There are times that I begin to despair a bit about all the crap going on all over. I can’t do anything about earthquakes, tsunamis, and nuclear disasters (all in one) but I can address some of the reporting I’ve seen in the TradMed the last couple of days.
Apparently the Beltway Village Idiots Pundits are anxious to stop writing all those bummer articles about the un and underemployed and the destruction of the global economy. I guess it’s just too Debbie Downer for them. So they’ve started the “Everything’s Getting Better” articles. The NY Times and Floyd Norris started with this headline:
Crisis Is Over, but Where’s the Fix?
Of course, without anything being fixed, it’s rather difficult for the “crisis” to be over. And to be fair, Norris does address some of this in the article:
When the financial system began to crumble more than three years ago, the world rushed to rescue it. Country after country went deeply into debt to keep banks afloat and prevent a deep recession from turning into something worse.…snip…
But the world has changed since then. The economic recovery in most developed countries is stuttering at best, and governments are struggling with their own finances. It is time for remorse and second-guessing.
A surprising citadel of that second-guessing is at the International Monetary Fund, where researchers this week concluded that the rescues “only treated the symptoms of the global financial meltdown.”
The researchers, Stijn Claessens and Ceyla Pazarbasioglu, warned that “a rare opportunity is being thrown away to tackle the underlying causes. Without restructuring financial institutions’ balance sheets and their operations, as well as their assets — loans to over-indebted households and enterprises — the economic recovery will suffer, and the seeds will be sown for the next crisis.”
…snip…
In retrospect, it is clear that the bailouts came with too little pain for those responsible. Bondholders who financed banks that failed largely escaped pain. That was true even in Ireland, where the bailout would have led to a default of government debt had Europe not stepped in. It is still not clear how Ireland will pay its national debt, but the bank bondholders did fine.
Norris goes on to point out that one of the problems is the lack of accountability. Imagine that?
Next up with the Let’s Declare Victory Recovery crowd is Ben Smith at Politico, though he projects it on to President Obama as the President’s “dilemma” about when to declare Recovery:
The economy has been growing for 18 months after the longest recession since the Great Depression – but public opinion has yet to fully reflect what economists generally agree are incipient signs of hope. One truism of presidential politics that actually happens to be true is that voters’ perception of the economy trumps just about any other issue, so Obama, acutely aware of both the need to present a successful economic record and the dangers of prematurely declaring victory, is treading very, very carefully.…snip…
Yet despite several quarters of real — if uninspiring — growth, the pessimism remains deep. A Bloomberg National Poll conducted in early March found that more than a third of Americans continue to believe that the U.S. is in a recession, more than a year after it ended, and 63 percent of Americans say the nation is on the “wrong track.”
Yeah. Gee. Now why ever would folks not be inspired with unemployment still hovering around 9% and un and underemployment nearly double that? There are still nearly five applicants for every job opening. But that’s only because all the people without jobs just lack the pertinent skills right? Well, no, that is not right:
Structural unemployment – unemployment stemming from a mismatch of workers’ skills and job requirements – has been cited in mainstream media as the main cause of current, high unemployment. Data from the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), however, suggest that structural unemployment is not what is ailing the economy. The graph below draws on data from the NFIB’s monthly survey from December 2007 (the official start of the recession) to January 2011. Each month, the NFIB asks its sample of small businesses to state the single most important problem facing their business today. Since the recession began, respondents overwhelmingly have cited “poor sales,” suggesting that today’s unemployment is primarily due to a lack of demand. “Quality of labor,” the factor most consistent with structural unemployment, barely made the list.
