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        <title>What Middle Class are you? - Information to Impact - digitalchain&apos;s Blog - Bakersfield.com</title>
        <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589</link>
        <description>My Economics professor told us that there are two types of middle class - upper and lower. I stuck to that concept until I found out from Pew Research Center that there are four - in America.  No, they&amp;rsquo;re not upper, upper middle, lower and low lower. Here&amp;rsquo;s the list:

Top of the Class. It&amp;rsquo;s the largest of the four groups, comprising slightly more than a third of the 53% of Americans who identify themselves as &amp;ldquo;middle class&amp;rdquo; in the Pew survey.
 
Struggling Middle. Life is considerably tougher for this group disproportionately composed of women and minorities. In fact, many members of the Struggling Middle have a lower median family income than Americans who put themselves on the lowest rungs of the social ladder. About one-in-six self-identified middle class Americans fall into the Struggling Middle.
 
The Satisfied Middle has everything but money; their comparatively modest incomes have not muted their sunny outlooks or overall satisfaction with their lives. This group is disproportionately old and disproportionately young; middle aged adults are relatively scarce in the Satisfied Middle. They make up a quarter of the middle class.
 
Call them the Anxious Middle; they make up slightly less than a quarter of all middle class Americans. By the conventional yardsticks of income, education, age, employment and family status, the fourth middle class group is the most middle class of all&amp;ndash;and the most dissatisfied and downbeat of the four groups. While they enjoy some of the economic advantages of the Top of the Class, they express many of the same bleak judgments about their lives as those in the Struggling Middle.

Read the rest of the article here.
Can you identify where you are?</description>
        <itunes:summary>My Economics professor told us that there are two types of middle class - upper and lower. I stuck to that concept until I found out from Pew Research Center that there are four - in America.  No, they&amp;rsquo;re not upper, upper middle, lower and low lower. Here&amp;rsquo;s the list:

Top of the Class. It&amp;rsquo;s the largest of the four groups, comprising slightly more than a third of the 53% of Americans who identify themselves as &amp;ldquo;middle class&amp;rdquo; in the Pew survey.
 
Struggling Middle. Life is considerably tougher for this group disproportionately composed of women and minorities. In fact, many members of the Struggling Middle have a lower median family income than Americans who put themselves on the lowest rungs of the social ladder. About one-in-six self-identified middle class Americans fall into the Struggling Middle.
 
The Satisfied Middle has everything but money; their comparatively modest incomes have not muted their sunny outlooks or overall satisfaction with their lives. This group is disproportionately old and disproportionately young; middle aged adults are relatively scarce in the Satisfied Middle. They make up a quarter of the middle class.
 
Call them the Anxious Middle; they make up slightly less than a quarter of all middle class Americans. By the conventional yardsticks of income, education, age, employment and family status, the fourth middle class group is the most middle class of all&amp;ndash;and the most dissatisfied and downbeat of the four groups. While they enjoy some of the economic advantages of the Top of the Class, they express many of the same bleak judgments about their lives as those in the Struggling Middle.

Read the rest of the article here.
Can you identify where you are?</itunes:summary>
        <language>en-us</language>
        <pubDate>Sat, 18 Oct 2008 09:52:33 PDT</pubDate>
                
