Showing posts with label Class Inequality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Class Inequality. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Trump 2026 State of Anxiety: Wars, ICE Raids, Soaring Rent, Food Prices:

 

 ... Shrinking Health Coverage, Less Maternity Healthcare, Rising Homelessness, Job Cuts, Rising Debt, Growing hardship ... That's The Real State of the Union!

News Analysis — By Norris R. McDonald, Sulfabittas News


Official speeches describe resilience and economic momentum. But federal data and independent budget projections tell a more complex story — one of rising living costs, persistent poverty, shrinking safety nets, expanding war budgets, and an exploding national debt.

In 2026, the central economic question facing Americans is no longer whether inflation has slowed. It is whether life has become more affordable.

For millions, the answer appears to be no.

Poverty Remains Deep and Widespread

According to the United States Census Bureau (2024 data release), 35.9 million Americans live in official poverty (10.6%). Under the Supplemental Poverty Measure, 43.7 million fall below the line. Deep poverty remains severe, and millions of households still experience chronic deprivation even in periods of nominal expansion.

Structural poverty persists — especially among working families, seniors on fixed incomes, and renters facing relentless housing costs. Economic growth at the top has not translated into economic security at the bottom.

Health Coverage at Risk

Provisions in the proposed One Big Beautiful Bill Act include major Medicaid restructuring and expanded work requirements. Congressional Budget Office projections suggest that 11 to 15+ million Americans could lose health insurance coverage over the next decade, with enrollment declines accelerating as pandemic-era protections expire.

Over 15 million people have lost their health insurance with Trump and the congressional Republicans dumping the Affordable Care Act (ACA) or, OBAMACARE. There have been 1,100 maternity clinics closed in poor Black urban and rural neighborhoods, creating what is called, MATERNITY CARE DESERTS. 

Coverage losses cascade into delayed treatment, untreated chronic disease, higher emergency-room reliance, and rising medical debt — a burden that is increasingly being transferred onto households already stretched thin.

Cost of Living: Inflation Slower, But Prices Still Punishing

Bureau of Labor Statistics data show food prices remain roughly 30% higher than January 2020 levels, while grocery bills routinely approach or exceed $900–$1,000 per month for many families. Restaurant prices continue rising faster than grocery inflation, and insurance, utilities, and healthcare premiums remain elevated.

Households are not debating inflation percentages. They are confronting permanent price plateaus. A slower rate of increase does not erase already high costs.

Housing Crisis & Record Homelessness

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development reports over 770,000 people experienced homelessness in the most recent national count, with a sharp year-over-year increase. Typical rents in many metro areas range from $1,600 to $1,900 per month, and nearly half of renters are cost-burdened.

Housing has become America’s most destabilizing expense. Miss one paycheck and everything unravels.

The Hidden Price of Trump’s Expanding Wars

While domestic programs face cuts and restructuring, military spending continues its upward march. By 2026, the United States is engaged in, or materially supporting, multiple overseas conflicts across Europe, the Middle East, and strategic flashpoints elsewhere — requiring sustained procurement, logistics, intelligence operations, and foreign military financing.

War spending consumes hundreds of billions annually. Every dollar allocated to war is a dollar not invested in healthcare access, affordable housing, education, infrastructure, and food security. The administration frames militarization as strength. Households experience it as scarcity.

National Debt Nears $37 Trillion

Federal debt is nearing $37 trillion by 2026. Debt is not abstract: it shapes policy choices. Rising interest payments are increasingly crowding out domestic investment and intensifying pressure to cut social programs, privatize public services, and shift costs onto families.

Ordinary Americans are told to tighten belts while the federal balance sheet expands without restraint. The burden is socialized downward.

Immigration Raids Are Disrupting Farms and Driving Food Prices Higher


Aggressive immigration enforcement has intensified across agricultural regions. Large-scale raids on farms and food-processing facilities produce immediate labor shortages — slowing harvests, disrupting packing lines, and destabilizing distribution schedules.

The result is straightforward: lower supply, higher costs for producers, and higher prices for consumers. Farm labor is skilled labor; when it disappears abruptly, the shock travels directly to grocery shelves. Food inflation becomes policy-made.