And this from Yahoo’s The Lookout:
Why the shortage? Many of the people who were laid off from factory jobs and are looking for work don’t have the specialized skills companies are looking for, manufacturing execs say. And they’re not eager to acquire them, because, having been laid off from one manufacturing job, they’re convinced that the whole sector is on the decline. So they don’t want to spend time retraining for jobs that they fear could soon be shipped overseas.Some say those fears are misplaced, arguing that skilled manufacturing jobs are difficult to outsource. But the numbers tell a different story. As we’ve reported, middle-wage, middle-skill jobs — a category that includes both skilled manufacturing jobs and white-collar clerical work — are shrinking rapidly as a percentage of total U.S. jobs, thanks to the effects of offshoring and mechanization. So it may make sense for a worker to decide against spending a year retraining himself to learn these skills.
My bold. Today’s (Saturday, March 11) Hartford Courant had three articles that reflect the reality of things today.
Links to the articles are embedded in the titles but there we have it. UTC is laying off workers and moving the jobs elsewhere. They are doing it because they can (profitable but want more profits) and they reward the CEO with $24M in compensation to oversee these cuts and outsourcing. And the CEO likes to brag about it (from prepared remarks delivered in Mumbai to NASSCOM):
…snip…
Today, we have almost 5,000 employees in India. Our Otis factory in Bangalore has produced more than 30,000 elevators since the 1990s. Our Carrier factory in Gurgaon produces 200,000 air conditioning systems per year. In addition, Pratt & Whitney engines power the aircraft of many Indian airlines, including Air India, Kingfisher, and Indigo – as well as more than 225 turboprop aircraft, business jets and helicopters in India.From our perspective, this is really just the beginning of our relationship with India. Before talking about some of the big macro forces that will shape the global economy over the next decade, I’d like to share just a little data that highlights the size of the opportunities in both the infrastructure and aerospace markets. Last year, UTC’s sales in India were $500M. We expect this to grow to $2.5B by 2015. I’m confident in this level of growth based, in part, on the current per-capita consumption rates. As countries like India become more urban, consumption levels for air conditioners, security systems and air travel will increase toward the levels seen in more mature markets.
…snip…
But surely there are folks in the US working to see US workers employed, building things useful to all citizens, right? Just today there were two more articles on Republican governors attempting to justify killing rail projects within their states. First up is John Kasich in Ohio refusing to put up $52M for a project estimated to cost $128M for streetcars in Cincinnati:
Gov. John Kasich said he can’t justify spending $52 million in state money for Cincinnati’s streetcar – the new governor’s most emphatic statement on what Cincinnati leaders consider a major economic development project.…snip…
Without the state money, the project could be up to $30 million short of the $128 million needed to build a streetcar route from Downtown’s central riverfront to the Uptown communities near the University of Cincinnati. The city could seek that money from Washington or other sources, say backers.
Then the NY Times tried to paint Florida Governor Rick Scott’s rejection of high speed rail funds as a rejection of President Obama’s planning:
The federal government had agreed to pay $2.4 billion of its estimated $2.6 billion in construction costs, railroad companies were vying to build and operate it, and state transportation planners had even dummied up proposed timetables: Train 7092 would depart Tampa at 8:10 a.m. and arrive in Orlando at 9:04 a.m.The fast train was sought, and won, by Florida’s former Republican governor, Charlie Crist. But it was killed last month by his successor, Rick Scott, who joined several other Republican governors in spurning federally financed train projects over fears that their states could be on the hook for future costs. The final nail in its coffin came last week when a Florida court ruled that the new governor could not be forced to accept the federal money and start building it.
Of course, buried w-a-y down in the Times article is this little nugget that negates the article’s premise (and Scott’s justification for canceling):
Last month, Mr. Scott decided to scuttle the project after reading a report by the Reason Foundation that questioned its ridership estimates. The foundation is a prominent libertarian policy research organization that employs several respected transportation analysts, but it gets some of its funding from donors with ties to the oil industry, including foundations related to Koch Industries, which owns oil refineries.“The truth is that this project would be far too costly to taxpayers, and I believe the risk far outweighs the benefits,” Mr. Scott said.
But a state-sponsored ridership study, which was released this week, concluded that the proposed line would actually have been a money-maker from the start.
Regardless of the complaints that Tampa and Orlando are too close together and as cities are “virtually unnavigable without cars,” the line would have been a money maker. It would have eventually been extended south to Miami as well.
