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Originally Posted by StillLearning
(Post 627184)
Just to 'tap' into this thought:
Scenario- China drills outside US territory into an oil field/reservoir/cache that primarily sits inside of US territory. Bad, right? No, worse. An environmental disaster. Because of poor drilling and site protection measures, as China drains our oil cache nearly empty, sea water rushes into the cavity and percolates the remaining oil up through weaknesses in the sea floor in US territory and oil washes ashore on our gulf coast. Scenario over, please return to your regularly scheduled programming;) You see...The earth has a fever!:eek: ...and aparently more cowbell will not help...;) |
Originally Posted by Herkulesdrvr
(Post 628585)
Hey, come back in 4 years when your unemployed and let us know how the "change" worked out for you. I'm going to enjoy watching this train wreck.
Job growth under Bush was worst since WWII Jacksonville Business Journal - by G. Scott Thomas President George W. Bush will leave office Tuesday with the worst employment-growth record of any president since World War II, according to a new analysis by Bizjournals. The nation’s job base grew at an annual rate of 0.28 percent during Bush’s eight years as president – by far the slowest pace for any of the 11 presidents in the postwar era, according to Bizjournals. Bizjournals is the online media arm of American City Business Journals, The Business Review's parent company. The previous low had been set by Bush’s father, George H.W. Bush, with an annual job-growth rate of 0.59 percent. The elder Bush served between 1989 and 1993. Bizjournals used seasonally adjusted data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to calculate employment-growth rates for the administrations of all presidents since Harry Truman. Each president’s record was based on a comparison of job totals in the final full month served by his predecessor and his own final month. George W. Bush’s span ran from December 2000, when nonfarm employment totaled 132.5 million, to December 2008, when it reached 135.5 million. The administration with the strongest growth rate since World War II was that of Lyndon Johnson, who served between November 1963 and January 1969. Employment increased at an annual pace of 3.74 percent during that period. Bizjournals also looked at five subsets of job growth, with the younger President Bush finishing last in four of those categories – private-sector, manufacturing, retail-trade and government employment. The exception was construction employment, where Bush ranked ninth with an annual growth rate of 0.08 percent. The nation suffered losses of construction jobs under two presidents: Gerald Ford (down 3.75 percent per year between 1974 and 1977) and George H.W. Bush (down 3.22 percent per year). Johnson was the top-rated president in three of the subsets – private-sector, manufacturing and government employment. Harry Truman, who was president from 1945 to 1953, led the other two – construction and retail-trade employment. Annual employment-growth rates for all 11 postwar presidents are listed below: Total employment 1. Lyndon Johnson (1963-69), 3.74% 2. Jimmy Carter (1977-81), 3.11% 3. Bill Clinton (1993-2001), 2.42% 4. Harry Truman (1945-53), 2.38% 5. Richard Nixon (1969-74), 2.30% 6. John Kennedy (1961-63), 2.28% 7. Ronald Reagan (1981-89), 2.04% 8. Gerald Ford (1974-77), 0.95% 9. Dwight Eisenhower (1953-61), 0.87% 10. George H.W. Bush (1989-93), 0.59% 11. George W. Bush (2001-09), 0.28% |
GROWTH being the key word in that article, not JOBS LOST!!
FBP |
Not so fast my friend......
Originally Posted by hair-on-fire
(Post 628804)
Wreck already happened:
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