and if you ask people where do you think you will be a year from now, they are actually not that optimistic, they are more pessimistic. so it is a very odd set of personal feelings. one possible explanation for all of this is inflation. people hate inflation. that is why it is in the misery index. but under joe biden, consumer pricing index has gone up by 15.3%. personal incomes 19.2%. meaning that people have still stayed ahead of inflation as a whole. but that said, there are a number of categories, a lot of sense difference things that people buy often or at least are very exposed to the prices of, that have gone up by much, much higher numbers. food, cars, energy, and this is automobiles here. and so on one hand their incomes if you as an economist would look like this, have gone up after inflation, but they are still feeling a lot of the
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nbc s sam brock joins us from austin where the water is starting to recede and meteorologist michelle grossman joins us with a look at what s ahead. sam, talk to us about what you re seeing there. i would say this is an aberration. we re seeing four or five once in a thousand year flood events in the last month. this was very much gushing as of 12 hours ago, so much so that it flooded the nearby restaurants and businesses, spilled onto the streets. some folks got stuck in their cars. austin received almost 3 inches of rain in one location in an hour. that was a 70-year-old record. the bigger problem is dallas. we re looking at your screen where you saw folks waist-high in water. dallas received in the neighborhood of 15.3 inches in a 24-hour period. dallas police say a couple hundred water incidents, katy,
mississippi. sam brock is reporting live from austin, texas. good morning. what s the latest there? reporter: jose, good morning. austin got whalloped, not quite on the scale of dallas which saul 15.3 inches in a 24-hour period. out west, now in the south. historic drought followed by historic rainfall. flash floods prompting rescues and in this case, claiming a life. texans wading through waist high water with hundreds of rescues. a stark contrast to the blistering heat and devastating drought punishing the state for months. overnight, eastern texas and louisiana slammed with more heavy rain and flash floods. those same thunderstorms drenching the dallas-fort worth area just 24 hours earlier, dropping more than 14 inches of rain. more precipitation the area has seen in the previous eight