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Dream Your Unemployment Troubles Away

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By Jerilee Wei


Depression Bread Line - FDR Memorial (photo by Frank Johnston, Washington Post).
Depression Bread Line - FDR Memorial (photo by Frank Johnston, Washington Post).

Seems like lately, that a lot of talk has been flying around, comparing the economic events of today, to the troubled decade of the 1930s. That got me to thinking about the forms of escapism many turned to during the thirties, and how we might learn some lessons from them.

That decade opened with almost three million people out of work and two years later, it had escalated to more than ten million unemployed (1 in 4). No wonder people looked for any way they could escape reality.


One of the Most Popular Escapisms of the 1930s

Thanks to radio and movies, Americans escaped for a little while, when they sang along with Bing Cosby to the top hit, “Wrap your Troubles in Dreams, Dream Your Troubles Away”


Last month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that we currently have 10.3 million people unemployed and 6.7 million under employed.

The breakdown of those figures further reveals that:

  • 6.5% were males
  • 5.5% were women
  • 20.4% were teenagers
  • 6.1% were whites
  • 11.2% were blacks
  • 8.6% were Hispanic

These figures didn’t count some significant numbers of the unemployed:

  • 1.9 million who were out of work seasonally
  • Those whose unemployment have run out
  • Those who have stopped looking for work
  • Those who are ill, out on strike, or out of work for personal reasons (quit)

Furthermore, the biggest numbers that the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ report doesn’t spell out -- is that these figures are just a hit and miss “sampling” of the number unemployed. It’s only a random sampling of 60,000 households. It's sort of like the headcounts, Fish and Game officials make, when sampling the number of wildlife in a given area.

The difference is -- Fish and Game doesn’t eliminate the wildlife who are out of season, run out, starving, ill, laying down on the job of looking for food, or quit foraging for personal reasons. Or, at least the agency doesn't tell on itself in it's reports when it does.

Bing Cosby - Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams, Dream Your Troubles Away


President Herbert Hoover
President Herbert Hoover

Belly Punch

Poor President Hoover endured a public's foul mood in the form of being the butt of a belly punch joke (jokes that drew a belly laugh) about a hitchhiker who made it across the country in record time, because he carried a cardboard placard that read:

"Give me a lift or I'll vote for Hoover."

I'm pretty sure that didn't draw a belly punch laugh from Hoover. Then, there were the soso newly coined vocabulary jokes (the ones that got a smile, not a laugh), and the downright stiff jokes (terrible jokes that got no laughter, only silence), new words, like:

Hoovervilles-- Shantytowns of the poor, hungry, and dispossessed on the outskirts of many towns across America

Hoover blankets -- Yellowed discarded newspapers, under which hobos slept

Hoover shoes -- Shoes with holes in the soles

Hoover cars -- Broken down cars being pulled by mules

Hooverisms

First, let’s hope in the face of all that’s happening economically world wide, that our President Elect, Barack Obama, doesn’t repeat history by naively making some dumb predictions, like President Hoover did back in the 1930s. We wouldn't want "Obamaisms" to enter our language, like "Hooverisms" did.

President Hoover no doubt wanted to forget about the whole mess, just like everyone else did back then. He had a lot of good reasons to want to escape, since he signed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Bill (creating the highest import duties in American history and speeding the break down of international trade).

Then, he compounded that error by intervening in markets, rather than suffer them. He added, further to the country's problems as creditors were urged not to foreclose on overdue debts, short sellers were told not to pound common stocks, and lenders, were pretty much ordered not to say no. His big plan was to stall for time, while seeking an eleventh hour "save" that would restore prosperity.

It wasn't all solely his fault, since the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, had set the stage for extending credit to banks even if they had no "eligible paper" in their vaults. Nothing like borrowing and printing more useless paper to solve your problems. Naturally, banks were failing at a record rate.

We'd certainly all like to forget about what's happening now too. President Hoover probably had one right idea, that people should think positively and move forward. However, he got off on the wrong foot, when he declared:

"What our country needs is a good big laugh. If someone could get off a good joke every ten days, I think our troubles would be over."

When you've lost your job, lost your home, banks are failing, businesses are closing, and you are down to your last dime -- you don't have the same sense of humor you might ordinarily have. Americans wanted solutions and leadership from their president, not a jokester and a progressive. Turns out what jokes were made, were on him, as his presidency slipped into ruin.

President Hoover also made the mistake of predicting that prosperity would return within two months. I'm thinking, President Obama should stay away from such impossible time tables too. Both Washington and the news media can be very unforgiving, and will pounce on such a thing, like a pack of wild coyotes on fresh meat.

Hard Times Come Again No More


Great Depression - Soup Line
Great Depression - Soup Line

Just How Unforgiving Was The Public When It Came To Herbert Hoover?

