Last Pre-Election Jobs Report Released 225
September's jobs report notes a gain of 96,000 jobs, and a downward revision for August from 144,000 to 128,000. The unemployment rate held steady at 5.4% (about even to Nixon's and Clinton's when they were reelected), while another 236,000 jobs were added in a periodic revision to the total, leaving Bush at a deficit of 585,000 jobs from where he started. If he averages 150,000 jobs for the last four months of his term, he will net positive job growth. The effects of the recent hurricanes were not possible to determine at this point, the report said. This will surely be featured prominently in tonight's second Presidential debate (starting at 9 p.m. Eastern).
What motivates people (Score:2, Insightful)
The rest of us with jobs will just decide our canidate based upon other issues.
Re:What motivates people (Score:4, Insightful)
damn straight, you tell 'em leftie! (Score:2)
There's a forty something guy who works the window at a Wendy's near me. It hurts to see the look on his face sometimes. His affect is flat.. he's courteous in his tone but yo
Re:It's hard work flipping burgers. (Score:2)
Or an adult who lost his/her job and has no insurance. Or a kid who's parents can't afford insurance.
>>A highly motivated adult manages a fast food restaurant and hires high school and college kids.
Right.. because as we all know, new jobs are magically created every time someone is ready to work. And no one is ever unemployed because of a lack of available jobs. Right? Right?
So we should open more burger joints? (Score:2)
Cool. And here I thought the problem might be difficult.
We can all make enough money and get health care by managing burger joints. And selling ad space to each other.
I'm sorry, didn't that concept die back in the 90's?
Re:You're just making stuff up now. (Score:2)
Re:You're just making stuff up now. (Score:2)
For starters, he's full of shit. It's idiocy to imply that anyone who works fast food and isn't young is not motivated. And neither you nor he have the balls to go into a McDonalds and say what you say here.
QUIT TROLLING!
Re:You're just making stuff up now. (Score:2)
Oh thanks thats insightful..
It's idiocy to imply that anyone who works fast food and isn't young is not motivated.
And its equally stupid to assume that because someone works in fast food they are *that* was what was being asked how is either one a vaild statement?
And neither you nor he have the balls to go into a McDonalds and say what you say here.
And what exactly have I said? I have said that if a person is not going above and beyond to improve their situation they
Re:His claim is false. (Score:2)
Re:His claim is false. (Score:2)
WTF is your point? "Are they motivated adults?" Of course they're motivated. We're losing manufacturing and technology jobs and they're being replaced with fast food jobs. So either motivated people are working fast food, or unmotivated people are working fast food and motivated people are unemployed, which is even worse.
Get lost, troll.
Re:His claim is false. (Score:2)
Having a job does not mean youre motivated. I dont think that 90% of our population is motivated do you?
we're losing manufacturing and technology jobs and they're being replaced with fast food jobs. So either motivated people are working fast food, or unmotivated people are working fast food and motivated people are unemployed, which is even worse.
Slow down take a breath and think for a second... Did I ever say if someone work
Re:His claim is false. (Score:3, Interesting)
But lets say that two burger flipper get married lets even say they only work 36 huors a week so they dont count as full time hires.
The lowest Minimum wage in the nation is 5.15 (http://www.aflcio.org/yourjobeconomy/minimumwage / staterates.cfm) That couple makes 19 thousand a year which is above the poverty line so good for them. In some states
Re:No. Let's look at a single person living on $9, (Score:2)
Your spin is weak. (Score:2)
Re:Your spin is weak. (Score:2)
Re:They are working a crap job. That's motivated. (Score:2)
Re:Fine. You can explain raising kids on min. wage (Score:2)
If a guy flips burgers and then goes home an studies to make his life better he is motivated, if he goes home and watches TV he is not motivated.
Look at Edwards latest pathetic "my daddy worked in a mill" story, it was about how his fater was up late at night learning math that was a motivated man and it rubbed off on his sun (no matter how much I disa
Re:John Edwards' Dad rose to middle management. (Score:2)
Re:Camoflage and smoke-screens (Score:2, Informative)
The people who need health insurance cannot get health insurance.
Sorry for the confusion KTD (Score:2)
KTD, you're the man. b-baggins is the one I was calling unpatriotic.
BTW I posted anon because I'm sick of getting modded -1 for expressing liberal views. I'm double sick of seeing pretentious conservative morons getting +2 for being republican spin jockeys.
