Gary Younge
London Guardian
Saturday, January 16th, 2010
One year after his election, Barack Obama’s approval rating is lower at this stage than for any US president since Eisenhower. So why has the optimism surrounding his victory disappeared so suddenly?
Every Wednesday at 4.30pm they come: a small steady human trickle rolling down a ravine in Prestonsburg, western Kentucky towards the Town Branch church. They come in pick-ups, on foot, alone and with families. Some stop for just a few minutes. Others linger. They come for food and warm second-hand clothes. They come because desperation in this part of America has become a routine part of life.
More than a quarter of the families in Prestonsburg live in poverty; half of the children in Floyd County, where it is situated, are on food stamps. This Appalachian coal mining area has never been rich. But no one can remember when it has ever been this poor either. It sits on the old Route 23 – the country music highway of which Dwight Yoakam (a Floyd Country native) sang in Readin’, Rightin’, Route 23. It was the road that took people north to factory jobs in places such as Detroit and Cleveland and “the good life they had never seen”. Now those cities are broke and there’s nowhere left to go.
“We’re getting more and more people coming here as time goes by,” says Tom Price, who helps administer the church’s Feed My Sheep pantry. “The bottom’s just fallen out of it all.” He blames it on Barack Obama. “Is there a direct correlation [between Obama's victory and the region's bad times]? I don’t know. But I do know a lot of people are hurting.”
“When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.” – Fall Of The Republic – Buy the DVD here
Read More: ‘Even Charles Manson could beat him now’
Source: Alex Jones’ Prison Planet.com
Related Reading:
The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream (Vintage)The Audacity of Hope is Barack Obama's call for a new kind of politics—a politics that builds upon those shared understandings that pull us together... Read More >
Dreams From My Father - A Story Of Race And Inheritance, Revised EditionNine years before the Senate campaign that made him one of the most influential and compelling voices in American politics, Barack Obama published thi... Read More >





