Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Humbug

How in the hell can they call creating 93,000 jobs in the private sector in November good news? We need to create 150,000 just to hold unemployment at the current 9.6% By creating little more than half that means we are continuing to erode. Right?

Meanwhile, when what needs to be addressed are the tax cuts, job creation and getting a budget in place for the fiscal year we are already 2 months into instead the Senate and House are dicking around with an unnecessary food safety bill which would give the FDA even more authority. And they even fucked that up (which is a good thing).

Some idiot of Fox yesterday was talking about the recovery being underway. That it's underway not because things are improving but because the downward spiral has now hit bottom. And then he said for every job available there are 5 people available for it. But what are those jobs? Checkout clerks? Grocery baggers? Burger flippers? French Fryers? When you'd been making 60 or 80 or 100K?

That's a recovery?

Never worry never fear our Vacationer In Chief is here.

This is the second Christmas season I'm out of work. The third that either my wife or I are out of work. No Christmas lights or decorations beyond a tree. Our annual Christmas Eve family get together for the entire family (30 people) is now being funded in part by my mom and a few others. Gifts for no one except our daughters. And those much smaller than ever. The nieces nephews godchildren will have to suffice with a candy cane.

And we're in far better shape than many many others around this country. Until January, anyway, when my benefits expire.

But it's hard for me to believe that when my twelve year old looks ate me with a little bit of worry and panic (she's none too good at hiding it) and asks if we are going to lose the house, (the only one she has ever known). Is the bank going to foreclose on it? (She's heard some of the blowouts I've had with Citibank).

So you'll understand when I say my TeeVee and computer are in danger these days.

Because if I see or hear one more fucking well-heeled talking head or political pissant nitwit patronize about how Americans are hurting Americans are in pain and all we're doing is talking about it (when they're doing just that) I'm going to put a brick or a bullet through the screen.

Newsmax:

2 Million Lose Jobless Benefits as Holidays Arrive
Wednesday, 01 Dec 2010

Extended unemployment benefits for nearly 2 million Americans begin to run out Wednesday, cutting off a steady stream of income and guaranteeing a dismal holiday season for people already struggling with bills they cannot pay.

Unless Congress changes its mind, benefits that had been extended up to 99 weeks will end this month.

That means Christmas is out of the question for Wayne Pittman, 46, of Lawrenceville, Ga., and his wife and 9-year-old son. The carpenter was working up to 80 hours a week at the beginning of the decade, but saw that gradually drop to 15 hours before it dried up completely. His last $297 check will go to necessities, not presents.

"I have a little boy, and that's kind of hard to explain to him," Pittman said.

The average weekly unemployment benefit in the U.S. is $302.90, though it varies widely depending on how states calculate the payment. Because of supplemental state programs and other factors, it's hard to know for sure who will lose their benefits at any given time. But the Labor Department estimates that, without a Congress-approved extension, about 2 million people will be cut off by Christmas.

Congressional opponents of extending the benefits beyond this month say fiscal responsibility should come first. Republicans in the House and Senate, along with a handful of conservative Democrats, say they're open to extending benefits, but not if it means adding to the $13.8 trillion national debt.

Even if Congress does lengthen benefits, cash assistance is at best a stopgap measure, said Carol Hardison, executive director of Crisis Assistance Ministry in Charlotte, N.C., which has seen 20,000 new clients since the Great Recession started in December 2007.

"We're going to have to have a new conversation with the people who are still suffering, about the potentially drastic changes they're going to have to make to stay out of the homeless shelter," she said.

Forget Christmas presents. What the so-called "99ers" want most of all is what remains elusive in the worst economy in generations: a job.

"I am not searching for a job, I am begging for one," said Felicia Robbins, 30, as she prepared to move out of a homeless shelter in Pensacola, Fla., where she and her five children have been living. She is using the last of her cash reserves, about $500, to move into a small, unfurnished rental home.

Robbins lost her job as a juvenile justice worker in 2009 and her last $235 unemployment check will arrive Dec. 13. Her 10-year-old car isn't running, and she walks each day to the local unemployment office to look for work.

Jeanne Reinman, 61, of Greenville, S.C., still has her house, but even that comes with a downside.

After losing her computer design job a year and a half ago, Reinman scraped by with her savings and a weekly $351 unemployment check. When her nest egg vanished in July, she started using her unemployment to pay off her mortgage and stopped paying her credit card bills. She recently informed a creditor she couldn't make payments on a loan because her benefits were ending.

"I'm more concerned about trying to hang onto my house than paying you," she told the creditor.

Ninety-nine weeks may seem like a long time to find a job. But even as the economy grows, jobs that vanished in the Great Recession have not returned. The private sector added about 159,000 jobs in October — half as many as needed to reduce the unemployment rate of 9.6 percent, which the Federal Reserve expects will hover around 9 percent for all of next year.

"I apply for at least two jobs a day," said Silvia Lewis, of Nashville, Tenn., who's also drained her 401(k) and most of her other savings. "The constant thing that I hear, and a lot of my friends are in the same boat, is that you're overqualified."

JoAnn Sampson of Charlotte hears the same thing. A former cart driver at U.S. Airways, she and her husband are both facing the end of unemployment benefits, and she can't get so much as an entry-level job.

"When you try to apply for retail or fast food, they say 'You're overqualified,' they say 'We don't pay that much money,' they say, 'You don't want this job,'" she said.

Sampson counts her blessings: At least her two children, a teenager and a college student, are too old to expect much from Christmas this year.

Shawn Slonsky's three children aren't expecting much either. The 44-year-old union electrician in northeast Ohio won't be able to afford presents or even a Christmas tree.

His sons and daughter haven't bothered to send him holiday wish lists with the latest gizmos and gadgets.

Things used to be different. Before work dried up, Slonsky earned about $100,000 a year and he and his wife lived in a three-bedroom house where deer meandered through the backyard. For Christmas, he bought his aspiring doctor daughter medical books, a guitar, a unicycle.

Then he and his wife lost their jobs. Their house went into foreclosure and they had to move in with his 73-year-old father.

Now, Slonsky is dreading the holidays as he tries to stretch his last unemployment check to cover child support, gas, groceries and utilities.

"You don't even get in the frame of mind for Christmas when things are bad," he said. "It's hard to be in a jovial mood all the time when you've got this storm cloud hanging over your head."

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