m not buying more groceries or changing my investment or budget. All I’m buying is groceries, and the cost of groceries keeps rising infinitely without my pay rising. This is the problem with the idea that budgeting can help you.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    46 hours ago

    For the last 40 years through free trade we’ve had a large population join the market from countries like China, Russia, India etc.

    Free trade with China has given us cheap consumer goods but at the cost of our own manufacturing which suppressed wage growth and inflation for a long time. We hit the peak of this just before Covid and we are now feeling the after affects.

    China’s dramatically aging population along with geopolitical instability means that the logistics and manufacturing capacity that existed overseas for 20 years Is now failing. The US forced to reshore or nearshore (Mexico) much of its manufacturing capacity. Basically if we want to continue to have stuff we need to find somewhere else to make it besides China. This isn’t a cheap process and it won’t be as efficient as the old system.

    Russia’s war with Ukraine has huge implications on resources and energy. Russia exports a lot of raw materials, fertilizer products, food, energy and aluminum. Taking them offline has affected international trade and has many many markets.

    Our institutions that support labor have also withered over the last 40 years. Labor unions don’t have the sway they used too and politicians have ignored their needs for decades. Big business will not just give wage increases much like in the 20s and 30s Labor will need to grow and become more combative than it currently is to see any improvements.

    In short the world order that we all grew up in is breaking down and changing. It will be at least a decade before these changes finish shaking out and we see solutions to the problems we are facing fully materialize.

  • مهما طال الليل
    link
    fedilink
    11
    edit-2
    8 hours ago

    Humans have a great capacity to adapt. Consider people around the world who have adapted to even worse circumstances.

    spoiler

    unionize

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    11
    edit-2
    10 hours ago

    This is a circumstance born, in no small part, of the idea that manual labor and menial labor is meaningless and has no real value.

    Our economy has been sold from beneath us, and the overall cultural ideologies result in most people avoiding these things. But it is the only thing that is actual production - the rest of the economy is all efficiencies or expenditure.

    Slowly, the wealth has slipped away, and now it’s becoming apparent to people, and they don’t know who to blame.

    Find or make an enclave and survive together.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    79 hours ago

    First you look at other countries around the world. Then you see that lots of people somehow eke out OK livings despite horrible shit in government. So maybe you can too.

    That’s not to say the horrible things to come are acceptable. Rather, you’re probably more capable than you believe. Believe in examples of billions around the globe.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    6116 hours ago

    It is about politics. You need to organise yourselves better into unions. Then, you strike until you get what you deserve.

    Why does Denmark and the rest of the Nordic countries have so high quality of living and happy people? Cause the people realized that you need to work together to get what you want. You need to have solidarity with your other workers to push for better compensation and work environments.

    Do this, or you’re doomed.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      1111 hours ago

      Absolutely 100% this.

      To be totally blunt, this doesn’t need political backing. This requires people collectively coming together, forming unions with single-focus, and pushing for an increase in pay to align with the cost of living. Hell, if anything it’s better if Trump and his lackies oppose this, because you ultimately have the power to cripple these businesses via strikes, forming your own cooperatives off the back of your soon-to-be previous employers, or simply signalling to businesses that if they cannot afford to pay people enough money they shouldn’t be in business.

      Push for gradual increase year-on-year until pay is aligned. If this is missed, everyone walks. Push for the removal of limited sick pay, and for 25+ days minimum vacation time a year. Leave it at that, and you’ve got terms that 90% of workers will agree to. Can’t get a single company to agree? Create a professional body for your line of work and promote it as the place to be for those in your field. Push for accreditation for roles, and shun those that avoid it.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      6
      edit-2
      13 hours ago

      I’ve anecdotally heard that the reason Nordic countries rank high on happiness is because they have a relatively high level of cultural homogeneity, or similar ideals circulating around with most people. This is in contrast to a place like the US that has a relatively high variety of ideologies and cultures. In other words it’s easier to get along if we all generally agree. What are your thoughts on this?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        3
        edit-2
        6 hours ago

        Every other time I’ve encountered this argument, it’s been an argument in favor of racism and xenophobia, often a Nazbol argument like “socialism only works if no diversity.” It’s my instinct to refuse it.

        But I couldn’t deny that, American conservatives and liberals + leftists, on the mental level, live in different realities, with not only different core values and worries, but different ideas of what is actually happening (and no, I actively believe American leftists do not live in a fundamentally different reality from American liberals the way conservatives do from liberals + leftists.)

      • Dragon Rider (drag)
        link
        fedilink
        English
        1011 hours ago

        True, but misleading.

        Yes, if you got rid of all the Nazis in America, then Americans would be happier. On the other hand, if everyone in a country, say, Germany, agreed on establishing a fascist dictatorship, then Germans would be unhappy.

        Norwegians aren’t just happy because they all agree. They’re happy because they agree, and they’re left wing. Agreement is important, but only if it’s agreement on people’s rights and decency.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        211 hours ago

        Yea definitely don’t disagree with that. I think that is a factor too. But I think it also kind of goes hand in hand. Do you have similar ideas because you organized and kind of aligned your ideas, or did you organize because your ideas are similar and you easily agreed to organize? It’s kind of a chicken and egg thing.

        I’ve also often thought that countries like the US are just too big. There’s too many people to take into consideration. A country like Denmark with ~6 million people is much easier to keep track of and the governance and politics is closer to reality.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      2
      edit-2
      10 hours ago

      You need to organise yourselves better into unions. Then, you strike until you get what you deserve.

      It’s a system of bargaining. But if you have nothing that they don’t already have, you can’t bargain. How can you unionize, when they have so many applicants they can just fire you or outsource you to India and your government will never stand up for you? It’s not possible. COLLECTIVE bargaining. It doesn’t work if a few people do it, and I can’t control others.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        611 hours ago

        Of course it’s collective bargaining, that’s what I mean with “organize”. I don’t mean just organize within your workplace, I mean organize within entire fields and industries.

        Friend, you don’t know how unions work at a core level.

        This sounds kind of condescending and mean. In Denmark we have large unions that cover whole industries and fields and they work very well for collective bargaining and securing good levels of compensation, vacation and good work environments. I am myself a member of such a union. So please don’t assume that I don’t know how unions work.

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          210 hours ago

          Sorry, didn’t intend for it to sound man and realized afterwards. I edited that part out. Read my other response. I don’t believe it’s as easy to unionize here in the USA as it is in Denmark. Denmark is extremely restrictive with immigration and is such a tiny country. If they started losing workers in a large number it would be very difficult for them to replace them. In the USA, we have 50 states, and incredible amount of land mass. People move around quite a bit for jobs, and when people start unionizing, they just fire everyone or make everyone terrified to lose their job. Just look at what happened with The Home Depot, largest hardware store in the USA. Basically, Home Depot lobbies strongly against it and provides severe amounts of misinformation to mislead people into thinking that they’re going to be a lot worse off, that they’ll get rewarded for voting against unions. These people are basically fighting against themselves and trying as hard as they can to screw each other over in hopes of a reward that never comes. And it’s totally perfectly legal, companies can basically paint unions as a nightmare that you will never recover from

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            27 hours ago

            when people start unionizing, they just fire everyone

            Yea this needs to be made illegal obviously. But that’s hard. And that’s where it becomes political. You can’t get around the fact that it is political unfortunately.

      • @iknowitwheniseeit
        link
        211 hours ago

        This is why it’s important to work for class consciousness and worker solidarity. Look for ways that management and capital tries to divide us and point them out to your peers!

        • @[email protected]OP
          link
          fedilink
          110 hours ago

          Sure, but what’s your idea for fixing that? It works in Germany where it’s extremely difficult to gain citizenship and immigration is extremely tight but in the USA when there are countless millions of people ready to fill in your job, and constant turnover due to the amount of people that live in the USA and the expensiveness of the country, what is your solution?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    7918 hours ago

    Is not about politics

    It’s all about politics. Just not about the 24/7 clown show that passes for politics in the US.

    It’s about who gets what, how the spoils are divided. It’s obvious how the deck is stacked against ordinary people: the middle class is being bled dry and the hoarder class is taking off with all of it.