So here we sit. Private industry destroys jobs because they can. Governors destroy jobs because of ideology even though those jobs could eventually help people get around cities and states without buying gas, contributing to pollution and auto gridlock. Saving gasoline that has spiked in price once again, chewing up more financial resources that the long term un and underemployed could use on things like, oh food or medical care.
Let’s let the Village Idiots Pundits declare Victory Recovery and move on so they can cover such news as Newt Gingrich’s Patriotic Affairs.
And because I can:
Cross posted from Just A Small Town Country Boy



41 Comments

Yesterday I saw an entire row of stores that were newly closed in my area. Made me feel sad. They can say “recovery” all they like, but I’m not seeing it.
I don’t see it either, in fact I go so far as to say we are in a depression.
Just as an aside, I own that album. It was featured as part of a great soundtrack in the movie “A Walk on the Moon.”
As for recovery, it’s important to differentiate among no recovery, a business cycle recovery and systemic change.
In the narrowest, distorted sense, the US economy will “recover”. We will indeed see some decrease in the unemployment rate leading up to next year’s elections. The ugly, underlying truth, however, is that while more of us will have jobs, we will be rehired at much, much lower rates of pay.
No matter how sick our economic system becomes, the business cycle still exists. As confidence declines, we head for the bottom. When people “get used to despair”, we gradually “recover”. National economies, even really dysfunctional economies, ebb and flow.
But with each business cycle, the overall trend is downward. We get lower highs and lower lows. We no longer have effective mechanisms to try to produce the greatest good for the greatest number. Wealth, and subsequently power, concentrates at the very, very top. While this might be good news for Wall St. and the investor class, this is not good news for 99% of us. At some point, the whole ponzi scheme collapses.
There can be no real recovery until the masses, i.e. the working men and women of the country, hold more power than the investor class. A small bump in employment will likely slow the pace of revolution; it won’t stop it though. Capitalism, like cancer, gives you good days and bad days. In the long run, we need more than symptomatic relief; we need a cure.
Yeah, I have the album as well. Always liked them from when I first heard their music then got to see them live in early ’72 (they opened for Free)
I’m just trying to push back against the noise and try to counter the theme that the unemployment is because of a lack of skills in the “new economy” as well as the soon to come “Oh well, we’ll just have to deal with the ‘new realities’” BS
I think that’s one of the reasons they don’t show all the folks who are underemployed as part of the “official” number as it would blow so much of their BS away.
And all the “self employed” and “independent contractors” who are also not counted.
Yeah, but those stores were not visible to the Village
IdiotsPundits so they don’t really exist.A wonderful example of what you speak is the Flint,MI mayor,et al speaking about GM’s plan to hire 700 more people there yesterday on Al Jazeera English. GM spokesman saying the decision to run a third shift was because “it appears as though the economy is improving”.
Great piece. I follow a couple of republicans on twitter, and one of the programs they are pushing is more visas because we just don’t have enough skilled people to do the jobs here.
It’s all rigged. The politicians and parasites have become cooperating predators.
Calling a Spade a Spade this is just another page in the CLASS WARFARE that is being waged against the 99% of us by the Rich such as the KochRoach brothers… Just saying that is what I am seeing across the nation state by state…
You guys took the words right of my mind. As a liberal and a socialist sympathizer I could not agree with all of the above more.
Tell me if we are 99% how is it possible for 1% to dominate us as if they were gods? I can not find anything super human about the pin-heads at the top, therefore it has to be us. In order for 1% to control 99% of a population at least 20% has to sell out the rest: Police, National Guard, Military. Think about it, when the “head cracking” starts the guys in the suits won’t be doing it.
Bottom line, there is no us! Like the Sunni and the Shiite they will drive a wedge of misdirection between us while they rob us blind. Are the Tea party part of that 99%? About 40% of the country are center right to right wing; the south is chock full of knuckle dragging racist;
And 30% of the Democrats will jump ship at the first sign of trouble. Face my brothers and sisters,
Game over!
