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First Posted: 12- 4-08 11:43 AM   |   Updated: 01- 4-09 05:12 AM

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Meltdown

On Monday, Arianna wrote a piece about the terrifying state of America's economy.

So, just like we did with your election anxiety, we asked you to share. And share you did!

We've pulled together a selection of some of the standout stories to share with the rest of our readers -- both to do our part to document the downturn and to make sure that everyone out there feeling the financial pressure knows that they are not alone.

Like we said, the meltdown will be blogged. By you.

Thank you.

To share your stories, your tips, your fears, or your ideas with us, click here and fill out the simple form.

I am 62 years old and retired for 3 years. My husband and I always saved our money. If we had $100 we saved $25. We did not buy furnature for our home, but lived with hand me downs for 20 years. We raised 3 kids and sent them to college on one teacher's salary. We bought used cars and kept them for 12 to 18 years. The money that would have payed for "luxury items" was SAVED! Saved in my husbands 401K, saved in stocks and bonds. We sent all 3 kids to college without taking out loans or going into debt. They went to state schools with some academic scholarships and all graduated and are good citizens today. We felt like we had "done the right thing", and then one day in Sept. 2008 the 401K was gone. The money we had put into it when we had very little to add, but always made that deposit. That money was gone! It was our savings that took 40 years to accumulate with hard work, and even harder "sacrifice" to save it. Gone in a day! It was to be used to travel,something we never had time for when raising a family.It was for our kids when we are gone and our grandkids. But now it is gone.
Mimi, Berlin


My partner and I formed a business in 1979. We've had ups and downs over the past 29 years but we've survived nicely and managed to grow modestly each year...For the past 10 years, we've kept our expenses minimal and never had more than two associates in spite of suggestions that we add more people...Then came last November...Virtually all of our work dried up and what we receive now trickles in periodically. Our 2008 gross is down 50% from 2007.

I had surgery late last year and the only way we've been able to keep any staff employed is because I've been disabled and what would have been paid to me is going to staff. I'm seriously considering retiring since I have become physically disabled and there's little incentive to return to a business that isn't likely to survive much longer. My situation is no where near as awful as many others because we won't lose our home or our life if I am forced into retirement: Many other's aren't so lucky.
Roger, Stockton, California

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i run a home daycare center and have since i was laid off toward the end of bush one's presidency. funny, but during that time, my husband and i both lost our jobs in the air freight industry 3 months apart from each other. of course it wasn't funny then. we did what we had to in order to support 4 kids. we delivered newspapers, my husband took a part time job at target. i decided to open my own daycare center within our home. i watched kids day and night. weekends and 24 hour care. i've been doing it now for 17 years. now i watch my daycare parents struggle as we did over 17 years ago. some are self employed and have no business. others are seeing co-workers get laid off and wonder when they will be next. others have been laid off and can't find jobs. others are forced to take pay cuts and work longer hours. these are just the families within my own daycare. my son is a recent college graduate and plans to attend law school since the job market is so poor. i dont know how he plans to pay for it though. we sure dont have the money to send him. we have a daughter in her freshman year of college who worries her financial aid will dry up. my IRA is worthless along with my husband's 401 K. we are fortunate to have been in our house over 10 years so we are not affected by the housing crisis. i see how our society replaced credit for wages. most of us dont know what it means to save for a washing machine, we just charge it. i remember my parents selling everything they could when my dad was laid off in 1974. now we live on credit. somehow we've lost sight of financial responsibility. we as a people, as a country, need to find our way back.
Karen, Arvada, Colorado


I worked for a tech company that provided support tools to the finance industry in New York and was in the first round of layoffs when this recession began back in January of this year (2008). After several months of looking for work I was forced to look outside of NY and ended up finding work starting in May in California. I'm a single parent with multiple sclerosis and a son in college. His father is on SSI due to emphysema and cirrhosis of the liver so it's been up to me to provide for our son. My choice was to stay in my house in NY with NO JOB or leave that house and come to California where I could, at least, find a job. I left. The house has been on the market since April and despite the price now being reduced to below what I owe on it, I've had NO OFFERS. I can't afford to live here and make payments there and am just waiting for the lender to foreclose. I will lose all my savings in that house. Three years ago when I moved to NY I put $50,000 down on that house. It completely aggravates me that the "experts" have been denying we're heading for a depression. Wake up guys, we're there.
JK, Santa Clara, CA