As for Bush... grrrrrrr. I hate that mofo.
Don't Worry... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Don't Worry... (Score:2)
Funny, but sounds a bit dated.
Also, your sig...
(Though more likely it's Draft '(never) [slashdot.org])
Re:Don't Worry... (Score:2)
As for Little Green Foozballs...no I don't visit white supremacist sites, thankyouverymuch.
And BTW it's more like Bush '00, draft RIGHT NOW [military.com]
/here come the OT downmods
Re:Don't Worry... (Score:2)
They're calling for a Muhammad Luther to nail some objections to the door of the mosque then?
Re:Don't Worry... (Score:2)
I think that's exactly it, give or take. The guy who runs the site isn't a muslim himself, but he does point out and link to stories that indicate that some cultural reform is needed. (Not that that's the only topic of the site, mind you.)
Re:Don't Worry... (Score:3, Interesting)
Dated? Cheney made his Ebay comment on September 9, 2004, just under a month ago.
For comparison, Gore's made his unfortunate "inventing the Internet" gaffe on March 9, 1999. I don't remember anyone saying that one was "dated" in 2000.
on the morning news radio broadcast... (Score:2, Interesting)
though i expect construction jobs to really pick up there in the next few months.
Re:on the morning news radio broadcast... (Score:4, Interesting)
From the D.C. Post
"Many economists thought that the onslaught of successive hurricanes over the past month might seriously skew the results for September, but the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics, which issues the jobs reports, found otherwise.
"At the national level," the BLS said, "the severe weather appears to have held down employment growth, but not enough to change materially the Bureau's assessment of the employment situation in September." "
Re:on the morning news radio broadcast... (Score:2)
But I never said anything was truth.
I only posted a quote from the source that was directly disputing what I thought you were saying.
Jobwatch.org (Score:2, Informative)
Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:5, Informative)
The entire economy problem can be traced back to the Dot-Coms. There is no 'quick fix' after a bubble bursts. If you don't have an economics degree, don't start spouting crap.
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
I was very hard on greenspan in the late 90's and early 2k but I have to say that lately I have seen why he is Chairing the Fed and I am not. Hopefully other areas of the economy will recover before housing goes but I am already seenig it start to pop.
My wife and were looking for a house but at almost 200K for anything half
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:3, Insightful)
Quick, look over there! (Score:2)
Oh, I see. You're entitled to your opinion, and to slander and bully anyone who doesn't share it. But people who disagree, they don't have a right to their opinion and must be wrong no matter what. It must be nice to live in a fantasy land.
Re:Quick, look over there! (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not really a prediction at this point...nearly any newspaper you pick up, or any Democrat you listen to, openly blames Bush for the economy and job loss. It's partisan rhetoric, since there's very little effect presidential actions have on the economy until at least half way through their term. Their economic policies and budgets don't go into affect until almost a year after they're elected.
That being said, this is the 13th con
Re:Quick, look over there! (Score:2)
That's funny, I haven't heard anyone openly blame bush, as in "Bush is the reason the economy is down". What I have heard is that the economy's performance is likely to be a major issue in the election, and that it reflects poorly on bush.
As for partisan rhetoric, conservatives are blatantly, continuously partisan, crossing every line and redrawing a few to boot, while bashing liberals f
Re:Quick, look over there! (Score:2)
It's still continuing today- only construction and retail have seen gains, and neither one of those pays as much as manufacturing or IT did.
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
I'm not spouting crap, I'm merely parroting whats already been said. Big difference.
(I don't see why people think the President has that much control of the economy. I think a good sum of people have been spoiled by 'irrational exuberence'.)
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
The President has some influence on who gets taxed and how much, and that has a serious effect on the economy. IMOCertainly there are other factors, but I wouldn't say he has no influence at all.
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
While you are correct in a round-about way, it takes an act of Congress to pass any type of tax legislature.
As to either of the candidate's positions, do people really think that business owners (AKA Employers) should be taxed more? Aren't those the people that we depend on to create jobs?
Where in Constitution does it say that it's the government's job to create jobs and make sure people have
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
Matrix:While you are correct in a round-about way, it takes an act of Congress to pass any type of tax legislature.
I said the Prez has "some" influence, so there is nothing "round about" about it, unlees you think you can dispute that some way.