                    <item>
                <title>Oct 18,  2008 at 01:10 PM : A little history on...</title>
                <description>&lt;p&gt;A little history on where this term came from. &amp;nbsp;It was a product of the Eisenhower Administration. He was attempting to refocus the nation away from a very, very, very popular administration under Franklin Roosevelt and Roosevelt loved to refer to these people as the &amp;quot;working class&amp;quot;. Under Roosevelt&#039;s view, everyone was a &amp;quot;worker&amp;quot; but along came Joseph McCarthy (and Richard Nixon) who made his political career hunting down communist behind every rock. &amp;nbsp;The communist mantra was, is, and will always be - &amp;quot;Workers of the World, Unite!&amp;quot; so under a democratic government, the association between &amp;quot;worker as community&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;worker as class&amp;quot; irritated people. &amp;nbsp;It sounded like the same thing. &amp;nbsp;It was a bit of genius on the part of Eisenhower&#039;s administration to put some ideological distance between American workers and communist workers, so that&#039;s really why the term &amp;quot;middle class&amp;quot; appealed to Americans.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Since Eisenhower the term has been nuanced a great deal and refined and has now evolved into what you are talking about here: a sense that &amp;quot;middle class&amp;quot; doesn&#039;t quite tell the story as well because there are lots of people - white people especially - who would never say they are &amp;quot;lower class&amp;quot; because they associate that status with racial minorities - black people. &amp;nbsp;They very well may be as dirt poor and disadvantaged because of their economic status, but they don&#039;t like the stigma of being pooled with the truly poor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Me? I&#039;m definitely Top middle class right now, but looking at the recent economic earthquakes, I feel like the Anxious Middle since all of my wealth is tied to a retirement account that lost a third of it&#039;s value in the past month. We have pulled the belt notches all the way in here in my house. It&#039;s hard to say, actually. Pew doesn&#039;t put a dollar figure on any of the categories so you don&#039;t really know how you compare.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
                <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328159</link>
                <guid>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328159</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;A little history on where this term came from. &amp;nbsp;It was a product of the Eisenhower Administration. He was attempting to refocus the nation away from a very, very, very popular administration under Franklin Roosevelt and Roosevelt loved to refer to these people as the &amp;quot;working class&amp;quot;. Under Roosevelt&#039;s view, everyone was a &amp;quot;worker&amp;quot; but along came Joseph McCarthy (and Richard Nixon) who made his political career hunting down communist behind every rock. &amp;nbsp;The communist mantra was, is, and will always be - &amp;quot;Workers of the World, Unite!&amp;quot; so under a democratic government, the association between &amp;quot;worker as community&amp;quot; and &amp;quot;worker as class&amp;quot; irritated people. &amp;nbsp;It sounded like the same thing. &amp;nbsp;It was a bit of genius on the part of Eisenhower&#039;s administration to put some ideological distance between American workers and communist workers, so that&#039;s really why the term &amp;quot;middle class&amp;quot; appealed to Americans.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Since Eisenhower the term has been nuanced a great deal and refined and has now evolved into what you are talking about here: a sense that &amp;quot;middle class&amp;quot; doesn&#039;t quite tell the story as well because there are lots of people - white people especially - who would never say they are &amp;quot;lower class&amp;quot; because they associate that status with racial minorities - black people. &amp;nbsp;They very well may be as dirt poor and disadvantaged because of their economic status, but they don&#039;t like the stigma of being pooled with the truly poor.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;Me? I&#039;m definitely Top middle class right now, but looking at the recent economic earthquakes, I feel like the Anxious Middle since all of my wealth is tied to a retirement account that lost a third of it&#039;s value in the past month. We have pulled the belt notches all the way in here in my house. It&#039;s hard to say, actually. Pew doesn&#039;t put a dollar figure on any of the categories so you don&#039;t really know how you compare.&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary>     
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                    <item>
                <title>Oct 18,  2008 at 02:10 PM : Thanks for the...</title>
                <description>&lt;p&gt;Thanks for the information.&amp;nbsp; Interesting piece of history.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;</description>
                <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328173</link>
                <guid>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328173</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;Thanks for the information.&amp;nbsp; Interesting piece of history.&amp;nbsp;&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary>     
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                    <item>
                <title>Oct 18,  2008 at 03:10 PM : Regardless of which...</title>
                <description>&lt;p&gt;Regardless of which group you fall into, because our Government refuses to do anything about illegal immigrant slave labor, you more than likely will continue to spiral downward.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;My Father use to support a family on a truck drivers salary. Try doing that today. He was paying for a home, car, and supporting four children on his income. We went on vacations every year, generally camping. Always doing something on at least one night per weekend, whether it be roller skating at the rink, going to a hockey game, Cal Palace rodeos, something.&amp;nbsp; That was the days when a Mother could stay at home and tend to her children. They were being brought up in a home with two parents to care for them. We wonder why we have so many drop outs, gang bangers, druggies, etc. No one is at home to make sure they are behaving, doing homework, etc. President Bush patting himself on the back for all the job growth we had. What good is all the added job growth if it is for minimum wages. Heck even if both parents work for min. wage, you are still dirt poor, regardless of color, white, brown, black, it doesn&#039;t matter. Your Poor!&lt;/p&gt;</description>
                <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328193</link>
                <guid>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328193</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;Regardless of which group you fall into, because our Government refuses to do anything about illegal immigrant slave labor, you more than likely will continue to spiral downward.&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;My Father use to support a family on a truck drivers salary. Try doing that today. He was paying for a home, car, and supporting four children on his income. We went on vacations every year, generally camping. Always doing something on at least one night per weekend, whether it be roller skating at the rink, going to a hockey game, Cal Palace rodeos, something.&amp;nbsp; That was the days when a Mother could stay at home and tend to her children. They were being brought up in a home with two parents to care for them. We wonder why we have so many drop outs, gang bangers, druggies, etc. No one is at home to make sure they are behaving, doing homework, etc. President Bush patting himself on the back for all the job growth we had. What good is all the added job growth if it is for minimum wages. Heck even if both parents work for min. wage, you are still dirt poor, regardless of color, white, brown, black, it doesn&#039;t matter. Your Poor!&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary>     
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                    <item>
                <title>Oct 18,  2008 at 10:10 PM : I think a whole lot...</title>
                <description>&lt;p&gt;I think a whole lot more of us have moved from &amp;quot;Top of the Class&amp;quot; to &amp;quot;Anxious&amp;quot; or even &amp;quot;Struggling&amp;quot; now since that article was written in July and the research was from even earlier.&lt;/p&gt;</description>
                <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328302</link>
                <guid>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/digitalchain/35589/#c_328302</guid>
                <itunes:summary>&lt;p&gt;I think a whole lot more of us have moved from &amp;quot;Top of the Class&amp;quot; to &amp;quot;Anxious&amp;quot; or even &amp;quot;Struggling&amp;quot; now since that article was written in July and the research was from even earlier.&lt;/p&gt;</itunes:summary>     
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