I am 55-years old. I hold a doctorate in music (earned in 1994 - so that is really when my career began) and have an excellent reputation as a scholar, performer, and education. I teach at a small liberal arts college in Nebraska. We have seen a drastic drop in our enrollment. Students can't get loans or jobs to pay our higher than average tuition. Our music department is really struggling and was the target of faculty/staff cuts two years ago. This year, it was announced in August that the college would stop making contributions to our IRAs. I an really afraid: first for our department and my job and secondly for the college overall...So, here I am a highly educated professional with very specific skills, facing unemployment with little in retirement since I have only worked full-time for 10 years. I have a 20-year old son and college and co-signed post-grad professional loans for my daughter. I never expected, at my age, to be facing these obstacles. The stress is significant, but I don't know what to do except go to work every day and hope for a miracle.
Peggy, Omaha, NE


I just turned 59. I have worked for 42 years of my life. Now I am living in a tent in someone's backyard... I had to sleep in my car for a week or more. I could be staying in an RV, but the tent actually has more space... I have had no income since September and mostly $500 a month income for much of this year, except for June when I received more money from a friend. what I see is that all of our systems are set up to penalize and criminalize the poor. can't pay for registration and insurance for your car? you are a criminal. cannot pay for rent? cannot pay for food? cannot pay for gas? where are you supposed to go? cannot pay for health care? tough luck, go die. I have a BA degree and am a professional. Two years ago when I hurt my wrist I looked into going on disability but found out that I would be lucky to get approved in two years... welfare, food stamps? social security? I do not qualify because why? I am a third generation American and my family is DEAD but because I have no income, but had some money way back in June, and have a car, I do not qualify? the red tape and rigamorale is difficult to deal with... exhausting. they say they need substitute teachers, same red tape, and you have to spend money to get the job... where am I supposed to get the money? churches social service agencies, each one passes the buck, sends you to some place else. food banks expect you to live on tuna, peanut butter and pasta, if you do not have a kitchen, how are you supposed to cook the pasta???
Sue, NYC


My teenage son lives with severe autism, as do 1 in every 150 boys today. The greatest tragedy of the economic meltdown in the richest country in the world is the further erosion and neglect of our government in supporting people who need the most help, those with disabilities who cannot live independently. At a time when diagnoses have surged, ironically over the past 8 years services were cut and now will disappear, leaving aging parents to care for their adult children at home until . . . the inevitable. What happens to those adults with autism when their parents are gone? Thankfully institutions are not the answer anymore, however now there are no new group homes opening, and agencies serving the disabled no longer have funds to operate. When a provider can make more working at Wal-Mart than teaching a young disabled adult a vocational skill that says something about our priorities as a country. Why was there no money 8 years ago when we asked for help, yet billions are suddenly found to support banks, Wall St., the auto companies, construction companies, etc? The money is there - let's reset our prioirities and leave a standard of living to our children better than what can be found in Sudan. This is America after all.
Susan, Harbeson, DE


I used to work for Sony Electronics when they still made television sets here in San Diego (as recent as 2002!). When this business moved to China, I was laid off and tried to establish my own specialty retail business. Shorly thereafter I became a business statistic when the business failed. After a 18 month period of unemplyment, I found at a position in our local school district, making about 50% less than when I was at Sony. Within a year I found a better position at Pfizer, but the big-pharma was already foundering, and was laid-off after less than a year. Since then I have not been able to find suitable employment. Had my wife not been a highly skilled Registered Nurse we would have lost our home long ago and suffered additional financial consequences.