Employment: Work Without Security

Millions remain unemployed or underemployed in early 2026, and many who have jobs are juggling multiple roles without benefits. Wage growth is uneven; essential costs rise relentlessly. Employment alone no longer guarantees stability.

Tax & Spending Priorities

Critics argue tax policy continues to favor higher-income earners while Medicaid is restructured, SNAP and housing assistance are squeezed, military budgets expand, and deficits widen. Social programs are framed as unaffordable; war budgets and elite tax advantages are treated as necessities.

Investigative Conclusion

The State of the Union in 2026 is defined less by headline GDP and more by lived economic reality: soaring costs, shrinking coverage, rising homelessness, expanding war budgets, exploding debt, and disrupted food systems.


This is not a temporary rough patch. It is a structural affordability crisis. Economic strength at the macro level does not equal economic security at the household level — and that widening gap is the defining issue of 2026.


About the Author

Norris R. McDonald is an author, Respiratory Therapist, and economic journalist who writes public commentary and news analysis on political economy, healthcare, and public policy. He publishes Sulfabittas News, covering affordability, inequality, and the lived consequences of government decisions.

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BOOKS

by Norris R McDonald (Author)


Book Description
The True Adventures of King Musk Rat and Ronald the Snake
By Norris R. McDonald

  • A biting allegorical fable exposing the corruption of money, tech power, and politics.
  • “Musk Rat” and “Ronald the Snake” stand in for real-world archetypes of greed, betrayal, and dystopia.
  • Echoes the tradition of George Orwell, Franz Kafka, and Animal Farm — but with a Caribbean/Jamaican sharp-edge “Bitta Truth” style.
  • Satire that blends animal fable + dystopian critique — accessible yet piercing.
  • A Satirical Allegory of Power, Greed, and Collapse
  • A Political Fable of America’s Descent into Chaos
  • A Dark Allegory of Money, Corruption, and Betrayal

True Adventures of King Musk Rat and Ronald the Snake is gripping political allegory, in which the intrigues of King Musk Rat tell a tale of power, betrayal, and the insatiable hunger for control.


SCAN QR CODE OR GET THE BOOK HERE: ðŸ‘‰  https://www.amazon.com/True-Life-Story-Ronald-Snake-ebook/dp/B0DXJB337C

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Corruption Is Economic Violence — And Jamaica Is Paying the Price

  Corruption as economic violence—class contrast and national consequences.

By Norris R. McDonald | SULFABITTAS NEWS

Jamaica may be recording a decline in murders, and that development is rightly welcomed. Any measurable reduction in violent deaths represents relief for families and communities that have endured decades of trauma. However, while public discourse remains focused on street-level criminality, the country continues to confront a deeper and more structurally destabilizing crisis: the persistent expansion of white-collar crime and the normalization of elite impunity.

A nation cannot meaningfully address crime if its concern is limited to the actions of the marginalized while large-scale financial irregularities proliferate within the upper reaches of the state and corporate sector. When procurement abuses are treated as administrative lapses rather than prosecutable offences, when investigations stretch across years without resolution, and when meaningful asset recovery remains rare, the problem transcends governance inefficiency. It becomes systemic economic harm.

A Dangerous Imbalance in National Attention

This contradiction should trouble every serious observer of Jamaica’s political economy. A society cannot confront crime while limiting its focus to the desperate and dispossessed, even as vast financial irregularities quietly multiply in the corridors of influence. When white-collar wrongdoing is absorbed into routine procedure, the country begins to misread its own danger, celebrating visible improvements while ignoring the deeper mechanisms that reproduce scarcity, inequality, and distrust.

Corruption as Economic Violence

Corruption should not be viewed merely as an ethical lapse or an unfortunate feature of political culture. It is better understood as a material process that redistributes wealth upward while eroding the state’s capacity to serve its citizens. Each inflated contract, each manipulated concession, and each unexplained budgetary overrun represents a transfer of collective resources into private hands. The cumulative impact of these transfers is borne not by the beneficiaries of corruption, but by ordinary Jamaicans who face deteriorating services and rising living costs.

