David Cox

David Cox
Location
Powder Springs, Georgia, USA
Birthday
December 16
Company
Pleasant
Bio
I have always been described as a person of artistic temperament or was autistic? In either case I completed my first major artistic work at aged six, a mural eight feet in width and eight feet in height. It received mixed reviews by the critics, my father thought I should be richly compensated with a spanking. While in my mother's more critical view, appreciated my concept of scale and also of rage. I continued my artistic endeavors throughout school specializing in faculty caricatures While I achieved some notoriety in these endeavors it did not give me the attention I was seeking. My parents on several occasions were asked by faculty members to come and discuss how such talent would appear in a child so young. Through no small measure on behalf of my teachers I was taught my letters and became an elementary school writer of some acclaim. They had erred, they had taught this boy a word, a word that should have been kept secret from him. This word should have been granted to him only after graduation in a sealed envelope, the word was satire!

David Cox's Links

Salon.com
OCTOBER 5, 2009 10:36AM

Why the Coming Great Depression will be Worse Than the Last

Rate: 26 Flag

Hooverville 

Why the Coming Great Depression will be Worse Than the Last One

By David Glenn Cox 

Oct. 2 (Bloomberg)- September’s losses bring total jobs lost since the recession began in December 2007 to 7.2 million, the biggest decline since the Great Depression.

The media will not tell us the truth, and when they do it’s because it’s become old news. The truth just isn’t in them; their job, as they see it, is to please their employer and not report the news. If you’ve ever watched any of the old movies from the thirties, there is always the character of the hot-tempered editor, yelling and screaming for the reporters to get the story.

Today with calm dispassion they say, "You’re a damn fine reporter, you’re fired! It came down from corporate this morning." Dan Rather is case in point but only because he was a household name. No one likes a person crowing about being right, so I won't. I’ll just say that I’ve been calling this a depression for over a year.

It’s not because I’m smart, it is because I’m old. It’s my personal demographics. My parents were the youngest children in their respective families and I am the youngest child in my family. My father used to tell me, "The Civil War was a long time ago, but I knew two men who were in it." Both of my parents survived the last depression, my mother in the city of Chicago and my father in a small town in Ohio.

My father warned me about the coming depression during Bush’s first term, so actually the idea for this piece is his. "During the last depression people lived in the country or small towns and knew their neighbors. Now people live in cities and are strangers to most of their neighbors and they own more guns. We owned shot guns and hunting rifles but I don’t think I ever saw my dad with a pistol."

My mother told me stories about people sleeping in vegetable gardens in their back yards with shotguns. She also explained about people sleeping on a sun porch. An item long lost to modern architecture, but it was a screened-in porch sometimes referred to as a chase porch or a sleeping porch. People didn’t have air conditioning so they would sleep on the porch.

Prisons sometimes give inmates ice cream in the summer; not because it looks cute to see a three hundred-pound murderer eating a Klondike bar, they know that heat in confined spaces causes violence. Today’s homes and apartments are not equipped to be cooled naturally. As more and more people turn off the air to save money, or have it turned off for them, look for tempers to rise.

During the 1930’s the country was almost 60% rural; times were bad but most still had food to eat. Even most people who lived in cities still had relatives back on the farm. When my father was twelve he was sent to live on his grandfather's dairy farm because his parents couldn’t feed him. Times were hard and he never owned a new pair of shoes until he joined the Navy, but he always had food to eat.

My mother’s situation was different. They were city people but they had strong family ties and strong ties with the Catholic Church. My mother attended Catholic school gratis but was required to pitch in when asked. Cleaning, washing, whatever a young girl could do. And when she stayed late she was fed. She remembers the nuns teaching her to sew and giving her fabric. She always hated Shirley Temple because in her movies she could just sing or dance and the depression just went away as nice rich folks would just shower her with love. But when you were a little girl in the real depression, it was a big. fat insulting lie.

My mother’s first taste of watermelon came from a trash can, and her first taste of steak came after her marriage. Her father abandoned the family. Like for millions of other men, it became harder and harder to go home and look at the faces of hungry children. I won’t say that what he did was right, only that I understand. It was common during the depression for men to disappear. They lost their jobs and then their identities, then their pride, and then their souls.

My grandmother died of a heart attack when she was barely forty. She cleaned houses, took in laundry and mopped floors until it killed her. My Uncle Dan took over the family at the ripe old age of fifteen. He promised that he would never marry until his five brothers and sisters were married first. Only because of the strong family and church ties was this arrangement allowed to stand. How many families today could manage such an arrangement? To the end of her days my mother would not tolerate anything negative ever being said about her brother Dan.