I am now planning to attend a paralegal certificate program at a local university in January, and should be on the hunt for employment in May. I have been unemployed 3 weeks to long to qualify for extended unemployment benefits, so I have received almost no help from the state or Uncle Sam. At 54 years of age none of this is coming easy for me. Aside from the financial issues, the emotional stress has been tremendous. Had it not been for friends and playing sax in a local big band, I probably would be dead by know. I've learned that money is not the most important thing in life! I consider myself well educated (BS Virginia Tech, MBA University of Phoenix), and have a lifetime of operational business experience, so why can't I find suitable employment? When somebody with my education and experience is tossed away by society, I wonder how those less fortunate can make it. We are fast becoming a third world country, it's not the place I grew up in. I fear for the next generation. Best regards,
Drew, San Diego, CA


This is what amazes me about my life in America right now: No heat. No heat last winter.....No heat this winter....And I thought I was alone. But this year, I checked in on the Frugal Living board of a popular mother's website, and what did I see? Women asking each other what to do when you have children at home, and you can't afford to fire up your furnace. And then, a few women on another mother's group I belong to admitted that they had no heat this winter, as well. Some of these women are pregnant, and due to deliver this winter. Most of us have husbands who work; but the downsizings and wage stagnation, and unemployment have taken their toll. So when money ran out, and the heat bill couldn't be paid...well, there never was enough extra to get the heat turned back on. Here's another thing I've learned: Having a college degree no longer serves as a safety net against impoverishment. I look around me, and well-educated friends simply can not find jobs. Naturally, I worry about the struggle.
Faith, East Windsor, NJ


I am 61 years old and bought my first house in 2007. The bank told me that I could afford a home up to $160,000. I had no money for a down payment. "Are you sure I can afford a home for $160,000?"


"Sure, no problem."


When all was said and done, I found a home for $151,000 and the monthly payment was almost $1,300. I am not in foreclosure but I have built up a credit card debt of $7,000. I have made my mortgage payments but I have not been able to keep up with other monthly expenses. I cannot afford to refinance at a lower rate because I do not have the cash for the closing. It will just be a matter of time before I lose my home.


I have a Master's in Library Science, I make a nice salary but I cannot afford my home. Foreclosure is on the horizon and I do not believe I have any options but to lose my home. I feel like I have been robbed these past eight years.


The current bailout does not seem to be making its way to Main Street.
Hjordis, Durham, NC


I am a 42 year old single mother. I've been without a job for a year now. All my savings are dried up at this moment and I don't know how I am going to meet my rent for this month. I've started a vending business about three months ago with the perspective of getting a monthly stream of income, but at this moment i've jet to get all of my routes. I can not afford to shop at the supermarket, me and my daughter are living of the local food pantry. I have to cancel my cable and cook at least once a week to safe on my electric bill. I only pray that our next President is able to fix this and he will need all the help that he can get. It is a relieve to see that the gas prices went down. I try to keep a positive outlook on the situation, through my faith in God. I pray for our new President and helps to know that through him we have hope for the future. I hope my story will help someone to see that eventough we in this situation all hope is not lost. We all have to have faith that it will get better, because of the faith that we have as americans.
Linda, Marietta


My story started with a layoff (11 of 25 employees) from a small biotech company outside of Philadelphia in June 2007. It took me 5 months to find a permanent position with a salary in alignment with my experience. In the 5 months it took me to find this job, I lost everything.


I am a divorced mother of three. When I divorced, I was doing well financially (I do not receive alimony) and purchased a townhouse for myself and children. When I lost my job, the savings were gone instantly as Unemployment Benefits did not cover much. As the mortgage got 2 months and then 3 months behind, I had no idea what we would do. I could not find a way to stay afloat. In desperation, I sent my younger children to live with their father. I did not want them to go though the horrifying process of 'mom falling apart at the seams' because we were about to have nowhere to live. My oldest child went to live with family friends (he was 16 at the time).


The economic meltdown was causing a complete meltdown of me and my family. The mental stress and anxiety became too much for me I and made two attempts on my life. Two days before Christmas Dec 2007, I had to be out of my house for good. My van was repossessed as well. I was no longer allowed to see my younger children due to my suicide attempts. My depression was all consuming. I did not eat or sleep well for months. I filed for bankruptcy and hoped the New Year would offer some ray of hope.


