thegreekdog wrote:So Player - are you conceding that the rest of the charts, with the exception of the last chart in link #1, don't illustrate your point? I think the answer is yes since none of those charts point out that the poor are getting poorer and none of those charts have any data post-2007.
So I win all those.
NOPE. You asked for internet-available data knowing that economic statistics like this take time. It does not mean you "win" it means you are pretending that the fact firefighters are too busy fighting a huge fire right now to give more than general estimates of damage means that you can just insert whatever you want and call it a "win".
It doesn't take graphs and charts to know that the number of unemployed and underemployed is increasing (note, I did NOT say the unemployment rate, because that is solely based on claims filed!) OR to know that more and more people are showing up daily at food pantrys across the country.
NOR does it take charts to know that companies are laying off or moving overseas, tha they are stockpiling money and not spending it, etc, etc, etc.
In short the fact that all of the above is disbursed over many articles and interview instead of being already concisely compiled into one neat chart by an economist does NOT mean the data is "not there".
Secondly I DID provide the data... AND the reasoning for what I said, in addition.
thegreekdog wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Note the rises, followed by the BIG drop at the end of the graph?
I could find a whole lot of chrats with the rises followed by the big drop at the end of the graph. You need to tell me what the Y-axis means. The onus is on you because you're the one that provided the data. Maybe someone will help you; until then... you haven't proven anything.
Its labeled.
Also, you continue to concentrate on only half of what I said. The MAIN point I made was that while we are not sliding down to "starving children in Ethiopia" standards (thank heavans!) (which IS a point BBS has made in the past and to which I agree), the point is that far more are sliding from middle class into poverty AND that the routes up are being curtailed.
thegreekdog wrote:I don't know if you're purposefully changing the question. I don't know if you realize that there is no data subsequent to 2007 (although you've already admitted that there's no data subsequent to 2007). However, what I'm pretty sure about is that you just don't like to admit when you're wrong and so that's where we're at right now. I contend there is no data subsequent to 2007, you contend that your data pre-2008 is enough to support your contention that the poor are getting poorer post-2008. Who is being the five year old again?
There IS data subsequent to 2007. You apparently just gave a cursory glance.
At any rate, my saying the past 3-4 years was fairly arbitrary. The POINT, which I HAVE made over and over, was that the initial chart, which you and BBS both claimed show that folks are not getting poorer, is only correct because it goes back and takes some of the most prosperous times in the US. Even so, as the article I posted explains, the figures presented DO hide another reality.. specifically that the gap was greatly widening throughout that whole time period, plus power was being more and more concentrated at the top. If you look at more recent times (earlier I believe I said 10 years, another point 5 years), then you DO see a very different trend.