StatCounter

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

"Whats Happening In America Is Making People Furious - Here’s Why"

Full screen recommended.
Epic Economist, 5/12/26
"Whats Happening In America Is 
Making People Furious - Here’s Why"
"The cost of living crisis in America has reached a breaking point - and ordinary people are finally saying it out loud. Across the country, families are getting priced out of rent, healthcare, groceries, and gas, while wages have stayed flat for nearly five decades. In this video, you'll hear from ten Americans describing what life actually looks like in 2026. A young woman with a hospital tube in her back, canceling doctor appointments she can't pay for. A creator in Texas explaining why the country feels like a depression nobody is calling a depression. A mother in Detroit working two jobs and still coming up four thousand dollars short by the end of the month. A renter in Florida opening a letter that just raised her rent overnight. A Google engineer who just got laid off and doesn't know how to tell his parents. A driver pointing out that the average car note in America is now over eight hundred dollars a month - for a Honda. This is what the American cost of living crisis actually sounds like right now. Not headlines. Not panels. Not pundits. Real people in their cars, kitchens, and apartments telling the truth about wages, rent, layoffs, medical debt, and the economic squeeze that 130 million households are living through. 

The University of Michigan consumer sentiment index has hit its lowest reading since 1946 - lower than 2008, lower than the dot-com bust, lower than every recession on record. The American economy is not working for ordinary people anymore, and they are done pretending otherwise. If you've got someone in your life who's been holding it together too long — send them this video. Drop your story in the comments. The bills. The job. The rent. The car note. Let people see they are not alone. Subscribe for more real stories about the American economy, cost of living, layoffs, inflation, and the housing crisis."
Comments here:

No comments:

Post a Comment