AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Free Dating

Reason #1 to Love a Recession (10 Reasons)

posted 1/18/2009 10:53:21 AM |
2 kudosgive kudos what's this?
    report abuse
tagged: newsletter
  SpiritOrnery

By Jay McDonald

The rest of the article <<<

I read this from my email server's eLetter...

Chicken Little and I differ on the coming recession. He hears the "R" word and immediately thinks "financial ruin."
I hear "recession" and think "disco!"

If you are old enough to have worn a mood ring, Earth shoes or bell-bottoms the first time around, you probably recall the "stagflation" days of the 1970s with a bemused mix of humor, national pride and nostalgia.

The forecast was just as dire back then, and for good reason. In 1975, inflation topped 14 percent, unemployment approached 6 percent (but doubled that in some locales), and fuel and food prices were headed skyward.
Most of us would be well into the Reagan years before our wallets grew appreciably heavier.

The funny thing is, I don't remember the sacrifice. We drove used cars and lived within our means, since car leasing and credit cards were not yet widespread.
We rented and shared apartments, since the average home mortgage rate hovered around 10 percent.

We shouldered none of the financial burden of such modern conveniences as cell phones, high-speed Internet or fitness center memberships.
No one wants a recession, of course. It can cause serious economic pain for millions.

However, economists tell us there are some reasons to actually welcome and perhaps even embrace a recession. After all, a recession is the ebb part of the natural ebb and flow of the U.S. economy.

Just as surely as hot markets cool and bulls turn to bears, capitalist economies take a breather every so often to pause and reflect. If they didn't, these corrections would be far crueler.

So, let's smile, lift our half-full cups of regular unleaded and toast these 10 very good things about impending bad times.

Reason #1
Family dinners

Want to start a revolution? Try eating dinner together as a family.
Recessions tend to foster family mealtimes as the pin money that drives fast-food meals and overscheduled lives dries up. Nothing could be better for America, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Research has shown that family meals promote a healthier and more balanced diet, foster better communication and ward off teen suicide, eating disorders and substance abuse.

But no, we can't make your little sister stop kicking you under the table.

Makes sense to me!



Copy & paste to friend: (Click inside box; Ctrl + C to copy; Ctrl + V to paste)

   read more blogs!

Blogs by SpiritOrnery:
Sometimes all we need is....Validation....
Druggies and Losers
Intous Graphics Pad...And Mythological Beings
On Being Judgmental... F.U.
Lack of Members
Fluxing Energies
Peaceful and Grateful...But Still ORNERY!
Dimensional Traveling
Wow! Scammers PHONING now.
Um, I am having a fight with....
FOOkn DOGS! DAYUM! *gnashes teeth*
Where Is The Love?
Reason #1 to Love a Recession (10 Reasons)
The Dog and the Deer
Cat story...Bathing The Cat... Part 2
Cat story...Bathing The Cat... Part 1
Email prayer
Just venting....
I'm Venting!!!! If ya don't like it, don't read it...ok?
Extreme Career
It never fails to amaze me!
Hurricane Ike Again.... Bad Check!!!! Horror stories!
I GOT it, I GOT IT!!!! Ike Update!
Hurricane Ike Disaster Update
I Have Wicked Plans!


Comments:
JackfromtheBox

Jan 19 @ 12:38PM  
The author makes some good points, and how we survive this recession has a lot to do with our perspective. However, I lived through the 70's, and that crisis didn't feel nearly as deep or encompassing or interdependent to everyone. How much worse can it get before we call this a depression, and how would we compare it to the 30's?
free adult dating | mission statement | testimonials | safety warning | report abuse | safe list | privacy | legal | advertise | link to us

© Copyright 2000-2009 Online Singles, LLC.
WEB2
Reason #1 to Love a Recession (10 Reasons)