Structural unemployment also doesn’t take account of free rider corporations, who face no enforcement of prohibitions on age, sex and other forms of discrimination. That list should be extended to include employer requirements than competitive candidates all be currently employed, a requirement that ensures lengthening unemployment numbers and rigidifying structural unemployment.
The consequences of this and forthcoming massive state-level cuts aren’t even being considered because they haven’t happened yet. God forbid the US ever becomes responsible for disaster prevention; current norms would make Brownie look brilliant.
Outside the Beltway, it’s not happening. Companies have no incentive to hire, and the anti-employee, anti-union mentality is so ingrained that they won’t even when their prospects recover. They’ll outsource offshore or devise any fix that avoids the bane of hiring more people. And hire those over 40 let alone 50, or anyone unemployed more than a year? Fuggedaboutit.
Well Dakine, here is some support for what you are saying from an unexpected source: The WSJ!
~~~Link shortened to preserve margins~~~
Note what Arrends says at #5: The economy today is no bigger, in real terms, than it was three years ago. The true jobs picture remains a disaster, and far worse than the official data will tell you. Wages have been stagnant. Yes, companies have boosted profits — to near-record levels — by slashing costs. But how far can that take you? (Perhaps in the end there will just be one, very productive guy left with a job. It would be Apple’s Steve Jobs, of course. But then, alas, he’d have to buy all those new iPads himself.)
Ha the WSJ calls BS on all the happy talk (or one of their columnists anyway) Whoda thunkit?
Good article. We are not feeling any recovery here. Rather, we pray every day that we do not get sick.
The US government is actively promoting US corporate investment overseas. From the UTC link:
India has one of the fastest growing economies in the world and is a major source of US investment and job outsourcing, and the US embassy is fully involved. The US ambassador to India, 2007: “U.S. firms have already exceeded average annual levels – investing $470 million, with indications that total investment for the year will clear $1 billion.”
In Poland the US ambassador recently told the Poland AmCham that “Promoting investment is a noted priority area.” In faraway Kazakhstan the US State Department conceived and developed a program supported by US taxpayer dollars (via USAID) to increase investment in that country.
The bailouts, financial sheets, loan mis-managements and canceled railway projects pale in comparison to the US-government-sponsored effort to export US investments and jobs to foreign countries.
The State and Commerce Departments are particularly employed in the effort, ambassadors and government commercial officers working diligently to line up US corporations with foreign suppliers, manufacturing and labor. USAID is focusing on training foreign workers with US taxpayer funds.
The American Chambers, affiliated with the US Chamber, are deeply involved. Currently, 115 AmChams in 102 countries are affiliated with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. AmChams pursue trade policy initiatives, make available publications and services, and sponsor a variety of business development programs. Through four regional organizations in Asia, Europe, the Gulf Countries, and Latin America/the Caribbean, the AmChams represent the concerns and interests of the business community at the highest levels of government and business in trade policy development.
http://www.uschamber.com/international/agenda/secure-us-investment-overseas
For three decades, the United States has negotiated bilateral investment treaties (BITs) to protect U.S. investments abroad, and similar provisions are included in bilateral trade agreements. BITs open foreign markets to U.S. investment, uphold contract and property rights, and level the playing field by prohibiting discrimination against U.S. companies and guaranteeing them the same rights and responsibilities as domestic investors. BITs guarantee transparency with respect to investment-related laws and regulations.
Book Salon up with Joey Mogul and Andrea Ritchie’s Queer (In)justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People in the United States hosted by bmaz
From Fortune,via Empire Burlesque:
(from Fortune):
“Obama is much more favorably disposed to arms exports than any of the previous Democratic administrations,” says Loren Thompson, a veteran defense consultant. Or, as Jeff Abramson, deputy director of the Arms Control Association, puts it: “There’s an Obama arms bazaar going on.”…the Obama team has hustled to pave the way for big sales like the Saudi deal; the President himself recently sought to secure a pending $4 billion aircraft deal with India. Obama is also backing a massive push to rewrite the rules that govern arms exports, a process that some say will reduce oversight of U.S. weapons sales.