Matrix:As to either of the candidate's positions, do people really think that business owners (AKA Employers) should be taxed more?
If they
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
No need to back it up, as I was not trying to state facts.
It is my opinion that if rich folks are taxed at the same rate or even higher, it could help out with eliminating the deficit, and hence help the economy.
Oversimplified, yes, but it "might" help.
Thank you for trying to tell me what I don't understand, but your explanations aren't exactly illuminating.
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:3, Insightful)
Also remember that it takes time to recover. For some irrational reason, people expect the economy to stabalize and grow overnight. It just doesn't happen that way. I'm certainly no economist, but to believe that our economy can be turned around in an instant in the wake of events like 9/11 and our current invol
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:3, Insightful)
Putting aside the useless comment. In a nation with a GDP of nearly 11 Trillion Dollars what exact impact do you thing 120 Billion would have?Seriously I have heard Kerry say he would use that money to provide health care, college education, more on homeland security (the name still gives me the willies). The fact is for all the Vietnam comparisions the amount of mony being spent on this war is *nothing*.
What about the immense budget deficit (spending w
You've confused your numbers. (Score:2)
You're confusing GDP with tax revenues. The are NOT the same.
Spending that $120 Billion on extending the unemployment benefits would have done far more to help this country than going after some third world tinpot dictator.
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:4, Informative)
Look Im not voting for Bush but I think he has done a decent job with the economy, the bubble burst during the Clinton administration, and then we had 9/11 but if you look at
http://www.dallasfed.org/data/data/us-charts.pdf
It been pretty clear that with the exception of trade the economy has been gorwing at a steady rate. GDP has grown at a bit more than 3% a year for his term.
On the whole unemployment thing what is left to fix, its at the same place it was in 1996 under the all wise Bill Clinton.. Heck he has done even better, in 1996 September Unemployment was 6.7%, in september 2004 it is at 5.4! (http://www.calmis.ca.gov/file/lfhist/cal$hlf.txt)
But hey why runi a good bush bashing with facts right?
Unemployment (Score:2)
Uh, no, not really. The 5.4% number is not counting all those people out of work for longer than six months. I read one estimate that the true number of Americans of working age who do not have jobs is closer to 10%. Anecdotally, I can believe it. I know people in recent years
Re:Unemployment (Score:2)
Nor did Bill CLintons 6.7% whats your point?
I read one estimate that the true number of Americans of working age who do not have jobs is closer to 10%.
Source?
Anecdotally, I can believe it. I know people in recent years who tooks many, many months to find jobs.
Oh you have an Anecdote, well that cinches it.. We dont need any one to actually study the economy any more because we have you anecd
Re:Unemployment (Score:2)
In recent years I've spoken with many co-workers and former co-workers as well as industry headhunters. Every last one of them felt the job market today i
Re:Unemployment (Score:2)
But you have no basis for that point, the two numbers measured the exact same thing in the exact same way.
Re:Unemployment (Score:2)
But not in the same working world circumstances, and that makes all the difference in the world.
Re:Unemployment (Score:2)
Re:Unemployment (Score:2)
Re:Unemployment (Score:3, Interesting)
What, did the laws of statistics change during that time? If you're claiming that the margins of errors are different, please produce those margins of error!
Every last one of them felt the job market today is terrible.
In the mid-90's we were on the rising slopes of a bubble. In comparison the job market today *IS* terrible. Likewise, a body temperature of 98.6 seems like a hyperthermia if you compare it to the fever
Re:Unemployment (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
As for the tax cuts, I benefitted from them and merrily bought a new Dell laptop with my tax return. And I'm not 'rich'
To say 9/11 et al didnt effect the economy is naive, but I feel that most of the ripples are largely confined to the oil market right now.
As for job replacement, sadly, we are just moving into a global economy.
Prisonse
Re:Before all you people start bashing Bush (Score:2)
That's nice. I used my tax cut to cover the increased cost of my health care program (Which went up $1000) and my increased energy costs.
My $600 refund was gone before the check reached my mailbox.
And with a $500 billion deficit this year, getting a tax refund is feels like getting a $600 check from my credit card company...