Today, 02Dec2008, I am employed. I am renting a place with my oldest son. My two little ones still live with Dad. He has not allowed them to return to live with me and I do not have the finances to fight him. I miss them every moment. Although money is extremely tight (I am starting a second job this week), we are making it.
Kimberly, Conyngham

Keep coming back to the Living page to see what other HuffPost readers had to say and to learn meaningful and practical ways to cope with and learn from these troubled times.

On Monday, Arianna wrote a piece about the terrifying state of America's economy. So, just like we did with your election anxiety, we asked you to share. And share you did! We've pulled together a s...
On Monday, Arianna wrote a piece about the terrifying state of America's economy. So, just like we did with your election anxiety, we asked you to share. And share you did! We've pulled together a s...
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- dbg2 I'm a Fan of dbg2 3 fans permalink

Please somebody find out where Hank Paulson lives and post his address, he made 500 million dollars in six years selling out this country. Lets start the recovery with his ass..ets, I want his money back now!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:52 PM on 12/04/2008

It is truly unbelievable what we have allowed in our country. Its a good thing they didn't sell us on privatizing social security or they (wall Street) would have gotten it all.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 12/04/2008

they were talking about privatizing 2% of the trust . The stock market is back to where it was at that time. That means that counting dividends you would still be better off investing in the stock market than getting 1.2% on yout Social security money from uncle Sam (yes that how much federal goverment pays to the Social Security trust)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 AM on 12/05/2008

Don't let those republicans fool you friend they still want to privatize social security.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:44 AM on 12/05/2008
- rarelement I'm a Fan of rarelement 3 fans permalink

I think it's amazing how well composed these items are! I wish I could hire you!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:51 PM on 12/04/2008
- deminmo I'm a Fan of deminmo 16 fans permalink

I have it much better than most of the people who wrote comments,
and I am very grateful for a place to live and food. I left a job where
the working conditions were affecting my health. But I have a job
again part-time, and I am hopeful that a full-time one will come.
My worry is that the economy will effect my current job, and should
I lose it, my state will not have money for unemployment benefits,
they are already coping with a deficit budget.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 12/04/2008

In a small town in northern Wisconsin the economy is horrible...I see longtime employees of small companies without work...I see people loosing there homes and all they have...and yet the senate says that we should not Loan the Car companies money....do they want another 10% of our workers to loose there jobs...I went to the credit union today to ask if I could just pay the interest on my loan for 4 months...they said no...luckily i have been paying more over the previous months and I will not be behind for a couple more months....but I do not have a couple more months on other bills. What are the banks going to do with all of these properties???? Nobody to live in our houses, and us on the streets....it was 8 below zero today...no place to go when you get thrown out. More news of more lay offs....another 6,000+ today....when and where will it stop? Did you ever notice that if a company lays off people to control cost there stock goes up....what about the people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:36 PM on 12/04/2008

Hey, Minocqua--

I'm from your neck of the woods (Rhinelander) originally, and my family that still lives up there has been telling me how awful it is. Things are a bit better down here by me (Eau Claire area). I wish I could send you a virtual hug, as I hate to see a fellow 'sconnie in such dire straits. I volunteer at the local free clinic, and it just breaks my heart sometimes to see all these good people struggling like this. Good luck with it all, and try to take care of yourself and your family.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 AM on 12/05/2008
- DebofMD I'm a Fan of DebofMD 14 fans permalink
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That's my issue...when do the regular American people get a bailout?? Can we all just go to Congress and ask for some money?? I don't see why we shouldn't. None of this makes sense to me. What is being done to help the average person? And it's not just mortgage help that is needed. Many folks like myself rent apartments, and we need basic financial assistance too. It would be great if the IRS would let me forego the $1,500 in taxes I owe so I can catch up on my bills. All they're going to do with it is send it on to Wall Street or Detroit anyway. Ugh.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 PM on 12/04/2008

