Results tagged “economy”

11/20/09 11:10 AM

Day 157: Sandusky, OH

Ohio Psychic Predicts Multi-Dip Recession

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I'd hoped the psychic would be wearing a colorful flowing gown, headscarf, and jangly gold bangles like the woman pictured on a sign in front of the otherwise nondescript little white house in Sandusky, Ohio. But the psychic who answered the door looked more like a librarian than a gypsy.

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10/01/09 2:38 PM

Off the Recession Road

More Than 10 Reasons to Love the Recession

worldcrumbles.jpg Working on this piece began as an effort to determine the top ten best things about the recession, but the responses received via Twitter necessitated I lengthen the list. So what follows are nineteen reasons to love the recession, as suggested by my Tweeple. You may agree with some, disagree with others, and laugh at a few. Feel free to add your own in the comments, send me a suggestion via Twitter @recessionroadie, or email an idea to recessionroad@gmail.com.
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06/26/09 10:30 AM

Day 16: Columbia, SC

On Sex and the Economy

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Columbia, SC: The news vans lined up outside the South Carolina State House on Thursday, along with a bright pink Chevy Suburban advertising The Cheat Book, which advertises itself as "The Ultimate Guide on How to Cheat on Your Woman." I doubt it has a sections on how not to formulate a patently dumb cover story or use a publicly-funded trip to visit your mistress if you're the chief executive of a state, but maybe that will come in the 2nd edition.

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06/11/09 10:49 AM

Day 01: Washington, DC

4 Months/48 States: A Journey Begins

The cataclysmic hemorrhaging of the US economy broke the spirit and bank accounts of Americans across the country. Job loss, bankruptcy, and home foreclosures mark only the measurable statistics representing crushed aspirations, helplessness, grief, desolation and broken-hearts of lives swallowed whole by a voracious monster experts like to call a recession.

"The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong in the broken places," Ernest Hemingway wrote in Farewell to Arms.  This morning I begin a quest to discover that well of strength I believe still resides in the American people and communities most devastated by the economic downturn.

For the next four months I will travel the back roads and State highways through the 48 contiguous United States, uncovering stories of economic survival and endurance. In diners, bars, bingo halls and coffee shops, I seek those Americans who have lost everything--except hope.

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