    What’s extraordinary is that that somehow passes for ‘natural’ and ‘not about politics’.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      1117 hours ago

      Well capitalism is based on the horrible unfeeling cruelty of nature, that we originally created human society to escape.

      So that’s why it feels natural. It’s the unfair unfeeling system of nature that society is not supposed to be

      • Dragon Rider (drag)
        link
        fedilink
        English
        411 hours ago

        Not bees. Bees cooperate with each other, nurture their young, operate according to democracy, take nectar freely given by plants, and only use their stingers for self defence.

        Fun fact: old scientists believed the queen controlled the hive for purely political reasons. They wanted evidence in nature for the existence of monarchy. They were wrong. Bees are communists and monarchy doesn’t exist in nature. Neither does capitalism. No animal profits purely from owning something, they all have to put in work to get what they need to live.

  • The america empire is following in the exact same footsteps of the Roman empire. If you fail to learn from history then history will repeat itself. The great American empire will fall and there will be nothing u can do about it no matter how hard u try.

    “Do not go gentle into that good night. Rage, rage against the dying of the light.”

    — Dylan Thomas

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      1020 hours ago

      Beautiful. In fact, under royalty, people used to be killed with things like the Breaking Wheel and being boiled alive, which makes the Guillotine a far more humane punishment. I’m tempted, though, to say that “nothing ever happens” and assume the U.S. will proceed as normal.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    4221 hours ago

    Honestly, the ones who survive well are the ones who build communities that take care of each other: Sharing meals, sharing gardens, sharing skills and labor, sharing rides, sharing emotions and stories, etc.

    Capitalism was always pushing the US towards a gigantic class divide, and Boomers and Gen X carried that torch at the expense of their descendants’ future. Communities of support are something that will have helped regardless of who is carrying what ideology and regardless of who is in charge, and they thrive in adversity.

    So if you’re looking for advice, build your local communities. Strengthen your bonds with your neighbors. Participate in local governance.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      716 hours ago

      Gen x is in the same boat as millenials, they just had a tiny bit more of a chance still.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      619 hours ago

      I would if the damned bank would let me buy a house!!! Trying to get a 90K bank loan, have 36k in cash, and still denied because I don’t have a credit score.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        210 hours ago

        I was in the same boat. Banks are lazy and often won’t underwrite custom loans that fall outside their automatic software, but there are still some who will.

        If you don’t have a score (which I’m convinced some mortgage people think means a bad score, because they’re fucking idiots who can’t listen), you can ask to speak to someone in charge or go elsewhere, but there are lenders who will work with you. Got ours through USDA, which took longer and was custom underwriting, but still got the terms about two weeks later.

    • tiredofsametab
      link
      fedilink
      217 hours ago

      and Gen X carried that torch

      Has anyone seen my torch, 'cause I sure can’t find it (though I was in the last couple years of Gen X)

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    5823 hours ago

    Learn how to live in poverty and go unnoticed, because no grand and noble revolution is coming

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      4
      edit-2
      14 hours ago

      Revolutions are never grand and noble.

      (But some history books have been written by the survivors)

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    1318 hours ago

    buying a house is simply out of reach unless you have dual income

    Not in all areas of the United States. Houses routinely sell for under $200k in my city. There’s also many for under $100k.

      • Coskii
        link
        fedilink
        312 hours ago

        I haven’t checked since covid, but Philadelphia usually has at least a handful for under 100k and a load under 200k.

        Granted they aren’t in great sections of the city and nearly all are row homes with existing issues.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      618 hours ago

      People say this kind of thing a lot, but I don’t really understand if they don’t have any family or friends, don’t care about their family and friends, or just think it’s reasonable to have to choose between your relationships and living in an affordable house.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        7
        edit-2
        18 hours ago

        It sucks but you have to do what you think is best maybe the savings allow for some road trips to visit.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          216 hours ago

          My household is in the top few percentile, we’re fine. I just think everybody else should also have the luxury of not having to choose between relationships and shelter.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    3923 hours ago

    You get milked by the big corpos. Money flows from the poor to the rich.

    And as long as you have only these two extreme right wing parties, there is nobody who would change it.