The people in that era had the radio and the newspaper. Today we have television, radio, the Internet and the newspaper. But television has gone digital which means when the cable is shut off the TV is shut off. The radio really doesn’t do news much anymore, just headlines and sports scores. Newspapers have grown expensive and are not commonplace like they once were. So when you can’t pay your bills, where are you going to get your news from? Rush Limbaugh?

Living in the suburbs of Atlanta, public transportation here barely exists. When the unemployed need to travel, how will they go? On the farm the dairy made a daily pick up at six AM. My father was expected to help haul milk cans to the wagon and then could get a ride to school on the back. Already schools are cutting back on school buses, shortening routes and shrinking availability forcing parents to car pool. But what about when the parents can’t do that anymore?

Here in Gwinnett County the county government is looking at a one billion-dollar revenue shortfall. Houses sold under foreclosure are taxed according to the purchase price. So the tax base itself is shrinking. Remember those people whining, "Why should we bail out people who can’t pay their mortgage?"

There’s your answer, cities and counties across America are laying off policemen and firemen and closing fire stations and cutting back services.

People are going to die. I see more and more people on bicycles and small motor scooters. Our roads here are not designed for them and the result is inevitable. Let’s assume you're homeless, where do your children legally attend school? Where you used to live? Or wherever you can get them in? How will you get their shots and their medical records, without transportation? Without those they will be turned away, you know.

More than anything else my father advised that "people were gentler in that era." Even so, riots and food riots were commonplace. Today people pack guns and tasers and pepper spray, ready at a moment’s notice if they don’t like the way you’re looking at them. My father was in a food riot. Men were tossing down bags of Hoover’s cracked wheat when someone became offended by the way the bag was thrown down. The people rushed the truck and hell was a poppin.

The police in that era carried a Billy club and a pistol, and for the most part they were trained to direct traffic and take complaints from neighbors. Today they like to dress like commandos with Army boots and body armor. Today the message says, "I’m here to confront you and control you." But what will Kelly’s heroes do when confronted with a food riot? Fire into the crowd? Try and taser everyone?

When you overlay a 1930’s style depression on our current society you begin to see just how important the New Deal was. It cooled tempers and gave hope to the poor. Today, however, the New Deal was issued to the banks and they are quickly making a comeback. In 1932 Roosevelt closed the banks and then throttled them. The money was pushed into the bottom of the economy rather than the top. So let's call this attempt the Raw Deal because that’s what Americans have gotten, a raw deal.

Under the New Deal the banks and the stock market didn’t fully recover until the 1950’s, long after the economy overall had recovered. But this time around the banks have recovered and the public has been left to languish. I hope for another New Deal, not because I’m a Democrat but because the greatest fear that politicians had in the 1930’s was of a revolution and blood in the streets, and as we see every day in the news people aren’t as nice as they used to be.

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
This is an incredible post. Your family's story makes me thing of my own family's survival of the Great Depression.

My grandfather and grandmother taught in a two-room school for local "colored" children after meeting at a state-supported black school and marrying once they completed their education. His father died when he was just a baby and his older brother quit school to get a job so he could support their large family.

My grandmother's father inherited about a hundred acres of farmland bought by his freed slave father and supported his family by farming. When my grandparents got married, they bought the land next to my great-grandfather's and my grandfather built a house there. (I was later born in that house.)

My grandfather's mother came to live with them every summer and hand-sewed clothes for the entire family to wear during the coming school year. She also made their Sunday clothes and underwear. My grandparents grew a garden and raised animals for food. They taught adult education classes in quilting, canning, and other subjects in the summer.

My mother who was born in 1930, said she never knew there was a Depression until she read about it in history class.

My father, on the other hand, lived nine miles away in a city and his family did everything imaginable to survive: his grandfather was a sharecropper, his uncles gambled and were bootleggers, his grandmother ran a whorehouse, and his mother worked in it. He was pulled out of school early after his mother died of syphillis, to work in the fields and his life was so brutal, he ran away to live with his father and his aunt, finally, joining the military at age 17, after lying about his age.

Thank God for the ability of my ancestors to survive or they'd never have made it.
BTW, I think you're right about our prospects now. Rated
I think another big difference now is that the population is much older. The demographics don't look promising--younger, healthier people were more able to survive such grueling times than our current demographics.
Well, at least we don't have dust bowls. Yet.
Great piece, David. I've been convinced this is a depression for the last year or lonre. Problem is, nobody likes to use the word.

R
Frog, I think that you should write more about your family. I had seen a program about how difficult it was for African Americans to hold onto the property that they worked so hard for. It was an amazing an little known aspect of American history.

