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#1
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On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 23:48:17 GMT, "NOYB" wrote:
By the time your message gets out, we'll have 12 solid months of increases in GDP and the employment rate. By then, nobody will be paying attention to the economy. Is that the same as Iraq won't be a quagmire, we won't have a huge deficit, well get OBL............... Let's see it when it happens. bb |
#2
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bb wrote:
On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 23:48:17 GMT, "NOYB" wrote: By the time your message gets out, we'll have 12 solid months of increases in GDP and the employment rate. By then, nobody will be paying attention to the economy. Is that the same as Iraq won't be a quagmire, we won't have a huge deficit, well get OBL............... Let's see it when it happens. bb My feeling is that as time marches on, we'll find out how more and more of Bush's War Against Iraq was based upon nothing more than the expediency of his attempts to bump himself up in the polls and get re-elected. Bush is spending money in Iraq that could be better spent rebuilding the crumbling infrastructure of America. I suspect the odds are pretty close to even that some of our new friends in Iraq will launch a devastating attack on American servicemen there, and that several hundred of them will be killed. I hope it doesn't happen, but the Bu****es have lowered statesmanship and diplomacy to the lowest level in generations, and anything is possible now. Bush really is a simp. I'll bet he STILL cannot point out Iraq or Afghanistan on a geopolitical globe with the names of countries deleted. -- * * * email sent to will *never* get to me. |
#3
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September 2nd, eh? Do you get advance copies of the NYT's or something?
BTW--the article by Greenhouse was entitled "Looks Like a Recovery, Feels Like a Recession"...and it was in *today's* NYT (Sept. 1). "NOYB" wrote in message m... By the time your message gets out, we'll have 12 solid months of increases in GDP and the employment rate. By then, nobody will be paying attention to the economy. "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... U.S. workers' fears rise as jobs are lost and pay lags Steven Greenhouse NYT Tuesday, September 2, 2003 Even though the U.S. recession officially ended nearly two years ago, polls show that American workers are feeling stressed and shaky because the United States continues to register month after month of job losses and wages are rising more slowly than inflation. . One factor above all has fueled the insecurity: The country has lost 2.7 million jobs over the past three years. The recovery has been so weak since the recession ended in November 2001 that the nation's payrolls are down by one million jobs from the time economic growth resumed. The current economic expansion, in fact, is the worst on record in terms of job growth. The average length of unemployment, more than 19 weeks, spiked this summer to its highest level in two decades. . "American workers are doing very badly," said Carl van Horn, director of the Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers University in New Jersey. "All the trends are in the negative direction. There's high turnover, high instability, a reduction in benefits and a declining loyalty on the part of employers. At the same time, expectations for productivity and quality are going up. It's a bad situation from a worker's standpoint." . In August, a Gallup poll found that 81 percent of Americans thought that now was a bad time to try to find a quality job, equaling the highest percentage found since Gallup began regularly asking the question two years ago. . A new survey by the University of Michigan found that while workers were showing somewhat less fear about unemployment, they were concerned that their wage increases were shrinking. . "Most workers expect the economy to improve, but at the same time they don't expect to have their income or their wages increase," said Richard Curtin, director of surveys at the university. "It's a very untypical environment." . Weekly earnings for all private-sector workers, after accounting for inflation, have slid for the past seven months and are down 0.2 percent so far this year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has reported. A new study by the Economic Policy Institute, a research group financed by foundations and labor unions, found that hourly after-inflation wages had slipped for most workers. But Labor Secretary Elaine Chao predicted that job creation would soon improve and, along with it, worker optimism. . "We're on the road to recovery, but obviously the president and this administration are deeply committed to accelerating the recovery so that everyone who wants to work can find a job," Chao said in an interview. . A survey of 1,015 adults conducted by the Heldrich Center at Rutgers in June found that 18 percent of all American workers reported having been laid off in the past three years. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- - I have a feeling this theme is going to be hit over and over and over and over, until every American worker realizes that the general malaise of our society today is the responsibility of the idiot in the White House. -- * * * email sent to will *never* get to me. |
#4
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On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 23:48:17 +0000, NOYB wrote:
By the time your message gets out, we'll have 12 solid months of increases in GDP and the employment rate. By then, nobody will be paying attention to the economy. Perhaps they should start by giving their fund raising jobs to Americans. http://www.business-standard.com/arc...310103.016.asp |
#5
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Perhaps they should start by giving their fund raising jobs to Americans.
http://www.business-standard.com/arc...310103.016.asp That's a classic. I wonder if the fund raising pitch will include a line or two about the brand spanking new priority just announced by the GOP, jobs. |
#6
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"Harry Krause" wrote in message
... Bush really is a simp. I'll bet he STILL cannot point out Iraq or Afghanistan on a geopolitical globe with the names of countries deleted. "The only thing I know about Slovakia is what I learned first-hand from your foreign minister, who came to Texas."-To a Slovak journalist as quoted by Knight Ridder News Service, June 22, 1999. Bush's meeting was with Janez Drnovsek, the prime minister of Slovenia. |
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