44 Numbers From 2018 That Are Almost Too Crazy To Believe

Authored by Michel Snyder via The Economic Collapse blog,

Was 2018 everything that you expected it to be?  Every year contains surprises, but 2018 truly turned out to be a year that we will never forget.  Over the past 12 months we witnessed great political shaking, Wall Street experienced the worst downturn that we have seen since 2008, the crust of our planet was rattled by an increasing number of major seismic events, social decay spread like wildfire, and America continued to become even more divided as a nation.  In comparison, 2017 was rather bland and boring, and I truly believe that one day we will look back on 2018 as a major turning point.

https://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/inline-images/2018-Public-Domain.jpg?itok=iqVChn5J

It is amazing that 12 months has flown by already.  It seems like the years just keep getting faster, and perhaps that is because we are all getting older.

In any event, the following are 44 numbers from 2018 that are almost too crazy to believe…

#1 One study found that the average American spends 86 hours a month on a cellphone.

#2 A different study discovered that 37 percent of all Americans have eaten fast food within the last 24 hours.

#3 90 percent of the beer that Americans drink is produced by just 2 gigantic corporations.

#4 McDonalds feeds approximately 70 million people a day globally.  Pornhub gets more than 78 million visits a day.

#5 60 percent of all Americans actually believe that they have seen a ghost.

#6 The middle class continues to decline, and at this point half of all American workers make less than $30,533 a year.

#7 During the 2018 midterm elections, Democrats were able to pick up 40 seats in the U.S. House of Representatives.  Those that were forecasting a “red tsunami” were completely and totally wrong.

#8 Kevin Spacey’s incredibly creepy YouTube video entitled “Let Me Be Frank” in which he promises that he will never be held accountable for his actions has already been viewed more than 8 million times.

#9 Since 2007, the total amount of student loan debt in America has nearly tripled.

#10 The suicide rate in the United States has risen by 33 percent since 1999.

#11 Suicide is now the second leading cause of death for Americans from age 15 to age 24.

#12 Netflix recently made a deal to renew streaming of “Friends” for another year for 100 million dollars.

#13 According to the United Nations Population Fund, 40 percent of all births in the U.S. now happen outside of marriage. But if you go back to 1970, that figure was sitting at just 10 percent.

#14 13 million households in the United States do not always have enough food to eat.  So if you have enough food to eat every day, you should consider yourself to be very blessed.

#15 According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, almost 1 out of every 4 children in rural areas is currently living in poverty.

#16 At this point, almost 52 percent of all children live in a home that receives monthly help from the federal government.

#17 Over half a million people are homeless in the United States right now.

#18 Today, a million Americans are living in their RVS, and that number is rising with each passing year.

#19 Social decay is clearly evident even in our most prosperous cities.  One recent investigation found 300 piles of human feces on the streets of downtown San Francisco.

#20 62 percent of all U.S. jobs do not pay enough to support a middle class lifestyle.

#21 In 1980, the average American worker’s debt was 1.96 times larger than his or her monthly salary. Today, that number has ballooned to 5.00.

#22 Over half the country now receives more in government transfer payments than they pay in taxes.

#23 According to one recent study, the “rate of people 65 and older filing for bankruptcy is three times what it was in 1991”.

#24 More than 100 churches in the United States are dying every single week.

#25 If you go back to 1986, just 10 percent of all young adults were “religiously unaffiliated”, but now that number has jumped all the way to 39 percent.

#26 According to one recent survey, Americans from the age of 18 to the age of 29 favor Democrats over Republicans by a 66 percent to 32 percent margin.

#27 One study found that one-third of all American teenagers haven’t read a single book in the past year.

#28 The number of married couples with children in the U.S. just reached a 56 year low.

#29 In the city of Baltimore, approximately one out of every four babies is born as an opioid addict.

#30 According to the New York Times, approximately 110 million Americans have a sexually-transmitted disease right now.

#31 It is being projected that the total amount of plastic in the oceans of the world will exceed the total weight of all fish by the year 2050.

#32 90 percent of all seabirds in the world now have plastic in their stomachs.  Back in 1960, that number was sitting at just 5 percent.

#33 In August, we learned that the number of global earthquakes over the last 30 days had risen to a level that was 50 percent above normal.

#34 In September, an all-time record high seven named storms were swirling across the globe simultaneously.

#35 In October, we witnessed the third largest single day point crash in stock market history on the exact same day that the third most powerful hurricane in U.S. history made landfall.

#36 In November, the Camp Fire destroyed 14,000 homes and businesses in northern California.  It was the most destructive wildfire in the history of the state.

#37 According to the official Twitter account of Mount Washington Observatory in New Hampshire, they had wind chills of between -70 and -75 degrees on Thanksgiving morning.

#38 In the aftermath of the magnitude 7.0 earthquake that rattled Anchorage, the state of Alaska was shaken by more than 1,400 earthquakes.

