President Obama is about to give his annual State of the Union
address. Is it really necessary? Most of us who live outside the
D.C. Beltway already know the state of the union: it’s a mess.
Unemployment, if the government actually reported the real
numbers, is at historic highs. Add in under-employment and the
numbers become astronomical. We are in the most difficult economic
times since the Great Depression. This is the reality for the
majority of Americans.
Yet inside the Beltway in D.C., employment and incomes are up.
Seven of the ten richest counties in the United States surround the
Beltway. Lamborghini USA has put its headquarters in D.C. The
construction cranes are everywhere. The restaurants are full,
despite outrageously high prices. This is the reality inside the
Beltway.
Inflation, if the government actually reported the real numbers,
is skyrocketing. Of course, they have removed food and fuel from
the calculations for inflation in order to mask reality. But we
outside the Beltway are living it. Fuel prices are at all-time
highs, as are basic commodity food prices. We are paying more, and
getting less than ever before.
Inside the Beltway, fuel and food prices don’t really matter.
Four dollars per gallon of gas: no problem. Expensive food: no
problem. Skyrocketing real estate prices are the norm. Inside the
Beltway, they’re getting rich while the rest of the country
suffers. That’s because they pay their bills with the money
extracted from the rest of us.
The state of the union, unfortunately, is now completely
different than the state of the D.C. elites of both parties. While
the elites in D.C. prosper and play political theatre, the people
of the country live in a reality that is the result of the
long-term madness they have created.
Much like the world painted by the recent literary and movie
phenomenon, The Hunger Games, the Capitol City is doing
fine. Out here in the provinces, things are not going so
well.
Perhaps President Obama will address the real state of the union
by describing the widening gulf between the Beltway elites and the
rest of the nation. Perhaps he could begin his new term, and the
new year, by talking about honoring the promises he made to us in
2008 to fight the influence of lobbyists and cronyism in Washington
D.C.
Perhaps. But, I won’t be holding my breath waiting.