I am exasperated that people with reasonable incomes are not being asked to do more to help. I have a secure job as a tenured professor at a public University in California, with substantial seniority. We have been told there will be no raises for the indefinite future, but that's not a hardship compared to what others are enduring.
I am not wealthy, but I could be asked to pay a little more to shore up social services for others, to name just one of many needs the bloggers here have identified. The Governor could bring back the vehicle tax he lifted to great fanfare a few years ago. That's a few hundred a year that would not hurt me and would help others in this state who need public services. The marginal rates could inch up on medium to high earners to help out. I am tired of the Republican mantra that taxes are always bad. Shouldn't those who can afford to help a little be asked to do so? I hope the Bush tax cuts on the wealthiest among us are allowed to expire. If I can afford to pay a little more in taxes, surely the Warren Buffett's of the world can, too.
I already give to many charities and I hope others who can afford it do, too. But asking those who can afford it to chip in a little more on their taxes to help the desperate situations of so many others is not unreasonable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:33 PM on 12/04/2008
- Artemis34 I'm a Fan of Artemis34 131 fans permalink
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Exactly. With rights come also responsibilities, like taxes. Let's ask our government to show compassion and social responsibility as we do in our own lives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 12/04/2008

you are correct "asking" is not unreasonable. "Forcing" is. If you feel that you should pay more taxes - you are always able to. The tax rates are MINIMUM you are REQUIRED to pay, you are always able to pay more. But you not talking about "asking", you are talking about forcing people to pay more, aren't you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 AM on 12/05/2008

I don't know anyone that wants to pay taxes. However, they are a must. We make less than $45,000.00 a yr and we are will to pay a little more in taxes to help with healthcare, unemployment insurance. Taxes that will actually help people. Even put people back to work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:53 AM on 12/05/2008

Off-point, but hard to let go without a response. Susan, I appreciate your struggles as the mother of a severely autistic child, but let's please keep things in proportion. It simply is not true that 1 in 150 boys are severely autistic (which is what you claim). Rather, the number of "severe" cases is quite low. The reality is that the definition of the "autism spectrum" was expanded and, as a result, portrays a higher incidence of autism than previously was shown. The incidence as a function of health has not increased, only the definition has broadened. A good comparison is what would happen if they lowered the qualifications for legal blindness -- suddenly there would be an explosion in the number of blind people without any changes in health. Please don't scare expectant parents!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 PM on 12/04/2008
- neocon666 I'm a Fan of neocon666 68 fans permalink

Don't gloss over the issue either: 1 in 150 boys is diagnosed with autism, though the definition of "severe" is subjective, since mental retardation often accompanies cases of autism. The fact that there are more diagnosed cases does not mean that they should be considered trivial.

"BETTER DIAGNOSIS? Some of suggested that autism is just being better diagnosed today versus ten years ago and that many cases of mental retardation are now being coded as autism. This would also assume that the experts diagnosing autism before did not know what they were doing.

This is NOT TRUE. Autism is the only rising dramatically disorder while mental retardation, Down syndrome, and cystic fibrosis remain relatively the same. Autism is now more prevalent among California children than cerebral palsy."

http://www.talkaboutcuringautism.org/autism/latest_autism_statistics.htm

We return you to your regularly scheduled blog...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 PM on 12/04/2008

If you think it is somehow "easy" to be declared legally blind, you are wrong. It is perfectly possible to be unable to see enough to do any kind of useful work and still be unable to receive any kind of diability benefits. Unless you are legally blind yourself, you have no idea what it is like to exist with limited vision.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 PM on 12/04/2008
- davispty5 I'm a Fan of davispty5 29 fans permalink
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First, as a parent of a non-verbal autistic child I take exception with you trying to "explain away" the very real autism epidemic that is occuring. People like you need to pull your head out of the sand and realize that something is causing this very dramatic increase. It is likely something we are polluting our environment with, probably mercury or some other neuro-toxin. Secondly, you could never truly appreciate what it is like to be the caregiver of an autistic child unless you have lived it, so spare us your feigned sympathy. I too lay awake nights wondering who will take care of my 13 year old son after his father and I can no longer care for him. This is something that the rest of you might want to start thinking about too, because there is a whole generation of disabled children that will need caring for and it's going to take the whole village.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 PM on 12/04/2008

Some humor in these bleak times:
http://democralypsenow.blogspot.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 PM on 12/04/2008
- imsosure I'm a Fan of imsosure 27 fans permalink
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Blame Bush he don't care and I sure know I don't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 PM on 12/04/2008

YOU BETCHA, The Bushes got rich off the american people. He sleeps well at night knowing he doesn't take the responsibility for anything. He blames Clinton, his Dad anybody and everybody but himself. The man deserves the title the worst president ever. He really does. The man has no compassion for anyone. What does he care he made his millions

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 AM on 12/05/2008
- pithy I'm a Fan of pithy 10 fans permalink


I am almost 61, & have worked since I was 16 years old. Raised a daughter as a single parent. I just found some income tax statements from 1987 - at the time, I was earning $26,000 a year and had full health & dental care.

Now, I work two part-time jobs and have a disabled husband who gets $683/month. Both my jobs have cut my hours in the last six months. No healthcare for me.

My income is now about $750/month, added to my husbands.

I recently applied for food stamps. We qualified - for $14 a month.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 PM on 12/04/2008
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That's outrageous....but many people are living the reality of a govt that doesn't care for its citizens.We all cry against higher taxes and think the poor are someone else....the truth is that we all need help at different times in our lives because we are all vulnerable.

"How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving and tolerant of the weak and strong. Because someday in your life you will have been all of these. "

May your road get easier.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 PM on 12/04/2008
- neocon666 I'm a Fan of neocon666 68 fans permalink

"That's outrageous....but many people are living the reality of a govt that doesn't care for its citizens.We all cry against higher taxes and think the poor are someone else....the truth is that we all need help at different times in our lives because we are all vulnerable."

That's exactly how I feel. Unfortunately, the republicans have scammed enough people into thinking that somehow, people don't need any government (Isn't that called ANARCHY?), as if the economy and enviroment would magically repair themselves whenever something went wrong. Except the military of course, which should always be given a blank check! I hope you republicans out there are enjoying the view your fearless leader created.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 PM on 12/04/2008

I am so sorry for your struggle. You are in my thoughts and prayers.

What has happened to our country?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:16 PM on 12/04/2008
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Hmmm...misery loves company?
I don't know how healthy this is....however real . Let's hope we weather the storms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 12/04/2008

It is not pleasant to see the depths of economic despair already in this country. The Bush Administration would like everyone to be quiet. They do not want anyone in the country who is doing okay to realize how bad it is for other people. The more people who slough off this economy as whinners looking for sympathy, the easier it is for Bush to do nothing until he leaves office, and for Rove to propagate the idea that Bush has been misunderstood, unfairly criticized, etc.

The healthiest thing for this country would be for all of us to face this, head-on. If we continue to think this is someone else's problem, we will find out to late that if we allow our neighbors to go hungry, one of these days it will be us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:46 PM on 12/04/2008

Trixie, people like me have known what has been going on for a very long time. It just didn't happen when the banks started going down. Lots of people especially the working poor have know for a very long time. We have faced it. Bush has tried to push it off on the churchs to do. But this is to much for even the churches to handle. It is the government responsiblity to take care of its citizens. They ask for our taxes. They spend our taxes on wars we don't want.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 AM on 12/05/2008