How one man after emancipation had aquired hundreds of acres. He feared the community would leave because there were such poor prospects for African Americans in the south. He deeded the land to build a school and then a church. Then began making loans to other African Americans to buy thier own land.

He was quite wealthy and could have sat on the porch and watched his fortune grow but he spent it on the community instead. I guess you could say he was a community organizer.
Great post and good timing. I put some old cartoons of FDR and was making a point that crying about how Obama is being treated is unproductive. FDR had the New Deal which was a big deal. I read where people say to hell with the deficit, let's make jobs, and I'm inclined to agree, at least for now.
Fantastic post. I wish everyone I know could read it.
I read in the morning paper about a local father who committed suicide under the pressure of taking care of his three girls. There are a lot fewer lifelines now than before.

I love the title Raw Deal, it should be the term used from now on.

Also, everyone is bragging how we "avoided" a depression when the reality is we have only delayed the brunt of it (while still reeling) and that will probably engender our final collapse. People get very, very angry when I say that but it's only because they don't believe in doing anything about it.
We have shifted it Harry, we've saved the banks and ignored the people. Roosevelt closed the banks and saved the people.
Our leaders are bought and paid for. TPTB control our destiny.
personal, intelligent, informed commentary, I've learned to expect nothing less from you, David
but still, they won't organize, still they won't take control of the nation. it needs a man on a white horse to get people off their knees.

unfortunately, men who win revolutions don't let go, so you get a new aristocracy. even so, cuba is better off than puerto rico and may soon be better off than brooklyn.
My family taught me self-sufficiency and part of that is the way to keep a farm kitchen. I garden, can jam, applesauce, pickles, relish etc and store foods in a way that makes them last. While I hadn't done some of those things because I lived in San Francisco for a few years while my husband was enjoying being an architect in a big firm, it didn't change who we are, because we were both raised this way.

We do most of the work that has to be done around our house ourselves. Both of us are well-educated but we both consider the education we were given as children of parents who survived the depression as an invaluable part of who we are.

We can't help but notice that there are so many people who don't know how to do anything. They don't know what tools are designed to do. They don't know how to take care of their homes. It's like some badge of honor to not know how to cook or the proper way to mow the lawn. It's idiotic. For the last 30 years people have been living off credit cards and using their homes like a piggy bank, paying other people to do things for them that they would profit by learning to do for themselves.

While I haven't done it in a very long time, I could get up to snuff on taking care of chickens, cows and hogs pretty quickly if I needed to do so. If our house burned down, my husband could get a new one built that improved on the last one and he'd know where every mechanical and structurally significant thing in the house was and how to get to it if it needed repair.

I wouldn't trade that level of self-sufficiency for any amount of money because we've learned in this depression exactly how much what we thought we had was worth, and it is only slightly more than half as much as it was two years ago.

Both of our families came to California from the Midwest, Dan's family from Kansas in 1936 and mine from Missouri in 1931, when my grandmother, who was orphaned in the 1918 flu pandemic, and two of her sisters and their husbands all packed up and moved to the San Joaquin Valley . Those three young women had their family split up and sent to live with other relatives but they survived and clung to one another and made a go of it. As tough as it was, things got better in California right away and part of that was simply because the growing season was longer, which aided self-sufficiency. When you're not hungry it is a lot easier to be productive. I once thought they were a little nuts about money, but I sure understand them all better now.
Susanne, I once made the comment to my dad about all the people driving their Fords out to California when he looked at me and asked, "You don't think those cars were paid for do you?"
Very interesting. I have been wondering for some time now where all the people who have lost their homes are living.
The schools now have to appoint a homeless liason so homeless children can still go to school and eat.
My Grandfather would always talk about the depression and how they survived. How they would eat whatever they could kill.
I don't know about you all but I am getting very worried about how this is going to end.
Rated - wonderful! I especially like your father's quote: "The Civil War was a long time ago, but I knew two men who were in it."

I fear we now take it for granted that America has weathered previous storms (like the Great Depression), and things will simply turn out for the better after this one as well. But we're a much larger and diverse country now that has enjoyed relative prosperity to a fault.

The lessons of the Great Depression still matter, but the United States is not nearly the same place. We're used to having more of everything now (and seeing others with it too) so it has become that much harder to cope with losing anything.
I share your concerns & the reasons for them. Rated!

My greatest concern, however, is that there are so many fear-mongers around, so many people crying "wolf" that the peoples' ears have become dulled to the sound, and the creeping opression of too much work & too many personal cares afflicting the USofA seems to have sapped the will to act.

