For a jobless, struggling South Carolina man, reality isn’t a political debate
He awoke to his alarm on Monday morning at 6, just like always, even though his handwritten schedule for the day read only: Find something to do! Steven Murdock, 39, poured himself a cup of coffee and rummaged through the defrosted Thanksgiving leftovers in an otherwise barren refrigerator. He grabbed the phone that bill collectors were threatening to turn off and made his first call of the day.
I need some kind of odd job to help me get by, he told a neighbor. Know of anything?
It was the beginning of another workweek in a town with too little work, and all around Murdock, the South Carolina economy of 2012 stirred to life. Forty people formed a line outside the downtown food bank, carrying empty plastic bags they hoped would be filled. Dozens more waited for sunrise at the unemployment office. A sign at the Department of Social Services directed all comers to an overflow parking lot, built to accommodate the 25 percent of Conways population that now survived primarily on government support.
Murdock was no longer among them. In the fourteen months since he lost his $11-an-hour construction job, his options had been whittled down to this morning routine of cold calls to friends and neighbors. His weekly unemployment benefits had expired. His food stamps had been trimmed to less than $50 a week. His bank account was in the red, his hot water was turned off and he no longer had health insurance to treat a pinched nerve or bouts of depression. Lately, his only medication was the pep talks he gave himself between phone calls.
full: http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/for-a-jobless-struggling-south-carolina-man-reality-isnt-a-political-debate/2012/01/18/gIQAKTtB9P_singlePage.html
Arctic Dave
(13,812 posts)Are you saying win or lose the problems will still exsist?
cutlassmama
(3,153 posts)Since he's so broke that he has to pick up aluminum cans he can't afford to have either habit.
Other than that, he's in the same boat as millions of Americans. This isn't Obama's fault. it's W's fault. It began on his watch, with his banker buddies.
He probably needs to move in with his sister or his mother since he helped them all those years. Many Americans are doubling and tripling up with family members.
raccoon
(31,111 posts)I can say that at the time my thoughts would've been, "I'm dealing with this shit, and you want me to give up
smoking? No way, Jose!"
Doctor_J
(36,392 posts)And most would probably tell you they "want the government out of their lives".
All of those people need to turn off their AM radios and form a "Medicare for all" coalition and go occupy their right-wing representative's office until (s)he actually starts to represent them, instead of Limpballs.