Obama in his first term is peddling almost 10 times as many weapons of death, destruction, repression and suffering than George W. Bush in his second term at the helm of the world-engulfing American War Machine. This is the reason why our Masters of War gave more money to Obama than to John McCain in 2008. The historic agent of hope and change had obviously clued them in on how well he would serve their sinister interests.
And the bulk of the Obama arms bazaar is going to one of the most repressive, hidebound, extremist regimes on earth: Saudi Arabia. The Saudi royals make the odious Moammar Gaddafy look like Thomas Jefferson in comparison. Yet Obama has gifted them with one of the biggest arms deals in human history. What will the Saudis do with these weapons? They will, like Gaddafy, turn them against their own people should they dare rise up against the ethnic, religious, economic, gender and political repression that stifles them.”
ews for of arms and the man:war profiteersOf Arms and the Man: War-Profiteers and Progressives Make Common …
20 hours ago
With both progressives and war-profiteering plutocrats making common cause on his behalf, the re-election of Barack Obama looks more certain all the time.Empire Burlesque – 2 related articles
►OpEdNews – Article: Of Arms and the Man: War-Profiteers and …Mar 12, 2011 … Opednews.com Progressive, Liberal United States and International News, Opinion, Op-Eds and Politics.
http://www.opednews.com/...
Of Arms and the Man: War-Profiteers and Progressives Make Common …Mar 12, 2011 … Of Arms and the Man: War-Profiteers and Progressives Make Common Cause … And the bulk of the Obama arms bazaar is going to one of the most …
http://www.chris-floyd.com/…/2101-arms-and-the-man-war-profiteering-bolsters- obamas-re-election.html
This is the chief problem with multinational corporations. They seem to be able to get government subsidies from their home countries, but feel no obligation to benefit the taxpayers that provide those subsidies. We’re shoveling money into the maw of a beast that can never be satisfied.
There are hundreds of outsourcing firms which can shift US jobs overseas. The directory Outsourcing.org has 21 categories under accounting alone, with the three leading categories being: Bookkeeping and Tax Services (59 firms), Accountants (47) and Payroll Processing (30). They have seventeen other categories.
Thanks for the wonderfully written piece, dakine.
Investors’ Voice
The Official Voice of the American Chamber of Commerce in Kazakhstan
December 2010
This issue is based on the mid-November AmCham Economic Policy Forum, the Chamber’s successor to the U.S.-Kazakhstan Public-Private Economic Partnership Initiative, which the Chamber headed under a USAID grant this past year. The Forum series continues the annual PPEPI conferences on major issues in Kazakhstan’s business environment as the country seeks to further develop and diversify economically.
**Get that? The American Chamber received a taxpayer-funded USAID grant.**
The November conference focused on Regional Economic Integration, examining the large-scale cross-border infrastructure projects that will enable Kazakhstan and Eurasia (the ‘New Silk Road’) to expand and further develop regional trade links.
Michael Snowden, Consul General at the U.S. Consulate General in Almaty, addressed Regional Stability and Economic Development. . .Ernst & Young in Kazakhstan annually performs a compensation and benefits survey – an increasingly important tool to assess current trends in the labor market. . .The day-long Forum, sponsored by Procter and Gamble, brought together experts from a wide range of institutions. . .AmCham and KPMG collaborated in presenting a Tax Workshop. . . the Almaty Human Resources Working Group featured speakers from Schlumberger and Ambition IBQ who presented on their training and development programs. . .PricewaterhouseCoopers gave a presentation on best practices in performance management. . . The presentation outlined how to set goals and objectives, employee feedback and performance appraisal strategies, and barriers inhibiting performance management programs.
http://www.amcham.kz/
You’re welcome and thank you for reading.