I guess we'll only know if the revolution actually happens. Which it well may, if anyone has enough energy left to start one.
These comparisons hit at every recession. I, too, am the product of parents who lived through the depression, with both being born in 1922. I, too, am their youngest. My mother's father was a millionare on paper and then wound up $300K in debt in 1929 dollars at the age of 50 with nothing but a grocery store. He gave his employees two options. 1) Fire half or 2) cut all wages by half. They opted for option 2.

There are so many things that ARE different from then.

1) Unemployment is at slightly under 10%. It needs to get closer to 30% to be on a par.

2) 60% around agricultural rural was because we needed far more to supply food than we do today. It takes under 10% of the population to feed it these days based on technology automation that triggered the shift then from a traditional agrarian economy to a manufacturing one.

3) Technology has drastically improved inventory turns and productivity. It therefore takes less time for business to correct. This is why so many recessions have been forestalled in the past few decades given we have now what are called rolling recessions. We react infinitely faster than previously.

4) We have social welfare programs that did not exist back then. Bellyache as we want, we have a far broader safety net now than we did then.

This is NOT to diminish the magnitude of the wealth loss from the real estate bubble and financial market melt downs. It is, however, offered to provide some temperance to the inevitable comparisons to the depression that crop up anytime we have a severe downturn. I have heard this in the early 70s when it scared the hell out of me as a kid. Then in the early 1980s after the stagflation bubble that burst on Reagan after Ford/Carter and then now. It resonates with those under 40 as they have no experienced a painful contraction ini their lives. I came out of college in one and have watched my 401K melt in another. Patience and temperance is what is required in these times. It's akin to camping in a rain storm. Stay inside the tent. play cards, and pop your hand out to wait for the rain to break and then make the best of it.

The flood waters are nowhere near the point of flooding the dykes.
Gwol, I don't know what you are smoking but can I have some? Official unemployment is at 10%. Unofficially if figured the way that it was figured back in the 70's is near 17%. In places such as California, Michigan and Georgia over 20% That doesn't include those under employed and those working short hours or those who have exhausted their benefits.

60% of the people were rural because before that 70% were rural, we started as an agrarian society and became an urban one. The point is that it is more difficult to survive a depression in the city. You can’t grow food in a parking lot and you are less likely to know your neighbors. You are more susceptible to violence and crime in a city.

“Technology has drastically improved inventory turns and productivity.” Yes, technology has improved so much that my whole industry has ceased to exist. Companies are going under it is not a question of adaptation. Whole shopping centers are empty here and what businesses are left are Title Loans, cash for gold and pawnshops. Your belief in the mythical beneovalance of Capitalism is heart warming and quite clueless.

Do we have a social safety net? Or did someone tell you that we have a social safety net? Before my wife and I separated we too believed that there was some program that would assist us, Wrong. Food stamps are based on last year’s income, welfare in Georgia is only available to those with children and is also based on your income, Since my wife was working we didn’t qualify.

Patience and temperance huh? I see homeless people every day and I’ll pass that along to them. Kind of like, “Prosperity is just around the corner and a chicken in every pot and a car in every garage.” As a person over 50 myself I have lived through all of these events you mentioned and if you think that they are in anyway similar to current events you are either delusional or disingenuous.

Did you ever work for FEMA in New Orleans? Maybe the floodwaters aren’t high at your house but we are treading water out here.
But at just 92... PEOPLE GET IRRITABLE...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CrEs0W-glpo

Seriously, though, I live in Phoenix and all you have to do is watch the drivers on a 120 degree day... ouch. Nobody is very nice. Especially those poor drivers without A/C...

Whatever possessed us to build a city of 3 million people in the middle of a dust bowl... and now I'm stuck here, too.

BTW, I always had a crush on Siousxie.
Joking comments aside, you're very right and I hope people are frightened. Especially rich, privileged people - like me.

I very, very much hope people like me are frightened.

I become despondent when I learn my family is clinging stubbornly to Glenn Beck.
Your are as grim as Chris Hedges and write almost as well. Naturally I hope you are wrong but I have the unsettling feeling that, while it may not get as bad as you say, the worst is far from over. The rich are on the way back up --- then again they have never been down have they. They had the socialistic support system that 'bipartisanship' has spent the last 30 years dismantling for the little guy.
David, thank you for that great post. My own pet peeve is the television networks that sound a drum beat to war and divisiveness at the same time as they profit from it. They are public airwaves after all, owned and licensed by us, but we don't seem to know that. Television is so powerful; it could be part of the solution, but it is owned by corporations that only want to sell us stuff and keep us consuming. Thanks again.
i'm glad you break throught the denial all around us