Bowfinger
Lifer
- Nov 17, 2002
- 15,776
- 392
- 126
Right. Did you and Sir Cad skip Reading 101 together? Just curious.Originally posted by: dirtboy
You're right, you don't generate the numbers the news does and you misinterpret them day in and day out.Originally posted by: Bowfinger
Sorry dirtboy, you're in over your head. I'd suggest you not call others "economically challenged" until you learn something about the subject at hand.
We aren't the one who generate the jobs numbers. The government does the research for us. Since Bush took office, we've lost about three milllion jobs net. In the last three months, we've gained back less than 10% of them. If Microsoft hired "10 billion American's [sic]", it would show up in the government's figures whether it made a headline or not.
Moreover, not all jobs are created equal. I don't have any links handy, but the consensus is that many of the jobs lost are good, high-paying jobs; most of the jobs gained are low-paying, limited benefits Wal-Mart type jobs. People may become employed again, but they are often under-employed, earning less and often going without benefits. Let's hope this trend is reversed once we get a good, solid, jobs-based recovery going.
Perhaps you should learn something, because the consensus is that you are economically challenged.
The problem with your little rant is you keep changing your story. You first claimed we are misinformed about jobs creation because we get our data from "headlines"; your premise being the media loves bad news so they don't talk about hiring. When I pointed out that I'm using the government's employment numbers -- the same numbers you use to show recent signs of recovery -- you now claim the "news" generates the numbers and we are "misinterpreting" them. The government generates the numbers, not the "news", you used them too, and I am apparently better able to interpret them than you are. I suppose now that I called BS on this, you'll switch to a third story.
The simple fact is we lost millions of jobs during Bush-lite's watch, and so far we've only gained a fraction of them back. While I am sure that's an unhappy fact for a die-hard YABA like yourself, it is nonetheless true. I agree the signs of recovery are encouraging, but we aren't there yet ... not by a long shot.
You also ignore the simple fact that not all jobs are created equal. Like it or not, the consensus is we are replacing good jobs with mediocre jobs. Obviously there are some good jobs regained, just not in proportion to the loss. I'm sure this is another unhappy fact for the YABAs to accept. However, unless you can provide real, statistical evidence there is NOT a proportional loss of good jobs, I will assume the consensus is right and your objections are sour grapes.