Sadly if the US does not want the arms sale, other “western” nations will jump in and sell anything – and their tech is no longer “generations behind US tech”.
Meanwhile the world knows arms sales are a waste unless they are used – which is why MAD worked for 40 years to produce arms agreements – there was a real possibility of the other guy using those weapons he has bought or made.
In 1950 I was not sure, if the Lord gave me 3 score and 10, that there would be a world around at the end of that period worth living in. Obama is making that cynicism look like optimism via his sellout to to the MIC and the GOP, but it is his arms sale push that puts him into the highest level of his chosen profession – con-man of all that want peace and prosperity for America – and the world..
Re: Gov Lex Luthor’s brilliant move to gut the high-speed rail line b/w Tampa and Orlando (and yes, later to Miami). All it takes is one lost Canadian family missing the exit to Disney World to swerve across 3 lanes of traffic to try to make it, flipping the minivan and/or causing a multi-vehicle pileup. When that happens, I-4, the major artery between Tampa and Orlando, turns into a parking lot for 2 hours. And this happens with sufficient frequency to set your watch by it. So yes, it IS a relatively short distance between Tampa and Orlando, but what the hell good is it to have a multi-lane highway when all you do is sit there like a bump on a log?! Hell, major multi-year road widening projects wrapped up recently on I-4 and parts of I-275 and we’re STILL behind the curve; hellish traffic and gridlock occurring during rush hour on a daily basis.
Tampa’s outgoing mayor Pam Iorio has been working like a woman possessed for the last 8 years trying her damndest to improve public transit in the Tampa area and get more cars off the roads. She has been working hard at the local level to implement a functional light rail transit system for the Bay area and had high hopes of tying the local system to the proposed Tampa-Orlando line that Scott just killed. For her part, she’s made decent progress during her tenure and Tampa’s downtown/urban core areas are slowly coming back to life. One of the contributing factors to that revitalization was the establishment of a streetcar system in the downtown area and beefing up the established bus lines.
Local businesses, governments and educational institutions (chiefly USF) have partnered over the last decade or so to develop a high-tech/bio sciences corridor between Tampa and Orlando in an effort to diversify Florida’s economic base and attract high-paying jobs to the region. It stands to reason that the proposed rail system would have supported such an objective. In addition, the tourism angle alone would probably justify the expense incurred. At one end of the line you have the land of 1000 theme parks and resorts. At the other, you have a major cruise ship port and some of the most beautiful beaches in the world (not to mention Busch Gardens/Adventure Island, Ybor City, Channelside, etc). The whole ordeal just leaves me (and many other Floridians) completely flabbergasted.
True -
but it starts with the CEO and his immediate staff being anti US workers.
The out-sourcing tax advantage can be obtained with minimal loss of jobs in the US (and island corp subsidiary requires between 1 and 5 “local workers” – with some folks the “local workers” to dozens of companies). The US corps have made the decision to go beyond minimal job loss.
The “US Corporations” are now totally against their own US workers, wanting only a few needed to handle the sales of overseas goods to Americans. There is no loyalty – so US tax cuts make no emotional sense. Most new US small business is as distributors of what is made overseas.
Meanwhile the unions can not decide to support Democrats in elections – with the Teachers union in New York being “neutral” in two recent elections. One wonders why the MSM does not report the above until you realize media types have no more courage than the next person afraid of losing their job. It is all very tiring -
And those who took Social Security early because they couldn’t find a job
Well said – Tampa’s 12% unemployment is touted as “good relative to Tallahassee”. Yet the Clearwater beaches (and “Honeymoon beach/Caladesi Island”) are rated the number one beaches in the world year after year. I love Hawaii – but Clearwater area beaches are quite competitive. Real Estate prices in the area has dropped 60% in 5 years.
Hard to see the reason the GOP want to destroy jobs in America by killing any improvement in the current train service – must be like with Newt and infidelity – it is because they love this country so much.