My husband lost his job 15 months ago because the company he worked for insisted that he wear his hearing aids in areas of a extremely loud manufacturing plant. He tried and tried to get them to understand that doing this would cause him a great deal of pain and further loss to his hearing. But to no avail. We had to use his 401K to pay bills and when he couldn't find another job our credit was dramatically lowered. We are losing our home of 24 years and have sold most of our belongings to just pay the utility bills. Now, our local credit union is charging us a monthly fee because our credit has fallen below 540 points. He has applied to more than 150 places, nationwide and have only had 4 interviews, which went nowhere. Even though he finally did get unemployment, it is only about 1/5th of what he made while working. We've learned how to use our food stamps wisely, mainly by becoming vegetarians. We go to court next week to find out when we must vacate our home. The nightmares are excruciating. What is even worst is how our families are reacting. Dropping hints that we shouldn't come to their homes when we become homeless. I used to wonder where were the families of the homeless. Now I know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 PM on 12/04/2008
- imsosure I'm a Fan of imsosure 27 fans permalink
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Blame Bush, call him and tell him your mad as . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:19 PM on 12/04/2008
- CatherineK I'm a Fan of CatherineK 4 fans permalink

Princess, I am so sorry for you and your husband.

This blog is getting harder and harder to read.

What hufington needs to do now, is collate these stories, go public and shame the media into talking about these issues. people are really hurting.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 12/04/2008
- Artemis34 I'm a Fan of Artemis34 131 fans permalink
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I'd be surprised if the actions of your husband's former employer did not violate the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). He asked for reasonable accommodation and did not receive it. See if you can get a respected employment lawyer to give you a free evaluation.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:56 PM on 12/04/2008

Please tell us the name of your mortgage company. I would like to write them a letter. I have never heard of a penalty charged to a homeowner with damaged credit.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 PM on 12/04/2008
- yogajan I'm a Fan of yogajan 24 fans permalink
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These stories should be required reading for everyone, Bush and his cronies should see what their policies did to the economy and everyone who has to have their expensive lattes and newest Blackberry should read them with the understanding that they could be writing their own story very soon.

My parents grew up during the depression and never forgot how bad it was. They taught us not to go into debt, to save, to not buy anything we couldn't afford and to enjoy simple things, It was a good lesson for me, but it has been lost in the latest generations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:54 PM on 12/04/2008
- Kassandra I'm a Fan of Kassandra 97 fans permalink
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Humans can handle on so much reality, and reality is slapping us upside the head right now. I've gotta say I've seen this coming since Bush signed the "no-bankruptcy" bill right after he stole '04.

I thought, "hmmmm... corporations can take bankruptcy, rid themselves of all our pensions and bennies, but the individual cannot. I see a bad moon rising."

About that time, I started blogging and turning to the internet to see if there was anything I could do to help my country; turns out there was/is. We started the netroots because the media wasn't covering protest anymore, so it didn't make sense to "take to the streets" like we did in the '60's.

We talked to people, people who back then, mostly didn't want to listen, didn't want to hear about "politics". Been interesting to watch folks wake up just in time to be bitten in the ass!

Now, I THINK we MAY have a chance. Maybe. but ONLY if we keep our voices heard, continue to educate each other and help where and when we can.

Forget about the myth of America being the "most prosperous" nation in the world, we aren't anymore. Forget about what we think we DESERVE as Americans and think "return of Constitutional government".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 12/04/2008
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yeah it's almost like they planned to screw us over...it wasn't an "accident".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 PM on 12/04/2008
- Artemis34 I'm a Fan of Artemis34 131 fans permalink
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Let's see, conservatives and Republicans have looted the treasury (remember the surplus?). And, like Willie Sutton, they have been robbing the banks "because that's where the money is." And they want us to trust them with privatizing what little is left, in Social Security! I think not!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:05 PM on 12/04/2008
- imsosure I'm a Fan of imsosure 27 fans permalink
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You should get hold of GW Bush's mom and tell her she did a lousy job raising er children and you want her to help you cause your mad as . . .

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:21 PM on 12/04/2008
- Kassandra I'm a Fan of Kassandra 97 fans permalink
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continued......

I don't bother to waste time "thinking positive thoughts", that's delusion. I think about NOW and what I can do TODAY. That's all I have; that's all any of us have.

I've gotta say it, we let this happen in many ways. We misplaced our trust, even with a vast amount of evidence that our trust was misplaced. Now, let's bend down and pick up the pieces, because I'm here to tell you that our government, no matter who's running/ruining it, won't do it unless WE make them.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 12/04/2008
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