#39 In early December, the largest earthquake in 45 years hit eastern Tennessee.

#40 During the last full week before Christmas, the Dow fell 1,655 points.  That was the worst week for the stock market since the financial crisis of 2008.

#41 The National Retail Federation was projecting that total Christmas spending would surpass $465,000,000,000 in 2018. Only 25 countries on the entire planet have a GDP that is greater than that number.

#42 In 2017, the Dow was either up or down by 1 percent or more just 8 times.  In 2018, it happened 64 times.  Volatility has returned to Wall Street in a major way, and that is a really bad sign.

#43 A recent survey of corporate financial officers discovered that 82 percent of them believe that a recession will have started by the end of 2020.

#44 During 2018, the U.S. national debt increased by nearly 1.4 trillion dollars.  We are now almost 22 trillion dollars in debt, and there is no end to our debt problems on the horizon.

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17 Comments
Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
December 31, 2018 10:09 am

Happy New Years!!!!

? Tick Tock.

yahsure
yahsure
December 31, 2018 10:21 am

Glad to hear everything is just fine.

BB
BB
  yahsure
December 31, 2018 10:57 am

50% of all American workers makes less 30,000 a year .That is a sad reality I see every day out here on the road.I do a good bit better then that but for how long ?
Another thing I see is people living in campers or RVs . It would not be that bad for a single guy .

no one
no one
  BB
December 31, 2018 11:25 am

I bet a lot of truckers who own their own trucks live in their trucks. Some with sleeper cabins are pretty nice. I’ve made do with less. My friend here is living in her camper until fire damage on her under-insured home is repaired. She’s been in it two years or more… I suspect it may be a while. I suggested she hire the Mennonites I hired to at least “dry it in” with siding and windows, but she’s got adult kids and adult grandkids who require her financial support, apparently.

Thank God my kid just left for a programming job with some medical corporation hiring all sorts of newly trained software engineer types for Agile Software Developing. Haha… I just learned about Agile Management Methodology yesterday and am already working it right in.

no one
no one
December 31, 2018 10:35 am

I got interested and followed 15 about childhood poverty and got to this really profound statistic from the link.

“According to estimates by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, nearly a quarter of children growing up in rural America were poor in 2016, compared to slightly more than 20 percent in urban areas.”

How wide, exactly, is the gap from “nearly” a quarter to “slightly more than 20 percent…?”

TC
TC
  no one
December 31, 2018 1:14 pm

When was the last time you heard of a charity for poor white rural people? Local churches do what they can, I suppose, but that’s about it.

no one
no one
  TC
December 31, 2018 3:46 pm

There is a county-wide food pantry in the local town where we bank and which has a real grocery store. On Tuesdays and Fridays, food is distributed. I was shocked to see how many people waiting for its opening one day when passing by in the morning.

That’s the only one I know about. Haha

no one
no one
December 31, 2018 11:10 am

#25 is obvious. Behavior, attitude and language of children says it all.

no one
no one
December 31, 2018 11:13 am

C’mon… aren’t there some environmental engineers who could devise a way to collect that garbage pile and get rid of it? (Plastic in the ocean… #31)

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
  no one
December 31, 2018 12:16 pm

The greater problem is the nanoplastics and microplastics that are being used in items, and because of their size, are not being captured by water reclamation facilities, etc. and are making their way to the ocean. I also read a statistic that more garbage is dumped into the ocean than the weight of all the fish pulled from the ocean every year.

And by the way, the US NAVY, the navies of other countries, merchant shipping boats, and others, are some of the biggest contributors to ocean pollution. NONE of them store and offload their trash when they come into port. They simply dump it overboard. “Dilution is the solution to pollution” after all. LOL.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
December 31, 2018 12:12 pm

I personally have never seen a ghost, but I don’t see claims regarding this phenomena as anything problematic. What is more troubling is that 80+% of the population honestly believes that we can have “good government.” The existence of ghosts is far more plausible.

Donkey Balls
Donkey Balls
  KaD
December 31, 2018 7:45 pm

Extreme income/wealth inequality is very bad for a nation. 3rd world countries have terrible income/wealth inequality.

Big Dick
Big Dick
December 31, 2018 5:01 pm

And number 45 is that Michael Snyder tried to run to get on the government gravy train, but finished far out of the running. I think 9th out of the 10 people running. Michael was forced to go back to his blogging, and suckering people into sending him money for reading his already well known data of whines and cries. His blog is like Facebook and Google, in that he will not allow anyone to say anything he does not like, and anyone who does not show great thanks for his providing massive knowledge and wonderful writing.

pyrrhus
pyrrhus
January 1, 2019 5:41 am

Notice how all references to race, national origin, and “immigrants” have been scrubbed from this silly list?

no one
no one
  pyrrhus
January 1, 2019 8:43 am

I didn’t notice! I think I have gotten used to seeing “blanded” prose intended to avoid conflict.