Slashdot editor commentary (Score:2)
He needs closer to 300K per month to break even... (Score:3, Informative)
While 585,000 / 4 = ~150,000 that isn't the entire story. The economy needs to have about 150K jobs created per month just to keep up with population growth and the number of new people entering the job market(s). If Bush only averages 150,000 / month for the rest of the year he'll still end his first (and hopefully only) term with a net loss of over 1/2 million jobs. That would (will) make him the first President in 70 years to end a term with less jobs than when he started.
To reduce his .5 million jobs deficit Bush needs to have closer to 300,000 jobs created in each of the next four months. That's a number he hasn't been able to achieve at any point of the last 3.66 years. I doubt he can do it now, as his plan for the economy was never anything that sitmulated job growth.
And I see a downward trend in jobs added... (Score:2)
We are entering the fourth quarter, and the last strong job growth was Q2. Looks like the recovery is fading to me. It probably has something to do with $50+/barrel oil.
Nope (Score:5, Insightful)
Uh, no. Since you need about 150,000 jobs added each month just to keep up with a growing population, if he averages 150,000 jobs for the last four months of his term he will merely tread water. At this point, there is absolutely no chance that Bush can avoid being the first president since Hoover in the Great Depression to have had fewer jobs at the end of his term than when he began. With a growing population, that ain't easy to do. Just keep up with the population growth and you will wind up with more jobs at the end of four years. Which is why through recession after recession over the last seventy years no other president has managed to pull off such a shoddy record on job growth.
Naturally whatever the number is, it gets trumpeted by the incumbent. "96,000 new jobs were added last month! That shows my economic policies are working!" Garbage. It shows that the job market is going backward, not even keeping up with equilibrium.
Re:Nope (Score:2)
most businesses love peace ... (Score:2, Insightful)
War is a good stimulant as it pulls more out of people for a brief time, and it jump starts the war-industry establishment. But, over a long period of time, like line after line of coke, it starts doing damage. There is nothing really prof
Re:most businesses love peace ... (Score:2)
exactly.
Also, the number of working age people increases by a million a year, bush is -4.5 million jobs by any fair reckoning. Everyone else manages to create jobs, through world wars, cold wars, whatever. Only bush failed in the last 70 years, it is his fault. In addition, look at the budget deficit, notice that it always goes down (as a percentage of GDP) during democratic presidencies (since carter at least), and up during republicans, it's not an accident. The jobs record of bush would be even worse i
Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:5, Insightful)
But it's stupid. The President has no control over the unemployment rate. All he can do is ask Congress to lower taxes or let them raise taxes. Maybe he can give a speech.
The rest is cyclical. From where I'm sitting the economy is doing fine, even though the government still takes too much money out of it.
If I lost my job, I wouldn't blame the President, I'd blame the bum in the mirror.
Don't understand much about how the world works eh (Score:2)
Things like extra tariffs on certain products. Working with foreign goverments on trade deals. Investing in education to make certain that the companies still employing in your country can actually hire the people they need. Investing in healthcare so people can be cured fast
Re:Don't understand much about how the world works (Score:2)
Re:Don't understand much about how the world works (Score:3, Insightful)
You're right, this situation is not just the president's fault.
Responsibility lies with the Republican-controlled Congress, the Republican-controlled Senate, and the president.
Remember to vote against all three.
Re:Don't understand much about how the world works (Score:2)
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
Petrol prices aside, he's also lowering taxes the wrong way. It's all about who you lower the taxes for. Someone really rich who already owns everything he needs getting a 20000$ tax reduction won't be spending that tax reduction. He'll put it in his caymen island account or something. However 100 lower to middle class people getting a 200$ tax break will use the tax break to get the urging things in their life
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:4, Informative)
The Chinese. They're buying more of it than ever before.
Petrol prices aside, he's also lowering taxes the wrong way.
It makes a lot more sense if you look at it as percentages of income, not as raw dollars. For instance, if I make $200,000 a year and get a $2000 tax rebate, that's only 1%. If you make $5,000 and get a $200 tax rebate, that's 4%. Suddenly it doesn't look like the rich are getting all the money back, does it?
Of course, some real numbers are worth taking a look at. Bush only cut the Federal Income tax, which is the only part we're concerning ourselves for the purposes of this discussion. Did you know that the top 1% of the country makes 17.53% of the money in the country, but pays 33.89% of the Federal Income tax? (Note: To be in the top 1%, you must make more than $293,000 or so.) The top 50% of the country makes 86.19% of the money, but pays 96.03% of the Federal Income taxes. What are the bottom 50% of the population doing, if they're not reporting their income and paying tax on it?
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
If you graph salary v. % of income spent on taxes, it's really low as you approach that middle 50% but as you get up to the top 25% it goes up (no surprise here).
What is surprising is that as you go lower the federal taxes as a percent of income go up as well. Much of this can be attributed to payroll taxes. I'd like to see that problem get fixed; it's not fair no matter how you cut it.
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
What? you have to be kidding, I was under the impression that payroll taxes cover things like Social security. Social security is supposed to work like this: you put something in you get something out. My SS benefit will be the exact same as someone who makes half of what I do, to you this is not fair? No instead we should more focus on income re-distribution.
If you graph salary v. % of incom
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
I'm not sure I understand what you are saying, but here goes: Social Security and unemployment benefits are giant horribly run pyramid schemes that have no place in America. Medicare and Medicade (also financed through payroll taxes) as poorly run as they are do have some societal benefits (not that there arn't other ways to get them), but, like publicly funded schooling, are technically a form of wealth
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
Than do away with is all together dont shift the cost into income tax
Reguardless on where you stand on any of this, it is unfair for someone who is poor to spend a larger percentage of their income on taxes then someone in the middle class.
Except SS is not a tax like income is a tax. The government can do whatever it wants with income taxes, SS is marked for a retirement fund in which I will
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
That's what I'd like to see, but I'm realistic, that's not happening anytime soon.
SS is not a tax
A Tax is (according to Mirriam-Webster) "a charge usually of money imposed by authority on persons for public purposes". Social Security is supposedly for the public good and it's certainly a public program. By that definition, it's definately a tax; especially after you consider that even the poorest Americans get out less then they pu
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
Note that social security is not for public purposes it provides no service for the general public, I pay money in that I will get out.. So no by that definition it is most definatly not a tax.
My point is that Bush wanted to cut taxes across the board so he opened up a new low 10% bracket, and reduced the percentage of federal revenue comming from the middle class (by increasing the percentage of federal revenue comming in fr
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
Now my assertion was that trickle up economy is what works, not trickle down. Lowering taxes for the rich only make rich people richer. Poorer people are the ones who spend their tax credits not the rich people.
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
Most likely they will buy stock, or invest. Rich people dont throw money in their matress they invest it which create puts the tax cut money right back into the economy.
However 100 lower to middle class people getting a 200$ tax break will use the tax break to get the urging things in their life, like changing that timing belt or fixing the crack in the foundation. Heck I know I c
Re:Why are jobs a Presidential issue? (Score:2)
Yes he does. (Score:2)
My oh my. I guess the President doesn't also do things like sign subsidies and tariffs and such. What about the budget?
The President asks for specific taxes and his budget spends that money in specific ways. Both of those affect the job situation.
I should remind you of what Ross said about a giant sucking sound if NAFTA was approved.
question for anti-Bush people (Score:2, Interesting)
Bush's deficit spending on defense has created jobs (at the expense of accumulated debt of course). But I'm surious to hear what you anti-Bush people think. Specifically, what has Bush done to mismanage the econo
Re:question for anti-Bush people (Score:5, Informative)
Fortunatly, that is not the case, foreign investment in the United States takes many forms (not just the purchase of American hard assets, but also of American securities, and currency), and often more than offsets the trade imbalance. One of the better theories on the 90's boom was that a weak international economy (compared to the US) + international respect for the only remaining Superpower + Clinton's fiscal responsibility all mixed together to create a bonanza of investment (so much, that we ended up with a crisis of bad investments, but that's another story).
That this flow of foreign money has been greatly reduced is, no doubt related to 9/11, but many would argue that the reduction is because of how we reacted, not because of the event itself. Our response was the beginning of an internatational disillusionment that continues to this day. The high rate of exchange between the Euro and the Dollar is a quick way to see the effect. The exchange is where it's at because of the balance of people who would rather hold their investments in the Euro vs people who want to hold their investments in dollars. There's even some evidence that Bush is actually directly pushing for this imbalance because he mistakenly believes that manufacturing is the core of the economy and is trying to boost that sector. To many, it would just be another example of how he's out of touch with reality. Anyway, I'm Am Not An Economist, but I am a Democrat, so take my analysis with the usual grain of salt.
Re:question for anti-Bush people (Score:3, Informative)
It all boils down to this: Bush wanted lower taxes. He lowered all the brackets that were in effect in 2000 and added a 10% bracket (details and comparisons can be found here [moneychimp.com]). This ends up 'costing' the nation money, because the revenue that would have come from the additional taxes isn't going to be there. Whenever you see 'Bush's tax cut cost $X.YZ billion over 10 years', that's what it me
Re:question for anti-Bush people (Score:2)
Complete with pretty pictures
--trb
Am I the only one who doesn't believe the numbers? (Score:2)
I have no clue what the real numbers are for any of this. But they aren't anything like what is published as trut
Re:Am I the only one who doesn't believe the numbe (Score:2)
Re:Am I the only one who doesn't believe the numbe (Score:2)
I'm 40. I didn't make over $40,000 until I was 35. People are making more money earlier, so I guess the economy really is improving!
Free Will and the Economy and the President (Score:3, Interesting)
There are two ways to view the world: I am a captain of my fate, or I am a robot with its fate predetermined by people I don't even know (God, the President, or some secret Jewish conspiracy).
I know which philosophy I adhere to. That's why when the dot com bubble burst, and I found myself on the streets with a new child and without cash, I went to find a job and eventually found a well-paying one, albeit not in the industry. Now I am back working at a major dot com and I am enjoying life.
I can't imagine what drives people to make themselves slaves to someone else's will. How does the president create or destroy job? Has he ever interviewed for you? Has he hired you? Does he write secret messages to your potential employer "Hey, don't hire this guy. We don't want the economy to grow right now." Of course not.
And the economy dictating your lifestyle? That's silly. I think of the economy as the weather. Sure, I won't sow wheat in the fall, but then again, I wouldn't sow in the summer either. The economy has its cycles, and rather than wake up every morning and look out the window to see which way the economic winds are blowing, how about you learn a bit on the subject and figure out which way the winds will blow tomorrow so you are ready for it? It really isn't that complicated of a subject. All you need to understand is what Adam Smith wrote down in the "Wealth of Nations" and then how to identify the conditions he described in today's environment.
I totally support Bush. But if Kerry gets elected, or even Nader, or even Stalin for instance, it won't effect my fate. I am a captain of my fate. I don't let others dictate which way I go.
I think that is a major difference between Bush and Kerry supporters. I am hiring Bush for a job. He is going to go take care of the terrorist problem so that I don't have to worry about that so much. Kerry supporters are looking to Kerry as a savior. Kerry is supposed to correct all of life's ills and prescribes a panacea to the old, sick, young, and uneducated. They want to put Kerry in charge, but I want to hire Bush to do a job. That's a big difference in perspective.
Re:Free Will and the Economy and the President (Score:2, Insightful)
so that I don't have to worry about that so much.
The President has had nearly a term in office since the Sept. 11th outrage.
If you think the degree to which he has removed the
terrorist problem is acceptable then you should vote
for him.
If, however, you believe that during his term he
should have been able to utterly destroy Al Quida
then I'd like to suggest an alternative [johnkerry.com]
Al Quida is still in existence.
Q.E.D.
How is this calculated? (Score:2)
Damned statistics at work. (Score:2, Troll)
"Total employment was about unchanged in September at 139.5 million, and the employment-population ratio--the proportion of the population age 16 and over with jobs--was little changed at 62.3 percent. Over the month, the civilian labor force was essentially unchanged at 147.5 million. The labor force participation rate was 65.9 percent in September and has been at or near that level since late last year. (See table A-1.)"
Bush and his apologists can spin these numbers any way th
Re:Damned statistics at work. (Score:3, Interesting)
Not quite.
Actually I was doing quite a bit of hiring in 1996 and jobs were not falling off trees. In silicon valley I could find a LOT of VERY qualified applicants in 1996.
It didn't get difficult until 98 or so. And then the CISCO's etc. of the world were snatching up anyone who even knew how to do simple math.
From 1998 to 2000 I was seeing applicant's resumes who had no business doing anything but retail. And then I'm not su
How much was from .BOMB? (Score:2)
Damien
This growth is very unsustainable (Score:2)
In many ways things like healthcare and gas prices are exa
Re:of note (Score:2)
3 is ok, as long as we don't legalize nasty stuff like meth
4 - show me a mainstream candidate that is L33T enough to manage his own PC, let alone know the ins and outs of Microsoft.
Re:of note (Score:2)