Yeah I wrote this post a couple of weeks ago after Scott first announced he was not accepting the high speed rail money and quoted Iorio’s response
And then all we hear is the incessant whiiiiing about the hiiiighhh taxes that these poor pathetic unforunate corporations have to pay, and it so unfaaaair, etc, ad nauseum. But a significant portion (I mean: significant & not just the tea party) “buy” the nation that corporate taxes are *insanely* high, and that’s what’s “forcing” the corporations to off-shore jobs, etc.
Far too high a percentage of the overall population has bought a line of bull about this and truly believes it with all their hearts. Try talking about the “real” reality of corp taxes, loopholes & incentives to your trad-Dem friends. I can almost *guarantee* that they’ll start arguing with you about how the corp are being robbed blind by all these unfair taxes.
The propoganda machine works quite well on so-called “liberals,” too, in my experience.
The media is a wholly owned subsidiary of Elite, Inc, and as such, their sole job is propoganda, not “news.”
I don’t know much at all about the high-speed rail project in the Tampa-Orlando area, but what you write *makes sense* to me in terms of having the rail installed.
Why is this worthwhile, potentially jobs-creating project being scuttled? Who knows? But there are days when I feel like there’s a lot of orchestration behind the scenes to force this nation to its knees – or at least the lower 98% – including having the infrastructure get crappier & less safe, etc.
Why? Have you ever been to a third world country?? IMO, that’s what the elites want this country to be like. Crumbling infrastructure, hardly any decent-paying jobs (or just: hardly any jobs), things falling apart, people starving & barely hanging on… just like how India was/is (and elsewhere). The Elites rule, and how!!! The rest of us: ground under, tired, demoralized, sick, dying without care, etc. No ability to resist.
Maybe those Floridians who voted for your current governor will have second thoughts before the next election. We can but hope.
What baffles me is that if that’s what they really want, and I’ll agree it certainly looks that way, how can they possibly think that the end result will be beneficial to them or their kids in coming years? Are they incapable of looking even 50 years ahead?
I personally refuse to stake any claim of ownership by calling Scott “my” governor – he is merely the governor of the state in which I currently reside
Understandable. I’m not eager to claim ownership of my state’s governor either.
OT (but not really)
I have just reread the Ed Muskie for President 1972 Campaign Brochure entitled
‘A New Beginning for America’ for a graphic project. is there a time warp?
Here is the introduction in short:
“There are only two kinds of politics, the politics of fear, and the politics of trust.”
Here are the paragraph headings. Change a name of a war, raise the percentage of the unemployed, add a few names like Koch and you could publish the same 40 year old document as new.
The New Beginning means an end to the war in Vietnam, right away.
The New Beginning means Open Government.
The New Beginning means refusing to accept 6% unemployment.
The New Beginning means no more campaign financing by Special Interests.
The full text of the campaign brochure: http://www.4president.org/brochures/1972/muskie1972brochure.htm
FWIW I left being a part of the uncounted unemployed a bit over a month ago. Had been without a paycheck for 3+ years (I’d done consulting work for a startup company, was paid in stock which has no value since they went bankrupt).
Company I’m working for is hiring right now – there are 8 open positions I know about with nice referral bonuses, and a lot more open positions.
Not to say this is true everywhere. Just saying that there are some glimmers of recovery out there. I also know in 2010 I had a lot of on site multiple hour interviews. That did not happen in 2009, again suggesting there has some job market recovery.
Glad to see that Northern California is coming back a bit, and that you already have had your 1 month anniversary at the new job.
My daughter, a single mom with a similar background, but tied because of the kids to Mass, lost her job, and is looking. Seems quiet on the job front to me – but then the last time I changed jobs was in the Clinton years – and it only took 30 days to get a good job back then.
Corporate-Owned government will not promote development because that would compete with corporate owned-business. Do I have to explain this?
* Gov won’t create solar cells, because GE makes solar cells
* GOv won’t make electric cars because GM makes electric cars
* Gov won’t hire doctors because health corporatations hire doctors.
ETC.