Web Letters: Jobless in America

By Our Readers

January 28, 2009

Write a Web letter about this article.

What's a Web Letter?

Web Letters are continuously published e-mails from real people, signed with their real names. No registration is required. Each article page on The Nation includes a Web Letters link.

Read the best Web Letters on this page.

We're committed to publishing your comments as they are received. We place a red star () on the best submissions and may edit your e-mail for length or content. Your e-mail address will not be published or shared with any third party without your consent.

We look forward to hearing from you.

  • The fact that this "free market" feeding frenzy at the trough that most of call our lives has finally left our society in ruins--does not make me feel good but it does make sense. Did this capitalist culture of greed and obscene stratification truly believe we could go on like this in perpetuity?

    I have two small children to care for and my mother continues to work into her 70th year. I am, as an RN, fortunate to still have a job, but I watch helplessly as both friends and family feel the effects of what this scum on Wall Street felt most compelled by: contemptuous greed and righteous entitlement. This culture of theft has been allowed from Reagan to Bush to Clinton to Bush and, what a surprise, there is nothing left to pilfer from those of us attempting only to work for a living.

    Now I see that President Obama under a guise of political concession and compromise is readying his argument and rallying his troops for an attempt at "getting entitlements (Social Security and Medicare) under control." No, Mr. President. You may not have one single cent of compromise here. The working class and the poor of this country did not share in the gluttonous consumption that brought us to this terrible place, and consequently we should not share in the demands of this devastation any more than we have. The rich have resided on our backs long enough. It is time we shed ourselves of their dead weight and make Wall Street values a thing of the past.

    b. eliot minor

    New York, NY

    01/30/2009 @ 11:58am


  • I read these letters and wonder what has become of America.

    I was one of the early ones, given my notice in January last year and in March, after working fourteen years at the same site with many of the same people, said goodbye to my staff and drove away. Despite consistently high performance reviews, successful project implementations and departmental development, I was a victim of corporate business decisions and the capriciousness of executive management. But I was just one of many highly capable people that were let go, and my situation is nowhere near as dire as some of those (many of whom are still without work). The final icing on this particular cake was that while this company was laying off people and planning the closure of further plants, the CEO was awarded compensation of $16M. It is this kind of stuff that frosts the gourds of those who look for fairness in the world.

    I have filled some time and a bit of my bank account with both part-time consulting work and a (slowly) budding photography business. But make no mistake, this is a bad time to be pounding the streets and trying to drum up business. I am fortunate in that my wife is a healthcare professional--a business that seems to never want for customers--and so is a steady income-earner. But I see, hear and read of many in tenuous, desperate situations and can't help but wonder: what has become of our country?

    Jeff Clay

    Salt Lake City, UT

    01/29/2009 @ 12:15am


Advertisement
Advertisement

Blogs

» Editor's Cut

Filibuster Follies | "The filibuster has become a cancer growing inside the world's greatest deliberative body."
Katrina vanden Heuvel
46 Comments

» The Beat

Obama's "Finish the Job" Talk Sets Stage for Afghan Troop Surge | But Appropriations Committee chair Obey warns the move would "wipe out every initiative we have to rebuild our own economy."
John Nichols
114 Comments

» The Notion

Bad Black Mothers | For African American women, reproduction has never been an entirely private matter.
Melissa Harris-Lacewell
63 Comments

» Act Now!

Coal Country | Stunning film reveals new dimensions to the cost of America's over-reliance on coal.
Peter Rothberg
94 Comments

» The Dreyfuss Report

A Kingdom of Bicycles No Longer | China's ambassador for climate change speaks on the eve of the Copenhagen summit meeting.
Robert Dreyfuss
43 Comments

» Altercation

Slacker Friday | The "Second Amendment" sale; the raving paranoids of the right.
Eric Alterman