By 1932, Herbert Hoover had had enough, and so had the beleaguered public. He did take great offense to allegations by Franklin Roosevelt -- that he was “personally responsible for the Depression.”

President Hoover made a half-hearted party loyal re-election run against FDR, but he was often heckled and pelted with rotten eggs at rallies and speeches. Some people were so incensed by the economic times, that more drastic attempts were made on his life before it was all over. In the end, it was said, "he was the most hated President ever to serve in that office."


Pinball was a passionate pasttime in the 1930s.
Pinball was a passionate pasttime in the 1930s.

What We Can Learn From the 1930s

Now, I can't see where placing blame is going to do any of us any real good. Most of us know the score, and there are a lot of public figures and business entities, we could point the flaming blame finger in the direction of. I was thinking more along the lines, about what those hard times gave us back in the 1930s, and how people coped with the stresses as we worked for recovery.

Maybe, while the powers-to-be, duke this out, the rest of us should consider digging deeper and re-discover or create, some escapisms of our own. It'd be hard to top that of the 1930s. There's a lot to be said for escapisms, since without it -- stress kills.

In the 1930s, instant entertainment like television, the Internet, wii games, etc. didn't exist. With a nation in the thoes of poverty, people resorted to making their own amusement. This was the Golden Age of Radio, and with it came jive talk, the jukebox, goldfish swallowing, spin-off crazes, dance crazes, and most important -- movies, were just but a few of the diversions of the era.

These were also the days of absolute passion when it came to pinball machines and miniature golf.  However, that's another hub in itself.


Gone With the Wind - Advertised as a complete vacation's reading for $3.00
Gone With the Wind - Advertised as a complete vacation's reading for $3.00

More Than Anything -- The 1930s Were the Hey Days of Reading

Despite the Depression, sales of books totaled $22 million, just in 1933. Americans were actually reading more, and going to libraries. Library circulation jumped forty percent, and over four million people became library patrons. Millions of new avid readers were created by the Depression. The reading list of the 1930s, more than escapism -- also gave hope back to people.

Here are some of the best selling title lists of the time:

  • Gone with the Wind
  • How to Win Friends and Influence People
  • You Must Relax
  • Take It Easy
  • Wake Up and Live
  • Live Alone and Like It
  • The Good Earth
  • Anthony Adverse
  • Of Time and the River
  • The Yearling
  • The Grapes of Wrath
  • Cup of Gold
  • Pasture of Heaven
  • Tortilla Flat
  • In Dubious Battle
  • Of Mice and Men
  • How to Stop Worrying

No wonder so many people took to reading, some of the finest American literature was being churned out at the time. Beyond that, this was the era of movie star pin-up magazines, and the birth of the popularity of the all-American favorite, The Reader's Digest.

The only sour note, and a very sour one, was the 1939 release of the full text English translation of Mein Kampf. It's unfortunate that not enough people took it seriously, or read it -- or maybe Hitler's "My Struggle" could have forewarned us, to not make his "struggle" the world's.


Life Is Just a Bowl of Cherries

Songs like, Dancing with Tears in My Eyes, But Not for Me, and Time on My Hands, Brother Can You Spare a Dime -- certainly appealed to those feeling the squeeze of the Depression. Many wonderful love songs and inspirational songs (even hymns) were written during this time period.

Another bunch of good things that came out of this decade, were radio comedy shows, comedy movies, and depression humor. Fibber McGee and Molly, The Goldbergs, the Charlie McCarthy Show, Little Orphan Annie, Tom Mix -- were also all popular radio shows of the time. These were also the days of:

  • The Shadow
  • The Inner Sanctum Mysteries
  • The Lone Ranger
  • Mercury Theatre and War of the Worlds

Seems like hard times were inspiring some of the most creative minds back then. Which leads me to think about the what-if part of the unemployment equation -----

What if being unemployed, as much as it sucks, meant some Americans in their unexpected, unplanned, unwanted spare time (while looking for a job), found within themselves the talents and creativity they already possessed, and they actually figured out what to do with it? Spare time, might be better and worth more in the long run, than a spare dime.

Brother Can You Spare a Dime? - Dr. John and Odetta

Dream Your Unemployment Troubles Away in the News

Comments

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TKIMWRSVC profile image

TKIMWRSVC  says:
12 months ago

you totally impress me

Aya Katz profile image

Aya Katz  says:
12 months ago

Jerilee, great hub! Lots to think about. Bow really enjoyed the Bing Cosby video! It dealt with the subject that is nearest and dearest to his heart: finding mates and dealing with rivals.

I've never thought of Hoover as that much of an interventionist. Anything he did pales besides what FDR did. When I was living in Waco in the early 1980s I met a little old woman who lived in the same apartments as I did. She warned me to always own a house so as never to be homeless. (She's owned one in her day, but sold it, and she was very sorry about it now.) She said Hoover was her favorite president and that people didn't properly appreciate him.

