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Will COVID-19 end the American dream?

<p>Everyone has an expectation of when this COVID-19 thing will be over and we can return to normalcy&period;  Some folks talk in weeks – even months&period;  Some say that even as we relax most of the restrictions&comma; we are likely to face some level of shutdown again in the Fall flu season&period;  There will still be no COVID-19 vaccine and we will likely be hit with the double whammy of the normal flu season&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>History shows us that after dramatic events – wars&comma; depressions and pandemics – the return to normalcy takes years&period;  Unless we quickly return to no government restrictions &&num;8212&semi; and the people re-engage at pre-COVID-19 activities &&num;8212&semi; the economic path to recovery will be much longer than predicted&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There will be permanent changes in our culture&period;  In retail spaces&comma; more clerks and cashiers will be operating behind Plexiglas partitions&period; We will still be able to perform our transactions&comma; but with a lot less sense of personal connection&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Masks will be around for a while&period;  Many people will wear them whenever out in public&period;  If you extend your hand&comma; your offered handshake may be dismissed – and you may even be criticized for making such a gesture&period;  And as far as greeting old friends with a hug or peck on the cheek &&num;8212&semi; fuhgeddaboudit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Because of COVID-19&comma; we will have even less in common when we meet on the commons&period;  The freedom versus security divide will become starker and more obvious&period;  The security-types will accost people on the streets for not living by more extreme safeguards&period;  Conversely&comma; the freedom lovers will condemn hyper-cautious as a bunch of paranoid scaredy cats&period;  Just what we needed&period;  Another excuse to divide&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is not just a matter of easing restrictions&period;  It is how we the people will react to a re-opened society&period;  Current indications suggest that a lot of folks will NOT be going about their daily lives as they did just a few weeks ago&period;  They will still be avoiding crowds&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Even as restrictions are eased&comma; seniors will be advised to limit their exposure in the outside world&period; There will be a permanent recommendation to stay at home as much as possible&period;  You are less likely to take grandma out for that birthday dinner&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>We are told that in a few weeks&comma; restaurants will open where I live in Florida&period;  But already senior citizens – the most vulnerable to the virus –are being encouraged to stay at home&period;  And many seniors say that they will still be fearful of being in public places where distancing is no longer the practice&period;  That means that the restaurants in southeast Florida—with its high senior population – will not see their businesses return to former levels of patronage for the foreseeable future&period;  We are talking maybe one or two years AFTER a vaccine is developed and distributed – if ever&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Take that dynamic across the entire retail sector and you will see that tens of thousands – and maybe more – of those who were laid off during the pandemic will not be returning to work very soon&period;  There is an assumption that every business needs the workers that they had previously employed&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Even in good times&comma; we see thousands of workers being laid off because of decreasing profits or general restructuring to make the business more efficient&period;  It is very likely that when businesses re-open&comma; they will not re-hire all those that they laid off&period;  That is an almost inevitable outcome&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The sudden expenditure of several trillion dollars over-and-above America’s normal irresponsible and reckless spending will impact on our bloated government bureaucracy&period;  Efforts to reduce the size and scope of government at all levels will increase dramatically&period;  By the end of Trump’s first four years in office&comma; the National Debt will have risen from &dollar;5&period;6 trillion in 2000 – when President  Bush II took office  &&num;8212&semi; to almost &dollar;30 trillion by January of 2021&comma;  That is an average increase of &dollar;1&period;5 trillion each year&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Instead of slowing down the growth in the National Debt&comma; President Obama actually increased the trajectory&period;  The interest payment alone on the debt for FY 2021 stands at &dollar;479 billion&period;  That is more than the ENTIRE United States budget expenditures in 1978&period;  Imagine that&period;  We now pay more on the National Debt than we did to run the country – including the debt service – only 40 years ago&excl;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>While politicians see this COVID-19 emergency funding as absolutely necessary to keep people afloat during the crisis&comma; it is unfortunate that it came at a time when we have stretched the limits of deficit funding&period;  When the next economic crisis hits America in the future&comma; those affected can look back on this era of excessive government growth and spending as the culprit&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Socially and economically&comma; America may no longer be the wonderful nation based on maximum personal freedom&period;  Instead&comma; it may well become a nation with an enormous central government constantly manipulating the national treasure to compensate for regulatory excesses&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To defend our free Republic&comma; it will take work and sacrifice by we the people&period;  Unfortunately&comma; it seems that more and more Americans believe that a strong central government can provide for their every need – without hard work and sacrifice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The left-wing has taken advantage of the COVID-19 virus to scare us – and then to claim that THEY are the only means to have security&period;  If we succumb to that&comma; the future for America is very grim&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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