The human cost: corruption manifests as hardship, weakened services, and rising costs.

This is why corruption constitutes a form of economic violence. It does not manifest in nightly crime reports, yet its consequences are visible in overcrowded classrooms, under-resourced clinics, unsafe roads, unreliable water supply, and persistent wage stagnation. These are not isolated failures of management; they are downstream effects of fiscal leakages that accumulate year after year.

The Asymmetry of Justice

The contrast between how street crime and white-collar crime are treated further compounds public frustration. Lower-income Jamaicans routinely face swift arrest and harsh punishment for minor infractions, while high-level financial irregularities often languish in extended audits and administrative reviews that rarely culminate in criminal convictions. This asymmetry sends a powerful social message about whose actions are considered intolerable and whose are negotiable.

Empirical evidence already illustrates the magnitude of the problem. In one recent fiscal year, Jamaica’s Auditor General flagged more than J$20 billion in procurement breaches, cost overruns, and unsupported payments across multiple ministries and public bodies. These findings represent only the portion of leakage that is formally documented. They do not capture sophisticated forms of under-invoicing, transfer pricing, inflated consultancy fees, or concessionary giveaways that escape routine audit processes. Yet despite the scale of these irregularities, criminal prosecutions remain rare, asset recovery even rarer, and administrative sanctions minimal. The signal transmitted to society is unmistakable: large-scale theft conducted through institutional channels carries little personal risk.

Disaster Recovery and the Politics of Reconstruction

The devastation caused by Hurricane Melissa in western Jamaica underscores the stakes involved in public financial management. Large-scale disasters require rapid mobilization of resources for reconstruction, infrastructure repair, and social support. Billions can be allocated within relatively short periods, creating both opportunity and risk. In an environment already strained by fiscal leakage, disaster recovery becomes a test of national integrity: whether funds will be spent transparently, competitively, and in the public interest.

The problem is not episodic. Over the past decade, cumulative audit reports and parliamentary oversight reviews have repeatedly identified tens of billions of Jamaican dollars in unresolved financial irregularities, ranging from abandoned capital projects to unexplained advances and persistently breached procurement rules. In this context, every new disaster allocation becomes vulnerable not only to logistical delay, but to absorption into an already porous fiscal architecture.

Corruption, Class, and Development

Corruption ultimately functions as a class-based economic distortion. It does not rely on overt coercion, yet it systematically disadvantages those with the least political access. Rising electricity rates, increased transport costs, higher food prices, and utility adjustments do not occur in isolation. They are frequently connected to structural inefficiencies and procurement practices that reflect deeper governance failures, with the poor and middle class effectively paying twice: once through taxation and again through diminished service quality.

Elite impunity: when accountability does not reach the conference room, development weakens.

Accountability as a Development Imperative

Reducing street violence remains essential, and progress achieved in that area should not be dismissed. However, any national crime strategy that excludes white-collar accountability is incomplete. Handcuffs cannot remain conceivable only in inner-city communities while boardrooms remain insulated from scrutiny. Equal enforcement of the law is not hostility to success; it is the foundation of legitimate development, credible governance, and democratic trust.

Ultimately, Jamaica’s future will not be determined solely by whether murders rise or fall in any given year. It will be determined by whether the society is willing to dismantle a political economy in which economic power routinely shields wrongdoing while poverty is criminalized. A country cannot tax its way out of corruption, nor can it police its way around elite impunity. Development requires more than growth targets and fiscal discipline; it requires a credible architecture of accountability that treats theft of public wealth as the serious crime it is. Until such an architecture is firmly established, the corruption economy will continue to drain national possibility, quietly but relentlessly, even as Jamaicans are asked to endure still more sacrifice in the name of stability.

Norris R. McDonald is an Author, Respiratory Therapist, and Economic Journalist who writes public commentary on political economy, public policy, and health systems, and publishes SULFABITTAS NEWS.

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BLACK HISTORY BOOKS:

The Myth of the Black Ancestral Curse: Religion, Race, and the Psychological Legacy of Slavery!

by Norris R McDonald (Author)