The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that a record 94,610,000 people (ages 16 and over) were not in the labor force in September. In other words they were neither employed nor had made specific efforts to find work in the prior four weeks.



The number of individuals out of the work force last month — due to discouragement, retirement or otherwise — represented a substantial 579,000 person increase over the most recent record, hit in August, of 94,031,000 people out of the workforce.

© Casey Research

So the world didn't end, but we should face the facts that our world is exponentially changing. In the last ten years, it has changed so dramatically that many of us do not recognize it.



Riots, extreme climate changes, epidemics, unemployment, political upheaval, I could go on, but I think you get the picture. These changes are the events you should prepare for. Preparing for a singular event is impractical and will leave you exposed and with gaps in your preparedness plan.



That said, if your preps were well-rounded enough, you can insulate yourself from many different forms of disasters: natural, personal, economic, societal, etc. Once you are prepared for a multitude of events, you don't worry as much. There are always events that are out of our control. The only control we have is to be ready for them the best we can by being prepared, self-reliant, not depending on the system, and changing our perception about disasters.



Source: Another Doomsday Prophecy Come and Gone

While the Obama administration and their mainstream surrogates maintain that the economy is growing at a booming pace, the reality of the situation is starkly different.According to a report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics some 94.6 million Americans (age 16 and over) are either not working or have made no effort to find a job. With a population of 320 million, that means nearly one in three people in the United States are currently out of work.Curiously, the official unemployment rate remained unchanged at 5.1%, suggesting that some 95% of people actually have jobs.According to John Williams of Shadow Stats , if we were to calculate unemployment using the same metrics as we did during the 1930's, or even the 1980's, we'd already be in Great Depression territory. Williams, who utilizes a reporting methodology that accounts for "long-term discouraged workers who were defined out of official existence in 1994," notes thatNow compare the above chart to similar measurements from the 1930's and you'll see just how bad things really are:But how can it be possible to have a full-fledged recovery and record stock prices when nearly one-third of the adult population is not working?If the government is to be believed, it's because our economy continues to grow at a pace of about 2%.But once again, if we calculate the real growth rate and adjust for inflation, we see exactly why jobs are non-existent and getting worse every month.The following chart made available by Williams shows that despite a positive "official" GDP growth rate being disseminated to the public, the reality is exactly the opposite. The U.S. economy is by all accounts shrinking and has been doing so for the better part of a decade:We've already witnessed numerous shocks to the global economy over recent weeks and the prospects of any sort of stability just went out the window.The United States, regardless of what is being said by mainstream financial pundits or believed by their TV-watching myrmidons, is now (and has been for quite some time) in a recession.We have seen many prognostications of what might happen in the Fall of 2015 and beyond. For now, we have avoided the Doomsday event many have feared.But asauthor Tess Pennington notes, this doesn't mean we should ignore the real possibility of a wide breadth of potential outcomes from economic malaise and geo-political tensions:The collapse that many have suggested will take place at some point in the future is actually happening right here and now.If the charts above are accurate - and we believe they are - then America is already in the throes of its next Great Depression.