A subject that I would like to see covered, and that I'm still not clear on myself, is when Americans became dependent on jobs for their survival. I don't think that during the revolutionary war, and during the decades immediately after, there was such a thing as an unemployment index. I don't think it was assumed that the average free man had to have a job in order to live. It was okay to take a job, of course, but it seems to me that being employed was more of a temporary thing, until you got on your feet, and started your own business or farm.

In a recent comment exchange with Hot Dorkage, she said to me that minimum wage jobs are just for teenagers and apprentices. Well, it's just now occurred to me that jobs in general were just for teenagers and apprentices!

Jerilee Wei profile image

Jerilee Wei  says:
12 months ago

Thanks Aya!  I was torn in writing this hub as Herbert Hoover did get a bad wrap for events that were already put in place before his Presidency.   Like any President, he wasn't acting alone and had a lot of help from his "friends" in Congress.  Actually, he had a very interesting life pre-Presidency, and there was a lot to be admired about him.  I'd agree with your Waco neighbor, today he sadly gets about a paragraph in your average public school textbook. 

I was also torn and didn't touch on FDR, since there are still a lot of readers in my father's generation who considered him to be the "saint" that saved them, which of course, he wasn't.  We're still paying the price for a lot that happened in his administration. 

Years ago, I read extensively the many books and articles that Eleanor Roosevelt wrote.  At the time, I could relate to much of her struggles with an unfaithful husband, etc.  I was on a quest in studying strong women who tried to make a difference in the world.  Her books alone, made me see FDR in a not so favorable light.

Hot Dorkage is one of my favorite hubbers, as you can count on her having a strong opinion, whether you agree with her or not. 

Probably don't want to get me started on teenagers working, as I'd end up writing a hub.  Raised five kids, one year apart in age through their teens, plus my younger sister. 

I don't approve of most teens working during high school because the minimum wage jobs they hold, often distract them from their real job "learning."  I believe in them having summer jobs and doing volunteer work for experience.  Howver,  most kids work for money and get seduced away from academics by a paycheck that buys things they have no nutritional need for.   Apprentices, that's a whole different thing. 

Jerilee Wei profile image

Jerilee Wei  says:
12 months ago

Sorry TKIMWRSVC! Missed your comment, thank you.

TKIMWRSVC profile image

TKIMWRSVC  says:
11 months ago

All good, re-reading your hub and so need to revisit this often, great inspiration for my own hubs, for my fiction writing, etc. Very inspiring to my creative side.

That said I wonder what the Bushisms will be, we all should start that one up

Jerilee Wei profile image

Jerilee Wei  says:
11 months ago

Thanks TKIMWRSVC! I often re-vist some of my favorite hubbers hubs, I've learned a lot in these short months from studying some of the best.

socio-literature profile image

socio-literature  says:
8 months ago

Explain few tips to find an income and be positive and progressive in the midst of this desert like unemployment and recession.

Jerilee Wei profile image

Jerilee Wei  says:
8 months ago

Thanks socio-literature! I'll be doing other hubs on this in the future.

izettl profile image

izettl  says:
5 months ago

I would love to see more creativity come out of this economic downturn. Maybe people deciding to get creative or discover what other talents and skills they have rather than settling for the status quo job. Maybe it will force people to think outside the box too if they're desparate enough.

MikeNV profile image

MikeNV  says:
2 weeks ago

In the 30's we didn't have credit cards. Consumer debt was nothing like it was today. The United States actually manufactured things. Burying your head in the sand won't make any difference. We are not coming out of this recession (The Government Propaganda Machine as steered by the Privately Owned Central Bank) can not change the fact that America is simply bankrupt. They created the problem and it will not be resolved until the Federal Reserve is Abolished and we get back on a Gold Standard.

The schools and media are controlled by Bankers... this is why you never hear the truth.

Can anyone tell Americans what happened to the Gold in Fort Knox? You know the Gold that used to back our now worthless paper currency?

In early 1933, as part of the New Deal, the U.S. Congress enacted a package of laws which removed gold from circulation as money, and which made private ownership of gold in the U.S. (except for coins in collections or jewelry such as wedding rings) illegal. All gold in circulation was seized by the government in exchange for dollars at the fixed rate of $20.67 per ounce. Owners of gold bullion in the U.S. were also required to trade it for other forms of money. All of this left the government of the United States with a large amount of gold metal, and no place to store it.

Again Where is the Gold? Gold was removed from the United States control in order to further the power of PRIVATE BANKERS over the money supply. They took the Gold and American Citizens got pieces of paper.

Jerilee Wei profile image

Jerilee Wei  says:
2 weeks ago

Thanks MikeNV! All very valid points that many are not familar with.

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