barbee0715;4158904 said:
My opinion only, but that's how I see it here now. Since 2008 and the mortgage crash/recession started, there really hasn't been a full recovery. Full time careers replaced with part time jobs. Only people doing well were very rich already.
The US probably has the strongest economy in the world right now. You've had 76 months of consecutive job growth. More than 15 million private sector jobs were created since Obama took office. The unemployment rate is under 5%. The deficit has been cut by two-thirds. Fourteen states have increased the minimum wage this year. It's not a full recovery but it's better than most any other country out there.
In Europe it's a mixed bag with countries in Western Europe having mostly recovered to pre-crisis levels while the situation in some Southern and Eastern European countries is truly dire. The unemployment rate in Germany and the UK is at 4-5% while in Spain and Greece it is almost 25% for example. The average monthly wage after taxes is €398 in Romania but €3,122 in Denmark. The Netherlands is #5 on the Human Development Index while Bulgaria is #38. These are all countries within the European Union that provide free movement of people, goods and services - similar to states within the US. Such enormous discrepancies lead to resentment on both sides. In Western Europe, the notion that less developed countries in the South and East are holding us back and immigrants from those countries (esp. Bulgaria, Poland and Romania) are "taking our jobs" is becoming increasingly popular. In Southern and Eastern Europe, many people feel that the West is exploiting them and dictating economic norms that are hindering their recovery. What right-wing populists do is seize those valid concerns and take them to the extreme by arguing we would all be better off if the EU collapsed, which is patently absurd. The answer is
more cooperation to solve these issues together, not less.
Also, when it comes to concerns about refugees and terrorism, you just can't compare Europe and the US. Europe has several unstable Muslim countries on its doorstep while the US is separated by an ocean. Most Western European countries have a Muslim population of 5-10% while in the US Muslims comprise less than 1% of the population. Germany registered 1.1 million (mostly Muslim) asylum seekers last year while the US has pledged to accept 10,000 Syrian refugees but has only settled around 5,000 since 2011. France has had 11 jihadist attacks since January of last year, killing 237 and injuring 697, while the US has had 3 jihadist attacks in that same time period, killing 65 and injuring 76. The level of anxiety that reasonably exists within society is just not the same which is why I don't understand why Donald Trump resonates so well with a significant part of the American public. He is in some ways even more extreme than the European far-right with his call to bring back torture, kill family members (grandmothers, children) of suspected terrorists, ban Muslims from entering the country, mass surveillance on mosques, etc.
Tea Party started with Obamas election and racism reared its ugly head again. And the Republican party is probably sorry now that they welcomed the Tea Party with open arms, not realizing they were more or less religious extremists and totally unwilling to compromise.
Perhaps that's the problem with a two-party system. The Republican Party contains both religious extremists and libertarians, pro-free traders and anti-free traders, fiscal conservatives and big-spending populists, internationalists and isolationists. They can't even find a compromise within their own base, let alone across the aisle.
Essentially we've had a divided congress and nothing has really been done in 8 years.
I don't agree with that at all but perhaps it's because I have an outside perspective. To me, the past 8 years have been among the most transformative in modern American history. Just look at the progress that has been made with regard to LGBT+ rights, the civil rights battle of our time. Look at the racial issues that are finally being addressed (police brutality did not just start 8 years ago). Look at diplomatic relations with Iran, Cuba and Asia Pacific. Look at the ACA - which while not perfect is a massive improvement to what you had before. Look at the economy: you went from being on the brink of depression to one of the strongest economies in the world. Look at America's standing with its allies under Bush compared to Obama:
^ I always have to laugh when I hear Trump talk about how the US is perceived as weak and feckless because of Obama and is no longer respected. The opposite is true. Most Europeans absolutely loathed Bush and were exstatic when Obama was (re-)elected. Don't let Fox News tell you otherwise :cheeky: