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The Jobs Crunch

randall_burns writes "Neither major party is accurately describing or combatting the Jobs Crunch that Americans are facing. Bad immigration policy-and bad trade deals are combining to decimate the middle class in America."

1,307 comments

  1. Unemployed first post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Unemployed first post.

    1. Re:Unemployed first post. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha ha!

      Someone actually wasted keystrokes downrating this?

      Moderators. They should get a -1 for "redundancy".

      Morons.

  2. All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For the first time in my life, within 4 weeks of one another, my sister lost her job, my friend lost his job, and his wife lost her job.
    These are NOT good times...although Bush would have us believe otherwise.

    1. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ah, the old saying:

      A recession is when someone you know is out of work.
      A depression is when you are out of work.

    2. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a retarded statement. The poster said they just recently lost their jobs, which means the organizations they work for are downsizing for whatever reason.

      If they had been looking for work for the last 6 months unable to find any, then maybe your retarded ass would have had a point.

    3. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't see the correlation between you 3 losing your jobs within 4 weeks and these times... are you implying that those 4 weeks happened recently?

      And I don't remember Bush ever saying that these are good times... "rebounding" does not mean "good"

    4. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps the problem is that your sister, friend, and friends' wife lack the skills necessary to compete in this modern economy?

      The job market is not limited to ICT.

    5. Re:All I know is... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Personal anecdotes may suffice for a lot of people, but for it to be a reasoned argument, personal anecdotes alone don't cut it as it falls under the fallacy of insufficient sample. This is because it could be explained as horrible luck for a small group of people, you need national stats to make such a case, and of course, an alternative canidate with a clear plan.

      Being jobless is rough though, and very unfortunate if it hits both wage earners in a household.

      Personally, I think Kerry needs to give out specifics on how he expects to fix things. It just seems to me that he's hedging, he still hasn't offered real solutions during his campaign. I do seriously want to vote Kerry, but it seems that the best argument for doing so is that he's "not Bush".

      If someone does have a clear statement on Kerry's proposed economic policy, I'd like to read it. Seriously.

    6. Re:All I know is... by N3WBI3 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      maybe your retarded ass would have had a point.

      Or maybe the point is right now there are jobs to be had. The OP said that these jobs are still unfilled.

      --
    7. Re:All I know is... by here4fun · · Score: 2, Funny
      Ah, the old saying:

      A recession is when someone you know is out of work.
      A depression is when you are out of work.

      Then we are in a MAJOR depression.

    8. Re:All I know is... by FauxPasIII · · Score: 4, Informative

      > And I don't remember Bush ever saying that these are good times

      The economy is strong, it's getting stronger

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    9. Re:All I know is... by rebeka+thomas · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      For the first time in my life, within 4 weeks of one another, my sister lost her job, my friend lost his job, and his wife lost her job.
      These are NOT good times...although Bush would have us believe otherwise.


      And the problems with these times are a carryover from the Clinton administration's disastrous policies. There is only so much recovery one president can do in one term, despite how good Bush is.

      I can guarantee you if a Democrat gets in again you'll be sliding deeper and deeper.

      --
      RST
    10. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He said it's getting stronger. having a strong economy doesn't mean everyone has a job. Look at other economies around the world.

    11. Re:All I know is... by Pros_n_Cons · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For the first time in my life, within 4 weeks of one another, my sister lost her job, my friend lost his job, and his wife lost her job. These are NOT good times...although Bush would have us believe otherwise.

      And you'd have us believe everyone we know is out of work. 5.4 are the latest numbers, the lowest since Oct 2001. sorry

      --

      -- "of course thats just my opinion, I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
    12. Re:All I know is... by MetalMorph · · Score: 0

      This is all Bush's fault? Oh please.

      --
      My words are backed with NUCLEAR WEAPONS!
    13. Re:All I know is... by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Clinton's policies were there to take the steam out of the Republican congressional agenda. Clinton managed, for the most part, to grasp the politically essential pieces of what the Republicans were harping about, enough so to get Congress to back his spin on what the Republicans were doing. Once past his 2nd year in office (after the Congressional elections...), did we have a seemingly acidic and bitter version of Dick Cheney? No. Can't say we had to deal with Woodie Gore telling Newt Gingrich to fudge off. About the strangest thing that Gore did was claim to invent the Internet, and that whole book thingie. And on and on.

      Nope.

      If you can't beat 'em, join 'em. Embrace and Extend (and smother). He wasn't called "Slick Willie" for nothing... Tax & Spend? Well, the deficit went DOWN, and taxes did not go up.

      But now we have taxes going "down", deficit going up. If I was a major shareholder in a company doing this, I would be concerned more than a little about the long-term business outlook slashing income while expanding expenses and debt load.

    14. Re:All I know is... by maxpublic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      5.4 are the latest numbers, the lowest since Oct 2001.

      These figures are inaccurate. They don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up. Many households which formerly had two parents working now only have one parent employed but the government, in it's infinite wisdom, doesn't count these folks as being unemployed.

      This is nothing short of 'voodoo unemployment numbers': pretending that people who can't find a job prefer not to work, and therefore don't need to be counted.

      We should also note that of the jobs created (about half of those lost so far) the average pay is almost $9,000 lower than the jobs lost. Things are much, much grimmer than our government would lead us to believe.

      This isn't new, though. The government did the exact same thing during the Reagan Era depression, declaring that things were looking up despite the fact that, for example, nearly one in three people in Oregon were unemployed and that the few jobs created paid about *one-half the wage* of the timber jobs lost.

      Don't trust the government for unbiased numbers; you won't get them.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    15. Re:All I know is... by Awptimus+Prime · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And the problems with these times are a carryover from the Clinton administration's disastrous policies. There is only so much recovery one president can do in one term, despite how good Bush is.

      I can guarantee you if a Democrat gets in again you'll be sliding deeper and deeper.


      You know, your post would be much more impressive if it showed a single policy of Clinton's which Bush changed in the name of fiscal responsibility. I have not heard about any, myself.

      On that note, where were the Republican votes stopping Clinton's policies? Looking back, I remember the Republicans in congress being pretty quiet those 8 years, except when the whole Monica thing came out.

      I'm not going to debate beliefs, just throwing in my 2 cents. I don't like either party. I especially don't like paying over $200 Billion dollars to invade Iraq and make everyone hate us at the same time.

      Being hated globally is not condusive to future peace and prosperity at home.

    16. Re:All I know is... by polecat_redux · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For the first time in my life, within 4 weeks of one another, my sister lost her job, my friend lost his job, and his wife lost her job. These are NOT good times...although Bush would have us believe otherwise.

      I can absolutely relate. My dad lost his job, and so did I and a few of my friends. Of course, those friends worked at the same place I did... *cough* f'ing Interplay *cough*

      OK, perhaps Bush isn't responsible for mismanagement of a floundering game company, but it stings nonetheless.

    17. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they are wrong.

      You don't drop off the statistic when you stop looking for work, you drop off when you are no longer collecting unemployment, even if you are still out of work and looking and hoping to find a job.

    18. Re:All I know is... by helix400 · · Score: 5, Informative

      They don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up.

      That's not correct. From http://www.snopes.com/science/stats/unemploy.htm

      Although this belief is widespread and has at times been reported as factual in the mainstream media, the truth of the matter is that unemployment statistics are gathered through a process of sampling a representative number of households; they are not arrived by counting the number of unemployment insurance claims made during a particular month. Data collected in the Current Population Survey (CPS), a monthly survey of over 60,000 households, is used for this purpose. From this data, an extrapolation is made about the unemployment status of the country as a whole.

    19. Re:All I know is... by maxpublic · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Take a look at how the survey is conducted. The people who're part of it don't get to decide whether or not they're 'unemployed' or 'not part of the work force'; the GOVERNMENT makes that determination. Which means that the government can fuck with the numbers any way it pleases.

      Forgive me if I don't believe the government unbiased.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    20. Re:All I know is... by Awptimus+Prime · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The people who want to die, are going to die. They have given up and want me to take care of them, I do not care about these people. I am worried about the people TRYING to find work.

      Please do not be a tool. The "given up" remark is something getting said a lot in the media regarding some people who are married and have a spouse who gets laid off and can't find work. The household then learns to get by on a single income, then the pressure to find work is much less. This works and has been popular for the families who will sacrifice that Lexus and drive a Honda instead. This means nothing for the masses across middle america who's factory jobs are gone. So are all the Walmart and McDonalds jobs in many areas.

      The men and women who are trying to support families who have had their unemployement benefits dry up do not just "give up" on getting a job. They do anything and everything they can to keep their kids and spouse fed. The only thing they don't do is count towards the damn numbers our government is trying to pass off on us as "getting better". If nobody noticed, more people matured to legal working age than jobs created this year.

    21. Re:All I know is... by orthogonal · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      And the problems with these times are a carryover from the Clinton administration's disastrous policies.

      Yeah, that damn tech boom really sucked for me -- this job as a contractor in Iraq is so much better!

      Libruls, don't lose your head blaming Bush!

      Speaking of which, rebeka thomas (673264), your comment seems a bit muffled -- is it because your head is so far up your ass, or is it just because it's so far up Bush's ass?

    22. Re:All I know is... by dlelash · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...and a recovery is when George Bush is out of work.

    23. Re:All I know is... by Awptimus+Prime · · Score: 3, Informative

      Here is his "official" policy in PDF format from his website.

      Lots of big, simple, promises. I don't like those. Mind you, I can not imagine anyone doing a worse job with our economy than GW has. So I don't know what to think.

    24. Re:All I know is... by Crazieeman · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Look, the rate of unemployment is 5.4%. It was 5.5% when Bill Clinton ran for reelection in 96. Amazingly, 5.4% for Bush is considered bad, 5.5% for Clinton is considered good. Go figure. Now if you're going to rant about job losses, you must remember the average rate for unemployment is roughly 6%. The mid-4s when Bush entered office were downright unusually low rates.

      Then enter the dot-com bust, the accounting fraud crisis that boiled over after it festered under the Clinton years, as well as 9/11.

    25. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      case in point, i had "given up" (*cough* bullshit *cough*) on the job hunt by having my unemployment dry up a year and a half ago. with no unemployment money, there is no point in telling the government that i'm still looking. as of last week, i'm back on the DHS radar by being technically employed (if they'd hurry up and give me a start date!)

    26. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the homeless are not unemployed? Convenient?

    27. Re:All I know is... by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Informative

      And yet even if we assume the government is fudging the figures (e.g., the 'marginally employed' - I mean, c'mon!), the average wage has declined markedly. The new jobs created within the economy pay, on average, $9,000 less than the old jobs did.

      As a percentage of the population the middle class stands at its lowest point in American history. As a percentage of the population the number of lower-class and poor folks, along with the very rich, are at their highest points ever in American history.

      These are facts. They aren't up for debate. Employment rates don't matter a whole lot if all you're doing is turning former middle-class folks into poor folks, while making rich folks richer. For the vast majority of the population things are considerably worse than they were four years ago.

      Don't make the mistake of thinking that I'm blaming Bush for all of this. He is a tool, no doubt about it, but while Bush has done nothing but make things worse it was Clinton who really accelerated the process. And Clinton inherited the mess from Bush and his inane fiscal policies, who in turn got it from the Reagan crowd with their idiotic 'trickle-down' policies. Our government has been screwing things up royally since the Carter years, regardless of whether the Democrats or the Republicans have been in charge.

      Neither party has done anything to improve the situation, nor will they so long as they are, or answer to, the people who profit from this situation. I don't expect Kerry to do any better; I only hope that he deadlocks the government and thereby prevents it from doing any more harm.

      Jesus, I'm getting depressed just thinking about how low my expectations have dropped....

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    28. Re:All I know is... by fredmosby · · Score: 1

      Of coarse the government gets to decide what qualifies as unemployed. They're the ones doing the survey. What matters is wether or not they use the same standards for what qualifies as unemployed from year to year.

    29. Re:All I know is... by maxpublic · · Score: 1, Insightful

      we aren't compete against other Americans for our own survival, but against THE WORLD !

      That's what tariffs are for, boy.

      their cheaper labor is taking away our jobs.

      That's what tariffs and restrictive trade policies are for, boy.

      COMPETE AGAINST THE CHEAPEST LABOR IN BANGLADESH, by using OUR BRAIN.

      Oh, good show! Now provide some concrete, real-world examples of how our 'brains' will allow us to compete with labor you can pay $2/hour.

      Why, I know! Tariffs and restrictive trade policies! Problem solved!

      And then, there are Americans who accuse me of "exporting jobs to other countries". Again, I don't mind.

      Then do us all a favor and stop pretending that you're an American. If you're exporting jobs to India, then go become a fucking Indian citizen; it's certain you're doing more for India than for the U.S.

      Really, if we had any brains at all we'd ban corporations that employed foreigners in excess of 10% of it's workforce. Half your employees are Indian? Then fuck you and the horse you road in on! You're no longer an American company, but an Indian one! And now you're subject to tariffs and - you guessed it - trade restrictions! Eat shit, traitors.

      No matter how I like the world outside America, America is still my country.

      Yeah, right. Go ahead and tell yourself that while you're selling out your neighbors. Bastard.

      You can close the border to "immigrant, but you can't stop those things from coming in.

      We sure can. It's called 'tariffs' and 'restrictive trade policies'. It might put guys like you out of work, but why should I give a shit? It's just the way things go, and you're okay with that, right?

      Next thing you know you'll be hearing your (gainfully employed) wife yelling "get in the kitchen and make me a pot pie, bitch!" Scamper along now, before she gets angry with you!

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    30. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact is that the middle class IS being squeezed.

      As free trade agreements and technology make outsourcing feasible for the corporations, the middle class in America can no longer compete for jobs which are non service oriented and thus do not need to be done in this country.

      The middle class in America cannot compete for these jobs because:

      1) the protections afforded to them by US law do not apply to workers in poorer countries, making these foreign workers cheaper to employ.

      2) the exchange rates are favourable for US employers to use labour in poorer countries

    31. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, at the time, nobody even objected to his concentration camps for Japanese-Americans

      Aww shucks, th' gubment done rounded them Japs up an' we cain't git t' 'em t' kill 'em.

      By the way, the "concentration camps" we had here were after the Great Depression was over.

      I don't rightly recall seeing dead Japs stacked like cordwood in the "concentation camps" we had here.

      You might want to google "Dachau", "Sobibor", "Treblinka", "Matthausen", etc. and see what real concentration camps looked like.

    32. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You and i know it only takes like 2 days to set up a profitable business that can employ others. Thank god the government is there to do it for us!

    33. Re:All I know is... by Wolfkin · · Score: 1

      That's what tariffs are for, boy.

      Tariffs make things worse. It's just a way of stealing from local buyers to give (some smaller amount than was stolen) to local producers, thereby encouraging local producers to do less producing and more stealing, since stealing seems to work better.

      Oh, good show! Now provide some concrete, real-world examples of how our 'brains' will allow us to compete with labor you can pay $2/hour.

      Why, I know! Tariffs and restrictive trade policies! Problem solved!


      That whole 'economics' thing got you stumped, eh? It's true that there are some people who I cannot imagine being highly paid (like all Americans) in a world of incredibly cheap automation and global price leveling. Fortunately, things are getting cheaper faster and faster, so this seems likely to solve itself, unless people like you (and Kerry, and Bush) manage to head prosperity off at the pass and beat it to death with tariffs and regulations.

      --
      Property law should use #'EQ, not #'EQUAL.
    34. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      They don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up

      It also doesn't reflect the fact that lots of people can't get employment in their area of expertise. Instead of working in science and engineering, being stuck in the $17k job loading boxes onto trucks.

    35. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They also don't count people like my wife who was a stay at home mom starting her own real estate business (making 6 figures her first year).
      But of course that doesn't help your argument so you neglect to bring it up.

    36. Re:All I know is... by ahfoo · · Score: 1

      Informative?!
      This is blatant disinformation. You're calling the 1930s a routine recession? Well, by recent standards I guess that almost sounds reasonable.
      But your attempt to shift the blame from corrupt monopolies that sank the economy to the administration that picked up the pieces is pure propoganda. Again, no surprise these days.

    37. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I've got plenty of friends who have been chronically underemplyed since the early nineties.
      But this article calling itself liberal and then taking an anti-immigrant slant is disgusting. This isn't a liberal view at all. A real liberal is in favor of immigration and immigrants rights. This article is nothing but the same old fascist tripe mascarading as a liberal alternative. Shame on these assholes.

    38. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Think back to the main reasons this country was founded.

      religious freedom and

      freedom to "persue" happiness

      for the common defense

      ensure liberty and justice http://www.house.gov/Constitution/Constitution.htm l

      I don't see where it is the governments job to keep anyone employed or give them a job. If what you used to do doesn't earn the living you want, be creative, be an American and "change" your output into creating something other people want to buy.

      Stop feeling sorry for yourself - get over it, AND do something different until you are employed.

      If all those folks you know can't keep a job, perhaps looking at what they have in common would lead to a list of possible solutions? Oh, you've already done that, GWB is their president, that must be it. I'd propose an alternate "common cause" to this problem. They all know you. It is much more likely, since they've met you and probably not caused by the current President.

      I realize this is harsh, but did your parents actually tell you that life was fair? If so, bad parents.

    39. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, you're getting it.
      But here's a better one. The prison populations aren't unemployed either. This is really cute because now you can add jobs for prison guards for those on the outside and take those on the inside off the list of the unemployed! It's a pure win.
      Not only that, if you can pin a felony on these people who are mostly in jail on drug charges then you can prevent them from ever voting again! Bee-you-tee-ful.
      See, the system does work. You just have to be a fascist to appreciate it.

    40. Re:All I know is... by yo303 · · Score: 5, Informative
      A recession is when someone you know loses his job.
      A depression is when you lose yours.

      Yeah, good saying.

      Let me add what Reagan said in 1980: "A recovery is when Jimmy Carter loses his." (sorry, I'm really a Democrat.)

      But just so you know, there is actually a big difference. In a recession, the value of the dollar in your pocket goes DOWN. In a depression, the value of the dollar in your pocket goes UP. It's astounding how few [people|economists] know this.

      You think inflation is bad? Try deflation, the oppostite, when prices go down.

      Loans are defaulted, because people suddenly owe more, and can't pay. Interest rates go up, since cash itself is more likely to increase in value than an investment. You're used to getting raises, to keep up with inflation... how would you like it if your boss gave you a timely drop in salary, to keep up with the drop in the cost of living? That's deflation, and it happened during the last US depression in the 30s. There has not been a depressed economy since then (possibly excepting New Zealand and Finland.)

      A recession is not a small depression.

      yo.

    41. Re:All I know is... by Misinformed · · Score: 1

      Excellent post, sir! I struggle to understand how an actual story submitted is flamebait in its entirity, with a link to a thinly veiled attack on immigration mascarading as a political piece. Blame the immigrants and minorities for our middle/working class misfortune (which many articles on the 'op-ed' piece seem obsessed with. Reminds me of the beginnings of the Nazi party in Germany.

      1. Why should you have a comfortable well paying job and someone else not - because you work harder at it or are more able - you achieve this by hard work and/or study. Yeah it'd be great if we all had jobs which payed well and were secure, but not all tasks that have to be done in society are nice; if we all had jobs that were equally easy to get and more-or-less similarly well paid that'd be called communism - and that failed hard (because of the will to shirk/moral hazard/adverse selection reduced the incentive to work).

      2. Unemployment is around 5-5.5% of workforce (with around 12% saying they'd try to get a job if the situation changed substantially). Yeah it's not good to have 5% of the population not earning, perhaps 3% would be the expected number given some people in transition between jobs, below 2% would probably be damaging at any time horizon 2+ years, companies would be very squeezed, have to raise priced substantially to pay for required labour - a vicious circle resulting in massive inflation, high interest rates and/or a subsequent economic collapse - boom and bust.

      3. Want life on a plate - its not that easy. Don't blame the immigrants - they come to the country, speak little English, are very willing to do low paid lobs - are you really competing with these people? Did you choose a CompSci degree because you loved CompSci and were good at it - well then you could either get a job, as there is real demand for highly skilled people - or did you do CompSci because you thought the .com boom would be here again, you're not very good at the subject, or maybe you did a technical 2 year course - well I'm afraid that was a bad decision - you were after something to fall in to. Too bad - refocus, find you interest and find sustained demand for something you're interested in. Jobs like plumbers and electricians are pay pretty reasonably and - and don't need another degree - perhaps you could combine skills? Lather rinse repeat (do all Economics/Business grads think it'll get them a job on Wall St?!).

      Don't expect something on a plate. WOrk for it, and do something you enjoy so you don't need to be bitter 'for committing you life to this...' when you hit a rough patch. I'd sure prefer opportunity and reward than a job on a plate - the US is all about achieving and being rewarded for success (whatever level this may be on), I don't need to blame an immigrant for my being worse than them - born and educated in a developed country I, like the vast majority of slashdotters, have had every chance to determine my path, and it is never too late to develop the skills.

      Of course, this is my perspective. I'd be eager to get reposts (beyond 'flamebait' mods/abusive replies as is the usual 'I'll bite' reply lacking any coherance). Summary: The article was a piece of cr4p, as are all arguments 'immigration stole my job'.

      --
      --

      Slashdot: Racism against Indians OK. China bad, USA good. Blue pill in water supply.
    42. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You and i know it only takes like 2 days to set up a profitable business that can employ others.

      Then do it. Every two days, set up a profitable business employing others. You will be incredibly wealthy and give many people who want jobs a place to work. Or was that just more right-wing bullshit -- the kind of unsubstantiated thing that Rush Limbaugh or Bill O'Reilly says because it sounds good but isn't really true at all?

    43. Re:All I know is... by jcenters · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because we all know that thousands go homeless during a "routine depression."

      Ever hear of "Hoovervilles"?

      --

      vi ~/.emacs

    44. Re:All I know is... by talaphid · · Score: 1

      WARNING! Killer run-on sentence follows.

      My favorite part of such arguments is that Republicans, as a whole, seem to be completely oblivious to both the inertia of policy (so you made it easier for Joe Sixpack to start a business and gainfully employ five fellow Americans... that's nice, but until Joe knows about this, and has started his business, you still have six unemployed Americans, let alone lead in time for the bill to become enforced, printed, funded...) and to the fact that there seems to "just be" a cycle of recession and growth that's more or less every ten years (which yes, 'good policy' can moderate, but has yet to eliminate) until wow, it's in a Republican candidate's best interest to acknowledge them.

      I'm not saying Democrats are saints, but wow... when they were handing out whoppers, this is almost as good as the whole "flip flopper" as a perjorative. As if the bill was unchanged, or as if a single bill is about a single issue. As if any elected person has ever been infallible! Sheesh. I'd rather have a politican who at least said, "Mea culpa" on a weekly basis than one who didn't - at least the former realized the mistake and can fix it, the latter, however, must maintain the illusion by sometimes massive amounts of ignorance.

      Oops. Running OT...

    45. Re:All I know is... by mankey+wanker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Check the date on that one. IIRC Bush changed how the government collects it's data by purposefully underfunding and cutting certain unemployment tracking programs.

      Let's face it - the gang in power is just a bunch of "Cheap Labor Republicans." They are gunning for your job because it can be done cheaper somewhere else. These guys make money by keeping labor costs down, not by a a booming economy that benefits you or yours. Catch a clue.

      Political Reality Redacted

      Several months ago I watched Joe Hough, President of the Faculty and William E. Dodge Professor of Social Ethics at the Union Theological Seminary, speak on Bill Moyers "Now" and I was immediately impressed by both his passion as well as the following statement that he made:

      HOUGH: The growing gap between the rich and the poor which has become almost obscene by anybody's standards, and the stated intentional policy of bankrupting the government so that in the future there'll be no money for anything the federal government would decide to do. http://www.pbs.org/now/printable/transc...print.ht ml

      Now some of you may be thinking that the above statement is somewhat extreme, and I used to wonder about that myself. But the statement haunted me. The reality is that some of what our current government is doing only makes sense if you consider "bankrupting the government" their actual goal. Have they not reduced taxes for the top 1%? Have they not also run a record deficit? When is a tax cut not a tax cut? When you run a deficit.

      The bottom line is that it seems to be okay to run a deficit paying off federal war contracts to Halliburton, but god forbid they should run a deficit supporting job creation programs. And you'll forgive me if I don't consider the expansion of our military "true" job creation.

      So what are they really doing? Why are they doing it? You have to ask those questions because it would be a mistake to assume that anyone, esp. an apparent imbecile like Bush, acts without purpose. The appearance of the dolt just might be the mask of a sly con man.

      So who has the answers? There's this one guy that has it completely nailed. His stuff is so savvy, so on point that it is frankly scary in it's simplicity and clarity. So don't hesitate - go read it. If you can't handle it all at once, pace yourself - but read it, all of it. It's just four pages: two long, two short. And the rest of the site is excellent too if you still need more.

      "CHEAP-LABOR CONSERVATIVE" ISSUES GUIDE
      http://www.conceptualguerilla.com/blurbs.htm

      CATALOGUE OF BOGUS CONSERVATIVE IDEAS
      http://www.conceptualguerilla.com/bogusideas.htm

      "PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY" AND WAGES
      http://www.conceptualguerilla.com/wages...bility.h tm

      THE WRATH OF THE MILLIONAIRE WANNABE'S
      http://www.conceptualguerilla.com/milli...nnabes.h tm

      What's all this about in a few short sentences?

      Labor is the true engine of any economy, wealth is not (it is the mere distribution of the results of labor). A boom economy benefits anyone that works for a living because labor is then scarce and labor is valued more highly. Those at the top require cheap labor to maximize their profits - so they hate boom economies. Everything our government is doing right now is intended to devalue labor. The unequal distribution of vast amounts of wealth into the hands of non-laborers makes democracy almost impossible (which is why the founders favored limits on almost everything that concentrated wealth into too few hands).

      Let it sit with you a while and you will begin to realize that it explains everything from bad schools, pri

    46. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the wonders of statistics. If you don't know where they come from they can be very misleading.

      There was an article (covered here a few days ago) about a survey showing that average wages for several technical job catagories had gone up for the first time in a while. Sounds great, people are starting to get raises again, right? But if you get rid of data points (ie. jobs) from the middle to lower end of the range, that also drives the average up.

      So while the average may be up, you have fewer people with jobs.

    47. Re:All I know is... by jcenters · · Score: 1

      Sorry, that should read "routine recession."

      --

      vi ~/.emacs

    48. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "we aren't compete against other Americans"

      "You can close the border to immigrant, but"

      "I am saying this base on my experience"

      "Worked in all over the world"

      Uh, sure you're an American. And I'm German. Ich bein ein berliner!

    49. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Look, the rate of unemployment is 5.4%. It was 5.5% when Bill Clinton ran for reelection in 96. Amazingly, 5.4% for Bush is considered bad, 5.5% for Clinton is considered good. Go figure.

      During the Clinton administration, ten people are working at $45K/year factory jobs. 0% unemployment among the ten. Their retirement account mutual funds are all showing healthy gains.

      Bush takes office. All ten get laid off when their company outsources. Three get jobs at McDonalds, four get jobs at Walmart, and the other three get jobs in the mall. The mutual funds they hold stagnate and even lose money. Average pay: $10K/year. Unemployment (among the sample set): 0%.

      See? There's more to judging the health of the economy than counting people who are out of work.

    50. Re:All I know is... by pipingguy · · Score: 1

      The PP is equating long-term unemployment with death?

    51. Re:All I know is... by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      What you stated is, of course, correct, although others will claim that the government uses REAL data - how absurd. The recent GAO "study" claims no connection between offshoring and unemployment in the USA - let's see...slightly over 3.2 million manufacturing jobs lost over the preceding 48 months, while 91,000 have been created over the past 9 months, so now we have .04 percent of what we used to have - NOPE! No effect whatsoever....

      And the Bush Administration wants to count any and all trading on E-Bay as a new job!

    52. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "popular for the families who will sacrifice that Lexus and drive a Honda instead" Many families can not afford a Honda (new or used). Providing for your family is not a status item. Losing your job after you have put 110% into for years, just to lose it to a less qualified person in India or China for pennies on the dollar is not only destroying American families, it is also destroying America.

      I have spend 10 hrs a day cleaning up the mess created by outsourcing firms and "cheap" IT labor. 95% of the H1B visa people I deal with in IT have absolutely no real indepth knowledge of what their job requires. Just because they talk funny, does not mean they are experienced or can think through problems.

      We have wasted millions on outsourced IT projects. Our end-users are fustrated and angry at IT because of scalability issues, support issues, stability issues, lack of spell checked documentation (we will leave the grammer part out for now).

      In post 9/11 world where security is supposed to be the number one priority and Identity Theft is becoming common, we send unkown amounts of "private" data to India, China, Tiawan, Vietnam, etc. Who has your credit report, social security number, medical records, has information about your children?

      The problem is not just GW Bush, the problem is throughout our entire poliitcal system. Our congressmen/women, senators, etc never seem to vote for what the people want. They tend to vote in what they really believe in vs. what the campained for. Well you know what, we voted for these people based on their promises, if someone lies to me I cut them off socially. We have the power to vote people out of office! Vote while you still have a job.

      BTW India has the 2nd largested AIDs population and the 2nd largested HB population. Who knows what infectious diseases are coming in from our Clinton's favorite nation of China. Think about the welfare of your children next time you vote.

    53. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If what you used to do doesn't earn the living you want, be creative, be an American and "change" your output into creating something other people want to buy.

      Stop feeling sorry for yourself - get over it, AND do something different until you are employed.


      Ah, the vague tripe of the right-wing. Chest-pounding patriotism backed up with hollow, unspecific recommendations, based on the false premise that changing careers has zero cost and can be done overnight.

      Some guy who's worked on an assembly line for 26 years or some woman who's been employed as a customer service rep at a phone bank for 12 probably can't afford to start their own business or even go to school to learn some new skill. Perhaps you think that their families should live in refrigerator boxes under bridges while the ex-breadwinners get the training to change careers. Even if they did change careers, they'd be back that the bottom rung of the ladder in their new field, probably making very little money and facing tuition loans on top of that.

      Then you ignore the fact that most people don't have the intelligence to quickly change careers, start their own businesses, and learn a whole new set of skills. Any economic plan that requires that everyone be of above average intelligense is destined to fail.

    54. Re:All I know is... by sgt_doom · · Score: 2, Interesting
      You are soooo right. I'm a homeless working person, and believe me, if you think some jobs can be rough when you live "normally" - try them when you're homeless (due to the job situation).

      Also, you are reading this online because of people such as myself, who was on the development team of the original markup languages (written in Assembler and ported to C) of which HTML, XML, etc., are subsets of.....

    55. Re:All I know is... by True+Grit · · Score: 1
      They don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up.

      That's not correct. From http://www.snopes.com/science/stats/unemploy.htm


      I'm afraid it is correct. I'll give up my chance to mod some people down in this thread to correct this (I would dearly love to mod the guy who said people who give up looking for a job are "people who want to die" as '-5 Idiot'). That link above is an answer to a *different* (false) statement. The parent poster pasted in the answer, but didn't show us the statement the answer was in response to, which was:

      The government understates the unemployment rate because they report how many people are collecting unemployment insurance rather than how many people are out of work.


      This is *not* the same as:

      They don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up.


      Since this statement has another component besides the reference to employment insurance. If we leave out that part and just say "They don't count people who have simply given up.", the answer to that is **TRUE**. From the Department of Labor:

      Unemployed persons are:

      * All persons who were not classified as employed during the survey reference week, made specific active efforts to find a job during the prior 4 weeks, and were available for work.

      * All persons who were not working and were waiting to be called back to a job from which they had been temporarily laid off.


      If you don't qualify under one of those 2 criteria you are not considered "unemployed". The CPS survey only asks if you've tried in the last 4 weeks to get a job, it doesn't ask the people if they've "given up trying" (after looking for a job while they had UI and longer). So, the people who have given up trying are usually referred to as "not in the workforce" (see the definition of this in the same link), because they aren't "actively" trying to find a job.

      The unemployment numbers just tell us who is currently trying to find a job now, it doesn't tell us how hard those jobs are to find or that they exist at all. Obviously, if the jobs are rare and hard to find, many people will fail to find one, and a lot of *them*, such as spouses of other employed persons, or those who can fall back on family support, *will* give up, at least for a time.
    56. Re:All I know is... by SpinyNorman · · Score: 1

      Consistency is a plus, but it'd be nice to have a statistic that measured the job market the same way as those actually looking for jobs...

      In the current way of counting in the US, you're basically employed if you're getting a paycheck. A programmer who lost his job and is now delivering pizza or temping at H&R block (I've seen both recently) are both just as employed per the ststistics as if they were making their former family-supporting professional salary. The formal term for this (someone who's working well below the level of experience & salary that they used to have) is "underemployed".. the US unemployment rate does not measure underemployment.

      Also, FWIW, the unemployment rate does not measure unemployment per se - it measures the number of people who are not working at all (i.e. not counting those underemployed) who ARE looking for work. If you've gotten so discouraged that you decide to give up and live on welfare - no longer looking for a job (as you report when surveyed) - then you are no longer considered unemployed!!!

    57. Re:All I know is... by FlopEJoe · · Score: 1
      "For the first time in my life, within 4 weeks of one another, my sister lost her job, my friend lost his job, and his wife lost her job."

      Odd... My section of programmers has almost doubled (from 9 to 17 people) since Bush and we need more. And we have trouble finding peeps even thought we're in Monsters.com. It reminds me of how annoying the sig I've seen, paraphraising, "All I know is I had a job before Bush was in office." I'm not a huge fan of him but I know people who got great paying jobs while Bush was in office. And I know peeps that lost their jobs durning Clinton and, especially Carter. What is the point of using a 3 person poll as a bases for anything?

    58. Re:All I know is... by Mouse42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      All right! Really? So by Tuesday I'll have a nice profitable business?

      Oh wait. First I need money to pay for an office to hold my new employees. Plus, I'll need money to pay for the employees. And I'll need money for whatever supplies are needed for these employees to do their jobs (computers, products, etc).

      Oh, and then I'll need time finding the place to rent, supplies and employees. In addition, I'll need time to plan out what business I'm going into, as well as strategy to make it profitable.

      Hm. Yeah, that ain't happening in 2 business days even given my full weekend head start. I might be able to muster up enough grocery money in 2 days, not enough money to start a business.

      Did you really think about this comment before you posted it? I think you meant it takes two days for a rich person to set up a profitable business, with the previous months spent in planning.

    59. Re:All I know is... by xigxag · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Why go to snopes when you can go to the source?

      http://www.bls.gov/cps/cps_faq.htm#Ques5

      Who is counted as unemployed?

      Persons are classified as unemployed if they do not have a job, have actively looked for work in the prior 4 weeks, and are currently available for work.

      Now, if you look at the qualifications for collecting unemployment, you'll see that unemployment eligible people are a proper subset of "unemployed" people. If you're unemployment benefits ineligible, you're not considered "unemployed." So the poster you were disagreeing with was exactly right in saying that the figures "don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up.."

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    60. Re:All I know is... by intnsred · · Score: 1

      Thank you, THANK YOU for that comment!

      Unquestioningly accepting these loaded definitions and phrases that the media subtlely forces down people's throats are a way to bias discussions and restrict the terms of debate.

    61. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well if you'd taken any basic economics course you would know that "discouraged workers" aren't included in American labor statistics. A dscouraged worker is someone who has been unable to find work for so long that they are "no longer looking". So if your industry is so screwed you may never find work again the government just sticks its fingers in it's ear and goes "LALALALA"...at least until you give in and take a job stocking shelves at walmart.

      So in reality our unemployment is really a lot closer to the average 10% that Europe has (they do count discouraged workers)

      The fact that snopes leaves out the discouraged worker bit in their explanation kind of makes me doubt anything from that site again as being completely accurate.

    62. Re:All I know is... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No the Figure is not inaccurate, they are correct.

      Spoken like somebody with food on the table. The unemployment figures may be an accurate representation of a statistic, but they are not even close to an accurate representation of the actual unemployment rate. Rather they are a stat for the numbr of people on unemployment. Once your benefits go away, you're no longer unemployed - congratulations!

      The people who want to die, are going to die.

      I dare you to go to the midwest and say that to somebody's face. With any luck, they'll kill you and take your job.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    63. Re:All I know is... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Do a google search for "Franklin Delano Roosevelt". He not only turned a routine recession into the great depression, he instituted the practice of the federal government taxing the wages of each and every worker in the country.

      I think you have to cut the leaders of the time some slack since they and even economics experts didn't have a really solid grasp of macroeconomics--a major cause of WWII.

      One of the reasons that the allies were so far behind Hitler in preparing for the war is that they all thought that when Hitler began spending money like mad to build up his military that he would shortly bankrupt his country and his military threat would evaporate shortly thereafter. They feared the same for themselves if they tried to match him.

      However, Hitler had accidentally stumbled upon the idea of counter-cyclical economic policy--a government should spend big to get out of a depression, and save up during good times. So, the allies were still struggling with the depression while Germany was rolling high with a thriving economy resulting from a massive government stimulation. Unfortunately, instead of building widgets, Germany was building products that only have one real use, and Hitler was rather power-mad.

      Eventually, the Allies had no choice but to start policies of massive government spending and the Great Depression evaporated. And the experts concluded, "Gee, Keynes, the guy we were mocking yesterday, was right." So, you could say that Hitler was the hero who solved the Great Depression, though with some side-effects.

    64. Re:All I know is... by EvilLordSoth · · Score: 1
      This is probably the most well informed and insightful comment I've read on the political section of slashdot so far.

      It amazes me that this comment has not been modded up yet, but if I had any mod points today, I would definitely be forking them to ya, instead all I've got is props.

      "Cheap Labor" is the economic lynch-pin to hold together all of the republican parties' actions as a system of logical thought and not just mindless corruption, greed, and devaluation of America.

      By that same token, I sincerely wonder if Carly Fiorina is a republican, and/or whether Dubya has ever spoken to her, He is doing to the country what she is doing to HP on a macro scale.

      Frightening.

    65. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't blame the immigrants - they come to the country, speak little English, are very willing to do low paid lobs

      I don't blame the immigrants or the overseas workers who are doing jobs previously done by Americans. I blame the corporations who hire them and the government that makes it so easy for corporations to do that.

      Capitalism is a system whereby a relatively tiny number of wealthy business owners and corporate officers have an economic incentive to drive down the wages of the vast majority of workers. The only thing that keeps wages stable is the limited supply of workers in most fields. Globalization is undoing that with an almost limitless supply of foreign workers desperate for jobs. Supply goes up and wages go down. Simple economics.

      Companies which outsource are sending U.S. dollars abroad. If they paid U.S. workers, the U.S. workers would be spending money at Best Buy, Walmart, local grocery stores, car washes, beauty parlors, hardware stores, shopping malls, etc. So the company doesn't only hurt the workers it lays off. It hurts the entire economy.

      Sure, the price of some consumer goods are lower because of outsourcing. But cheap power tools and lower prices for hair dryers don't make up for the fact that you're unemployed. When you don't know where your next meal is coming from, it's kind of hard to get excited about Walmart being able to sell a microwave oven for $38.

      Now let's look at the uneven playing field. It costs less to hire an Indian software engineer in Bangalore than it costs to lease the office space that would be occupied by his U.S. counterpart. Even if the U.S. engineer was willing to work for $6,000 per year (about the going rate in India), he/she would still be far more expensive to employ.

      Nike can hire 14 year old children to work in its Asian plants while we have strict prohibitions against such practices in the U.S. In addition to prohibiting child labor in the U.S., we have many laws and regulations which are designed to protect American workers. We prohibit discrimination. We limit exposure to dangerous chemicals. We require employers to supply appropriate protective gear (hearing protection, hardhats, dust masks, goggles, gloves, etc. U.S. companies are getting around these expensive regulations by outsourcing.

      Many immigrants are willing to live with 8 people sharing a two-bedroom apartment. Is that the standard of living we want for U.S. citizens? Is that how we want our families to live? If not, then we need to do something to close the doors to foreign workers. We cannot afford to be an employment agency for the third world unless we want the standard of living for the average American worker to plummet.

    66. Re:All I know is... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      Forgive me if I don't believe the government unbiased.

      Forgive me if I don't believe you unbiased.

    67. Re:All I know is... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Look, the rate of unemployment is 5.4%. It was 5.5% when Bill Clinton ran for reelection in 96. Amazingly, 5.4% for Bush is considered bad, 5.5% for Clinton is considered good. Go figure. Now if you're going to rant about job losses, you must remember the average rate for unemployment is roughly 6%. The mid-4s when Bush entered office were downright unusually low rates.

      The way the rate is calculated was changed after Bush took office, so 5.4 is not comparable to 5.5 12 years ago. You're probably missing a whole 2 or 3 percent.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    68. Re:All I know is... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Then enter the dot-com bust, the accounting fraud crisis that boiled over after it festered under the Clinton years, as well as 9/11.

      You're wasting your breath. People are way too short-sighted to believe that a president isn't the direct cause of everything that goes on during his term, especially when people have a political agenda.

    69. Re:All I know is... by antifoidulus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually the really funny thing is that during Clinton's presidency, a lot of people(esp. Republicans) criticized Clinton for adopting Republican economic policies. But then they turn around and blame the recession on those same policies. How quickly we all forget what really happened during Clinton's years.....
      I really think the whole blind Clinton bashing is a lot like blind Bush bashing, the other side so reviles the person that they are willing to say anything to keep their side riled up against the competetion.
      My biggest gripe against Bush isn't that he "caused" the recession, you really won't be able to convince a single Republican that he did, but that he bungled the recovery while creating record deficits. That is something that even Herbert Hoover didn't do. The government is spending tons of money, but a lot of people are still having trouble finding work. Where is it all going? That is the question I really want answered from a Bush supporter.

    70. Re:All I know is... by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 0

      Dear Wolfkin,

      I will never reply to that guy, man. He, like Kerry and Bush, never want to use his god-given brain to think.

      We are in the world filled with instant access, and when competition is heating up, all over the world, the guy is talking about tariff, trade restriction, and such, as though he is the center of the whole damn world and he can control the world with his petty little tarrif and trade restriction.

      The fact that American corporations are actively cutting cost, - not because they like to, but because they have to, - is to provide themselves a chance to compete against OTHERS in the INTERNATIONAL ARENA, and not only the U. S. of A.

      US can hike the tariff through the roof, doing so not only will harm the US consumers, but also will encourage others to BYPASS the United States in many international trade.

      If Toyota can't sell cars in USA, they won't die. They can ply their trade in Brazil as well as Kenya.

      What most of us, the Americans, don't understand is, sooner or later, we won't be the center of the universe anymore, and when that time come, we will beg others to come to our shore to do business with us.

      Facing with this bleak reality, people like the one your responded to, still calling for setting up trade barrier. Duh !

      --
      Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    71. Re:All I know is... by colonslash · · Score: 1
      Being jobless is rough though, and very unfortunate if it hits both wage earners in a household.
      What is really tough is that you need 2 wage earners in a household in order to afford the basics. I agree with the article about the parasitic elite- how does this system continue to exist in a democracy? What really discourages me is that Dean seemed to have some answers. It was incredible how the media dumped on him all at once- voters are disenfranchised because only pro-current establishment candidates are allowed by the establishment in either major party.
    72. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you are what? 25 years old. I lived through the Jimmy Carter administration. I stood in line with 75 people to apply for one job. I waited in gas lines for hours. I had a draft card. Even then I had it better than my parents who lived through thr Great Depression and WWII. Wait a few years before making judgements based on your own life experience.

    73. Re:All I know is... by sporktoast · · Score: 4, Funny

      Step 1: Set up business.
      Step 2: Wait 2 days.
      Step 3: ????
      Step 4: Profit!!

      --
      In a related story, the IRS has recently ruled that the cost of Windows upgrades can NOT be deducted as a gambling loss.
    74. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Where is it all going?
      I'm not a Bush supporter, but I'll answer: It's all going to Iraq.

      You know, it's funny -- people complain about "bleeding-heart liberals," well, Bush must be a "bleeding-heart conservative" to want to "help" and "liberate" the Iraqi people at our expense!
    75. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If jobless people aren't being counted then how can you know about them. That makes no sense whatever.

    76. Re:All I know is... by HapNstance · · Score: 1

      You say:
      As a percentage of the population the number of lower-class and poor folks, along with the very rich, are at their highest points ever in American history.
      And then:
      if all you're doing is turning former middle-class folks into poor folks, while making rich folks richer.

      So if both ends of the spectrum are increasing in size why don't you say "turning former middle-class folks into poor OR rich folks"? The facts may not be debatable but when you make a statement like the above you show your bias which is debatable. I personally am someone who went from being a "poor folk" to middle-class and am now heading towards "rich". I do not expect the government to do anything to benefit me regarldess of who is in charge and I think if more people would try to "look out for #1" and depend less on the government (or someone else) to take care of them then we would have a lot fewer problems. I'm sooo tired of all the whining (by both sides).

    77. Re:All I know is... by Epistax · · Score: 1

      This is very interesting because I've heard the opposite so many times. I was just lately starting to figure that there was a difference between the unemployment rate and jobless rate, but perhaps the truth is "unemployed" now isn't PC or something.

      Anyway I am very surprised to hear this. I was even told by an economics professor that the unemployment rate comes from unemployment claims. I know that people still cite "people filing for unemployment".

    78. Re:All I know is... by voidptr · · Score: 1
      The new jobs created within the economy pay, on average, $9,000 less than the old jobs did.


      And if we're talking about tech jobs, that's not terribly suprising. Before the bubble burst you had fresh college graduates with a CS degree making upper 5 to 6 figure incomes for entry level IT jobs supporting thousands of just plain bad business plans that were going to make millions because they had the word "Internet" on every page. Of *course* wages are going to depress after that. Those wages were being paid out of insanely large VC pools and had absolutely no connection to the real value the employee was providing the company. Now there's more tech professionals in the market than there were ever real jobs for, and wages adjust accordingly.
      --
      This .sig for unofficial government use only. Official use subject to $500 fine.
    79. Re:All I know is... by mrgreen4242 · · Score: 2, Funny
      by using OUR BRAIN.

      You see, you have use your BRAIN to come up with an idea... I had an idea once... It was a Jump to Conclusions mat!

    80. Re:All I know is... by Epistax · · Score: 1

      Not to mention Green Policy -> Better Fiscal Policy. Sure right away there are high upfront costs but hundreds of billions of dollars will be saved in the future. Billions of dollars have been spent cleaning up because we decided to do thinks cheaply to begin with. As a whole (despite the "conserve") the democratic party is far more green than the republican party. I think this is because of either vested interest in coal/oil etc (both parties, but republicans more), or because they're afraid of something going wrong under their watch.

      It cannot be stated enough- every coal and oil plant in this country must be shut down. Modern nuclear plants need to be built and then the old ones shut down. NIMBY? Now THAT is unpatriotic, not french fries.

    81. Re:All I know is... by l33t+gambler · · Score: 0

      Those aren't promises, those are concrete ideas and suggestions we can watch him follow through!

      I thought simple and to-the-point statements was good, to be clear about the matters, instead of this endless political "we well do better ... god bless america ... terror terror ... god bless america ..." mumbo-jumbo.

      That's the attitude here in Europe, but overall Americans have a lower education degree then the rest of us polluting trash (1) so I can understand so many like Bush - hes cute and simple!

      1)
      Polluting trash:
      Japan, Europe, China, etc all modern rich countries with McDonalds

      --
      Teasing the nobles, and rightfully so!
    82. Re:All I know is... by MadMorf · · Score: 1

      Me too...

      I lost my job back in May, got a new one in July...

      However, 150+ of my fellow EDS employees lost their jobs 2 weeks ago here in RTP...

      Even though I'm working, things still don't look too good around here...

    83. Re:All I know is... by maximilln · · Score: 1

      how would you like it if your boss gave you a timely drop in salary

      Ask the people who lost their IT jobs to work at McDonald's. Ask the tens of thousands who were laid off in the pharmaceutical industry to take jobs at 75% their former pay

      To them, it's all the same.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    84. Re:All I know is... by Wolf_Larsen · · Score: 1

      Painful, yes. Statistically Relevant, no.

    85. Re:All I know is... by Gorobei · · Score: 1

      Interest rates go up, since cash itself is more likely to increase in value than an investment

      I'm sure you meant to say: interest rates go DOWN, since cash itself is more likely to increase in value.

    86. Re:All I know is... by maximilln · · Score: 1

      who in turn got it from the Reagan crowd with their idiotic 'trickle-down' policies

      My favorite anecdote: "There's no trickle-down if the net flow is up."

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    87. Re:All I know is... by nyri · · Score: 5, Informative

      That's deflation, and it happened during the last US depression in the 30s. There has not been a depressed economy since then (possibly excepting New Zealand and Finland.)

      Japan was depressed economy just a few years ago. Here is a brief of Japan's economy from the economist:

      Japan's economic slump began with a stockmarket crash in 1989; persistent deflation then lowered wages and discouraged investment. For years the Bank of Japan took a passive approach before aggressively boosting the money supply to keep the yen weak in February 2003. That, combined with cost-cutting by Japanese exporters, has led to a rise in business profits and in the stockmarket. The government now believes it can halt deflation by 2006 (the OECD disagrees). Some companies have been able to clean up their debt, banks are looking healthier, and there are even signs that consumer spending, low during the slump, might rise again.

      In the long run, however, Japan needs reforms: an ageing population will shrink productivity, raise health-care costs and further burden the costly public pension system (though some economists have argued that Japan's public debt--161% of GDP in 2003--is not as crippling as it looks). Junichiro Koizumi, the prime minister, promised painful economic reforms in 2001, but his efforts have been half-hearted. Reformed and galvanised, Japan's unproductive service industries could take up the slack of future economic slowdowns and lessen the burden on export-led manufacturing.

    88. Re:All I know is... by idiotnot · · Score: 3, Insightful

      OK, perhaps Bush isn't responsible for mismanagement of a floundering game company, but it stings nonetheless.

      You have it right. But there are many people who believe that the future of their financial position depends upon the actions of some politician.

      If someone honestly believes that, he will never be successful, because success is a function of external circumstance.

      Oh well.

    89. Re:All I know is... by arminw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ....Labor is the true engine of any economy,.....

      That's what Hitler said as he changed the basis of the German money and economy from the gold standard, essentially making gold nothing more than another metal commodity. All this was to the chagrin of all the wealthy people in the US and elsewhere, since now the gold they had amassed did not help them to control others any more. Soon after Hitler did this, the rest of the world abandoned gold and now the worth of money is entirely arbitrary, controlled by the bankers of the world. In the US it even became illegal for the citizens to own gold.

      What you get paid in dollars, pounds, pesos, euros or whatever is immaterial. What matters is how long you have to work for a loaf of bread or whatever. In the US, the time needed to work for most items is still much less than in many other countries. Today you can buy a pair of shoes for a few hours of labor, but my grandparents in Germany had to work for about a month for a decent pair of shoes. A good suit of clothes took three months wages for an average tradesman. Today, even someone flipping hamburgers in the US, works less time to buy almost everything and can buy those same shoes for a lot less work time than the worker in Indonesia who works in the factory that made those very same shoes.

      Compared to generations past, and to the vast majority of people on Earth today, we are spoiled and rather unthankful for what we do have here in the US. If things here really are as bad as some of the posters on this forum complain, then why is it that so many foreigners still clamor to come here, such as some from Mexico risking a horrible death in the deserts of the southwest?

      --
      All theory is gray
    90. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Well, don't forget GW inherited a bubble economy from the Clinton era (not that the bubble was just Clinton's fault). The jobless rate was much lower, and the growth rate much higher, than they should have been under a normal economy.

      I like G.W.'s specific proposals, but I just wish I could know if he will actually do them.

      It feels like I have to choose between a guy that isn't promising to do anything specific (except trade barriers, which have *never* worked), and a guy that failed to do what he said last time but is again promising to do some decent stuff.

    91. Re:All I know is... by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 1

      What matters is wether or not they use the same standards for what qualifies as unemployed from year to year.

      But the quote from Snopes that was used to support the claim (as far as I could tell) that the unemployment stats aren't based on whether or not people claim for unemployment insurance said nothing one way or the other about how the surveyers decide what qualifies as unemployed. The reference to Snope was completely worthless for (what seemed to me to be) its intended purpose.

      I'm not arguing that the stats are based on whetehr people claim unemplyment insurance because I don't know, but from the link given it seems that Snopes doesn't know either.

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    92. Re:All I know is... by Kjyn · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure about your $9,000 number. I saw Kerry say it, too, but Factcheck, and I, disagree. It is not a statistic relating the jobs being created. It is a statistic relating to the industry-wide average.

      From the Kerry report itself,
      "[T]he average wage in sectors that have gained jobs over the past three years was 30 percent lower than the average wage in industries that lost jobs." [CIBC World Markets, US Employment Quality Index, 6/21/2004]

      Note that this is about industry and not specific jobs. If an industry fires the bottom-of-the-chain, low wage people and keeps the higher ups, who usually make more money, then the averge pay of the industry will go up. If an industry hires low wage people, then the average pay per person go down.

      Also, the industries marked with growth, are the generally lower paying industries: education, hospitality, and construction. The industries that shrank were high paying industries: Information Services, Utilities.

      With that said, there's still a job problem, but it's with the fact that most new jobs are the bottom-tier jobs. They aren't paying any less, it's the opportunity for the high paying jobs have decreased. Maybe the end result is the same, but I don't think that if you tried to get a job now vs the same job last year, you would get a $9000 less salary offer.

    93. Re:All I know is... by Simonetta · · Score: 1

      So, you could say that Hitler was the hero who solved the Great Depression, though with some side-effects.

      Adoph Hitler was a twisted little freak who had an uncanny almost-supernatural ability to stir up latent hatred by means of making speeches on radio (a very hot medium in McLuhan terms).
      Hitler allowed really smart people to put policies in place that revived the rock-bottom German economy. When the economy started to recover, the dictator went fult-tilt-boogie with his plans to remove from the populace all of the groups of people whom he personally hated. The German tendency to follow-the-leader-regardless-of -the-consequences allowed him to implement the policies that led to the murder of 6 million Jews and the deaths of 70 million people in WWII.

      No, you could not say that Hitler was the hero who solved the Great Depression, with some side effects. If he had been born 100 years later, Adoph Hitler would have been a Death-Metal rock star who designed his own album covers.
      And the world would be a much better place than it is now after the consequences of his having been in it.

    94. Re:All I know is... by gorfie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You are correct in that the economy was failing even before Bush took office. Gillette laid off thousands just after the election but before Bush took office, and that's when I knew we were in for some problems. I'm willing to bet that those companies waited to lay people off until after the election (recall that Gillette donated razor blades to DNC attendees who were then promptly pulled aside by security guards).

      This brings up another question. What's going to happen after this election? Who is waiting until after the election to do something that might make Bush look bad? I personally don't know, but you have to wonder.

      That said, I'm in a decent job now and I'm assuming that this will still be the case in December, so economy isn't a hot topic with me. Ashcroft on the other hand, is. The guy's ultimate goal is to monitor all of our actions/thoughts and prosecute if we deviate from conservative/Christian ideals. Not saying church goers are bad, but I would prefer that they do their worshipping and I look at my pr0n and all of us can be happy.

      But again, you are correct. The shit was going to hit the fan regardless of who won in 2000. And if the shit's going to hit the fan again, it will do so in a few months regardless of who wins.

    95. Re:All I know is... by woztheproblem · · Score: 1

      Do you have a source for this information?

    96. Re:All I know is... by boomgopher · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      They own your children's bodies for the purposes of warfare.
      When will you start taking what is yours back again?


      Funny, you could change that to read:

      "They own your children's bodies for the purposes of welfare.
      When will you start taking what is yours back again?"


      And then it accurately reflects my feelings on the left and their misguided idealism.

      All I can say is this: The unmotivated hippy stoner living in his RV across the street from me has a Kerry/Edwards poster in his window. But, when I drive through the insanely rich neighborhood a few miles from here, they have Kerry posters too... Hmm...
      However, the small business owners, middle class types, and generally the people I know and respect for their can-do, hard-working attitudes all vote Rebublican.

      Sorry man, Kerry's a rich pig to0 - his wife alone is one of the 400 richest people in America.
      He's been in politics a hell of a lot longer than Bush, but haven't heard of anything impressive done by this great warrior of the proletariat..

      --
      Your hybrid is not saving the environment. Its purpose is to make you feel good about buying something.
    97. Re:All I know is... by jbolden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The level of economic activity is not the whole problem. The problem is shifting wealth away from the middle classes and lower classes and towards the wealthy. Liberal H1B laws do not help the American people but they do help American businesses. Low taxes on capital gains, dividends... while there are very high taxes on wages (combining income tax and social security) means the American tax system is anti-progressive.

    98. Re:All I know is... by the0ther · · Score: 1

      Seriously. I am sick and tired of hearing that 5.4% number. It is so worthless because they do not count the people who have given up on finding any kind of work. That's just cockamamie. There must be a reason why they calculate the number as such, but it escapes me right now.

    99. Re:All I know is... by LookSharp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Then do us all a favor and stop pretending that you're an American.

      This is the rhetoric we've come to. "If you support outsourcing, you're not an American," and others... "If you criticize the government..." "...if you don't submit to a full body-cavity search and background investigation before boarding a plane..." etc. etc. you are not an American.

      I SWEAR that I am not deliberately invoking Godwin's law here, but think about it. Getting the country afraid of unseen enemies, and promoting unquestioned nationalistic mindset is exactly how, over the course of a few years, Nazi Germany came about. I would HOPE that American society is intelligent enough to stand up and see what is happening, and stop it, before all civil liberties are lost. I don't think Bush is a dictator in waiting, I don't think we're sitting here compacently waiting to become a fascist state. However there can be no question that as we go down this avenue of language and mindset, bigger and bigger breeches of freedom will be justified in the name of security or patriotism.

      THAT IS A BAD THING.

    100. Re:All I know is... by Artful+Codger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I totally agree with your measure of "worth" as how long you have to work to get something.

      But you have to compare apples to apples - same timeframe, and same relative framework. it's not helpful to compare a 1st world economy to a 3rd world economy (except to remind oneself how good we currently have it in North America).

      A better comparison might be cost of shelter - how many days one has to work for a month's rent (or a month of mortgage, utilities, property taxes)

      But two very key things;

      First, we only have to work a couple hours to buy shoes... because we don't make them anymore. We get the 3rd world and to make them. ditto for alot of consumer goods. The price we pay is artificially LOW and we are going to get it between the eyes when we run out of cheap labour to exploit.

      And second... since we still do have it relatively good... we should be INVESTING AS A SOCIETY in things that will insure future well-being - eg education and research. As a class, the thing rich people are mostly good at is staying rich. Giving them more wealth via tax cuts in this day and age... makes them wealthier, period. They are not reinvesting in things that produce jobs.

      So I agree that we have it good, but we're on the wrong course for keeping it good... unless the intent is to maintain our wealth through world domination and intimidation by force (military and capital). Which doesn't seem to be working so well, lately.

      --

      ... plans that either come to naught, or half a page of scribbled lines...
    101. Re:All I know is... by cmorriss · · Score: 1
      If nobody noticed, more people matured to legal working age than jobs created this year.

      You need to subtract the number of people who retired, which given that baby boomers are retiring in huge numbers will decrease that number significantly.

      --
      10 minutes working on a sig. What a waste.
    102. Re:All I know is... by bladernr · · Score: 1
      The only thing they don't do is count towards the damn numbers our government is trying to pass off on us as "getting better".

      A great deal of economic performance is based on re-enforcing physcology (just ask any socio-economist). If people believe the economy is good, it is. If they don't, it isn't. A smart economist with a lot more grey hair than me told me in 2001 that we would be in a recession as soon as we thought we were, and out at the same time.

      In other words, what if I could wave a wand and make every CEO think the economy is in great shape and all his competitors are expanding? They would all start hiring, pumping money into the economy (through the workforce) and the economy does get better. Every central banker on the planet knows the economic differences you make just by jawboning.

      Another tibbit is that there is a great deal of evidence that all the anti-offshoring talk caused more offshoring. The reason is that businesses that weren't doing it much or at all started believing it was mainstream and all their competitors were doing it (why else would there be so much protest?). That made them ramp up their own offshoring programs as a competitive response. Simply sayings things can make them true.

      Being publically optimistic about the economy isn't just politics - it really does help the economy. John Kerry really does hurt the economy by talking it down. If hiring managers don't "feel good" about where we are going, they don't hire.

      (for the record, I don't support either Bush or Kerry).

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    103. Re:All I know is... by Andronoid · · Score: 1

      ....you are all wrong. People are notoriously bad http://www.analytictech.com/mb021/notes_on_gilovic h.htm at finding patterns in certain things and the economy happens to be one of those things. The problem is two fold: One) We're likely two see random occurences as evidence for our position. For example, if all our firends lose their jobs at once this is a rare occurence but not unlikely to happen to at least a couple people given that there are some many people in the US. If you flipped a coin a million times you might end up with a run of 100 heads in a row. The second problem is that even if people do use real evidence (ie unemployement rates) they are likely to associate it with the wrong cause. For example, Andrew Jackson ruined the economy by devaluing paper money by making gold the only way to buy land. He was long gone before the the disastrous effects of his decision were apparent. So why don't we blame clinto, bush sr., or even FDR instead of Bush jr.? It's sad to say but human beings are cognitively unable to associate fluctuations in the economy with the current present. (at least without a huge amout of studying or in rare a situation where it is completely obvious to everyone that the current president screwed up). Just as a side note on blaming presidents for things they had not much to do with (ie the economy), incubent presidents are way more likely to lose in areas were there has been natural disasters. apparently they get blamed for not fixing (and sometimes not preventing) natural disasters. Looks like bush might not win florida this year.....

    104. Re:All I know is... by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Whether someone is collecting unemployment is irrelevant to whether they're considered in the unemployment rate.

      The original poster's statement was a half-truth.

    105. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The most important reason to vote Bush is to send a clear message to the Arab world. Kerry can talk about the economy all he wants but until the problems in the middle east are neutralized it will be impossible to concentrate on domestic issues.

      The other problem is that current reporting aobut the economy is completely skued to reflect the liberal bias in many news papers. Locally there are a huge number of job openings for CNC machinests and programmers. WE are talking about employer needs that are affecting their ability to take on work, not just a man here or there. So what happens when that work (good paying Jobs by the way) can not be done locally? You got it people look outside the area, sometimes as far away as Germany or China.

      The problem right now in this country isn't the lack of jobs, it is a problem of a lack of people willing to work. It is rather sad to think that people really believe that work outside their educational background is beneath them or beyond their abilities. Adaptation is good for the species, but it is also good for the individual. One needs to take an active role in his employment.

      Dave

    106. Re:All I know is... by flacco · · Score: 2, Informative
      You think inflation is bad? Try deflation, the oppostite, when prices go down.

      ...or, from the carter era, stagflation: when the economy is stagnant but prices *still* rise. i learned about that real-time in my high school economics classes in the late '70s...

      the prime rate for loans is currently around 4.5%. do you know what it was in 1980? 20%! 20% prime rate, plus inflation, plus stagnant economy. i remember trying to get a job after high school back then - *very* demoralizing. employers were nakedly contemptuous of job applicants because so many of them swarmed like flies around every job opening.

      it can get a lot worse than it is now.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    107. Re:All I know is... by xsecrets · · Score: 1

      Well as soon as they realize that they can get a middleman for their product for $5 in their own country, and buy him an inexpensive coach class ticket over here then you will be out of a job like the rest of us. And we won't be crying for you either.

    108. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It completely amazes me when I see these sorts of comments about us going to war in the middle east. First off we really have little choice, one only has to open ones eyes and see the incredible harm the Arabs are doing in this world to realize that.

      Frankly it has always been a requirement historically to control the Arab world via warfare and massive slaughters. Just crack the history books a bit and you will discover clearly that the Arab world has never been concerned about decent behaviour or respect of life. The need to regullarly truncate that culture has been a reality for centuries.

      That doesn't mean that I agree with the way Bush has prosecuted the war. Frankly he has targetted the wrong element in the Arab world, but I'm 100% sure that Kerry doesn't have a clue. I would much prefer that we had a president that had a little respect for our troops and the capital tied up in nuclear weapons. Any war in the middle east should have started off with a 50% reduction in population. Simply put you have to wipe out enough people to have a credible impact on the culture there.

      Thanks

    109. Re:All I know is... by steven.hasty · · Score: 1

      According to an article from the New York Times Magazine, "Jobs" by Roger Lowenstein (paid-only, sorry), there isn't a whole lot a president can do about creating or losing jobs in the market economy. He only has figurehead duties to change the national mood, or he can hire or fire many people within government (think of Reagan and air traffic controllers). Aside from that, it's up to the economy itself, and, may I stress, the tax code matters little.

    110. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > your just as stupid as the rest of the liberal
      > assholes that are out there

      Oh my the rhetoric! Why is it that ANY political position other than toeing the republican party line is "so far to the left your in China"?

    111. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Keep using the word Jap asshole.
      You're a typical fucking racist fuckface.
      I don't think you would take kindly to suffer all the injustices the Japanese Americans faced in that time (loss of their property, their rights, health problems, etc.) Still, Japanese Americans volunteered to fight the Germans and continue to serve this country and little fucking faggot like you thinks he has the right to be derogatory?

      Guess what asshole, they died so you could be a little fucking derogatory piece of shit. You should go to their gravesites on Veteran's Day and try that "Jap" shit. I'll make sure you have the appropriate welcoming party of all their relatives and other veterans who will then proceed to flay your little monkey ass alive and cut that worthless excuse for a tongue right out of your fucking mouth. You miserable little sack of whore period stained cum fungus!

    112. Re:All I know is... by Gary+Destruction · · Score: 1

      The economy in Florida isn't strong since tropical systems have battered it repeatedly. The Miama Herald might not even exist now.

    113. Re:All I know is... by sisukapalli1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are correct in that the economy was failing even before Bush took office. Gillette laid off thousands just after the election but before Bush took office

      Here is another view point. Suppose a corporation wants to lay off workers and cut pay. What is a good time to do it? A union friendly government, or a corporate friendly government? May be, and it's just a wild idea, that corporations feel more powerful under Bush administration, so we see more layoffs.

      S

    114. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way the rate is calculated was changed after Bush took office, so 5.4 is not comparable to 5.5 12 years ago. You're probably missing a whole 2 or 3 percent.

      Don't move the damn goalposts if you don't have a source.

    115. Re:All I know is... by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      Hawley-Smoot Tariff

      Read about it. Learn.

      And then watch HomeStarRunner

    116. Re:All I know is... by ChrisInSF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But its even more profitable if you don't emply others..

      See This interesting piece about what is happening with call center jobs (from Simon Head's "The New Ruthless Economy" - a must read book)

    117. Re:All I know is... by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You and i know it only takes like 2 days to set up a profitable business that can employ others. Thank god the government is there to do it for us!

      Ok, in context, I guess you are telling a joke. I didn't find it very funny though. MAybe it will take you 48 work hours to get the ground-work set up for a business which may eventually become profitable though....

      When I started my consulting business, I spent something like a full week (more than 40 hours too) writing my business plan. I probably spent another 8 hours or so setting up network infrastructure, buying licenses, setting up office space, etc. So that is 48 hours or more (2 days, right? if I don't eat or sleep ;-))

      BTW, my business plan is about 100 pages long.

      My business has been profitable every month since inception. Granted it hasn't always made enough for me to pay myself enough to cover all *my* bills, but the business has been otherwise self-supporting.

      Now, six months later, I am finally being able to cover my bills (mortgage payment, electricity, groceries, etc). So my seed capital (tax refund, IRA) basically was used to pay my living expenses for those six months. Someday soon, maybe I can even look at hiring people fulltime.

      However, I have a different perspective on this job crunch. I think that we are in the midst of a major economic change in this country. It is going to take some time for businesses to understand how to best use off-shore outsourcing and global networks such as open source project teams. This transition creates an opportunity for me because many people feel orphaned by the current trends in the small business markets.

      In the end, I think that services businesses in the US will do well.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    118. Re:All I know is... by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      That's not correct. From http://www.snopes.com/science/stats/unemploy.htm Although this belief is widespread and has at times been reported as factual in the mainstream media, the truth of the matter is that unemployment statistics are gathered through a process of sampling a representative number of households; they are not arrived by counting the number of unemployment insurance claims made during a particular month. Data collected in the Current Population Survey (CPS), a monthly survey of over 60,000 households, is used for this purpose. From this data, an extrapolation is made about the unemployment status of the country as a whole.

      See, the text you just posted says NOTHING to contradict what you were trying to contradict. So I choose to pick 60,000 households to get my number from, big deal. I can STILL fuck with the numbers By counting the people in those house as not unemployed, even though they don't have jobs.

      The reality of the situation is that the Bush admistration has redfined what constitutes "unemployed".

      The text you posted is nothing but a bait-and-switch argument. Snopes doesn't give you enough information to actually show that the claim they're refuting is false, nor does the page the're linking
      It's like me saying, "Look a Corvette!"
      And you responding, "No, it's blue."
      And then a third party coming along based upon only hearing the conversation and note actually seeing the car, claiming it most definately not a Corvette. The reality is that there has been no information presented to you that proves it's not a Corvette.

      Additionally, do NOT trust snopes as a sole source for information.
      For example, this article is flat out worng:
      link

      I have emailed them with multiple refences which seem to support that Charles Proteus Steinmetz, did indeed perform the feat in question.
      (Not just web links, one of these is a historical sidenote from an advanced math book I used at Cornell.)
      Nonetheless, the snopes article was not changed at all. I dodn't think that particular article is a huge deal or anything, but the lack of change to the pages or even a reply to my email, makes seriously doubt the intellectual rigor of any "investigation" they do.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    119. Re:All I know is... by ImaLamer · · Score: 1

      I like to put this spin on it....

      If the unemployment numbers are high that means there are many people out of work. Well? There are obviously jobs out there... an abundance of them right?

      Bush will be saying this next.

    120. Re:All I know is... by dspfreak · · Score: 1
      Didn't they tigten up H1B visas during the last couple of years? Why? Because with the reduction in the number of jobs, there is no longer a justification to import as much labor. The government responded. Many businesses screamed about this, but they did it anyway.

      As far as investment income, dont' forget that when people invest their money, they have already earned the principle (probably as wages) and been taxed on it. Lower capital gains taxes have been around for a long time, and they encourage long term investing rather than speculation. Lowering dividend taxes to the same level as capital gains taxes encourages more conservative investing, and longer term investing. Or are you dying for another tech bubble?

      --
      "Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions." -- G. K. Chesterton
    121. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All well reasoned but inherently false.

      Just this one quote from TFA sums it all up:
      Henry Ford was right: industrial economies that do not pay workers enough to afford their products have limited potential.

      Henry Ford's own well-paid workers became the biggest source of buyers for his product. He got extremely rich paying his workers a better wage than almost everyone else was paying at the time.

      That "cheaper labor" that you speak of does not equate to cheaper products for the average buyer. You cannot justify the savings in labor by paying $1.00 a day for laborers overseas making tennis shoes that sell for $100 in America. Rather than cheaper products for all Americans, exploiting cheap overseas labor just results in bigger paychecks for a very few priviliged Americans.

      In the same token, the money I earned, I sent back to my good ol' U. S. of A. for safekeeping. No matter how I like the world outside America, America is still my country.

      Big deal. In past times, that money would have been used to finance further growth in the good ol U. S. of A. Now it is only used to finance more growth in other countries. If you really care about your country, how about developing things in it? Why don't you roll up (y)our sleeves and COMPETE AGAINST THE CHEAPEST LABOR IN BANGLADESH, by using (Y)OUR BRAIN?

    122. Re:All I know is... by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1
      an ageing population will shrink productivity

      That's an issue for all Western countries, and even countries beyond that.

    123. Re:All I know is... by severoon · · Score: 1

      You know, I keep hearing about how bad the economy is, and I was starting to believe it myself. But I'm in software development, the first field to be hit by the downturn and one of the first fields to start recovering (after financial institutions--they always feel it first). Well for the last year or so, I've had no trouble finding work, and things have really picked up lately. I'm in Silicon Valley and during my latest job search, I put my resume up on DICE and was getting 3-5 calls per day.

      I just signed to take a job yesterday. My brother graduated six months ago with an MBA, and management is traditionally the last sector to recover, and he just locked up a job as well. (Yes, management is the last to recover--when companies are unsure about money, they hire the people on the front lines and try to make that work before they start bringing in middle managers to manage the projects they've created.)

      I was starting to believe the Kerry hype over the last year or so, but this latest experience with this job search I just went through, turning down offers and having multiple offers on the table at one time, all while in the industry supposedly hardest hit by all of this outsourcing...I'm thinking Bush is right after all. The economy is on an upswing and it's only a matter of months before everyone feels it.

      It's too bad that if Kerry gets elected, everyone's going to think that he somehow magically did something to recover the economy in his first couple of months, because that's how long it'll take before things are back in full swing. As if that was even possible. It's like when 9/11 happened, the Dems are saying, Hey, that happened on Bush's watch. Not fair, people. You don't have a weak-kneed (when it comes to foreign policy) Democrat in office for 8 years who doesn't take any kind of stance against terrorism, and then we get hit 8 months after Bush is in office, and "it happened on his watch."

      Anyway, to the main point. This post above, however close to home these job losses have struck, it's anecdotal. (Sorry, but it's true.) My bro and I getting jobs is also anecdotal, but our experience during the job search is not. One does not receive several calls a day and competing offers in the hardest-hit industry in a bad economy. It just doesn't happen--I should know, I lived through it the previous three years or so.

      --
      but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
    124. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      ....you are all wrong.

      No, I am correct. All that you did was write a long, rambling, almost pointless post on why people can't be trusted to understand the economy. Yet you provided no concrete answers as to what has caused job losses, lower wages, etc. All you seem to want to do is "blame anyone but G. W. Bush."

      in rare a situation where it is completely obvious to everyone that the current president screwed up

      I'd say that's pretty obvious to just about anyone with any understanding of economics in this case. The uncertainty Bush has caused in the markets with his war in Iraq, the fear mongering as he ratchets the terror alert levels up and down, the unnerving effect of $400+billion deficits, and giving huge tax cuts to the people least likely to go out and spend the money have all contributed to the pathetic economic picture. What drives the economy is consumer spending and when consumers have no confidence, there is no spending.

    125. Re:All I know is... by cluckshot · · Score: 3, Informative

      The truth on H-1B is that the US Government begain for the first time enforcing the law in mid March of 2004! Not before. Before that it was wide open. The visa totals were as much as 100,000 higher than the law allowed. For about 2 months they enforced this law and those were the best two months of job creation in the Bush Presidency. Then they started cheating. They issued over 200,000 renewals and wavers on J-1 which leads to H-1B allowing people to stay here and look for work when out of status on J-1. They also opened the Illegal Immigration by stopping enforcement.

      Currently US Illegal Immigration is running at a level 3 times that of 2001! The Bush Administration is cheating H-1B and L-1 etc by bargaining numbers into the FTA's (Free trade agreements) they are having with about 50 nations. This is opening the barn doors wide open.

      The USA in the 911 report noted that in January 2001 The Bush team discussing terrorism noted that there was no way any measures would be effective against terrorism unless America's porous border situation was brought into check. Translation it means that nothing is of any value in the War on Terror unless we fix illegal immigration by stopping it. The Bush team is claiming to be fighting a war on terror that they know that they are not even fighting.

      As to prosperity. The foundation of prosperity is a Secure Nation.

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    126. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I cashed in my stock options during the bubble I paid over 30% on my capital gains. I don't consider that to be a small tax.

    127. Re:All I know is... by AaronGTurner · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Replying to my own post, in the future immigration may be one of the ways to cover the costs of an aeging population. Since capital is increasingly mobile you can't necessarily cover the costs of older members of the population by taxing corporations which means that the two options are either cutting benefits dramatically for baby boomers (it was assumed in the 1960s that the future would be rosy, and many failed to save enough by taking the information offered and planning accordingly) or by taxing the workforce more heavily to pay for the costs. Since you can't tax foreigners living abroad then getting more people of working age into your country to work there, and be taxed, rather than outsourcing, is one way to make up the tax revenue.

      The next generation (Generation X if you will) will simply have to save much much more for retirement (I need to save more for one) since importing more people to be taxed won't work forever as those people will also get older unless the visas on which immigrants work are strictly time limited and they get booted out at 65. If the US dollar is high compared to the costs in their home countries this might actually work, however, as money saved working in the USA might offer a comfortable retirement for them in their country of origin (and without being a burden to their country of origin) as well as offering the USA the chance to garner additional tax receipts while they are working in the USA.

      There are plenty of things that could go wrong, and encouraging immigration is not necessarily a popular choice. However the costs of an aeging population sometimes scare the pants off me.

    128. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And the problems with these times are a carryover from the Clinton administration's disastrous policies.

      Does constantly dragging your knuckles on the ground hurt?

    129. Re:All I know is... by Dr.+Smeegee · · Score: 1

      This is certainly damning. If it's not too much trouble, could you post references? I'd like to read it for myself.

    130. Re:All I know is... by GreyPoopon · · Score: 1
      Oh wait. First I need money to pay for an office to hold my new employees. Plus, I'll need money to pay for the employees. And I'll need money for whatever supplies are needed for these employees to do their jobs (computers, products, etc).

      Are you still living in the 50's? I wouldn't assert that you can build a business in two days, but in a matter of a couple months you could have a viable business up and running. You don't need office space, and you probably don't even need to buy equipment for your employees. I bet that if you know so many people out of a job, you could probably come up with a viable business plan and have your friends get their own computers and run a business online. I'm not talking about a dot-com. I'm just talking about using the internet to help. Meetings? Get together in someone's home. You can start a small business that way, and if you all work as partners, you don't have the "pay the employees" issue at the start.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    131. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > Then you ignore the fact that most people don't have the
      > intelligence to quickly change careers

      That's an important point that's not made often enough.

      Also, consider the fact that it's increasingly more difficult to learn drastically new ways of thinking the older one gets.

      The sad thing about the outsourcing is that the most experienced (and oldest) of the domestic workers are hit the hardest and left with the fewest options.

    132. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > A recession is not a small depression

      that's simply false... I would argue very much the opposite.

      Look at weimar Germany with its hyper inflation and collapse of the currency - or any one of the latin american countries of the 80s.. where the value of paper money halved *daily*

      A depression? well.. for people in them it sure felt like one..

      horos

    133. Re:All I know is... by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1
      If someone does have a clear statement on Kerry's proposed economic policy, I'd like to read it. Seriously.
      Camplaign webwite section on economy
      Incremental stuff: tax breaks for onshore job creation, end of tax breaks that reward offshoring, taking more trade disputes to the WTO. A few other things that aren't directly related to job creation.
    134. Re:All I know is... by deaddrunk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And how many of those businesses last 2 years? Not many, given that hardly anyone is hard-nosed enough to create a successful business.
      It takes guts and giving up any other things in your life for a long time to build a successful business. I'd much rather be an employee working 40 hours a week and have a life and I bet I'm in the majority.
      Outsourcing may be highly beneficial in the short term for big business, but when no-one can afford their products anymore because they're all working for minimum wage (or not working at all) all that rush to save money will look a bit stupid. Not that the middle-classes will ever allow it to go that far.

      --
      Does a Christian soccer team even need a goalkeeper?
    135. Re:All I know is... by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1
      In the UK back in the 1980s the figures were originally a proper measure of those unemployed. Then it was changed to 'unemployed and receiving benefit'. Then the qualification for benefit was changed.

      Basically many many governments use various tricks with regard to unemployment figures and different governments use different calculations. To compare you need to compare like-with-like from NGOs. But most NGOs interested in figures have their own axes to grind so you end up with different figures with different biases from different NGOs. It's quite confusing.

      The same thing happens with crime figures too. Some govt crime figures in the UK jumped up about three years ago as the way they were collated and counted was changed. If you look at the British Crime Survey (non governmental survey of victims of crime) there is a smooth downward trend in those same crime areas. So even official government figures that are honestly collected may contain various levels of error or inconsistency purely due to methodology. I would hope that those making policy are kept abreast of these inconsistencies, though.

    136. Re:All I know is... by GreyPoopon · · Score: 1
      Not many, given that hardly anyone is hard-nosed enough to create a successful business.
      It takes guts and giving up any other things in your life for a long time to build a successful business. I'd much rather be an employee working 40 hours a week and have a life and I bet I'm in the majority.


      I completely agree. But you have to admit that the possibility is there for anybody determined enough.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

    137. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whore period stained cum fungus

      Now that's a new one.

    138. Re:All I know is... by 17028 · · Score: 1

      "The spirit of the times may alter, will alter. Our rulers will become corrupt, our people careless. A single zealot may commence persecutor, and better men be his victims. It can never be too often repeated that the time for fixing every essential right on a legal basis is while our rulers are honest and ourselves united. From the conclusion of [their] war [for independence, a nation begins] going down hill. It will not then be necessary to resort every moment to the people for support. They will be forgotten, therefore, and their rights disregarded. They will forget themselves but in the sole faculty of making money, and will never think of uniting to effect a due respect for their rights. The shackles, therefore, which shall not be knocked off at the conclusion of [that] war will remain on [them] long, will be made heavier and heavier, till [their] rights shall revive or expire in a convulsion." --Thomas Jefferson: Notes on Virginia Q.XVII, 1782. (*) ME 2:225

    139. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The way the rate is calculated was changed after Bush took office, so 5.4 is not comparable to 5.5 12 years ago. You're probably missing a whole 2 or 3 percent.

      Soooo, now prove you didn't actually pull all that out of your ass...

    140. Re:All I know is... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I think the tax was capped at 20%. And if you had earned the same amount in wages what would you have paid?

    141. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      let me guess... you're a JAP?

    142. Re:All I know is... by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      "don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up.."

      As it should be. You can't say they can't find a job if they're not looking.

    143. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I feel that some of the compairsons that you make here are a little unfair. I assume that when you say "your grandparents in germany" you refering to a economic situation that existed 60 years ago... not exactly current. The Indonesia example is also a little unfair since it can be argued that situation exists due to the US (and others) creating that enviorment for "cheap labor" and supposed "free trade".I would like to say as well that I was born and raised in the US for the first 22 years of my life and I now live in europe (Norway) I am now currently 27 and I can say confidently that my wage here is better, I pay nearly the same amount of taxes, I am able to save money here FAR more easily then I ever was in the US and do not have to live "paycheck to paycheck" as was the case 95% of the time I lived in the US. I have met other Americans that have moved to europe as well living in Germany, France, Holland, Danmark, Beligum that all told me they felt the same way. While I agree the US is not the "worst off" The situation is bad in the US right now, it has not reached a crisis yet but it will and I hope the country will not just sit on the sidelines and watch it happen because "we are better off the indonesians so quit complaining"

    144. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      If you think Geroge Bush is right wing then your just as stupid as the rest of the liberal assholes that are out there.

      That I am liberal proves that I am your intellectual and moral superior.

      Just what is someone who thinks there should be prayer in school, that abortions should be illegal, that the wealthy should get huge tax breaks? Just because you are even more nutty than he is doesn't make him into someone who's not right wing.

      And they will be able to get a job because redistribution of wealth doesn't work you soialist idiot.

      Actually, the redistribution of wealth through taxes works incredibly well and has been all hallmark of the greatest nations on Earth: U.S., England, France, Germany, etc.

      As to being an idiot, you've got that covered. And you apparently recognize that as you have enough sense to post anonymously so that people can't get a clear picture of just what a nitwit you are.

      Not my fault you didn't plan ahead. Baby boomers - nothing but a bunch of gimme gimme freeloaders.

      I did plan ahead and I'll be abot to retire comfortably. But, unlike you, I believe in policies which help the nation as a whole and not those which simply help line my own pockets. Planning ahead doesn't always work. Just ask any of the spouses of soldiers killed in Iraq if that was part of their plan.

    145. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously a LOT of people do it. Most of our economy stems from small/mid-sized businesses. Come out to the west coast and see how many people that can't even speak english own their own business. I, like Rush or Bill O are tired of the entitlement mentality - make your own way through our world. Ie, when you are sitting around gaming or jerking off to linux paraphenalia, others are building huge companies out of their garage by a lot of elbow grease and persistence. I love the narrowminded socialists that /. and open source in general seems to attract ...

    146. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
      If nobody noticed, more people matured to legal working age than jobs created this year.

      And, out of curiosity, how many retired, became too ill to work, or died?

    147. Re:All I know is... by jbolden · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The H1B rules were supposed to cover situations where there were no Americans capable of taking the jobs. There are very few tech jobs not involving foreign languages/cultures that Americans are not qualified for. H1B was just a way to undercut American wages. A much more reasonable system would be something like a 25% surcharge on H1B wages which goes towards training....

      As for earning on earnings; generally systems that have lower taxes on earnings on wealth than on earned income are regressive and designed to shift wealth up the economic ladder. The idea that "they got taxed on it the first time" doesn't make any difference. All taxes are unfair and destructive to economic activity the question is where to have this damage take place. The US has recently choosen to have it happen to the middle class, and Bush has been a huge advancer of this cause.

      I BTW agree that dividends should be the same level as capital gains. Where I disagree is I think that both of them should be at the same level as earned income (and the earned income tax should count Social security taxes), and further that capital gains should be realized annually through estimation.

      Now a genuinely progressive system would have much lower taxes on earned income (espeically below certain levels) than on cap gains and dividends but I'll settle for less regressive.

      Earnings that the idea that earnings on already existing

    148. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Obviously a LOT of people do it.

      How many people start profitable businesses which employ people in two days as the other poster suggested?

      Come out to the west coast and see how many people that can't even speak english own their own business.

      And how many people do not own their own business? How many tried to start a business and failed? Want to talk about those numbers? You're like someone who believes that the lottery is the road to retirement.

      Most of our economy stems from small/mid-sized businesses.

      So what? The majority of people who try to start a business fail. It's not through lack of trying or lack of initiative. It's usually because of underfunding.

      I, like Rush or Bill O are tired of the entitlement mentality

      So you chose a hypocritical drug addict (seen him calling for mandatory minimums for illegal drug use lately?) and a proven liar as your role models? Given that you think that "I are" is proper English, I guess that I should not be surprised.

      I love the narrowminded socialists that /. and open source in general seems to attract ...>

      Narrow-minded = conservative.

    149. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Forgive me if I don't believe you unbiased.

      Why can't the poll simply consist of the collective biases of the respondents?


      1. Do you have a job? ___Yes ___No
      2. Do you want a job? ___Yes ___No


      If the answer to 1 is No, and the answer to 2 is yes, you're unemployed. It's not rocket surgery...

    150. Re:All I know is... by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      I would support any measure that removes some of the corporate welfare aspect of H-1b. However, the problem was never really training of the US citizens. The US has some fundamental problems with trade, immigration and tax policy that are affecting the human capital investment in the US.

    151. Re:All I know is... by servognome · · Score: 1

      Yet you provided no concrete answers as to what has caused job losses, lower wages, etc
      Speculative investment in an overextended technology market. Y2K was a big reason, when the tech bubble started stuttering in '98, the large investments in technology in anticipation of Y2K caused an employment bubble. Sorta like what happens in retail during the holiday season, lots of people get hired, then fired afterwards. Is it any surprise that the first stock market drop happened in March, then again in August of 2000. Nobody needed new computers. Since a disproportionate amount of wealth during the dotcom period was in the form of stock, this had a significant impact on the spending power especially those of technology workers.
      Things were expected to start recovering in 2003, but then GWB screwed everything up with the war in Iraq, causing uncertainty and driving up oil prices.
      Presidents don't make the economy go up, but they can certainly make it go down.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    152. Re:All I know is... by jcr · · Score: 0, Troll

      This is blatant disinformation. You're calling the 1930s a routine recession?

      No, read what I wrote: FDR turned a routine recession into the great depression. We'd had recessions before, and the feds didn't go on a panicked binge of power-grabbing and profiligate spending.

      But your attempt to shift the blame from corrupt monopolies that sank the economy to the administration that picked up the pieces is pure propoganda.

      FDR didn't "pick up the pieces", he dynamited the building that was on fire. Oh, and BTW: the monopoly that did the most damage was the Federal Reserve.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    153. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      I agree that the dotcom investments had much to do with the problem, but also, the lack of a presidential initiative to get greater deployment of broadband helped fuel the crash. Many dotcom businesses failed because their products and services were tailored for a broadband-enabled marketplace that was slow to materialize.

      I also don't think that the dotcom bubble bursting has anything to do with outsourcing of everything from telemarketing to customer service call centers to processing of bank transactions. That, too, contributed to job losses.

      Things were expected to start recovering in 2003, but then GWB screwed everything up with the war in Iraq, causing uncertainty and driving up oil prices.

      That was part of it, but let's not forget the fear-mongering about terrorism that he's continued to use for political advantage: 'vote for me or terrorists will kill your family.' And then there is the insane deficit spending. It doesn't take a financial genius to recognize that the debt being accrued by 'Dubya' is going to dog Americans for decades.

      Presidents don't make the economy go up, but they can certainly make it go down.

      If they inspire confidence in the population, they can, indeed, make the economy go up.

    154. Re:All I know is... by dprovine · · Score: 1
      Personal anecdotes may suffice for a lot of people, but for it to be a reasoned argument, personal anecdotes alone don't cut it as it falls under the fallacy of insufficient sample.

      So, would you accept the argument that everybody who lost their job since Bush's inauguration, or who has had to take a worse job, should vote against Bush? And everyone whose job is better should vote for him?

      That would seem to take care of the "insufficient sample" problem.

      And it is, of course, Reagan's question (given to him by David Gergen, IIRC), "Are you better off now than you were four years ago?"

    155. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh, it all seems so familiar. Why would the economy of the 80's be making a comeback? Simple. Most of Reagan's people are in Bush's cabinet. Do a little research and it's clear to see why things are the way they are.

      Rich get richer, poor get poorer, and the beat goes on.

    156. Re:All I know is... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Lots of big, simple, promises.

      Kerry can't win in the PR campaign about "simple solutions". The system is too complicated for simple solutions, but every time Kerry tries to get into detail about his plans, no one wants to cover it because they can't get any juicy sound bites (& he gets accused of being another ivory-tower egghead proposing an overly complicated solution). So when he "dumbs it down" so that the media will accept it, he gets accused of being condescending to the public, and proposing overly-simple solutions to a complicated problem.

      Bush's approach is a lot simpler: let his buddies write the laws. No thinking involved, and he looks like he's getting something done. As long as nobody can find out where the money's going, he can put on a happy face and pretend like everything's going great (because it IS - at least for him & his buddies...).

      At least from those awkward moments in interviews where Kerry gets "too complicated", you can tell he's put some thought into the issues.

    157. Re:All I know is... by palfreman · · Score: 3, Insightful
      "Actually, the redistribution of wealth through taxes works incredibly well and has been all hallmark of the greatest nations on Earth: U.S., England, France, Germany, etc."

      Eh? EH? I seriously suggest you check out the 10-15% long term unemplyment and microscopic growth rates in France and Germany. That is the price of socilaist distortions like in TFA above. And England is rapidly catching them up under Blairism. In spite of a IT recession in the US (now over), it is still far easier to get an IT job in America than England, and in England far more easily than France or Germany.

      Where on earth do you people come up with this kind of stuff? There isn't a lump of jobs out their that can be divvied up between your favourite political groups. Individual people, wherever they are from, create jobs by creating wealth - spending their time to take somethng low value and make it higher value using their abilities. If you go down the socialist road that TFA wants, you will bring ruin to the very people you pretend to be helping.

    158. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm doing this. Every two days I set up
      someone in a profitable business. Also geeks! It is possible folks.

    159. Re:All I know is... by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

      "Several months ago I watched Joe Hough, President of the Faculty and William E. Dodge Professor of Social Ethics at the Union Theological Seminary, speak on Bill Moyers "Now" and I was immediately impressed by both his passion as well as the following statement that he made:"

      I hope you've watched this weeks's Now with Bill Moyers as well. I don't think I've ever agreed with a politician more than when I heard the interview with Peter G. Peterson. Seemed very relevant to what you are saying here.

      They also touched on his book Running on Empty... more at http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/search-handle-ur l/index=books&field-author=Peterson%2C%252520Peter %252520G.

      Not trying to shill or anything, just saving you a little bit of typing ;). Oh, the first-half segment about the debates was scary too.

      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    160. Re:All I know is... by zxnos · · Score: 0

      My wife took what she had been doing for extra cash since college and turned it into a profitable business. We spent $300, put together a website and sent out targeted advertising.Four months after that she quit her day job. That was 2 1/2 years ago. She now has clients in 6 states. Couldn't be happier.

      --
      always mosh clockwise
    161. Re:All I know is... by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      Capitalism is a system whereby a relatively tiny number of wealthy business owners and corporate officers have an economic incentive to drive down the wages of the vast majority of workers.

      No, capitalism is a system whereby a very large number of middle class and poor customers have an economic incentive to drive down the profits of the vast majority of businesses.

      From that definition comes the need for businesses to pay as little as they can. We need to remember that capitalism is controlled by customers. Not by businesses. Not by governments. Not by politicians. By customers.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    162. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Despite what you may have learned in government schools, the federal government is NOT responsible for your employment, or lack thereof. The best thing the government can do is GET THE FUCK OUT OF THE WAY of business and industry. Lower taxes will encourage more hirings than anything else that could be done.

      Why are corporations moving out of the country? The answer used to be to pay lower wages, but other countries have caught up with us and some have passed us. The answer is TAXES.

      Want to turn everything around and have the best economy this country has ever seen? 1. Don't vote for a socialist democrat. & 2. Encourage your CongressCritter to vote for the fair tax plan that's now in Congress. You'll have to hide to keep from working.

      These ARE good times. The unemployment rate is LOWER than when you yahoos re-elected Billy Clinton. Inflation is almost nonexistent. Mortgage rates are a record low leevels. The stock market has recovered and will do even better when Bush is re-elected; investors are scared shitless that John Fuck-you sKerry might be elected.

      Grow up and take responsibility for your own life and the choices you've made. Oh, and BTW, Mickey D's is hiring losers every day.

    163. Re:All I know is... by sg3000 · · Score: 1

      > Gillette laid off thousands just after the election but before
      > Bush took office, and that's when I knew we were in for some
      > problems. I'm willing to bet that those companies waited to
      > lay people off until after the election

      Huh?

      I admit that I know little about the Gillette company, but if I read what you wrote correctly, you're suggesting that Gillette specifically waited until after the 2000 election to lay off employees to make Bush look bad? That would imply that Gillette did not lay off employees before that (otherwise there would be no help there). It would also imply that Gillette as a company wanted to delay their layoffs until after the election to avoid the unpleasant connotations of doing a layoff while Clinton was in office. I assume that would help Gore. Am I correct in assuming this is what you're suggesting?

      I checked over recent articles, and I don't think the facts support this.

      Gillette's previous CEO Michael C. Hawley was CEO until around June 2000. He was faulted in March of 2000 for having a $7.6M increase in compensation, even as Gillette was cutting earnings forecasts. His salary alone increased 27% [Boston Herald, March 2000]. Under Hawley, Gillette laid off 4,700 workers in a plan announced in September 1998 [USA Today, September 29, 1998]

      Hawley was replaced by Edward F. DeGraan, who served as acting CEO until he was succeeded by James Kilts in January 2001.

      Through 2002, James Kilts laid off an additional 3,000 employees. Kilts was brought in from Nabisco, so it would have been impossible for him to have "delayed" layoffs until he actually became CEO, which was in January 2001.

      So it seems that Gillette had a significant change in leadership between 2000 and 2001. They also did layoffs before the 2000 election (4,700) and after the 2000 election (3,000).

      > (recall that Gillette
      > donated razor blades to DNC attendees who were then
      > promptly pulled aside by security guards).

      I was unable to find any article that supported this. Searching on Lexis-Nexis found no hits for "Gillette" and "Democrat" or "Gillette" and "Democratic Party".

      I did find that Gillette has a Political Action Committee, and they support Republicans and some Democrats. As for Mr. Kilts, although he contributes to both parties, his contributes far more to Republicans than Democrats [source = fundrace.org and sdrdc.com]. So I find it unlikely that Gillette would delay layoffs in order to help the Democratic Party.

      --
      Insert simplistic political, ideological, or personal proselytization here.
    164. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the trouble with liberals. They think that their view is from on-high and everybody else is an uneducated oaf.

      Abortion IS murder whether you see it that way or not.

      Wealth is not distributed; it is earned. What do you do when the earners get fed up? Answer - your economy fails.

    165. Re:All I know is... by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      you need national stats to make such a case

      So the argument can be about the statistics instead of the actual issue. That's called a "straw man." Observations by people are PERFECTLY REASONABLE PREMISES in constructing an argument that the modern workplace is swirling cesspool of thievery, liars and cheats.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    166. Re:All I know is... by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

      "Then you ignore the fact that most people don't have the intelligence to quickly change careers, start their own businesses, and learn a whole new set of skills. Any economic plan that requires that everyone be of above average intelligense [sic :) tehe] is destined to fail."

      I believe the conservative ideology accepts this. As I understand it, everyone 'should' be able to achieve life, liberty and happiness by 'bootstrapping'. Those who are unable to do this do not deserve the American Dream. I think this is why many Conservatives promote the incarceration of the lower classes (through 'mandatory minimums' and such). "Compassionate Conservative" is an oxymoron as I understand it, since being 'anti-social-welfare' promotes social Darwinism. It's ironic that the intersection of Christians and Conservatives don't see the dichotomy.

      Some one tag on if I'm wrong, the comments around here like "get a job you lazy bastard" and "economic girly men" and "stop whining" don't sound very compassionate to me, nor do they seem very Christian.

      Maybe the 'just train for a new job' argument would be valid if The State provided free education to all interested. Sorry for going kinda off topic.

      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    167. Re:All I know is... by jeif1k · · Score: 1

      Such estimates have lots of problems. For example, they probably neither count the prison population nor the homeless anywhere near accurately.

    168. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "i remember trying to get a job after high school back then - *very* demoralizing. employers were nakedly contemptuous of job applicants because so many of them swarmed like flies around every job opening."

      You mean exactly how it is right now? Try finding a job now right out of school. Everything is either fast food, telemarketing (and even those are getting harder and harder), or requires 5+ years of experience doing the exact job that they're hiring for (how anybody is going to get that experience without being able to get that job is anybodies guess)

      I guess it doesn't help that theres another factory closing about once a month around here, feeding thousands of people into the workforce.

    169. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      "That I am liberal proves that I am your intellectual and moral superior."

      Spare us.

      "Just what is someone who thinks there should be prayer in school, that abortions should be illegal, that the wealthy should get huge tax breaks? Just because you are even more nutty than he is doesn't make him into someone who's not right wing."

      I think prayer should be in schools that are private religious institutions, but in public schools? Of course not. However, I am against public schools for various reasons. Inefficiency and ever increasing costs, being primary factors.

      It is not the proper role of government to say what can and cannot go on in schools, business, or in my household. The role of government is to defend property rights, and to defend the rights of the individual.

      I am sure you realize it is difficult to determine when a fetus becomes 'human', and I am not versed enough on biology to argue over that point. However, we can discuss the morality of abortions.

      Could you claim a woman has the right to kill what would become a child [with the logic that with proper care a fetus would become a child, just like with proper care a child would become an adult] even if she did not want the child? If you can claim that the woman has no responsibility for the child that she did not want, could you then honestly say that it is my responsibility to take care of my fellow man, most of which I could care less about... and perhaps should [care less about]?

      In simpler words, if a woman does not have to take care of something forced upon her in the case of an infant, why should I?

      Huge tax breaks for the wealthy... Oh, do you mean the corporate welfare that our NonConservative Liberal (in terms of large government, heavy spending, support of business-government relations/corporations, tariffs/trade-taxes, etc) President Bush has vanguarded? These tax breaks are not just for the wealthy, or for the corporate elite, they're for everybody. Unfortunately, they're not tax breaks as they are a form of welfare. Call it corporate welfare if you'd like, but don't fail to point out that it is fabricated as an illusion to assist all of us.

      Bush has proven himself to not very Conservative [in terms of limited government, and limited mettling in the market]. It is unfortunate that so many Liberals refused to acknowledge this because Bush tends to lead more towards militant nationalistic socialism, as opposed to the welfare state or stateless-socialism ("worker's of the world, unite!" blah.)

      "Actually, the redistribution of wealth through taxes works incredibly well and has been all hallmark of the greatest nations on Earth: U.S., England, France, Germany, etc."

      Actually, the redistribution of wealth does not work. It is the artificial reduction of poverty. It begins to fail when the funds reducing poverty are cut off. As Germany, France, the Netherlands, and all those touted welfare states in Europe are finding out, this sort of practice is economically exhausting. They continue to outsource more accounts and infrastructure to support their growing welfare states. One might argue that we are doing the same thing, for very similar reasons.

      Since you claim to be a moral superior, then tell me, what is redistribution of wealth but stealing through taxes? Oh, my mistake. It is not stealing if done by government.
      "But the people voluntarily accept it?" Oh they do? Only if you ignore misinformation our blatant lies to take said money.

      There are two ways that can allegedly reduce poverty. "Durable opportunities" as they are called by some, are opportunities that last a considerable amount of time (jobs and careers). Wealth distribution fails in creating durable opportunities. In the short term, it appears to succeed, but there are hidden costs that accumulate over time. It never lasts too long.
      The free market shows the folly of such a system every time.

      The second way to permanently reduce poverty is to increase productivity/efficiency of

      --
      Speckpot?
    170. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *Very* true.

      Look at what happened after George Bush Sr. lost his job. :)

    171. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That I am liberal proves that I am your intellectual and moral superior.
      Please don't use a word if you are unaware of its meaning.
    172. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In response to your assertion that overall Americans have a "lower education degree", why don't you look at the actual statistics first?

      http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/edu_ave_yea_ of _sch_of_adu

      The US is most highly educated country in the world.

    173. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everyone is going to be happy sucking dick for a living.

    174. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      "Narrow-minded = conservative."

      Depends on your definition of conservative. If by "conservative", you mean socially/religiously conservative, then that certainly works.

      If you define "conservative" as limited government and minimal or no interference in the market, then your claim does not hold up. For example, the millions of self proclaimed libertarians and Libertarians in the United States tend to be very economically conservative, but don't give a rats ass what you do socially, as long as you do not hinder on the Natural Rights of others.

      If all conservatives = narrow-minded, then all Liberals (as opposed to classic liberals) = those who fail miserable, with dire consequences, at trying to prove they are smart enough to manage the lives of millions of people.

      --
      Speckpot?
    175. Re:All I know is... by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Which means that the government can fuck with the numbers any way it pleases.
      In my country where the statistics are gatered in detail, the way to do the numbers is to declare any of those difficult long term unemployed people "invalid pensioners", which gets them off the unemployment books but they are sill on welfare. In that way Australia has a low unemployment rate on paper despite there being large numbers of people out of work.
    176. Re:All I know is... by dbIII · · Score: 1
      They do anything and everything they can to keep their kids and spouse fed
      Think about it folks - in extreme cases the prison system becomes welfare, and it is a very expensive way to do it.
    177. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I seriously suggest you check out the 10-15% long term unemplyment and microscopic growth rates in France and Germany.

      I suggest that you look at the unemployment and standards of living in countries where there aren't progressive taxes.

    178. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK I am now your boss.. start knocking on doors to mow lawns. I am the boss that started the job, so you have to bring a mower to work with you. I don't have one or the money to buy one. You will also need your own truck to bring your own mower around to the different places to work for me.

      This was a great Idea... and to think it only takes two days!!

      When will you arriving at my house with your pickup truck so we can start working?

      Monday sounds good to me.

    179. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Abortion IS murder whether you see it that way or not.

      No, abortion is not murder not whether you see it that way or not. Gee, it sure is easy to make proclamations, isn't it?

      Wealth is not distributed; it is earned. What do you do when the earners get fed up? Answer - your economy fails.

      No, wealth is usually inherited. Incomes are earned. And when you beat down the hard-working people who are doing the earning, the economy fails. Fuck the rich. They can afford to pay more in taxes, so let them. Some guy in a middle class job, afraid of losing it to outsourcing, downsizing, or mergers, needs the tax break a hell of a lot more than Dick Cheney, John Kerry, Bill Gates, or George W. Bush does.

    180. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Gee, I guess you don't follow the international news much? Try Hong Kong several years ago with a hyper deflation economy around 3,000%!!!!!

      I'm not sure where they stand at the present time, but things were really bad there - China offshored the Hong Kong industries and jobs to the mainland with resultant catastrophic results - ever wonder why there are suddenly so many Hong Kong Chinese here in North America????

    181. Re:All I know is... by bladernr · · Score: 1
      And everyone whose job is better should vote for him?

      Only do that if you want Bush to win in an absolute landslide. We could replace the "Bush" and "Kerry" levers with a simple questions: "Is you inflation-adjusted income higher now that in 2001," and, of course, require honest answers.

      Even pro-Kerry economists say that income has increased. See story here. The argument is "not by much" and "the income gap is widening." No one at all seriously claims average household income has gone down over the past four years.

      Kerry has the reasonable position "We can do better." I agree. But no purpose is served by misleading anyone or stating false "facts."

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    182. Re:All I know is... by palfreman · · Score: 1
      Like, Hong Kong, Singapore, Dubai, Oman, Bahrain, Bemuda - all countries with very high living standards and small "progressive" taxation.

      Also, Russia and China may be starting from a lower level, but currently millions there are lifting themselves out of poverty for the first time in history. Russia has an income tax of 13% and hardly any other serious taxation. China similarly has very low taxes. The pattern is that countries without what is laughably called "progressive" taxation perform economic miracles, whereas other countries, whether rich or poor in natural resources, whether starting from high living standards or low, all *stagnate* under "progressive" taxation's ruinious economic burden.

    183. Re:All I know is... by OldAndSlow · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But you have to admit that the possibility is there for anybody determined enough.

      But it is mostly the possibility of failure. From this report

      According to Dun & Bradstreet reports, "Businesses with fewer than 20 employees have only a 37% chance of surviving four years (of business) and only a 9% chance of surviving 10 years." Restaurants only have a 20% chance of surviving 2 years. Of these failed business, only 10% of them close involuntarily due to bankruptcy and the remaining 90% close because the business was not successful, did not provide the level of income desired or was too much work for their efforts

      The old adage, "People don't plan to fail, they fail to plan" certainly holds true when it comes to small business success. The failure rate for new businesses seems to be around 70% to 80% in the first year and only about half of those who survive the first year will remain in business the next five years 3 .

    184. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the lawyers you'll need to protect yourself from lawsuits from SCO.

    185. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Step 3 is to steal underpants.

    186. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (same Anonymous Coward) .. First off, I find that the type of folks that point out things like grammar errors usually do so amidst concepts that confuse them. And I know I don't want that same person imposing legislation on me... nuff said. ^H^H^H^H^H 'enough said, sir'.

      As far as accusing my view of concentrating on the minority, it isn't. It is concentrating on the successful mindset which is required to continue our prosperity. In other words, you obviously haven't noticed that the US is largely capitalistic which props up the socialist services that are in place. It doesn't mean that the services are a good idea or required for the US to exist, but certainly this can be said for capitalism, at least to the point of how our country exists today.

      It isn't perfect either. But at risk of throwing in a cop-out - if you think the US needs _mostly_ changed and that capitalism doesn't work - your right, it probably doesn't. For you, that is. Leave the successful, fair, healthy minded people to our own system and move to Europe or Canada which has more of what your looking for.
      And when you get there, quit trying to screw up the advances in all areas of science, technology, medicine which are owed almost solely to 'big business' (and please, don't get confused with the government that contracts these advances from these companies). If socialism worked as well, then the US wouldn't be the world leader. Remember - almost every other country in the world was there first, but all are still trying to catch up with the movers and shakers of the USA.

    187. Re:All I know is... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      However, Hitler had accidentally stumbled upon the idea of counter-cyclical economic policy--a government should spend big to get out of a depression, and save up during good times.

      Too bad our politicans like doing the first thing, but don't like doing the second.

    188. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 4, Informative

      That's right. If there is any rick of failure, don't even think about doing it.

      That seems to be George Bush's thoughts on stem cell research. But, again, I ask for someone to show me profitable businesses that are started in two days that employ people.

      Prove that Bill O'Reilly is a liar.

      That's easy. Here's one: O'Reilly Lied About Canada Being Bankrupt

      "Canada can't help us anyway. They have no military to speak of. And the socialistic system they have there has nearly bankrupted them. So Chretien is history. A new administration is upcoming. We should be trying to work things out with Canada."

      Quote from the Bill O'Reilly's December 11, 2003 factor talking points memo.

      From the Canadian Broadcasting Company website.

      Budget surplus

      Justin Thompson, CBC News Online | October 22, 2003

      Finance Minister John Manley announced that Canada's budget surplus for the fiscal year 2002-2003 was a whopping $7 billion. The entire amount, he said, will go toward paying down the national debt - keeping it to a projected $510.6 billion by the end of the fiscal year. A noble decision, indeed.

      On the other hand, this is Canada's sixth straight budget surplus, and debt payments aren't the most exciting way to spend $7 billion.

      And as for Rush, why don't you say the same thing about your Hollywood heroes and sports heroes; ever heard of Daryl Strawberry? And I hear that Ted Kennedy has had a drink or two.

      Because Daryly Strawberry was not calling for imprisoning drug users. Neither was Ted Kennedy. They, unlike Rush Limbaugh, are not hypocrites.

      Whiner = liberal
      Mama's boy = liberal


      Say it to my face, coward.

    189. Re:All I know is... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      That said, I'm in a decent job now and I'm assuming that this will still be the case in December, so economy isn't a hot topic with me.

      That is insightful? What do you think will happen to your job if millions of others are unemployed and unable to afford your company's product(s)? With short-sighted vision like that you should apply for the CEO position.

    190. Re:All I know is... by Doppler00 · · Score: 1

      Low taxes on capital gains, dividends... while there are very high taxes on wages

      Are you implying that only wealthy people benefit from low capital gains and dividend taxes? I would guess that a large percentage of the middle class have investment accounts and benefit just as much as the wealthy.

    191. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      That seems to be George Bush's thoughts on stem cell research. But, again, I ask for someone to show me profitable businesses that are started in two days that employ people.

      First off, you won. There are 0 examples of this. And that fact leaves us with the obvious - that since there are none, then .... where is this going? That capitalism doesn't work? That some guy who said that there is one is wrong, and capitalist and therefore capitalism is wrong? Are you trying to get to a point of successful living? Are you even searching for answers on anything or just trying to back up some faulty emotional conclusions on your own part?

      Man, go brush up on how to think in the first place then maybe you can get your own life working in some successful direction .. and I'm not talking about monetarily, either.

    192. Re:All I know is... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Didn't they tigten up H1B visas during the last couple of years? Why? Because with the reduction in the number of jobs, there is no longer a justification to import as much labor. The government responded. Many businesses screamed about this, but they did it anyway.

      No, Congress did not tighten up on H-1B visas. They let a temporary increase in the number of visas expire. They also removed any provisions that required (very few) companies to seek Americans first for employment. American companies did not "scream" about it because it was too farcical while laying off hundreds of thousands of IT workers.

      Congress is entertaining new measures to expand the H-1B visa program even though engineering/IT unemployment remains at all-time highs. So, no, aside from small efforts by a few thinkers in Congress, the government hasn't really done anything to help American workers.

    193. Re:All I know is... by Izago909 · · Score: 1
      Then enter the dot-com bust, the accounting fraud crisis that boiled over after it festered under the Clinton years, as well as 9/11.

      You're wasting your breath. People are way too short-sighted to believe that a president isn't the direct cause of everything that goes on during his term, especially when people have a political agenda.
      It's absolutely amazing that, under Clinton, everyone could not criticize him enough. Blind accusations, popular rhetoric and cliché, and conspiracy theories were common talking points by the population and media. Generally speaking, it was a good thing; government should exist under the constant scrutiny of the people.

      Then Bush gets elected, the attacks happen, we invade Iraq to retaliate (not sure of the logic there) and all of the sudden he is a "War President" and criticizing him or the government is tantamount to treason. The same people that define patriotism as "agreeing with your government" were the same personalities that sided against true patriots over 200 years ago. Government derives its power, its very existence, from the people it is supposed to represent. Anyone who fails to raise questions, anyone who blindly fall in line with the status quo, is in dereliction of duty as a good citizen. When people stop asking questions, they are a short step away form not being allowed to ask questions; and that is the first sign of a dictatorship.

      People are wrong to blame Bush for inheriting a sour economy. They are right to hold him accountable for doing nothing to stimulate growth. He has no intention of shifting the tax burden back on corporations (pre- Reaganomics) or on the upper 1% of citizens. He fails to see that a society capable of fostering such wealth and success demands arrears as its cost. One can not live in a society, extract so much from it, and expect no retribution. People argue that a CEO earning 8 figures a year had to go to school for a long time and had to crawl his way up the ladder. If you were to place a mine worker, struggling to stay in the middle class, and one of these CEO's side-by-side, no one would be able to judge the value of a man. All we can judge is what society has given them, and what society is owed in return.

      Bush's complete inability to foster economic growth, his desire to maintain environmentally destructive strategies (like oil dependence), his almost negative progress in education, and his stubbornness to admit when he's wrong so that he may learn from his mistakes are indicative of everything that is wrong in American politics. Without cheap education and easy access to it, how are we able to learn new skills as time passes and the economy shifts? In less than 10 years, with a fraction of the money spent on Iraq, America could have shifted over three quarters of its energy demands to hydrogen and other renewable sources. New technology requires new education and new jobs. We wouldn't even need to abandon our oil processing centers. Hydrocarbons are rich in hydrogen and result in more efficient production than separating hydrogen and oxygen from water. It can also be extracted from coal which is too dirty to burn. And when all of the above have been used, we can easily switch to other sources. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the universe.

      Unfortunately, Bush lacks any insight into the future. I can not trust a man who can not admit guilt when it's due. Say what you want about Clinton, when he got caught lying, he admitted to it on national TV. The result: He shamed his family, ruined his credibility, and made his mistress an overnight pop icon. When Bush was caught, he blamed everyone around him. The result: Over 1000 dead soldiers, tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians dead, his own Veitnam, a still floundering economy, a damaged environment, no international credibility, and has given otherwise peaceful middle-eastern citizens even more reason to hate us, to name a few. He has made no progress and can not be expected to change his ways if reelected.
    194. Re:All I know is... by beq · · Score: 1

      Hm. Let's see. I used to live in the US, in the Boston area to be precise. Now I live in London. I work in the IT industry.

      In Boston, many, many friends who work in IT have spent months looking for jobs. In London, I'm fending off regular cold-calls from recruiters. Admittedly my evidence is anecdotal, but I find it compelling nonetheless.

      However, in the interest of fairness, lease explain to me exactly how much easier it is to get a job in IT in the US than it is in England, and where you get your evidence from. I'm sure we'd all be love to hear it.

      --
      -Brendan
    195. Re:All I know is... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      What matters is wether or not they use the same standards for what qualifies as unemployed from year to year.

      So consistently misleading and useless numbers used to calm the masses are helpful? You've got to be kidding.

    196. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Planning ahead doesn't always work. Just ask any of the spouses of soldiers killed in Iraq if that was part of their plan.

      1) Join the army because it has guaranteed income and college tuition payment.
      2) Become surprised when you are actually deployed as a military force.
      3) Die while upholding the contract of 'fighting in conflicts that arise' which was part of the job description...

      Of course the burden is on YOU to figure out this COULD HAPPEN when you join the military. Oh yeah - liberals only believe what they make up on the fly in their own heads, even if a logical chain of events holds up just fine.

      Where in the world do you guys get your beliefs? The back of a cereal box? This is a hilarious stance, too, considering how much time is spent combatting the christian right. Are we to believe that the thing they believe in is more arbitrary than what your head full of jelly beans concludes on a daily basis...?

    197. Re:All I know is... by Izago909 · · Score: 1
      You know, I keep hearing about how bad the economy is, and I was starting to believe it myself. But I'm in software development, the first field to be hit by the downturn and one of the first fields to start recovering (after financial institutions--they always feel it first). Well for the last year or so, I've had no trouble finding work, and things have really picked up lately. I'm in Silicon Valley and during my latest job search, I put my resume up on DICE and was getting 3-5 calls per day.
      Congratulations on the new job. It's a shame that IT represents only a fraction of the workforce, and training for IT is more time consuming and expensive than the average joe can pick up and start life again from scratch. Besides, if everyone switched to IT, you could expect to see your luck dry up with the influx of new labor.

      I was starting to believe the Kerry hype over the last year or so, but this latest experience with this job search I just went through, turning down offers and having multiple offers on the table at one time, all while in the industry supposedly hardest hit by all of this outsourcing...I'm thinking Bush is right after all. The economy is on an upswing and it's only a matter of months before everyone feels it.
      It's a shame that you would let your personal luck allow you to make a sweeping statement that the economy across all sectors is on a rebound. Your earlier statement that management is the first to go in a bad economy is quite false. Labor is almost always the first to go. Management decides its own fate, labor does not have that luxury. I'm glad that everything is looking up for the college educated, but you must remember that the majority of the population did not attend college.

      It's too bad that if Kerry gets elected, everyone's going to think that he somehow magically did something to recover the economy in his first couple of months, because that's how long it'll take before things are back in full swing. As if that was even possible.
      It's not possible, because the rebound is only happening to a small sector consiting of mostly white collar, college educate people. Besides, if and when the economy rebounds, the conservatives won't let Kerry accept credit. It would be like them admitting their own guilt for doing anything for over 3 years, something which has not happened once in the last 4 years.

      It's like when 9/11 happened, the Dems are saying, Hey, that happened on Bush's watch. Not fair, people. You don't have a weak-kneed (when it comes to foreign policy) Democrat in office for 8 years who doesn't take any kind of stance against terrorism, and then we get hit 8 months after Bush is in office, and "it happened on his watch."
      You are right, it happened under Reagan's watch when we trained, funded, and armed Osama. At least Clinton threw a couple strikes at him. Unfortunately the conservatives accused him of deflecting attention away from his sex scandal, but they don't like to bring that topic up. In all fairness, Bush ignored everything related to terrorists and terrorism up until the point when over 3000 people paid for his ignorance. Not to mention he diverted resources away from the real attacker to invade Iraq. The man that killed over 3000 people may be free, but at least we got Saddam and his weapons of mass destruction! It only cost over 1000 more lives and billions and billions of dollars that had no better use.
    198. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >personal anecdotes alone don't cut it
      Yeah? Tell that to the people starving. There ARE many, you know. I was among them, until recently.

      No, you DON'T know. You, 4-digit Slashdot asshole, have NEVER been hungry, I bet.

      Tell you what - you stop eating for a month or two... just to try it out: You're NEVER going to experience it any other way (Right? Unless something bad happens to you, as it did to me). Then you might be qualified to say that.

      Complacent asshole.

      You got a +5 moderation, and I'll bet you've never, EVER, wanted for anything in your whole life.

      Never been homeless. Never been hungry.

      Fuck you. Your post was a call for reason from someone without a clue.

    199. Re:All I know is... by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      and has given otherwise peaceful middle-eastern citizens even more reason to hate us

      Wow, for a second there, I thought you were being serious.

    200. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, wealth is usually inherited. Incomes are earned. And when you beat down the hard-working people who are doing the earning, the economy fails. Fuck the rich. They can afford to pay more in taxes, so let them. Some guy in a middle class job, afraid of losing it to outsourcing, downsizing, or mergers, needs the tax break a hell of a lot more than Dick Cheney, John Kerry, Bill Gates, or George W. Bush does.


      AND let me add that someone in Ghana dying from 1 of 10 things could use YOUR money that you have stockpiled for retirement a lot more than YOU. Why don't you give it to them? Why are you sitting there, a relatively wealthy american holding it back from them? (Compared to a _majority_ of the world, you have far more _buying power_ and therefore are wealthy, regardless of what you think is middle class. )
      Your a much worse person than any of the guys mentioned above and you know why? Because you adopt a viewpoint that has the burden of following it, absolutely, as you would impose on others to. Irregardless of how much charity shit your going to come back with it doesn't matter because I know that you have not equaled yourselves with that same person in Ghana I speak of and the countless like them.

      In other words - Do you have any extra you could spare without dying like they are going to die? Why do you still have it then?

      And by the way no - Oreilly, Cheney and the rest don't have that same proof - they didn't adopt your beliefs even though you did.

      The sad fact is that your only one of millions that need to sit down with someone like the posters to this thread and be shown, step by step, how dysfunctional your thinking is. You can't do it for yourself and I guess that's why you demand that someone like the government breastfeeds you and changes your diaper.

    201. Re:All I know is... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      As it should be. You can't say they can't find a job if they're not looking.

      Being rejected over and over again while looking for a job can have an effect on a person. I had a relative who looked for a job for many months with no result. Eventually, the unemployment benefits ran out, and some time later he stopped looking. Then one day he wrote a note, got into the bathtub, put the business end of a gun in his mouth, and pulled the trigger. One less person on the dole and included in the statistics, right?

    202. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, certainly fmaxwell ain't going to respond to this one. First and lastly it makes a bunch of wild logical conclusions that are not handy for justifying a life without consequence, and a lifestyle that has no good result.

      Of course living in San Francisco I see this all the time so I am used to it :)

      Go drug use!

    203. Re:All I know is... by Izago909 · · Score: 1

      Look at the conflict in Vietnam. On Monday, you may run across a village that is either apathetic to the American presence or friendly. On Tuesday they get carpet bombed. On Wednesday the survivors pick up gins and side with the communists, not because they believe in their cause, but because they want to side with their own people against a foreign entity that had decided their lives have little or no value.

      The same is happening in Iraq. The longer we stay there, the more militants our presence creates. All of the sudden there are hundreds, even thousands, of people willing to carry out attacks against our population who otherwise would have been apathetic. Peaceful doesn't always mean welcoming or friendly, it could simply mean "don't mess with me, and I won't mess with you."

      Tens of thousands of Iraqi citizens, who never committed a crime against us, are dead. Who are the surviving family members going to blame?

    204. Re:All I know is... by coastwalker · · Score: 1

      Fascinating post. I had no idea that there was actually an internal reasoned opposition to the Hollywood joke that America appears to be from Europe. Of course the criticism has to be couched in terms of money as this is the main totem of American culture. However it is very encouraging that somebody has finally come up with an alternative point of view which reduces this totem to the status of the Emperors new clothes.

      I dont personally believe that the "Elite" actually are seriously engaged in political manipulation to reduce the bulk of the population to serfdom as suggested here, rather they are engaged in protecting their ability to accumulate excess wealth.

      However any reasoned opposition to the automatic assumption that 'protection of the ability to generate and concentrate wealth is the only guiding principle in life' is a good thing. A better principle would be quality of life. For example food and shelter is probably better now for more people than at any other time in history. This is not due to their extrordinary wealth, it is due to advances in technology. Most Ancient Egyptian rulers died with rotten teeth before the age of thirty, modern technology gives most of us a lifespan of 70 years or more.

      Quality of life also depends on the relationship between the individual and the state. Various arrangements of social organisation are being tried by different countries, they all vary in their ability to provide quality of life for their citizens; none are perfect. In particular despite being the most economically sucessfull country in the world America does not have the reputation for the highest quality of life for the greatest number of people.

      People still have to work to generate wealth and competition is a very efficient way of maximising wealth creation but these necesities have limits when applied to everything. Money is useful but it isnt everything as the Japanese for one have shown.

      --
      Facts are history now plebs have politics for religion on social media.
    205. Re:All I know is... by hendridm · · Score: 1
      Amazingly, 5.4% for Bush is considered bad, 5.5% for Clinton is considered good.

      How can you even compare the two? Remember what jobs were like during the Clinton administration? Are they the same quality now? Are they even close? I'd like to get a newspaper from the late nineties and a newspaper from today and look at the classifieds. I think it would be an interesting comparison.

    206. Re:All I know is... by palfreman · · Score: 2
      It could well be that at this exact moment in time IT jobs are easeir to ge tin England than in the US. My anacdotal evidence says that there are lots of IT jobs available in London currently.

      But that is an extremely different thing from that the original comment was claiming, that "progressive" taxes, i.e income taxes where the percentage of the income taxed rises with the gross income, actually make people richer - "works incredibly well and has been all hallmark of the greatest nations on Earth: U.S., England, France, Germany, etc". That is plain wrong - such taxes are a terrible drag on those countries, and it is only because they started from a high living standard that have not been a total disaster. As it is, they have been responsible for economic stagnation.

    207. Re:All I know is... by AArmadillo · · Score: 1

      The price we pay for shoes (especially brand name shoes) is not artificially low. It is actually rediculously high. It costs only a couple bucks to make a shoe at most, and it would only cost a couple bucks more if cheap labor weren't available. I disagree with your point that rich people don't reinvest in things that produce jobs. Most rich people invest their money in the stock market (like Bill Gates) where it goes directly towards producing jobs. Pretty much the only thing a rich person could do with their money that wouldn't help create jobs is bury it in a hole somewhere.

    208. Re:All I know is... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      You need to subtract the number of people who retired, which given that baby boomers are retiring in huge numbers will decrease that number significantly.

      What "huge numbers" would that be since the retirement age is a moving target constantly being bumped up by Congress? BTW, the leading edge of the boomer population is just getting ready to retire.

    209. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And probably only a few have a good idea or a business plan.

      I guess noone is talking about the presumptions.. most notably that if you plan on opening up a good business without at least some skills or a market for what your doing .. then yeah of course you fail.

      I bought my first computer at a place in an expensive movie plaza .. right next door was a birdfeed supply store... a _birdfeed supply store_ ... only bird stuff and it was a double unit. And they are actually still open 5 years later ....

      Not that it's proof of it's easy but man .. I think something can be said for that .. birdfeed ...

    210. Re:All I know is... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      While I agree that the media in general likes 15 sound bites, the media in general doesn't have anyhthing to do with Kerry's website. Why doesn't he have specific detailed information on his policies posted there?

    211. Re:All I know is... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Yes, and I don't feel bad about it. We all have our crosses to bear, and your relative simply opted out, as is their right.

      And yes, I believe you should be allowed to off yourself.

    212. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the rate jobs are being lost in the last year, if Bush is re-elected and the trend contines he will have lost -3million jobs by the end of his 2nd term.

    213. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He was being sarcastic dumbass. Democrats make it sound like starting a profitable business is trivial, and it should be easy to sustain these businesses while overpaying workers and providing all their health care.

    214. Re:All I know is... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Well then you would be guessing wrongly. The middle classes by in large generate most of their annual income from employment (i.e. earned income). The wealthy conversely get most of their income from unearned income. Bill Gates isn't paid $10b per year in salary; and a secreatery making $30k per year is only earning $2k or so on her $30k retirement 401k plan.

    215. Re:All I know is... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1

      Because his web site is just there for the media - the media (and the people who read the media) read his web site for sound bites (where the concept of sound bites can be extended to "catchy phrases"). The web site is just part of his campaign - it isn't to his advantage to put anything "complicated" on it, where his opponents will pull stuff out of it & write about it out of context.

      If you really want to know what & how he thinks, you're going to have to get into a deep & long, face-to-face conversation with him, in a way that won't put him in "campaign" mode. Debate between the candidates would probably be a good idea, but in its limited for-TV form, probably quite useless except judging how comfortable the candidates are in front of a camera.

      Since your typical voter isn't going to get a chance to have such a conversation for him, or to even observe such a conversation (since the media can't seem to report such things w/o reducing everything down to "sound bites"), all you can really fairly do is judge the candidates by their history - they handled situations in the past.

      As far as I can tell, Bush Jr. has failed in just about everything major he has tried to do (and then was protected from consequences by his family), except for grabbing the Presidency (and even that wasn't a "clean" victory). Kerry seems to be quite methodical & analytical (even for very complex issues), and aggressive where he needs to be (military behavior). Unfortunately, he doesn't really have the charisma that he needs to easily overcome the partisan polarization that Newt, Bush & Co. have implanted firmly in American society.

    216. Re:All I know is... by Cyberdyne · · Score: 1
      Ok, in context, I guess you are telling a joke. I didn't find it very funny though. MAybe it will take you 48 work hours to get the ground-work set up for a business which may eventually become profitable though....

      I think the point is that it takes two days of work to do the paperwork for forming a company - the tax forms, registration etc, not the groundwork for the business itself. If it's the one I'm thinking of, the same survey quoted much higher figures for other countries; IIRC, it was a few days for the UK - and almost a month for France, which apparently has far fewer self-employed people and very small businesses. So it is a serious figure, it just doesn't refer to the whole creation, just the legal paperwork side. (Understandable: how exactly would you get a figure for creating a business as a whole - a year or so to build a new restaurant? An hour of paperwork and a big investment to get a franchise?)

      However, I have a different perspective on this job crunch. I think that we are in the midst of a major economic change in this country. It is going to take some time for businesses to understand how to best use off-shore outsourcing and global networks such as open source project teams. This transition creates an opportunity for me because many people feel orphaned by the current trends in the small business markets.

      There have certainly been some surprises; ISTR Slashdot had an article about Dell moving many call center operations back to the US ("insourcing"?), after finding the cost savings weren't enough to offset the extra overhead, PR hit etc - and I still remember patching someone's outsourced code which had documentation obviously written by someone to whom English was a foreign language ("With Every Word Of The Documentation In Capitals!")

      Of course, Linux itself entails a significant element of this: run SuSE, you're importing your distro from Germany; even the kernel itself has large elements developed in the UK (Alan Cox!) and many other countries, not to mention Linus himself - Finnish, after developing the early kernel in Finland he became another of those immigrants to the US other posters have been complaining about when he joined Transmeta. This is nothing new - Mr Einstein wasn't born in the US, nor was Werner von Braun (father of America's early rocket program) - and no doubt there were complaints about immigrants "taking jobs" then, too, just as there have been in all the Western economies since at least the early 20th century.

    217. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Soviet Union experiment proved that business owner produce wealth. Workers are just along for the ride. Remove the incentive to mak make money and you ask for economic collapse. The top 10% pay 65% of all income tax already, BTW.

    218. Re:All I know is... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Um, no. The economy here is fine (I live in Florida and doubt you do) and making blanket generalizations are stupid.

      My father is a building contractor, and he's making a boatload right now. If you're an orange grower though, you're taking it in the shorts.

      The point? The economy is not one thing, but many industries that combine to make a composite. Right now our's (Florida's) is no worse off (or only very slightly) because of the hurricanes.

    219. Re:All I know is... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      How dare you attempt to impart reason into this? You're supposed to call him an idiot and then talk about how he must be voting for bushkerrysomeothernamelessidiot. You have a lot to learn.

    220. Re:All I know is... by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      The people who want to die, are going to die. They have given up and want me to take care of them, I do not care about these people.

      I can't believe that the noblest impulse in man, his compassion for another, can be completely dead here.
      - Kirk Douglas, Paths of Glory

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    221. Re:All I know is... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Don't take this the wrong way, but that's a really poor answer. You're trying to tell me that a link to a PDF with some detailed information is too much to place on a website? That's nonsense.

      As far as whether it's to his advantage, there's no way in hell I'll vote for a candidate who hasn't clearly outlined his policies. It IS to his advantage because people like me exist, and we might vote for him if he has good ideas.

    222. Re:All I know is... by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      Yep, there are people in the third world countries who will accuse me of "exploitation", but I don't mind. If they won't let me exploit them, then they won't get jobs. It's that simple.

      And then, there are Americans who accuse me of "exporting jobs to other countries". Again, I don't mind.

      You see, if I can't make a toaster oven in America under U$ 2.25, then I won't make money selling them not only in America, but also all over the world. I gotta find the CHEAPEST PLACE IN THE WORLD to do what I need to do, and if that means doing it OUTSIDE AMERICA, I'll do it in a jiffy.


      And thus were the last words recorded of the first one up against the wall when the revolution came...

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    223. Re:All I know is... by Chris+Oz · · Score: 1

      I am not sure about the US situation, however successive governments have been "favorably" changing the definition of unemployment in Australia since at least the 70s. If my memory serves me correctly you are considered to be employed if you work more than 1.5 hours a fortnight (this includes charity work). Interestingly you can still get unemployment benefits and classed as fully employed by the system. This is considerable economic debate regarding the actual level of unemployment and underemployment in Australia. Again from memory I believe that the unemployment figure is typically assumed to be 3 or 4 % higher that the official rate. More interestingly the underemployed rate (people who want more work than they can get) generally consider to now be around 20%. This in part is a result of the increasing conversion of full time positions to part time positions.

    224. Re:All I know is... by Cyberdyne · · Score: 1
      And yet even if we assume the government is fudging the figures (e.g., the 'marginally employed' - I mean, c'mon!), the average wage has declined markedly. The new jobs created within the economy pay, on average, $9,000 less than the old jobs did.

      The facts don't seem to match your version there...

      These are facts. They aren't up for debate. Employment rates don't matter a whole lot if all you're doing is turning former middle-class folks into poor folks, while making rich folks richer. For the vast majority of the population things are considerably worse than they were four years ago.

      Well, the $9000 claim isn't a fact at all, but you do have a point about the "middle class" (at least by one definition, those earning $25-75k/yr) having shrunk - what you missed, though, is that the upper class also shrank over the same (2000-2003) period! Incomes dropped across the board early on, due to the economic implosion (recession, dot-bomb bubble, telecoms, 9/11, Enron/MCI) - but the loss almost halted across 2002-2003, and has probably already reversed. For 2002-2003, the upper income category expanded again slightly, while the middle shrank by much less than it had previously. (Lots more figures here if you're interested.)

      I'd also point out that employment is rather important for the people who don't currently have it: being unemployed with no income may still put you in the same bracket as having a $24k/yr job, but it's certainly a very different situation :-)

      Neither party has done anything to improve the situation, nor will they so long as they are, or answer to, the people who profit from this situation. I don't expect Kerry to do any better; I only hope that he deadlocks the government and thereby prevents it from doing any more harm. Jesus, I'm getting depressed just thinking about how low my expectations have dropped....

      In general, I'd say being left alone is the best most people can or should expect from the government. In the long term, even when the government actively props up failing businesses things usually get worse long-term as a result. (I'm not a hardcore anarchist/libertarian: I'm all in favor of the government regulating banks to make sure my money doesn't disappear, food to keep toxic additives or contamination out, etc - I just know they can't run an economy and shouldn't try.)

    225. Re:All I know is... by Dick+Faze · · Score: 1

      He never said they make people richer. He said they were an effective means for redistributing wealth. Where, exactly is the incorrect part of that statement? You had 30-odd percent of your income taken away before you could do anything about it, and its either been given to someone else or used to pay for something for someone else. This is pretty much how it works. It does work quite well, as evidenced by the fact that you probably know terribly few people who don't pay federal income tax.

    226. Re:All I know is... by upsidedown_duck · · Score: 1


      The foundation of prosperity is a Secure Nation.

      The foundation of prosperity is a Free Nation, in the Libertarian sense and not the anarchist sense.

      --
      -- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
    227. Re:All I know is... by Dick+Faze · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And when you beat down the hard-working people who are doing the earning, the economy fails. Fuck the rich. They can afford to pay more in taxes, so let them.

      The problem with this statement is that, to literally 10 million people in this country, anyone making $30,000 a year or more is 'rich' compared to them, so I'm sure you won't mind if your income tax is raised 10% since you can 'afford it'.

    228. Re:All I know is... by alwynschoeman · · Score: 1

      In the recent elections in the Philippines, somebody sent a letter to the local newspaper reading: "I would rather vote for the evil I know than the devil I don't"

      He/she was referring to voting for Gloria (GMA) instead of Fernando Po Jr. (FPJ, the actor).

      If I was american I would rather vote for Bush because I have seen how he operates. Kerry from afar looks to me like a big fake. He's always whining about things that are relevant (or should be).

      It seems as if the elections are turning into something like "The next action movie star"

    229. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      1) Join the army because it has guaranteed income and college tuition payment.
      2) Become surprised when you are actually deployed as a military force.
      3) Die while upholding the contract of 'fighting in conflicts that arise' which was part of the job description...


      You don't understand the difference between accepting that something COULD happen and having some meaningful way to PLAN for it. What the hell kind of plan is some 19 year old couple supposed to have? "Honey, if I don't come back, sell my comic book collection. That should see you through the tough times ahead, pay for daycare for the baby, and provide for you when you get old."

      Of course the burden is on YOU to figure out this COULD HAPPEN when you join the military.

      Anything COULD HAPPEN. You could keel over while driving your family at 70MPH, but it doesn't mean that you can plan for it. If you grab your chest and your car veers into oncoming traffic, everyone will probably die, regardless of how much planning you did.

      Are we to believe that the thing they believe in is more arbitrary than what your head full of jelly beans concludes on a daily basis...?

      Compared to you, the average liberal is a genius and I'm Albert friggin Einstein. You pretend that anything that you can imagine happening is something that can be planned for. Well, it can't. Your family could find themselves completely destitute and no amount of imagining or planning could prevent it. That's the problem with right-wingers: You're unwilling to accept that you don't have complete and total control over what the future holds for you. You want to pretend that you can plan for anything and everything that can happen to you. Well, you cant.

    230. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I graduated college in 2000, the New York Times job section was usually 18-24 pages.

      I have been keeping track of the size of the 'jobs' section again, and it is usually 8-12 pages.

      While you can make plenty of remarks about the inaccuracy of this method, I think it is a better gauge of the economy's true performance (at least in the NYC area) than any numbers coming from the government.

    231. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Like, Hong Kong, Singapore, Dubai, Oman, Bahrain, Bemuda - all countries with very high living standards and small "progressive" taxation.

      In Dubai, Oman, and Bahrain, money flows out of the ground in the form of oil. That you would even suggest that their standard of living is related to their taxes is laughable. Rich people from all over the world vacation in Bermuda. Of course the standard of living is great there. That's not much of an economic model for someone living in Pittsburgh, Cleveland, or Fargo, is it? Despite your attempt at picking absurdly skewed models, you still failed.

      Per capita GDP ranking:
      USA: #2
      Bermuda: #4
      Hong Kong: #15
      Bahrain: #53
      Oman: #63
      Source: http://www.worldfactsandfigures.com/gdp_country_de sc.php

      You right-wingers really aren't very good with getting your facts straight, are you?

      The pattern is that countries without what is laughably called "progressive" taxation perform economic miracles, whereas other countries, whether rich or poor in natural resources, whether starting from high living standards or low, all *stagnate* under "progressive" taxation's ruinious economic burden.

      That's why people from all over the world are desperate to live here. Move to Sudan if you think that lower taxes will provide you some kind of economic nirvana.

    232. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 days???? Yeah right. I just spent four weeks waiting for my taxpayer ID number from the the IRS. You can't hire anyone without it. I can't get a business license without it, and that will take a few more weeks. Anyone who thinks you can start a business and hire people in 2 days is obviously someone's employee.

    233. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 2, Informative
      The problem with this statement is that, to literally 10 million people in this country, anyone making $30,000 a year or more is 'rich' compared to them, so I'm sure you won't mind if your income tax is raised 10% since you can 'afford it'.

      No, I will not mind. I'm not some right-wing parasite who feels that he should benefit from living in the U.S. but should give nothing back. Want to hear from someone who's really rich? Then read this CNN/Money article:

      Buffett slams dividend tax cut
      One of world's richest calls plan 'voodoo economics,' says it puts burden on low-income families.
      May 20, 2003: 10:41 AM EDT

      NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Renewing his criticism of the dividend tax cut laid out by the Senate last week, Berkshire Hathaway's Warren Buffett called the proposal "voodoo economics" that uses "Enron-style accounting."

      The Senate's plan for dividends to be 50 percent tax free in 2003, 100 percent tax free in 2004 through 2006 and then face the full tax in 2007 would "further tilt the tax scales toward the rich," Buffett wrote in an opinion piece in the Washington Post.

      Buffett posed a hypothetical situation in which Berkshire Hathaway, which does not currently pay a dividend, paid $1 billion in dividends next year.

      Through his 31 percent ownership of the company, Buffett said he would receive an additional $310 million in income that would reduce his tax rate from about 30 percent to 3 percent, while his office secretary would still have a tax rate of about 30 percent.

      "The 3 percent overall federal tax rate I would pay -- if a Berkshire dividend were to be tax free -- seems a bit light," Buffett wrote.

      Instead of the Senate's tax cut plan, Buffett proposed that it provide tax reductions to those who need and will spend the money in the form of a Social Security tax "holiday" or a tax rebate to lower-income people.

      "Putting $1,000 in the pockets of 310,000 families with urgent needs is going to provide far more stimulus to the economy than putting the same $310 million in my pockets," Buffett added.

      He closed the piece by saying that the "government can't deliver a free lunch to the country as a whole. It can, however, determine who pays for lunch. And last week the Senate handed the bill to the wrong party."

      Warren Buffett sits on the board of the Washington Post Co (WPO: up $3.91 to $715.01, Research, Estimates). and Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B: up $2.00 to $2451.00, Research, Estimates) owns a stake in the newspaper publisher.
      Not only does Warren Buffet have more money than you'll ever see, he also has morality and ethics, something you severely lack.
    234. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      AND let me add that someone in Ghana dying from 1 of 10 things could use YOUR money that you have stockpiled for retirement a lot more than YOU.

      The person in Ghana is not part of our society. That's like saying that Nationwide Auto Insurance should pay for the person in Ghana to get a new car -- even though he's not a Nationwide customer.

      The unemployed guy in Detroit is part of this society. He is a fellow American. If he's fallen on tough times, then I have no problem with my tax dollars going to help him out. If the shoe were on the other foot, his tax dollars would be helping me. That's what it's like to be part of a society.

      You can't do it for yourself and I guess that's why you demand that someone like the government breastfeeds you and changes your diaper.

      My income and net worth probably dwarf yours. I pay far more in taxes than I'll ever see in government services. I'm arguing that I, and those of similar good fortune, should pay higher taxes and that people in lower income brackets should pay less. I guess it never occurred to you that someone could be interested in the well-being of others, did it?

    235. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      The top 10% pay 65% of all income tax already, BTW.

      So what? Bill Gates isn't going to close down Microsoft if his taxes go up by 5%. It won't take away his incentive to be successful. I'd much rather see him shoulder a bit more of the tax burden than see someone having to forego medical insurance or warm clothing so that they can afford to pay their taxes.

    236. Re:All I know is... by OoSync · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I seriously suggest you check out the 10-15% long term unemplyment and microscopic growth rates in France and Germany.

      IIRC, the unemployment rates in France include measurement of discouraged workers. The number that gets flashed on TV in the US does not include such persons. If you compare fairly, our current unemployment rate is 9.4%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

      So, doesn't look like such a good comparison after all, does it?

      --

      I always get the shakes before a drop.
    237. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 3, Insightful

      First off, you won. There are 0 examples of this.

      Thank you. Words to that effect have probably seldom been read here.

      And that fact leaves us with the obvious - that since there are none, then .... where is this going?

      I don't know. You tell me. My whole point was was to counter the claim that "You and i know it only takes like 2 days to set up a profitable business that can employ others."

      That capitalism doesn't work? That some guy who said that there is one is wrong, and capitalist and therefore capitalism is wrong?

      Not at all. Capitalism works fine when there are reasonable laws and government regulations to protect the workers from having their standards of living eroded by greed at the top. Something is wrong when people with decades of experience are being laid off at age 60+ just so that the companies that they helped make profitable can become slightly more so.

      Man, go brush up on how to think in the first place then maybe you can get your own life working in some successful direction .. and I'm not talking about monetarily, either.

      My life is fine. No need to get insulting.

    238. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Some one tag on if I'm wrong, the comments around here like "get a job you lazy bastard" and "economic girly men" and "stop whining" don't sound very compassionate to me, nor do they seem very Christian.

      As an atheist, what can I say but "Amen!"? ;-)

      Maybe the 'just train for a new job' argument would be valid if The State provided free education to all interested. Sorry for going kinda off topic.

      It's not off-topic at all and you hit the nail on the head. The vast majority of conservatives that I've met want to blame the poor, not lend them a helping hand.

    239. Re:All I know is... by Garbonzo+Pitts · · Score: 1

      Looking back, I remember the Republicans in congress being pretty quiet those 8 years, except when the whole Monica thing came out.


      The republicans certainly fought against Clinton's tax increase. And it's a damned good thing they lost.

      I am amazed at how many people forget the story of Clinton's tax increase. Alan Greenspan told Clinton that if he did nothing about the deficit, interest rates would remain high and it would be impossible to fund the social programs that Clinton wanted. So, Clinton pushed a tax increase, which was passed on the tie-breaking vote of Al Gore.

      That tax increase was followed by a decreasing deficit (ultimately a surplus), low interest rates, and the longest economic boom in US history.

    240. Re:All I know is... by lightknight · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmm. Returning money to those who earned it is immoral and unethical...yes, that is doubleplusungood.

      Now, Mr. Buffet may be a philanthropist, and he may have *so much money* that he no longer knows where to put it, but that is his opinion. I imagine that if we asked Mr. Gates for his opinion, we may find an interesting contrast (note: Microsoft IS issuing dividends). And Mr. Gates is the leading philanthropist.

      From each according to his ability, to each according to his need. How about we let people keep their own damn money, and let them decide whether to donate it to charity?

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    241. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it is possible....4 ways.....PORN, PROSTITUTION, DRUG DEALER (thanks to the war on drugs), and lastly a RICH DEMOPUBLICAN DADDY.

    242. Re:All I know is... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      "So what? Bill Gates isn't going to close down Microsoft if his taxes go up by 5%."

      Yes, but you are removing capital from the market. Mr Gates may wish to engage in a risky business decision (rewrite Windows from scratch), but in removing those funds, he will stay the course (less risky).

      "It won't take away his incentive to be successful."

      Yes, it does. Working for your own effort is fun, carrying someone elses lazy ass is not (slavery). Ever work on a group project? Ever do all the work yourself? Same idea. It breeds hate.

      "I'd much rather see him shoulder a bit more of the tax burden than see someone having to forego medical insurance or warm clothing so that they can afford to pay their taxes."

      Mr. Gates has a right to his money (property rights). Someone else does not have a right to medical insurance or warm clothing. Instead of raising taxes, how about telling that someone to get a job?

      Different day, same old sh*t. Give a man a fish (welfare, social security, medicare), you feed him for a day. Teach a man to fish (get a job), you feed him for a lifetime.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    243. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Instead of closing up, we SHOULD be OPENING UP EVEN MORE, and yes, that means, we should roll up our sleeves and COMPETE AGAINST THE CHEAPEST LABOR IN BANGLADESH"

      Here's my problem with this. In Canada (which is where I live, but same principle applies in the US) we have these funny little things called labour and minimum wage laws. You tell me that I need to compete with people overseas that are willing to work for less money. Ok fair enough. But I'm not legally allowed to work for what they're getting paid. The government mandates that the game is rigged. Now the response to this that I usually hear from outsourcing proponents is that I, as a "brainy" North American can't just try and compete on price, I need to find some extra value that I can add to justify the higher wage I'm required to be paid. But I have trouble swallowing this. If I'm an assembly line worker making toaster ovens (to borrow your example) exactly what can I do to be more efficient than the guy in Bangladesh? Make toaster ovens faster than he can? How many times faster would I have to make toaster ovens to balance out the wages that I'm being paid? How many times faster can I reasonably be expected to be able to make them? The wage margins are big enough that it's unrealistic (at least much of the time) to expect a North American to be able to make up the difference in higher quality or faster through-put.

      But...(my free trader usually continues) perhaps we in the first world shouldn't be attempting to out compete third world labour in manufacturing at all. Let all the manufacturing be done overseas, and we'll concentrate on less tangible knowledge oriented businesses.

      But again I'm unconvinced. We're now seeing computer programmers and other IT professionals outsourced all the time. How long before no white collar job is safe? The truth is we've put North American workers is tough position. We have wage and labour safety laws that prevent them from being competitive, and we have trade laws that require them to be competitive to survive.

      Ahh!!! (says my increasingly hypothetical free trade supporter) so what we need is for the government to butt out of business all together. Scrap all those pesky labour and wage laws (and while you're at it you'd better get rid of the environmental laws too) and let the magic of free market enterprise solve all our problems! Hurray!

      And yet funny that no matter how supportive of free trade a politician is, they would never, not in a million years, run on such a platform. Why not? Because they would be run out of any town they tried to campaign in. The truth is that we tried it that way at the opening of the industrial revolution and it sucked. People were exploited and mistreated so badly that we, as a society, got together and fought for laws to keep people from being abused for profit. So what is the solution? Well as I see it you have two options. Repeal all the wage and labour safety laws, tear down the trade barriers, and let everyone on Earth compete to see who's willing to work for the lowest wage. Or we could try to bring other peoples standard of living up to ours instead of the other way around. We could put conditions into our free trade agreements requiring that all parties involved in whichever don't abuse their workers and pay them fairly. Now I know this is not a magic bullet solution, and that the situation is probably far more complicated than I've laid out here, but I do wish that politicians and illustrious captains of industry would at least consider the idea. It might do everyone a lot of good.

    244. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for reinforcing this. I came to this conclusion independently about 2 years ago in review of the dot-boom and dot-bust, and it added up to what is said becomes truth.

      I don't consider it an inherently good or bad thing, but it can be exploited for good or bad very easily.

    245. Re:All I know is... by PingPongBoy · · Score: 1

      Every two days ...

      How red is this herring?

      The law of diminishing returns, for one, refutes this line of thought. If you try to start profitable businesses at the frequency of 0.000005787037037 Hz you will accumulate so many businesses that you'll go nuts.

      --
      Know your pads. One time pad: good for cryptography. Two timing pad: where to take your mistress.
    246. Re:All I know is... by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Places like Dell and Microsoft should be learning that you should send the things like programming utilities to India while keeping your services local. After all, people won't care too much of Windows was "Made in India" but they will certainly care if they can't communicate with the other person on the phone when they call for help!

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    247. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Mr. Gates has a right to his money (property rights).

      If you're that delusional, I suggest that you take the matter to court where they can explain the rights of our democratically elected government to impose taxes.

      Yes, but you are removing capital from the market.

      No, you are not. You're just redirecting it. No one is setting it all ablaze on April 16. If it Bill Gates' taxes go to people in the form of welfare checks, you can rest assured that the money will be spent, adding capital back into the market. And more importantly, it wouldn't all go to Bill Gates. It would help pay the salaries of people at the grocery stores, the clothing stores, in doctors' offices, in department stores, in Walmarts, etc.

      Yes, it does. Working for your own effort is fun, carrying someone elses lazy ass is not (slavery).

      Not everyone who need government assistance is a "lazy ass" you insensitive, ignorant prick. There are plenty of people who took welfare only as a last resort to feed their families while they did everything that they could to find work. If you get to keep 65% of the money you bring in, you're still getting rewarded for your efforts. Do you honestly think that wages would be as high if they eliminated income tax tomorrow? Hell no. The day that they eliminate income tax is the day that employers start cutting wages.

      Teach a man to fish (get a job), you feed him for a lifetime.

      Part of the welfare system is job training, but I suppose that you're against that, too.

    248. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Rather they are a stat for the numbr of people on unemployment.

      Incorrect.

    249. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you always have to buy food and medicine...assuming you want to continue to live since all the land is now private property. You can't just travel out into the wilderness and start a farm. You have to sell your time to an employer.

      Have you read how capitalism started? It wasn't because it was so great. People didn't want to work in a factory their whole life just to buy some cheesy mass produced trinkets...

    250. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Now, Mr. Buffet may be a philanthropist, and he may have *so much money* that he no longer knows where to put it, but that is his opinion.

      No, those are his morals. Something you apparently lack.

      I imagine that if we asked Mr. Gates for his opinion, we may find an interesting contrast

      I'm not interested in finding someone greedy and self-serving. I'm more interested in hearing from someone who speaks about values and ethics -- even when it it hits them in the wallet.

      How about we let people keep their own damn money, and let them decide whether to donate it to charity?

      No thanks. I'm not interested in a society where greed is rewarded monetarily. You shouldn't get to drive a nicer car than you neighbor simply because you chose to donate nothing to charity. All that the income tax system does is set the minimum participation level for you as a member of society. It keeps you from opting out of your societal obligations. Don't like it? Then move.

    251. Re:All I know is... by EnigmaticSource · · Score: 0, Troll

      Sounds like you're lacking in motivation. Personally it's not as difficult as you make it sound to switch professions, in fact I know quite a few people who have done so as of late, and are better for it.

      I am a programmer first and foremost, unable to find a programming job in this shithole I live in, I work as a heavy equipment mechanic. Got paid on the job training, and It only took about two weeks to get the hang of things (like learning z80 ASM). This I have done on my own merit because I'm not obstinate or lazy, therefore I am willing to do what's needed to survive. There are _plenty_ of jobs... most people are just unwilling to do them. (And that's good for me)

      Enough of my rant. (of and I will be voting GOP, except for Arnold)

      --
      The Geek in Black
      I know my BCD's (when I'm Sober)
    252. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      I think prayer should be in schools that are private religious institutions, but in public schools? Of course not. However, I am against public schools for various reasons. Inefficiency and ever increasing costs, being primary factors.

      The battle cry of the right: prayer belongs in private schools and all schools should be private. Oh, and to hell with any kid who was born into poverty. No school for them.

      It is not the proper role of government to say what can and cannot go on in schools,

      So I guess that you'll be voting against "No Child Left Behind" Bush, right?

      business

      What right does that evil government have to say you can't expose your illegal immigrant workers to carcinogens during their 12 hour, no-restroom-break shifts?

      , or in my household.

      Damn those anti-incest laws!

      The role of government is to defend property rights, and to defend the rights of the individual.

      In your world, perhaps. But in the U.S., we have over two centuries of legislative and judicial activity that defines government as being there to help people, not just defend their property. As to defending individual rights, does Bush's support of the Patriot Act count as another reason he should be ousted?

      Could you claim a woman has the right to kill what would become a child [with the logic that with proper care a fetus would become a child, just like with proper care a child would become an adult] even if she did not want the child?

      Yes. I have no problem with that. Nor do I have a problem with my sperm ending up in the end of a condom -- even though one of them could have resulted in a child.

      If you can claim that the woman has no responsibility for the child that she did not want,

      Logical leap: First it was a fetus that could become a child and now it's a "child." I don't play those games.

      could you then honestly say that it is my responsibility to take care of my fellow man, most of which I could care less about... and perhaps should [care less about]?

      I doubt that you "could care less" about your fellow man than you do now. Sorry, bud, but you are part of a society and a society takes care of its weak.

      In simpler words, if a woman does not have to take care of something forced upon her in the case of an infant, why should I?

      I don't recall stating that women should be allowed to abandon babies.

      These tax breaks are not just for the wealthy, or for the corporate elite, they're for everybody. Unfortunately, they're not tax breaks as they are a form of welfare. Call it corporate welfare if you'd like, but don't fail to point out that it is fabricated as an illusion to assist all of us.

      It was simply a means of buying votes from people too stupid to recognize that they were just taking money from their children, grandchildren, etc. And to get votes from rich greedy people.

      Actually, the redistribution of wealth does not work. It is the artificial reduction of poverty. It begins to fail when the funds reducing poverty are cut off.

      Such as what happens when you cut welfare programs to pay for tax cuts.

      Since you claim to be a moral superior, then tell me, what is redistribution of wealth but stealing through taxes?

      It's paying the cost of a society. It's recognizing that the weak sometimes need help and that the strong can provide it.

      There are two ways that can allegedly reduce poverty. "Durable opportunities" as they are called by some, are opportunities that last a considerable amount of time (jobs and careers).

      But aren't you arguing in favor of letting companies outsource jobs and careers out of the U.S. with no penalties, laws, or regulations to impede the job exodus? Aren't you saying "anything for a buck" when it comes to major corporations?

      The second way to permanently reduce poverty is to increase pro

    253. Re:All I know is... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      You're trying to tell me that a link to a PDF with some detailed information is too much to place on a website?

      For a politician, yes. Giving too much information to the public & your critics is even worse than not giving enough information.

      I'm not saying I'm happy about the reasoning, but I can understand why politicians do it.

      there's no way in hell I'll vote for a candidate who hasn't clearly outlined his policies.

      So you don't vote?

      The only real clue you're going to get about any politician's policies is by who or what issues they've supported in the past (and for some politicans who are "for sale", you will only be able to guess what they're going to do by who is giving them the most money at the moment).

      If you can't be bothered to do a little research about your choices (most of which is done for you on various web sites), then the democracy is better off if you don't take part in the voting proces.

    254. Re:All I know is... by ckaminski · · Score: 1

      um, you do know you can get one by phone in five minutes? I did.

    255. Re:All I know is... by JFitzsimmons · · Score: 1

      While I'm not going to bother touching any of the other stuff you said with a 10-foot pole, how can you possibly be against public schools?

      Without public schools, where will the poor kids even stand a chance at getting something close to an education? While the public schools in Bad Neighborhoods(tm) in the US may suck, it is at least an attempt, or at the very least pretending to teach some kids. Without public schools you would just have a bunch of poverty-stricken poor families whom could never have a hope of getting out of the rut they were born into unless some generous benefactor donated money (Africa comes to mind here). Closing the public schools will be the final nail in the United States' coffin, in my opinion. I also doubt it would ever happen, which can be taken as both a positive and a negative.

      Did you go to public school? If not, I guess you were lucky enough to have rich parents...

      --
      Beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his heart he dreams himself your master. -Anonymous
    256. Re:All I know is... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Unemployment rates only deal with people who are drawing unemployment. Out of work for 2 years? You don't show up. Don't qualify? You aren't counted. Lose a good job, and end up flipping burgers to make ends meet? You are not unemployed.
      The real question to ask is, how many jobs where lost and how many jobs where created, and in what fields? Asking these questions, things don't look as good as your comparison would suggest.
      A real concern that fiscal conservatives have is the tremendous debt we have accumulated in such a short time. We had ballanced the budget and were generating surpluses, we were actually reducing the national debt, and looking at a timetable to zero it. A philosphy of starving government down by simultaneously reducing revenue (tax breaks) while spending outrageous sums (faster than Reagon, even) has scared fiscal conservatives. Some of us thing it should at least get your attention, too.

    257. Re:All I know is... by fingerfucker · · Score: 1

      Something is wrong when people with decades of experience are being laid off at age 60+ just so that the companies that they helped make profitable can become slightly more so.

      I've been struggling to find out whether there is something truly wrong when that happens.

      The business owner has the right to make a decision about his business. The 60-year-old was involved in a relationship with that business for a number of years. It worked: he delivered value, he got compensated back for it. Why is it wrong to terminate such a relationship if it doesn't make sense for the employer any more? It would be wrong to keep it artificially, wouldn't it? If I am a business owner and I am forced to loose an opportunity to contribute extra into the domestic product by employing (and paying) someone with whom my business is not extracting the value it is interested in, isn't that bad for the economy?

      Please debunk to me what is "wrong" with situations like your example: people over 60 getting fired just because the company doesn't need them any more?
      Is it the fact that the company doesn't need him but the poor fellow still needs them because he is scared of potential difficulties of finding a different job?

      Why isn't it realized by people that the job market is nothing more than a big match-making service where people or businesses go and try to find out who fits whose needs at the moment?

      Please shed some light on this "moral" issue for me, as I truly am frustrated with the kind of vagueness that people here often use to hide the reality that they simply can't justify something because it "feels right/wrong".

    258. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I pay far more in taxes than I'll ever see in government services. I'm arguing that I, and those of similar good fortune, should pay higher taxes and that people in lower income brackets should pay less. I guess it never occurred to you that someone could be interested in the well-being of others, did it?

      So yeah let's skip the _dying_ person in Ghana that I was talking about (sorry, fmaxwell says that he arbitrarily, for no good reason, draws the level of concern at the country level) and talk about the guy in Detroit ya mentioned.

      As far as I know, you are allowed to give as much money to the IRS as you wish, it only requires an extra form at tax time. How much have you given extra? How much of your Bush tax decrease did you give back to the government directly? (charities dont count because you seem to be interested in 'my tax dollars' above). In other words, why are you so concerned about _my money_ in the form of taxes when I'm sure you haven't done one thing yourself that your talking about? Why don't you worry about _your money_ and give it all away first? Matter of fact I can nearly guarantee that if yourself and the other bleeding hearts did this, that the hard luck that others are supposedly in would be all but solved. I am sure there are many more liberals doing fine in our terrible country to offset the 5-10% unemployed .. and the single digit in poverty.

      All you have to do is give half your stuff away like you want every 'rich person' to do. The clock is ticking - better hurry to the bank.

      For the record since you challenged me on it, I have the freedom to do what I want every day. When I do work I make 6 digits, and when I don't, I enjoy it. This is I am sure totally foreign to you, but it sure beats worrying about security and stealing from others to achieve it.

      And even if I didn't do so well in life, I would still have my values because they are the _most fair to everyone involved_ and I do not live in this mindset of guaranteed security.

      Additionally, you are an 'S' in the well known 'DISC' personality test. Why do I know? You think security in job/income is the crux of life and forsake all other parts for it. Believe it or not, folks like myself (Myers Briggs 'NT' or Keirsey 'Rational') don't even understand why you search out job security .. the world is about everything _but_ being enslaved by the fear of losing something. My goodness I can't even imagine living like that.

    259. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot - do you have any idea how much money Bill Gates has given to charity?

    260. Re:All I know is... by nonstop_taco · · Score: 1
      You make a reasonable argument however you must take into consideration the audience you are addressing. Approximately one third of the population in the United States is economic dead weight. The individuals who decry free markets and long for state intervention generally come from that segment of the population. There are two reasons why they support such policies.

      1. They directly benefit from the inefficiencies caused by such policies and generally don't care about the burden they place on the productive members of society.

      2. They are not productive ( in part ) because they have difficulty correctly determining causal relationships between events.

      You must understand that it is a waste of time to explain why unrestricted free trade is beneficial to ( productive ) society. The individuals who are capable of doing useful work already share your opinion and do not need to be convinced. The individuals who do not share your opinion cannot be convinced using reason. In order to explain why this is the case, it is necessary to understand the function of reason in both the productive and non-productive segments of society.

      The productive members of society use reason as a tool to modify their environment. First they create a mental model which they apply to the environment. If things do not work as planned, they use reason to determine what was wrong with their mental model and modify it appropriately.

      This can be contrasted with how reason is used within the non-production segment of society. They too create mental models of the environment which they apply to the environment. However, if things do not work as planned, they do not use reason to determine what was wrong with model ( and therefore do not modify it ). In their world there is no objective reality. To them, whatever they think is necessarily true and they use reason ( or at least a rhetorical semblance of reason ) to convince themselves and others why their model is correct rather than what would be indicated by the environment.

      The only thing we ( the productive members of society ) can do is to try to produce as much as possible and stay as far away as we can from the non-productive members of society.

      p.s.

      Unfortunately that tends not to work in the general case because the useless members of society tend to also be the the ones most prone to violence ( against the productive members of society ).

    261. Re:All I know is... by Cyberdyne · · Score: 1
      Places like Dell and Microsoft should be learning that you should send the things like programming utilities to India while keeping your services local. After all, people won't care too much of Windows was "Made in India" but they will certainly care if they can't communicate with the other person on the phone when they call for help!

      The irony is, from what I've seen the coding that comes out is worse than the English! Indian call centers seem to be OK for simple tasks (I'm pretty sure when I called the airline to reschedule some tickets the handler was Indian) - taking down and checking details like flight number, name and date; it's when you need creativity (like real programming work) that they fall down. AIUI it's because the schools focus too much on blindly memorizing things, which is fine for following a call center script but useless for writing software. From what I've heard of companies trying this, even when you give clear instructions the code rarely works as required - by the time you either spoon-feed then what they need to do or fix their code yourself, it would have been quicker (hence faster) to write it yourself in the first place.

      Perhaps the best approach would be to use Indian call centers for first level retail customer support, then transfer it to more suitable operators once you screen out the cup holder crowd ("help, the cup holder on my PC is broken...", "that's not a cup holder, it's the CD/DVD drive; give me your address, we'll have FedEx pick it up, fix it and have it back in a week - that'll cost $150.") Cisco use foreign call centers for two-thirds of their calls - but that's from having three call centers (in the US, Holland and Australia, I think?), each of which handles calls during their own daytime. Wherever the call goes, it's going to well-trained native English speakers, not cheap Indians with a script - then again, Cisco doesn't sell many $100k routers to the cup holder crowd.

    262. Re:All I know is... by xerid · · Score: 1
      The price we pay is artificially LOW and we are going to get it between the eyes when we run out of cheap labour to exploit.
      You're forgetting that creating cheap labor is all part of the system. So you don't have to worry about running out.
    263. Re:All I know is... by Luscious868 · · Score: 1

      Well I've got some bad news for you. It's going to be another four years before Bush is out of work. Kerry has blown this one Monica Lewiski style.

    264. Re:All I know is... by lightknight · · Score: 1

      "No, those are his morals. Something you apparently lack."

      Again, with the same attack. Apparently having a different opinion than you is the equivalent of lacking morals. Wonderful, you'll make many friends.

      "I'm not interested in finding someone greedy and self-serving. I'm more interested in hearing from someone who speaks about values and ethics -- even when it it hits them in the wallet."

      Brilliant. I am interested in finding someone greedy and self-serving: that's how the market works. Greed = they want more than they have. Self-serving = they went it for themselves. Find me someone who is greedy, self-serving, and not stupid, and I will show you someone who has benefitted us more than any politician.

      "No thanks. I'm not interested in a society where greed is rewarded monetarily. You shouldn't get to drive a nicer car than you neighbor simply because you chose to donate nothing to charity. All that the income tax system does is set the minimum participation level for you as a member of society. It keeps you from opting out of your societal obligations. Don't like it? Then move."

      Hardly, I'd rather save the country from people who believe in "societal obligations". The income tax infringes on property rights, gives free money to a group of delinquants, and allows a bunch of politicians to feel like they've done something. If I work 40 hours a week as a doctor, and you work 20 hours a week at McDonalds, you better believe I will drive a nicer car than you. Want to get to my level? Take out a few loans, put yourself through medical school, then you can enjoy the benefits. Otherwise, shutup and sit down.

      If you take away the advantages gained with working hard (or sap them to support others), you take away a few of the reasons for anyone to pursue that line of work. If a doctor, a teacher, and a plumber all make the same amount, who is going to put themselves through hell (medical school)? No one.

      If you keep raising the income tax, who will work hard? No one. The top producers will either move away or give up. They will make enough to support themselves, and then stop.

      People do not act unless they see benefits (i.e. money). Having a happy, warm feeling as a reward only works on a small portion of the population, and then only if they are not hungry. People's jobs are determined by the market: you get paid according to your perceived worth.

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    265. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, abortion is not murder not whether you see it that way or not. Gee, it sure is easy to make proclamations, isn't it?

      Then killing you would not be murder if I defined it that way. Gee, it's easy to be immoral, isn't it?

      No, wealth is usually inherited.

      I think you'd better re-check your statistics, Sparky.

    266. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If by face-to-face you mean not posting as an AC, you're out of luck and don't hold your breath.

      If you literally mean face-to-face in person, you wouldn't stand a chance.

    267. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, the subject line pretty much sums up your problem. That's all you know. The rest of us know better.

    268. Re:All I know is... by Artful+Codger · · Score: 1

      Good point about brand-name things. Nonetheless, if you don't go "brand" you can still get good shoes for $20 to $40.

      In general I think my point about artificially low prices on much manufactured stuff is still valid - look at all the stuff that's made overseas, and how the actual price has dropped, even without factoring in inflation.

      I don't agree that money invested in the stock market always directly results in jobs. Investing is increasingly about just finding gambles (shorting, futures, derivatives, etc) where money is made/lost in some sort of "play". How often do these plays result in a company being downsized or wiped out altogether? These plays usually reward investors at the cost of the downsized worker and the taxpayer.

      --

      ... plans that either come to naught, or half a page of scribbled lines...
    269. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was fuckin hilarious! I almost spit water over my keyboard... To tell you the truth, I'd say that is exactly what she is doing. I tried to convince my wife to do that same thing- Amatuer Internet Porn is a big business...

    270. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      Actually private schools are very easy to get into and pay for unless you have a pisspoor attitude, and do not listen to anyone.

      Catholic schools, for instance, run voluntary programs to help those who cannot afford to go to the school. The ones that actually do their homework and pass classes get practically a full ride, but no less they a considerable portion to help them pay for it.

      The idea that all private schools can only be attended by the rich is both foolish and ignorant, and I laugh at anyone who honestly believes that. Beverly Hills 90210 schools only exist in Beverly Hills. Here, in Pennsylvania, they are much cheaper and I did not know one single kid at the private school that I attended that was even upper middle class. Wait, scratch that, we had one kid whose father was a CPA.

      [And just so you know, I went to private school for one few year. I went to a Catholic School, but I did not stay because I was not Catholic and there was alot of religious segregation.

      My father is working class [railroad] and my mother worked night shifts at a nursing home so we could afford the house we live in. Rich? Bullshit. Hardworking? Yes.

      Private schools from K-University are less expensive and provide a better education. Statistical facts done by government, independent, and private studies. Look them up.

      --
      Speckpot?
    271. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's funny ... because we have three computer related jobs (including one for a senior developer) that we've been unable to fill due to lack of skilled applicants.

      Maybe if your company wasn't asking for impossible skill requirements you'd get qualified applicatants. I'm sure you're guilty of the old "10 years experience with Visual Studio .NET 2003" type of requirements...

    272. Re:All I know is... by palfreman · · Score: 1
      You are not comparing fairly. You are comparing an adjusted gross US figure for official figures in France and Germany that do not take into account the same things. Over there, huge numbers of people are perpetual students, into their 30s. Huge numbers of people are on paid government "training" schemes (i.e. make-work projects), and have been for years. Without taking all that into account, there countries still manage to show over 12% unemployed. The figures for the US are simply not even close to comprable.

      Wherever you go, the higher the "progressive" income taxes, the higher the unemployment rates and slower the economic growth.

    273. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      "The battle cry of the right: prayer belongs in private schools and all schools should be private. Oh, and to hell with any kid who was born into poverty. No school for them."

      The battle cry of the right? Please. I'm not from the right.

      Actually private schools are very easy to get into and pay for unless you have a pisspoor attitude, and do not listen to anyone.

      Catholic schools, for instance, run voluntary programs to help those who cannot afford to go to the school. The ones that actually do their homework and pass classes get practically a full ride, but no less they a considerable portion to help them pay for it.

      The idea that all private schools can only be attended by the rich is both foolish and ignorant, and I laugh at anyone who honestly believes that. Beverly Hills 90210 schools only exist in Beverly Hills. Here, in Pennsylvania, they are much cheaper and I did not know one single kid at the private school that I attended that was even upper middle class. Wait, scratch that, we had one kid whose father was a CPA.

      Private schools from K-University are less expensive and provide a better education. Statistical facts done by government, independent, and private studies. Look them up.

      "So I guess that you'll be voting against "No Child Left Behind" Bush, right?"

      I vote against pretty much anything Bush does. The "No Child Left Behind" policy ignores so much on how children learn, so why should I support it?

      "What right does that evil government have to say you can't expose your illegal immigrant workers to carcinogens during their 12 hour, no-restroom-break shifts?"

      Are those workers being forced into those conditions [which aren't exactly universal, no matter how hard you try to demonize business owners]? Nope. They're not.

      "In your world, perhaps. But in the U.S., we have over two centuries of legislative and judicial activity that defines government as being there to help people, not just defend their property. As to defending individual rights, does Bush's support of the Patriot Act count as another reason he should be ousted?"

      Please. The Nanny State existed in minimal form for most of our history, and has only been growing over the past century, and especially so with FDR, Wilson, and the other "New Deal" jerkoffs.

      But as far as Bush's support for the Patriot count being grounds for him to be ousted? Absolutely! But that's not the only reason he should be ousted. There are plenty of other reasons why, as well.

      "Yes. I have no problem with that. Nor do I have a problem with my sperm ending up in the end of a condom -- even though one of them could have resulted in a child."

      Nope. Sperm don't result in children no matter how much you take care of them. It's not the same argument. See any online argument over when cells become humans.

      "Logical leap: First it was a fetus that could become a child and now it's a "child."

      Again, when does a fetus become a human being?

      "I don't play those games."

      You play even more dubious games.

      "I doubt that you "could care less" about your fellow man than you do now."

      I could care less about a whole lot of people...

      "Sorry, bud, but you are part of a society and a society takes care of its weak."

      The value of a society is in the difference between being forced, or coerced, into providing for others, or by voluntarily doing so for others.

      If socialized programs were voluntary, I would probably participate in a few of them until the private sector provided better, more efficient programs of that type.

      "I don't recall stating that women should be allowed to abandon babies."

      Accepted. I made the jump there from fetus to infant. When does a fetus become a child? If you cannot define that, you cannot say abortions are ok. I do not claim to. I'm only asking questions.

      "It was simply a means of buying votes from people too stupid to recognize that they were just taking money from th

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    274. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      Just so I'm not taking as a plagiarist with the ten truths about trade...

      I'd like to thank Brink Lindsey.

      The link can be found at reason.com, and probably a few other places.

      It was titled "10 Truths about Trade"

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      Speckpot?
    275. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      Errr. "not being taken" or "taken as a".

      Preview, Josh, not Submit.

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      Speckpot?
    276. Re:All I know is... by WorldRimWalker · · Score: 1

      In Germany they have followed your recommendations - there are extensive (and until recently) ulimited benefits for the unemployed. What they have found is that if the benefits are generous enough, people have no reason to seek work. The tax burden to support the unemployed drives up the costs for enterprises, fueling further outsourcing and more unemployment, in a self-reinforcing death spiral. Clearly, there is a delicate balance to be held, between assisting the unfortunate and rewarding the indolent.

    277. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Acting tough over the internet... gotta love it.

    278. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Catholic schools, for instance, run voluntary programs to help those who cannot afford to go to the school. The ones that actually do their homework and pass classes get practically a full ride, but no less they a considerable portion to help them pay for it.

      I don't like the idea of children who live in Salt Lake City, Utah having to either go to the local Mormon-run private school that teaches the Mormon faith or go to none at all. If a child's family is Muslim and the only private schools around are Catholic and Jewish, what then? Should the child be indoctrinated into one of those faiths against the wishes of his parents?

      Private schools from K-University are less expensive and provide a better education. Statistical facts done by government, independent, and private studies. Look them up.

      You've got a self-selecting sample in private schools. The kids who are only staying in school because the law requires it, and whose parents don't give a rat's ass about education, are in public schools.

      Are those workers being forced into those conditions [which aren't exactly universal, no matter how hard you try to demonize business owners]? Nope. They're not.

      So anything goes? No OSHA standards. No standards about sexual harassment? No Department of Labor standards? Are they forced at gunpoint? No. Are they forced by economic circumstances? Maybe.

      Please. The Nanny State existed in minimal form for most of our history, and has only been growing over the past century, and especially so with FDR, Wilson, and the other "New Deal" jerkoffs.

      But the economy has been growing at the same time, so it seems that social welfare isn't causing the downfall of society that you predicted.

      Again, when does a fetus become a human being?

      There is no litmus test for humanity and there never will be. And there is every definition from conception, to viability, to birth.

      I could care less about a whole lot of people...

      I could NOT care less about a whole lot of people.

      Accepted. I made the jump there from fetus to infant. When does a fetus become a child? If you cannot define that, you cannot say abortions are ok.

      Of course I can. You're making the assumption that there is a scientifically valid means of determining when a fetus becomes a child and I am confident that there is not. Therefore, in my opinion, it's only right to respect the views of the pregnant woman.

      I'm not against helping other people, no matter how much you or anybody else tries to demonize me as such. I'm against programs that are not voluntary on moral grounds.

      I oppose, on moral grounds, letting someone reap all of the rewards of our society and then choose to give nothing back. Social programs are like insurance. Most of us hope that we never have to "make a claim." But voluntary welfare contributions would be as likely to succeed as making a system of car insurance where everyone was insured but only those who chose to contributed to the insurance fund.

      Let us go over some truths about Trade.
      1. The number of jobs grows with population.


      But those jobs are being filled with overseas workers in many instances.

      2. Jobs churn constantly.

      Yes, but the rate, volatility, and downwards pressure on wages that is an issue.

      3. Challenging, high paying jobs, are becoming more plentiful, not less.

      I know. Just call tech support for your computer and the person in Bangalore, India will tell you that challenging, high-paying (for India) jobs are definitely more plentiful in recent years. You might get a different answer if you asked the American that they replaced.

      4. While I say we are moving towards an information and services economy, the idea that we are deindustrializing is a myth. We're becoming more productive. It is easier for anyone in this country to create more wealth than ever. Do n

    279. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Then killing you would not be murder if I defined it that way. Gee, it's easy to be immoral, isn't it?

      You missed the point: Proclaiming that abortion is or is not murder does not make it so. It's pointless to assert that "abortion is murder" or "abortion is not murder" without providing rationale for the statement.

      No, wealth is usually inherited.

      I think you'd better re-check your statistics, Sparky.


      I did. The vast majority of wealthy Americans were born into money. If George Bush's parents hadn't been wealthy, he would not now have a multi-million dollar net worth. In fact, there's a much better chance that he would have died in Vietnam or ended up working at a Dairy Queen.

    280. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Sounds like you're lacking in motivation.

      Unlike you, I'm working as a software engineer, so it sounds like I was motivated enough to get the skills I needed to be desirable in a tight job market.

      Personally it's not as difficult as you make it sound to switch professions, in fact I know quite a few people who have done so as of late, and are better for it.

      It's one thing to go from being a recent grad in an entry-level programming position to some other entry-level position, but it's quite another for a family breadwinner who's got 15 or 20 years of experience and seniority in his field to switch professions.

      I am a programmer first and foremost, unable to find a programming job in this shithole I live in

      I went to the web page shown on your Slashdot link (http://www.aboring.com) and got the following:
      Notice: Undefined variable: prefix in /var/www/virtual/aboring/html/header.php on line 21

      Notice: Use of undefined constant REMOTE_ADDR - assumed 'REMOTE_ADDR' in /var/www/virtual/aboring/html/header.php on line 27

      Warning: mysql_connect(): Can't connect to local MySQL server through socket '/var/run/mysql/mysql.sock' (2) in /var/www/virtual/aboring/html/fusion_core/fusion_c ore.php on line 65
      Unable to connect to SQL Server
      Maybe your inability to find programming work is not due to where you live...

      I work as a heavy equipment mechanic.

      I'm sorry that you've had to take such work, but I wouldn't call it a profession. It's a job.

      and I will be voting GOP

      I can see why given the way that your career is prospering under the GOP.
    281. Re:All I know is... by severoon · · Score: 1

      Congratulations on the new job. It's a shame that IT represents only a fraction of the workforce, and training for IT is more time consuming and expensive than the average joe can pick up and start life again from scratch. Besides, if everyone switched to IT, you could expect to see your luck dry up with the influx of new labor.

      Nice try, but I'm still not buying it. I know people in several sectors that are experiencing a pick-up, blue collar and white collar. For instance, the trucking industry is picking up and everyone that's involved is getting back to work...dispatchers, drivers, dock workers, terminal managers, bindery clerks, truck mechanics, etc. I know a secretary that have been on unemployment that just found a job. I know a lawyer that just found a job after doing contract work for a couple of years. The jobless phase of the jobless recovery is over.

      Everyone doesn't have to switch fields, nor would that be good for the economy. (That's not to say some people don't have to switch fields--if you were answering phones in a call center, you're now pretty much irrelevant. Some churn is good--we do need to make sure our resources are being directed in the most efficient means, and if India can provide more efficiency right now in call center processing, then that's just the "creative destruction" of capitalism...of course, whether they are more efficient at handling this is debatable, but you get the point. If we never lost certain job functions, we still have 1950s-style switchboard operators putting our calls through.)

      It's a shame that you would let your personal luck allow you to make a sweeping statement that the economy across all sectors is on a rebound.

      I think you see from the above passage it's not only my personal luck informing my statements. Actually, as I said originally, it's not luck, and it's not even the anecdotal evidence I'm presenting of all these people, who were in unsteady job positions or just straight-out unemployed, suddenly getting jobs. It's the experience of job searching that each of them has reported to me that is really behind my attitude--they're all saying that after 24-36 months of a whole lot of nothing, this last few months of job searching has been very active. (Just for the record, this is geographically restricted to the LA, SD, SF, and Chicago job markets.) For three years or so I've been doing software contracting and those contracts have been hard to come by until about a year ago...get a call for a job, and I'd take it b/c who knows how long until the next one. This time, totally different experience...lots of companies hiring. This has nothing to do with "luck" and a lot more to do with...well, companies hiring, I guess.

      Your earlier statement that management is the first to go in a bad economy is quite false. Labor is almost always the first to go.

      I never said management was the first to go in a bad economy. I said it was the last to feel a recovery from a bad economy. You're statement is correct--labor is the first to go. What I said was, labor is also the first to come back, before management. (I always try to understand an argument before I rebut it...that's just what I do.)

      Besides, if and when the economy rebounds, the conservatives won't let Kerry accept credit. It would be like them admitting their own guilt for doing anything for over 3 years, something which has not happened once in the last 4 years.

      Well, strictly speaking, neither Democrats nor Republicans can do much of anything to change the economy short-term, in the space of a few years here and there. We've had a bad go of it the last couple of years because of the dot com bust--not because of Clinton, or Bush, or anything to do with what anyone's political ideology wants them to believe. Basic macroecon...the president can have small, barely

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      but have you considered the following argument: shut up.
    282. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Why isn't it realized by people that the job market is nothing more than a big match-making service where people or businesses go and try to find out who fits whose needs at the moment?

      Yes, it is a big match-making service. If you met your wife/girlfriend through a match-making service, would you dump her the moment you found someone younger, prettier, or with less expensive tastes on a Russian brides website?

      The business owner has the right to make a decision about his business. The 60-year-old was involved in a relationship with that business for a number of years. It worked: he delivered value, he got compensated back for it. Why is it wrong to terminate such a relationship if it doesn't make sense for the employer any more? It would be wrong to keep it artificially, wouldn't it?

      Businesses like "loyal" employees. They will play the loyalty card every time that they want an employee to come in over the weekend, stay late into the evening, or reschedule a vacation so that they can meet the company's needs. Where is the loyalty on the part of the business? Why isn't someone in the corporate office saying: "The people on that workfloor made this company a success. They have sacrificed weekends, worked late into the evenings, and accepted pay cuts when we got in trouble. They stuck with us even when they could have found others to pay them more. We owe it to them to not dump them the moment that we find someone cheaper overseas."?

      If I am a business owner and I am forced to loose an opportunity to contribute extra into the domestic product by employing (and paying) someone with whom my business is not extracting the value it is interested in, isn't that bad for the economy?

      That worker's salary was contributing to the economy. He was spending it on goods and services in the U.S., unlike his foreign counterpart.

    283. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you literally mean face-to-face in person, you wouldn't stand a chance.

      I once met someone who, on the Internet, claimed to be "a competitive powerlifter and kickboxer." I managed to trick him into being at a local mall after he threated to "kick [my] ass" if he ever met me in public. Guess what? Mary Kate & Ashley looked tough compared to this scrawny little wimp of a guy. Before letting him go, I got him to beg me not to beat him.

      I somehow get the feeling that you and he have a lot in common.

    284. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      You think if public schools were abolished, that all of the public school children would have to choose between Catholic and Jewish? Please. Private schools, or home schooling operations would pop up left and right. They exist now, there's no reason to suggest they wouldn't become more numerous should laws and regulations not be so hindering.

      Have you ever attended a Catholic or Jewish institution? I never attended a Jewish institution, but I was hardly indoctrinated into the Catholic faith. They accepted my protestantism, and left it at that. If you were the one I replied to about prejudice, it was largely from others outside the school. It's a very small town. Irish Catholics still look down upon Irish protestants.

      Do you live in Salt Lake City? A quick google search showed a whole lot of schools, both public, private, and religious. I did not even go into how many homeschool their children. The numbers would increase should public schools be done away with. Too expensive to go to a Catholic school? No. Too expensive to go to unreligious Catholic schools? No. Too expensive to home school your children, or to have someone else home school them? No.

      You want to talk about indoctrination, you want to be looking at public schools. Even far left-wingers and right-wingers agree with people like me, that public schools are becoming more and more about indoctrination.

      "You've got a self-selecting sample in private schools. The kids who are only staying in school because the law requires it, and whose parents don't give a rat's ass about education, are in public schools."

      Did you just say it is ok to force students into school? What happened to freedom? The fact that you have to complete the curriculum that whatever state/school district you reside under issues to you shows how much public schooling is about indoctrination.

      Do you know how many laws and regulations private schools, no matter how religious or unreligious, have to go through to keep in operation?

      "So anything goes? No OSHA standards. No standards about sexual harassment? No Department of Labor standards? Are they forced at gunpoint? No. Are they forced by economic circumstances? Maybe."

      Anything goes? Of course not ANYTHING goes. You can't have some wealthy businessman forcing people to work for pennies at gunpoint, but if people are willing to work in poor conditions, that is their choice - or it's the fault of whatever government/society they're escaping from that "forced them".

      "But the economy has been growing at the same time, so it seems that social welfare isn't causing the downfall of society that you predicted."

      I don't believe I stated that social welfare is causing the downfall of the society, but it is certainly increasing the costs. Socialized programs increase the likelihood of societies to go bankrupt. What prevents this? Continous outsourcing [France, Germany, Netherlands] of infrastructure and accounts.

      The economy is not growing because of social welfare, the economy is growing due to relative peace and relatively free markets. [Relatively speaking when you compare the U.S. to other industrialized nations in the world.]

      "Of course I can. You're making the assumption that there is a scientifically valid means of determining when a fetus becomes a child and I am confident that there is not. Therefore, in my opinion, it's only right to respect the views of the pregnant woman."

      I'm making the assumption that there is no scientifically valid means of determining when a fetus becomes a child, and since there is no defining line, how can we honestly say that it is ok to destroy the fetus if we cannot define that line?

      "I oppose, on moral grounds, letting someone reap all of the rewards of our society and then choose to give nothing back. Social programs are like insurance. Most of us hope that we never have to "make a claim." But voluntary welfare contributions would be as likely to succeed as making a system of car insurance where everyone w

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    285. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      I."But those jobs are being filled with overseas workers in many instances."

      I think that one went over your head.

      II. "Yes, but the rate, volatility, and downwards pressure on wages that is an issue."
      I'm going to charge you with doing a little bit more research on your own here.
      But if wages go down, there should be no complaints if prices on goods and services go down as well.

      Wages fall with a surplus of unemployed workers. Prices fall because of previous surplus and due to consumer demand being reduced during these economic slumps, especially in the natural correction of said slumps. If the nominal wages of workers is reduced, and the prices of goods is reduced, then they're no better and no worse off.

      When politicians interfere in the labor market, they slow down the natural correction 'mechanisms' of the market.

      III. "I know. Just call tech support for your computer and the person in Bangalore, India will tell you that challenging, high-paying (for India) jobs are definitely more plentiful in recent years. You might get a different answer if you asked the American that they replaced."

      Yes, if you asked the disgruntled American that was replaced you're going to hear alot of complains, but not if you ask the still much more numerous Americans who still have a job, including more high-tech and high-skilled jobs, or have recently had their jobs imported back due to the money saved on lower foreign wages not being worth the weaker results. Software and IT jobs are slowly coming back into this country, no thanks to government intervention.

      High-tech and high-skilled jobs go beyond tech support... just so you know.

      IV. "Vague and non-specific."

      Vague and non-specific, or you're either biased or too uninformed to know what I am referring to? Hmmm.

      V. "Unsubstantiated assertion."

      Hah. I suppose you did not look up that article. That's fine. I looked it up for you.
      http://www.reason.com/0407/fe.bl.truths.shtm l

      VI."Again, an unsubstantiated assertion."

      Again, http://www.reason.com/0407/fe.bl.truths.shtml

      VII."Yes, corporate officers and stockholders are seeing ever increasing monetary rewards while workers are seeing reduced benefits, lower wages, longer hours, and tougher competition for fewer jobs."

      All workers? Certainly not. Most workers? Certainly not. Increased welfare and unemployment benefits correlates to the increase in the number of unemployed. When there is a whole lot of people unemployed, wages go down - longer hours are not often the norm. As said before, jobs are not just disappearing with no substitutions or reemergence in sight.

      VIII. "I know people who are/were supplying contract tech workers. They don't even want resumes at this point because they are buried in them. They can't find enough customers to pay the costs of leasing their offices. It's not an imagined problem."

      I never said it was an imagined problem, I just think you don't fully understand the sources/causes, or solutions to the problem.

      IX. "In India, China, Vietnam, Malaysia,..."

      Awww, how cute.

      X. "U.S. tech worker earns $85K/year. How much of that will make it back into the U.S. economy? Indian tech worker earns $6K year. How much of that will make it back into the U.S. economy. The jobs aren't going overseas to boost foreign economies. They are going overseas so that corporate officers and stockholders can take a bigger slice of the pie (relative to the tech workers)."

      That $85,000 a year seems a little high. Even ignoring that, nobody is making the claim that we have to get most of the Indian tech worker's salary back. In your head, presuming you have the ability, scale the wages and costs of living between the countries you mentioned earlier in relation to the United States. Compare this to the overall number of employees in the broadly defined "IT" field in said countries. Very few jobs are being outsourced to India or Malaysia, or whereve

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    286. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      "I'm angry at the corporations that have no loyalty to the workers who make them successful. I'm angry when someone who is performing up to expectations in a profitable company being told to train his foreign replacement. I'm angry when a profitable company lays of tens, hundreds, or thousands of U.S. workers because they found someone overseas who's more desperate for money."

      To be completely honets with you, I'd rather see corporations be more loyal to workers. But let us face unbiasedly, a whole lot of workers in America simply aren't working as hard as they used to [unemployment and welfare benefits.]. The people who are losing their jobs aren't exactly top performers, or the most efficient employees.

      When Americans are losing their jobs, instead of saying "oh well let's punish the business owners" (uht! "Damn those vile corporations!"), how about you try making it a little bit easier to make a profitable business? Low taxes. Weaken unnecessary regulations. The list is quite substantial already.

      "Right. Progressive taxing at work. It's fine to talk about how "proud" she should be if she's above the poverty line, but how proud is she when she can't afford to buy her son a football uniform for an after-school league? How proud will she be when she can't afford braces for her daughter? There's more to life than having enough to avoid death."

      Hmmm. I played football when I was younger, and I did not have to pay for a single thing. There is always a whole lot of money donated voluntarily, and not to mention the amount of money concession and admissions make. Enlighten yourself a little bit more.

      You know that health plans are fairly easy to come by. Not onlt do prices decrease all the time, along with quality of service and product increase, but health plans are easy to come by. The mother does not necessarily have to show up with whatever amount of money in cash. Payment plans exist. There is nothing wrong with them, except for what people who are trying to come off as righteous imagine.

      "Ebeneezer Scrooge would love that system."
      Awww, how clever!

      "No, I don't think she "deserves" it, but neither do I think that her children should be punished because of her lack of morals, ethics, and initiative. My solution to this has been an easy one: A long-term welfare recipient gets pregnant? Take the child away immediately after birth, put it up for adoption, and try her for child endangerment (if she can't afford to feed herself, she had no reason to believe that she could feed the child). I'd go even further: A 10% increase in welfare benefits for any man or woman who voluntarily undergoes sterilization."

      Wow... that's just incredibly... wow. You wouldn't happen to be Chinese, would you?

      "So you're claiming that the needs of the poor have always been met in this country and that government social programs sprang up with no one needing assistance? I find that hard to believe."

      Have the needs of the poor always been met? I would say for the most part, but the definition of needs is almost as difficult as defining when a fetus becomes a child.

      I claim that honest, hardworking people almost always succeed, as long as someone does not commit a crime against them.

      Government social programs began when unnatural numbers of immigrants overloaded our infrastructure. You know, particularly after all that nastiness of the "robber barons" and all. Nevermind all of the evidence to suggest that those corporations and companies did more to further workers' conditions and lessen the work week, they were still evil. Nevermind all the evidence to suggest that those "robber barons" really did no worse than what the government could have done at the time. Immigration laws have to be strict, unless you know you have the infrastructure in place to handle them.

      [The book mentioned is called "The Myth of the Robber Barons". I recommend it.]

      Government, naturally, took it upon themselves to "fix" the problem. What has occurred is temporary benefits that are backed up by ever increasing costs, as well as hidden costs and layered bureaucracy. Almost all of which is involuntary.

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    287. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I personally am someone who went from being a "poor folk" to middle-class and am now heading towards "rich".

      FYI, it's reported that 20% of Americans think they're in the top 3% of earners. Please don't make the same mistake.

    288. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      No, capitalism is a system whereby a very large number of middle class and poor customers have an economic incentive to drive down the profits of the vast majority of businesses.

      Businesses set prices, not consumers. There may be some consumers who are buying with a price-is-everything mentality, but that companies like BMW, Linn, and SK thrive is proof that there is a market for high-quality products sold at appropriate prices.

      From that definition comes the need for businesses to pay as little as they can.

      So why have salaries of corporate officers skyrocketed while those of workers have declined? They are just redistributing the pie. My bank now uses overseas workers to process paperwork. They haven't passed any savings on to me.

    289. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Thank you for this discussion.

      Apparently it is wearing on you considering the number of the personal attacks that have crept in, so I'll bid you farewell and leave you with the last word.

    290. Re:All I know is... by the_meager · · Score: 1

      Wearing on me? Please. You're but a footnote of a footnote.

      Personal attacks? You were the one who first claimed moral and intellectual superiority for simply being a Liberal.

      Don't lecture me on the fine art of ad hominem.

      Arrivederci.

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      Speckpot?
    291. Re:All I know is... by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      The problem with this statement is that, to literally 10 million people in this country, anyone making $30,000 a year or more is 'rich' compared to them, so I'm sure you won't mind if your income tax is raised 10% since you can 'afford it'.

      uhhh....wtf does that have to do with anything?? I know for a fact that in King County WA that anything below 40,000 is considered poverty level (I am sure we are not the only ones). But nice job pulling random numbers out of your ass and passing them off as fact. I am pretty sure when people say let the rich pay more taxes they are not talking about people below the official poverty level.

    292. Re:All I know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't confuse wealth redistribution with welfare. Welfare is undeniably bad for the economy and is very present in "socialist" countries that also heavily partake in wealth redistribution. The reason welfare is bad is that it takes away incentive for work.

      Ideally, money should only be given to those who work, with very rare exceptions if any.

      Insufficient wealth redistribution will accelerate the process of consolidating power in the hands of the select few. This, arguably, is very bad for everyone else.

      IMHO, this consolidation is nearly inevitable and can only be reversed through some form of revolution (eg, worker's revolution + unions).

    293. Re:All I know is... by fingerfucker · · Score: 1

      Very interesting!

      If you met your wife/girlfriend through a match-making service, would you dump her the moment you found someone younger, prettier, or with less expensive tastes on a Russian brides website?

      I would dump her the moment I would find someone smarter, more understanding and better suited for me - provided the 'convenience' of my current relationship is not really what I need any more. But if what I need is to see my current wife happy because she is with me, I wouldn't dump her. In any case, it's about what I personally need/want - even if it involves so-called 'selfless' needs.

      They will play the loyalty card every time that they want an employee to come in over the weekend, stay late into the evening, or reschedule a vacation so that they can meet the company's needs. Where is the loyalty on the part of the business?
      It's called the paycheck. The company's loyalty might not end there necessarily, but it's up to people to not to let themselves get exploited. In capitalism, the businesses would love to pay $0 - that would be the best reduction in labor cost that could get. It's up to the workforce to not let that happen. And to to make that happen is not a matter of 'social responsibility', it is a matter of raising children in a certain way. That's where America is making a mistake - it forgot that new people (bluntly put) come out of people - to shape those new people is what needs to happen. Everything else will follow through as a result of that. America forgot that and it will pay the price by other economies (whether it's the European Union or Indonesia) being more successful because of this value capital. There is no point any more whining about the situation now, it's already here.
      That worker's salary was contributing to the economy. He was spending it on goods and services in the U.S., unlike his foreign counterpart.

      1. Yes, the worker's salary was spent in the economy - but it's not about the individual's consumption here. The salary was paid out by the wrong party - a party that was forced to spend money because they were forced to employ the person only because he was there for a number of years; money that could have been put into more efficient use (and the opportunity for businesses to spend money more efficiently helps the economy as a whole, don't you think?).
      2. Don't bring up the U.S. vs. foreign argument, it's nonsense. Go look up Walmart numbers (has like a $250B GDP - bigger than Sweden or Austria), then walk down to your local Walmart (regardless of where in the world you are, there will be one within a range of max. 300 km), look at the back of the products for the "Made in" labels and please realize that even if you live in the U.S., you do NOT live in a U.S. economy any more.

      Overall, you seem to have something against 'foreign' economies, 'foreign' workers, 'foreign' jobs, 'foreign' goods. Where is that xenophobia coming from? Are you fearing you'll be outsmarted, outraced, outdone, made obsolete by the 'foreign', that the 'foreign' is plotting against you? Do you follow what I'm trying to say?

      1. Embrace your principles. 2. Realize reality. 3. Decide your future.

      And stop whining....

    294. Re:All I know is... by fingerfucker · · Score: 1

      And I hope that you are taking my posts as something worth discussing and not as an attempt to attack you. What we are facing is that there are problems at hand and we need to attack those.

      So hopefully, you will have understanding for the fact that when my sentences seem like they are targeted personally, they are not. When I use "you", I usually mean any person having the opinion I am commenting on. I enjoy reading your insight so I will be very happy to learn new things from your reactions.

      Enjoy.

    295. Re:All I know is... by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      Businesses set prices, not consumers.

      You are confused. Price-setters (who can be either consumers or businesses) set prices. I didn't say, though, that customers set prices. I said that customers control businesses in a free-market society.

      So why have salaries of corporate officers skyrocketed while those of workers have declined?

      If, in a free market, you can get more for selling one thing than another, you should selll more of the first and fewer of the latter. So why aren't more workers training themselves to be corporate officers? Greater supply drives down prices, you know. That requires a free market ... but people who complain about high executive salaries don't want a free market. "It hurts when I do this". "Don't do that, then."
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    296. Re:All I know is... by cluckshot · · Score: 1

      A bit of add on which will probably get forgotten by most is available since I posted. (Link to Fed Numbers Report on non immigrant visas) This is dynamite it says 1.1 Million non-immigrant visas issued 2003. It also says between the lines more than 2 million family visas issued for these people as sponsors. YES they can sponsor immigrants even though they are non-immigrants. Then the immigrants can sponsor them!

      Current mismanagement of US Visas is causing the USA to import about 8 million persons a year though the official numbers appear lower the US Census data shows the population increase and Americans are not breeding that much!

      This represents in workforce the displacement from work of about 12 million Americans since the Bush Administration took office! This is Genocide against a nation's own population.

      The government works hard to obscure the visa applications and numbers so that getting a full handle on the issue is hard. I will try to give you an approximate estimate of what is going on.

      The USA has Family visas associated with spouses and financees and relatives which account for the inport of about 3 million annually. No firm or accurate numbers are published here on these. This number is rising rapidly. The USA has Non-Immigrant visas officially stated for 2003 at 1.1 million. The USA admits to illegal immigration having trippled since 2001. The numbers officially admitted then were about 1 million a year. US Census data showed from 1990 to 2000 that the US Population rose from 244.5 million to 281.4 million. US birth rates indicated a population increase of 2 million leaving 34.9 million by immigration. (Dividing that is 3.49 million per year) It is notable that the Census missed this number low in their estimates due to a runup of Illegal Immigration in the last 4 years of that decade by 11.4 Million persons!

      This leaves the rate of Immigration running at about 5 million a year in 2001. US LEGAL immigration has increased by over 2 million since that time and Illegal is up by 3 times. Illegal Immigration was running something in the order of 2 million a year. It is now about 6 million. Sorry for being a bit detailed in the fact looks but they are important.

      The claim of extremist laid on those who suggest proper controls are in order is just wrong. It is the extremists who defend what is going on! This is threatening our survival as a nation in so many ways.

      To be succinct the US is getting 300 million people here in about the next 35 years per this policy. That means we have to build and supply a whole new USA on top of this one while working with the current one. To compare this in ratio terms we will handle a demographic change in the USA in the next 35 years equal to the past 500 years! In the words of a wonderful lady from the University of Kiev (Ukraine) "That will annialate your culture."
      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    297. Re:All I know is... by Mark+of+THE+CITY · · Score: 1

      ... and a panic is when your wife is out of work.

      --
      The clearance system sounds logical. It is not. It is completely arbitrary. -- John Bolton
    298. Re:All I know is... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Man, you're really stupid. Stop sticking up for Kerry's lack of clarity and poor choices. Lot's of other politicians discuss their views specifically. it's not unusual at all. You've made 3 attempts to justify why a link to a PDF with detailed information about Kerry's policies doesn't exist, and all 3 attempts were utter nonsense. I have a much better, and more honest, answer. He doesn't have any specific policies. Stop trying to convince people that there's a legitimate reason he hasn't made them public.

      As far as doing research, I guarantee I know more about the issues and candidates than you do (especially after reading all of your moronic justifications). You want me to vote for you, YOU better fucking tell me why. Not your record, not some lackey, YOU.

      if you're so stupid that you would vote for someone without detailed information from the candidate themselves, then maybe YOU should reconsider voting. The world would be a better place for it.

    299. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      I would dump her the moment I would find someone smarter, more understanding and better suited for me - provided the 'convenience' of my current relationship is not really what I need any more.

      Then we differ. It's just different values -- no insult intended. But to me, it's that "in sickness and in health" thing you hear at so many weddings.

      It's called the paycheck. The company's loyalty might not end there necessarily, but it's up to people to not to let themselves get exploited.

      A paycheck is contractually required. Loyalty is the company granting you an additional week of leave because of a death in the family. It's the company keeping your job for you when a serious medical problem keeps you out for three months. It's the company saying "Bob's been there for us for thirty years, cutting into his personal schedule to meet our needs. We owe it to him to not replace him in his last three years of work just to save a few bucks."

      1. Yes, the worker's salary was spent in the economy - but it's not about the individual's consumption here. The salary was paid out by the wrong party - a party that was forced to spend money because they were forced to employ the person only because he was there for a number of years; money that could have been put into more efficient use (and the opportunity for businesses to spend money more efficiently helps the economy as a whole, don't you think?).

      Often, no. The millions of dollars sent overseas is money that won't be taxed as income, hurting other taxpayers. The workers who were outsourced will get unemployment, further harming all of us who pay taxes. Some will declare bankruptcy, harming businesses, which will pass the costs of the uncollectable loans on to consumers and other businesses. Many will have less to spend for years to come, harming businesses and the workers those businesses employ. It's a ripple effect that should not be underestimated.

      2. Don't bring up the U.S. vs. foreign argument, it's nonsense. Go look up Walmart numbers (has like a $250B GDP - bigger than Sweden or Austria), then walk down to your local Walmart (regardless of where in the world you are, there will be one within a range of max. 300 km), look at the back of the products for the "Made in" labels and please realize that even if you live in the U.S., you do NOT live in a U.S. economy any more.

      But when I, or any U.S. worker, spends money at Walmart, it's helping to pay the wages of cashiers, stock clerks, store managers, security personnel, janitors, and anyone else who works there. It also helps to pay the wages of the truck drivers who deliver the goods, the construction workers who built the store, and the accountants, lawyers, and buyers working at headquarters. You're mistaking manufacturing for the whole economy. It's not.

      Overall, you seem to have something against 'foreign' economies, 'foreign' workers, 'foreign' jobs, 'foreign' goods. Where is that xenophobia coming from? Are you fearing you'll be outsmarted, outraced, outdone, made obsolete by the 'foreign', that the 'foreign' is plotting against you? Do you follow what I'm trying to say?

      I'm not afraid of foreign workers or in danger of losing my livelihood to them (for reasons that I can't discuss -- but I'm safe). What I am afraid of is the harm that will come to the economy when the middle class finds themselves with less and less income and increasingly fewer opportunities. The gap between the CEOs' salaries and those of the workers is growing by leaps and bounds, while more and more U.S. dollars are going overseas. It's a recipe for economic meltdown.

    300. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Price-setters (who can be either consumers or businesses) set prices.

      Then I'm going to become a consumer price-setter and tell Best Buy that I've repriced the 300GB hard drive to $5. Oh, you mean that Best Buy can set the price but I can't? And I'm a "price-setter" how?

      So why aren't more workers training themselves to be corporate officers?

      Because people normally attain these positions by climbing corporate ladders, not by taking classes at night school.

      Greater supply drives down prices, you know.

      That might explain why corporate officers at most companies don't groom 40% of their workforce for roles as corporate officers.

      That requires a free market ... but people who complain about high executive salaries don't want a free market.

      Correct. I do not want a free market. I want one which is somewhat regulated.

    301. Re:All I know is... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      Man, you're really stupid.

      Oh dear, I've been put in my place. Your logic is quite obviously irrefutable & I have no chance against your superior intellect.

      Oh wait a minute, _what_ logic?! All I've seen from you is an emotional argument of why you don't like Kerry solely based on your assumption that you know how to run a campaign better than he does (and your sole criteria seems to be whether he's kowtowing to _your_ particular whims), with no attempt at even _trying_ to analyze why a rational politican might be acting the way he is.

      I have a much better, and more honest, answer. He doesn't have any specific policies.

      Yep, yep, you sure know what you're talking about! *snicker*

    302. Re:All I know is... by dprovine · · Score: 1
      Sorry for the delay; I was away for a few days. [N]o purpose is served by misleading anyone or stating false "facts."

      It was not my intent to state any facts or support any candidate. My position is that voting on one issue only is a bad idea. So whatever the job situation, if you vote only based on how your job is doing, with no regard to other issues of national importance, you are not doing well.

      The original poster suggested that the only problem with anecdotal job data is that it's anecdotal. Even if not anecdotal, I believe that the tunnel-vision of voting only on one issue does a disservice to everyone.

    303. Re:All I know is... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Emotion? I asked for specific policies outlined in a document. How is that emotional? It's emotional that I want to actually hear the CANDIDATE tell me what he would do? Ok, I guess I'll have to deal with being emotional then.

      More importantly, you need to ask yourself why you are letting a candidate get away with saying nothing of substance about his policies. That's the purpose of a campaign, not to say feel good crap and make pie-in-the-sky promises. Both candidates have done a piss poor job, why are you allowing it? Why are you DEFENDING them?

      And I stand by my statement, you continue to prove how stupid you are. Please, please don't vote. We'll all thank you.

    304. Re:All I know is... by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      Okay, so you know less than I thought. Let me start with the basics. In some industries, the seller sets the price. Saudi Arabia can sell all the oil they want for $30/barrel, or $40/barrel. On the other hand, absent government intervention, an undertaker pretty much has to take whatever the heirs are willing to pay them (which is why undertakers are licensed). Taxis and hair-cutters are other examples.

      I do not want a free market. I want one which is somewhat regulated.

      Unfortunately, regulations don't lead to freedom. Regulations lead to more regulations.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    305. Re:All I know is... by gorfie · · Score: 1

      I did a search on Google for Gillette, razor, and bags and came up with a pretty good list. Here's a sample compilation of stories. I came across it on Fark, was pretty funny so I remembered it.

      My research shows that Degraan took up the CEO position in October 2000 and announced that he would take "no radical new strategy" (link).

      I can't find any conclusive evidence concerning his political leanings. However, I did find evidence suggesting that Gillette as a company tends to favor Democratic candidates by a 5-2 ratio in terms of donations.

      My main point was that companies/organizations will time announcements to influence elections when possible. In 1998, it doesn't really matter. In 2000, releasing that news in October might hurt the incumbent while not releasing that news wouldn't have an impact.

      Whether or not Gillette is an example of this isn't really an issue for me, as I have no doubt that decisions to withold/release information are determined by whether or not they want the candidate benefiting from such information to take office.

    306. Re:All I know is... by gorfie · · Score: 1

      That's probably not what the moderators considered insightful. I still stand by that statement. I'm in a decent job now and I believe that will still be the case in December regardless of who wins (if I had to choose a liklihood, I would guess that I have 20-1 odds of still being in a job come December). No, I don't trust the economy. I just believe there are more important issues out there at this time. If you want my list...

      1.) Education - our schools suck right now and the PC movement is turning our children into a mass of "equal in every way" zombies. Children don't understand winning and losing, they're drugged when they act like kids, they can't celebrate holidays, they can't be individuals. The bright students aren't getting the motivation/attention they need to reach their full potential, instead the schools are focusing on the lower echelon of children which basically brings everyone else down many notches while raising that 10% up a few notches. Our children won't be able to compete, innovation will be a thing of the past, and metric conversion errors will be much more common.

      2.) Guns - most gun control laws only hurt law abiding citizens. They don't make the guns any less dangerous, they just make the parts that enthusiasts seek more expensive. Thugs and other criminals can obtain illegal weapons cheaper and more easily than the typical citizen. Automatic weapons have been illegal since the 1930's I believe, and most people don't even know that. Make smart laws and enforce them better. The waiting period was an excellent policy. Programs to encourage gun safety (even mandatory ones) are an excellent idea.

      3.) Ashcroft - the guy is out to know everything we do, even in the privacy of our own homes. You might say it's not a problem if everything you do is legal, but what happens when the government starts declaring harmless activities as illegal and then begins prosecuting you based on what you DID (i.e. it wasn't illegal at the time but you get in trouble for it anyway). Sure, it's not immediately possible, but I think this guy is chipping away at the privacy wall quicker than any other official that I can recall.

      4.) Healthcare - I pay $40 ($20x2) a month in prescription drug costs for a chronic condition (i.e. they can't cure it, they only remedy the symptoms). I pay an additional $300 to $600 for blood tests, diagnostic tests, appointments, etc.. This is WITH insurance. My employer is getting cheap with healthcare and basically we are paying for our own stuff on a discount plan similar to Sam's. I want to see healthcare costs go down so people can afford them without insurance. Why should my drugs (an acid if I understand correctly) cost over $200 without insurance? Why does my doctor suggest the latest and greatest drugs because the pharmaceutical reps tell him to (so I can't get generic)? Why can't shorten the duration that companies have to wait to copy a drug and put less emphasis on healthcare companies making money and more emphasis on curing people? Do you really think they can't find a cure for these chronic conditions or do you think they are focusing on coming up with new symptom reliever drugs that are associated with recurring income? It's ridiculous.

      5.) Economy - Yes I care. But I care about the above issues more.

      I really don't know who I will vote for. I think both candidates suck on education and economy. Bush sucks with Ashcroft and healthcare, and Kerry sucks with gun control. I lose with either candidate.

    307. Re:All I know is... by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Getting a little behind in your correspondence? :)

      I still stand by that statement. I'm in a decent job now and I believe that will still be the case in December regardless of who wins

      If two months is job security for you, again, I have to say that's short-sighted.

      Education - our schools suck right now and the PC movement is turning our children into a mass of "equal in every way" zombies.

      If we don't have jobs requiring higher education, what's the point of educating the population? BTW, not all schools are bad, but the "Leave No Child Behind" act didn't help matters any.

      Guns - most gun control laws only hurt law abiding citizens.

      The somewhat silly ban on so-called assault weapons just expired. The gun-control battle is mostly hot air - like always. I joined the NRA in the 70's - nothing has changed. You're wasting your concern.

      Ashcroft - the guy is out to know everything we do, even in the privacy of our own homes.

      Easily removed by a regime change. His machinations are already being knocked down by the courts and criticized by lawmakers of both parties.

      Healthcare

      Yep. Problematic. It's a lot worse if you're out of work and trying to pay for it. Especially if you have a dependent with a chronic condition and only group policies will provide coverage. Yet another reason to push for a good economy and well-paying jobs.

      I really don't know who I will vote for. I think both candidates suck on education and economy. Bush sucks with Ashcroft and healthcare, and Kerry sucks with gun control. I lose with either candidate.

      As a life-long Republican, I'll be voting for Kerry. Bush's advisors are running the country, and I have no use for neocons or their policies. A regime change is needed to prevent further erosion. I never liked or voted for Bill Clinton, but he was right when he claimed it was all about the economy. When the economy is good, people have time to sweat the small stuff and work on improvements. When the economy is bad, people tend to elect a man on a white horse offering absurd promises.

    308. Re:All I know is... by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1

      You sez:

      You make a reasonable argument however you
      must take into consideration the audience
      you are addressing. Approximately one third
      of the population in the United States is
      economic dead weight. The individuals who
      decry free markets and long for state
      intervention generally come from that segment
      of the population.

      I thank you for your reply. It is very informative and awakening.

      The reason I post that message, however, wasn't to address the deadweights, but, as you also know, one-third of our own people are not-yet deadweights, and some of them may _still_ be able to reason to, and because my love of my own country, I simply can NOT sit there and say nothing and let the people being brainwashed by the mass media into brainless zombies.

      My fear is that U. S. of A. will turn into another Nazi like empire, where the "leaders" can do whatever they can and the people never offer any resistance. As a card carrying member to both the NRA and ACLU, I love my country too much to do nothing.

      That's all, and thanks again !

      --
      Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    309. Re:All I know is... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Okay, so you know less than I thought.

      No, you just think you know more than you do. Read on. By the way, don't take that smug, superior attitude with me -- especially when I'm spending my time writing things like this to educate you.

      Let me start with the basics. In some industries, the seller sets the price. Saudi Arabia can sell all the oil they want for $30/barrel, or $40/barrel.

      In all industries, the price is either set by the seller or set by government regulation. The consumer does not set the price. If they did, they price would be $0 almost every time.

      On the other hand, absent government intervention, an undertaker pretty much has to take whatever the heirs are willing to pay them (which is why undertakers are licensed).

      That's just a completely nutty statement. Licensing of undertakers is done for reasons of public safety and consumer protection, and has nothing to do with their fees. Undertakers have to know how to tell if a person is truly dead (yes, mistakes, though rare, hapen). They have to know how to spot signs which are cause for suspicion of foul play so that they can alert the authorities. They have to know the laws governing the preparation, burial and disposal of dead human bodies, and the shipment of bodies dying from infectious or contagious diseases. They have to be familiar with local health and sanitary ordinances and regulations relating to funeral directing and embalming. They have to be trained in the art of embalming and body preparation.

      An undertaker can charge whatever fee he/she wants and the heirs have to pay it or find a different undertaker. The consumer does not set the fee.

      Taxis and hair-cutters are other examples.

      They are other examples of professions licensed for reasons of public safety and consumer protection. Hairdressers (AKA "barbers" and "hair-cutters") need to know how to recognize and treat scalp problems like lice, seborrheic dermatitis, and rashes. They need to know how to properly clean and disinfect their hair cutting instruments to avoid transmission of disease or parasites from one client to another. They have to be trained in hair cutting so that clients are not put at risk of injury (cuts) and so that their haircut is not hideous, poorly done, and a source of embarassment.

      Hairdressers can charge whatever they want to. If they want to give haircuts to actors and politicians for $150 each, more power to them. If Joe Average Consumer doesn't want to pay that much, he can go to "The Hair Cuttery" and spend less than $20.

      Taxi drivers are licensed for the safety of their passengers and those with whom they share the roads. They are also licensed for reasons of consumer protection. Cabbies have to get licenses to show that they are skilled drivers with a good knowledge of traffic laws. The licensing process includes testing to see that they know how to transport handicapped passengers, that they understand laws regarding non-discrimination, and, in some cities, that they understand how to administer first aid and CPR. In many localities, they are also tested for their knowledge of the local landmarks and their ability to choose appropriate routes to destinations. That way, you can get into a cab at LAX and tell the driver "Stouffer Concourse Hotel" and they will take you to 5400 West Century Blvd without you having to give them directions and without driving you all over the city looking for it.

      Taxi fares are regulated by the government. Neither the drivers nor the passengers get to set the fares.

      Unfortunately, regulations don't lead to freedom. Regulations lead to more regulations.

      That's better than having your drinking water contaminated by decomposing corpses, getting head lice, and being in a cab driven by someone who is an incompetent, dangerous driver.

  3. I have made it with a woman. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Inform the men.

    1. Re:I have made it with a woman. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We are sure she's a women this time?"

    2. Re:I have made it with a woman. by jimmydevice · · Score: 0

      Didn't choke this time?

    3. Re:I have made it with a woman. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What exactly did you make with the woman?

  4. Outsourcing by b0lt · · Score: 5, Informative

    What about the state sponsored outsourcing? The US government is actively supporting outsourcing, examples here, here, and

    --
    got sig?
    1. Re:Outsourcing by N3WBI3 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      This is the *only* thing of worth Kerry has said, Now what he might do about it I dont know, and how business will react to having outsourcing clipped and taxes hiked at the same time also remains to be seen.

      How I long for a candidate who actually cares about both workers and business owners...

      --
    2. Re:Outsourcing by donatj · · Score: 0

      Heh, I notice I got bad Karma for my last comment, because people don't like to take resoponsabiltiy, they like to blame it on the president, the government. Its not, its overpaid workers. Simple fact of the matter.

    3. Re:Outsourcing by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Now what he might do about it I dont know

      Believe it or not, he's actually got a plan for this. Unlike so many of his other proposals, this one doesn't revolve around ludicrously jacked revenue projections or unfunded mandates. Kerry's plan is to get Congress to pass a tax penalty on companies that send jobs overseas.

      Might sound good to some, but the net result will be increased labor costs (or increased tax and tax-compliance costs) for business, which will have the net effect of putting the breaks on an economy which right now is growing at a nice, sustainable rate. Since Kerry's spending plan already calls for nothing less than a wildly unsustainable 12.5% GDP growth per year for 10 years, the additional labor and compliance costs will make little difference in terms of tax revenues and a balanced budget. But it will mean that those businesses are generating less overall economic activity, which will have a net negative effect on domestic job growth.

      "Backfire," I think is the word I'm looking for here.

      --

      I write in my journal
    4. Re:Outsourcing by Coryoth · · Score: 2, Informative

      Heh, I notice I got bad Karma for my last comment, because people don't like to take resoponsabiltiy, they like to blame it on the president, the government. Its not, its overpaid workers. Simple fact of the matter.

      Mostly it is the high cost of living in the US, partly driven by a reasonably extravagant lifestyle, but mostly driven the high cost of housing.

      A while ago my brother and I both had reasonably well paying jobs, his in the US, mine in New Zealand. We were earning the same amount in local currency, but when converted by the exchange rate (the NZ dollar wasn't doing so well at the time) I was earning almost half as much as my brother. In terms of standard of living however, I was actually slightly better of because the cost of living in New Zealand was just that much cheaper. Compare that to India and we're talking another order of magnitude.

      That sort of situation is always going to have a huge impact on low skill tech jobs because

      (1) Tech jobs are more easily relocatable than most, because for a lot of it you're just pushing information around, so with global communication, the physical locality is just not important.
      (2) There is a base minimum that you're going to have to pay someone if they're going to have any sort of standard of living in the US. If we're talking about low skill jobs that are not paying not far above that minimum level, it looks awfully expensive.

      This situation is changing - the US dollar is dropping significantly against world currencies (but that in itself entails problems for the economy), but it still has a very long way to go before any kind of equilibrium is struck.

      Jedidiah

    5. Re:Outsourcing by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 0

      You are absolutely right. The whinging from IT nerds about outsourcing is just a staggering misinformed piece of special pleading.

    6. Re:Outsourcing by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Yes, boys and girls, I wrote "breaks" instead of "brakes." I'm as horrified as anybody at this revoltin' development. Teach me to comment right before bedtime.

      --

      I write in my journal
    7. Re:Outsourcing by vandan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't think the average worker has anything to take 'resoponsabiltiy' for, as you so elloquently put it.

      It's bastards like that current US administration, who's family and buddies are making billions of dollars on weapons sales and oil deals and such.

      It is a complete myth that unions are wrecking the economy. Pure greed makes companies turn to the lowest cost of production, and it won't be until the people decide that they want to force their companies to only buy labour at a nationally agreed 'fair price' - no matter what country the labour comes - that this myth will be fully exposed.

    8. Re:Outsourcing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The UK.gov does the same, its disgracefull. The Congeston Charge was outsourced to India, and to make matters worse, they used an amircan product when a prefectly good European one would of done.

    9. Re:Outsourcing by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was gonna mod you up, but I decided to post a response instead. Lucky you! I don't entirely agree with your post, so I wanted to blab on about my silly ideas.

      I take serious issue with anyone who wants to try and suppress outsourcing or "globalization" in any way. Not because I think it's good for me personally - it's bad for me personally, as a software engineer in the Silicon Valley... at least in the short term. But this attitude is similar to the attitude of the RIAA who wants to fight the inevitable. The world is changing, national economies are becoming one global economy. You can try and fight it, but we will just be damaging our position in this new global economy. It's going to happen, whether we like it or not. The ubiquity of the Internet that gave us such prosperity in the late 90's has also helped to ensure the inexorable approach of globalization.

      The question we has to ask ourselves is not "How do we stop outsourcing/globalization?" The question is "How do we make sure we have a strong position in the new global economy?"

      Unfortunately, I don't have any firm answer I can beat people around the head with. It's a hard problem. I have some ideas, though (of course). I think what will keep us fiscally healthy as certain types of jobs become more efficient to export is innovation, pure and simple. We need to encourage innovation and entrepreneurialism, which will not only create new jobs, but new TYPES of jobs, new fields, and new skills that we will have a distinct advantage in possessing.

      Assuming you buy that idea at all, the question then becomes, how do we promote that? We already have a culture that encourages individualism, creativity, and risk-taking. I think that's a good start. But we need to focus more heavily on education. We should be more aggressive about the expectations of our children. Perhaps have some government subsidy of pre-schooling. More education about education - make sure kids know what their options are. Anyone that can finish high school can go to a university or a vocational school and get some basic knowledge about a field where there is a chance they will innovate. There's all sorts of loans or scholarships available for people who don't have the money. There are some exceptional people that will be revolutionary no matter what schooling or environment they come from, but innovation will be more common given more rigorous and effective education. I think the government should aggressively fund and incentivize education at all levels.

      The other thing that's REALLY important is making it EASY to start and run a small company. Small business is extremely important in innovation, and local job creation. Joe (or Jane) Upper-Middle-Class-with-a-Bachelor's-degree-and-an -idea is not going to offshore anything. He is going to find someone local. The easier it is for him to stay in business, the longer that someone local has a job. And, the more people who can start small businesses are more people who can try their ideas out and perhaps start the next industry people will be scrambling towards.

      I think the US government, in order to protect its country's position of economic dominance over the next 20 years, must take an active role in shaping America into as Educated and Creative a country as it can. Big business leads to monopolies leads to a lack of innovation, competition, and freedom leads to mediocrity and the death of Capitalism. Why does our government encourage big business over small business, other than simply corruption?

      Ok, I've started ranting. I'll stop now.

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
    10. Re:Outsourcing by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      The US government is actively supporting outsourcing

      As is the owner of Slashdot. Kinda hypocritical for them to run this kinda story.

    11. Re:Outsourcing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Kerry's plan is to get Congress to pass a tax penalty on companies that send jobs overseas.

      Yes, and that's how it should be. Are those companies helping the American country went outsourcing? No. Hence, they get taxed.

      Might sound good to some, but the net result will be increased labor costs (or increased tax and tax-compliance costs) for business

      Only of companies which are completly unable to generate growth without outsourcing, i.e. without destroying American jobs.

      But it will mean that those businesses are generating less overall economic activity, which will have a net negative effect on domestic job growth.

      Not true. On contrary the US industries, the one which are unable to grow without destroying American jobs, will be less competitive, and as a result the dollar value will decrease, increase the competitiveness of the US industries able to grow without destroying American jobs. This is basic competitive advantages.

    12. Re:Outsourcing by donatj · · Score: 0

      Heh, I was so pissed about my rating I actually made a post to this idea on my blog earlier tonight.... http://www.oasisband.net/index.php?pa=blogger/at/a t.html Theres a link if you choose to read it... its long but I think you'd agree with much of it

    13. Re:Outsourcing by Toby+The+Economist · · Score: 1

      > Believe it or not, he's actually got a plan for
      > this. Unlike so many of his other proposals,
      > this one doesn't revolve around ludicrously
      > jacked revenue projections or unfunded
      > mandates. Kerry's plan is to get Congress
      > to pass a tax penalty on companies that
      > send jobs overseas.

      The guy is a populist fucking retard if he's pulling tricks like this.

      I get so angry when I see politicians screwing people over because people *think* what's being done is *good* when in fact the politicians *know* it screws them over but do it anyway because it will get them *elected*.

      You have an ethical responsibility to do what is *best* for the people and whether you suffer or benefit by it is totally fucking irrelevent.

      --
      Toby

    14. Re:Outsourcing by shadowcabbit · · Score: 1

      I am firmly and solidly against outsourcing as of 11:30 am yesterday, when I found out my position was being cut in favor of sending the work to India. ...big deal, I didn't really like working with SQL anyway. I wonder if EB Games is still hiring...

      --
      "Why Subscribe?" Good question...
    15. Re:Outsourcing by shadowcabbit · · Score: 1

      Tech jobs are more easily relocatable than most, because for a lot of it you're just pushing information around, so with global communication, the physical locality is just not important.

      Fine, so why don't contractor companies start setting up shops in places like Nebraska and Kansas and Ohio and Pennsylvania; places within the US where tech jobs aren't currently found and the cost of living is significantly cheaper than California and Washington? I will admit it's not as dirt-cheap as India or Whereverstan, but it is a fair shade better than killing off 50-odd jobs. Plus, well, think of the publicity a firm could get-- if it works for clothes and food that have the "Made in the USA" sticker, why not software?

      Disclaimer: I am horribly naive and bitter right now. Anything I say can and will likely be dumb.

      --
      "Why Subscribe?" Good question...
    16. Re:Outsourcing by sgt_doom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your major problem is a severely limited grasp of analytical thinking. To explain it in the most fundamental of terms: survival occurs in groups, and if a group does not protect itself - it simply doesn't survive. That is what is occurring in the USA today (and other countries) and all the corporate misinformation and disinformation won't change that. The offshoring of jobs has nothing to do with free trade - it simply raises the perks and wealth of CEOs and senior management!

    17. Re:Outsourcing by korbin_dallas · · Score: 1

      "Unfortunately, I don't have any firm answer I can beat people around the head with. It's a hard problem. I have some ideas, though (of course). I think what will keep us fiscally healthy as certain types of jobs become more efficient to export is innovation, pure and simple. We need to encourage innovation and entrepreneurialism, which will not only create new jobs, but new TYPES of jobs, new fields, and new skills that we will have a distinct advantage in possessing."

      Yeah that all sounds good an all, but most companies I code for have 2 things that pretty much f&^king guarantee you and I as middle class workers will be out of a job.

      1. Stodgy management. Upper management consist of stodgy , old, micromanagers that learned this crap 20 years ago. They have no concept of product cycles, or that software is an artform.
      When you need 3-4 signatures to obtain 5 blank cd-roms, something is very wrong. I cannot be innovative after 3 signatures.

      2. Quality Assurance BS. All places I have worked that had more than 5 employees had all this QA, Total Quality, CMM Level X, "BULL4H!T". This always boils down to some 20-40% of the department employees who just suk up the overhead costs of a project. And contributed ZERO to any product being produced.

      You are right , small companies are the way to do it. But the risk is huge. And can easily mean financial ruin for your family.

      --
      They Live, We Sleep
    18. Re:Outsourcing by Genda · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The problem here is that we are shifting from a colonial economic system to a global one, and we've kept the worst part of both.

      If you're going to have a global system, then you must adjust the relative value of human labor, so that the quality of life is elevated for the poorest, and the whole world isn't reduced to a huge slave shop. Just as we balance monetary worth between nations and currencies, we need to set up a fair trade balance in wage differential across nations to insure that the quick and the greedy don't just use this as an opportunity to make a cash grab (in the form of human value), and cause an economic implosion. This needs to be a slow process, allowing for global equalization to occur, at the same time we need to insure that trade and the flow of wealth is balanced so that the nations economy remains robust and flexible.

      The current outflow of 'Dollars' is unsustainable. The current rate of increasing unemployment for American workers is unsustainable. What happens when every, job blue and white, collar is taken by either an illegal immigrant, or a foreign national working outside the country? What happens when the only jobs available in this country pay minimum wage? What happens when tens of millions of people have no way of finding work at all, no way of contributing to the economy, and are a drain on the national infrastructure? As the tax base erodes, how are government services provided? How do we prevent lawlessness, crime, ignorance, when government infrastructure begins to collapse? That's not a moot question. A small town on the California central cost just closed it's city government, Salinas has let go of over half it's city employees, and the kindergartens in Monterey have gone from an average of 20 students 4 years ago, to over 40 per classroom now, and teachers are terrified, because there have recently been a number of cases of 5 year olds wandering off of school property because there is no way for one person to watch that many young children.

      Your idea about education is a good one, sadly, money for education is being cut across the board all over the country. A recent report describing the increased cost of education and the quickly dwindling money available for supporting education, is forcing student with resources to settle for less, and students without resources to settle for nothing at all. Add to that, a general educational system more intent on making people docile and obedient, than actually giving them anything that vaguely resembles knowledge, and you have one more critical ingredient for what is quickly becoming a global disaster.

      As for small business... how do you start a small business if the middle class is gone and you have no local customers? Are you going to start off with a global business from the get go? If so, how will you compete against a third world country providing the same service as you for 10% of your cost? Your ideas are good, they just can't happen in the world that is getting made, they are literally impossible, if the current trends follow to their conclusion. The worst part, is that the European and Asian economies are intimately linked to ours. If we go down, we're taking the entire first and second world down with us. We'll be faced with an economic disaster that makes the great depression look like misplaced chump change. The current Libertarian Presidential candidate had some brilliant ideas, returning the country to a strict adherence of the constitution, fixing the big mistakes we made with corporations and bringing back a high level of personal responsibility to both business and society. Separating business from state, just as we separate church from state. Making government service the thing it was originally intended to be, a means to serve, not a means to get rich or empower lawyers/business/the highest bidder.

      I am of the mind that all people everywhere need to be free, safe from harm, safe from violence, safe from slavery. I am of the mind that every person on earth should have a nom

    19. Re:Outsourcing by greenrd · · Score: 1
      No, I think it's good. It proves that the editors aren't forced by their management to avoid starting political discussions which might lead to conclusions that are detrimental to the parent company. That's a good thing, and rather unusual in media companies generally.

      In other words, it proves that there is still some degree of editorial independence at Slashdot.

    20. Re:Outsourcing by Paulrothrock · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I think what will keep us fiscally healthy as certain types of jobs become more efficient to export is innovation, pure and simple. We need to encourage innovation and entrepreneurialism, which will not only create new jobs, but new TYPES of jobs, new fields, and new skills that we will have a distinct advantage in possessing.

      And what happens when those skills get sent overseas? Are people in India or Korea any less creative than Americans?

      What happens when China decides to stop taking our money, or stop exporting goods to us? We *need* a manufacturing sector. If China decides to invade Taiwan, where will we get our steel or semiconductors? This is a very real threat.

      Finally, these "new industries" have extremely high costs of entry. What new industry would be possible? Biotech? Nanotech? Robotics? Space? How will a small business raise the hundreds of millions of dollars needed to start any of these businesses? Who the heck will buy carbon nanotubes if they don't do anything? And how the hell are we going to keep biotech open if we allow big companies to patent genes?

      The answer isn't a "Creative" economy. That's bullshit. The only thing a creative economy will get us is more PHBs spouting jargon. There's only so much crap people will buy, especially when John Q. Sixpack lost his job and can't find anything in his field.

      The economy of tomorrow is going to be... a service economy. Those are the *only* jobs that can't be exported, because it's kinda hard for someone in India to unclog your toilet or (increasingly) change your bedpan. Our economy will be based on the baby boomers retiring. There's already a *huge* nursing shortage, to the point where they're offering $10,000 signing bonuses and $50,000/year salaries.

      If we want to save our country, we need to stop the culture of consumerism by REMOVING PERSONHOOD FOR CORPORATIONS and TAXING THE HELL OUT OF THEM. This is the only way we will prevent Wal-Mart from being the de facto retailer, selling things *not* made in America to people who *lost their fscking jobs* because it's cheaper to hire a person with no human rights in China or Bangladesh.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    21. Re:Outsourcing by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      the US dollar is dropping significantly against world currencies (but that in itself entails problems for the economy)

      Dropping local-currency value is both a problem and an opportunity. Canadians have made out like bandits from a lower-valued currency over the past couple of decades, though few would actually believe or understand this.

    22. Re:Outsourcing by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      " 2. Quality Assurance BS. All places I have worked that had more than 5 employees had all this QA, Total Quality, CMM Level X, "BULL4H!T". This always boils down to some 20-40% of the department employees who just suk up the overhead costs of a project. And contributed ZERO to any product being produced."

      You don't think QA methodologies work? I don't know about your company or your industry but QA methods are what enabled the Japanese car companies to become dominant from almost nothing. QA may be a cost sink and produce nothing for the final product, but they usually lower costs, decrease defects, and so forth...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    23. Re:Outsourcing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right , small companies are the way to do it. But the risk is huge. And can easily mean financial ruin for your family.

      Let's see. You are not willing to take any level of risk to get a better job at a small company but you want to complain about the people who gave you the low risk non-innovative job at mega-corp. Hmm.

    24. Re:Outsourcing by Epistax · · Score: 1

      Kerry's plan is to get Congress to pass a tax penalty on companies that send jobs overseas.

      Funny. I thought his plan was to remove the tax cut that businesses already get for their overseas ventures. Unless removing a previous tax cut constitutes a tax penalty? Oh wait, no it doesn't. If he is planning something further than that, I haven't heard about it.

      I can't find the CNN article that was released a few months ago so these numbers are a little fuzzy. Something like 30% of US corporations pay tax. That is, 70% don't. In the 70's this number was reversed. Of the fortune 500 top 100, I think it was 3 pay tax. All the rest pay absolutely nothing. This is due to the tax cuts passed all the time when companies pay for senate/house election campaigns. Why can't we start killing all these corruption-driven breaks?

    25. Re:Outsourcing by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      Agreed. I'd also add Iowa to the mix:)

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    26. Re:Outsourcing by ikeleib · · Score: 1

      Gosh, it would seem to me that unless you are actively "shipping jobs oversees," under Kerry's plan you get a corporate tax break.

    27. Re:Outsourcing by korbin_dallas · · Score: 1

      Nope.

      The company I work for has 6 employees.

      We work under contract to larger corporations.

      These are my real world observations.

      --
      They Live, We Sleep
    28. Re:Outsourcing by korbin_dallas · · Score: 1

      As implemented at the several companies I have worked at NO. Its only marginally useful at a factory where hardware is made. Measuring the length of a wire +/- 0.5 inches is useful.

      How do you measure the usefulness of printf() versus a macro of printf, versus writing a class that wraps printf???

      Software QA I have had to work with are unseen until some huge stack of paperwork is needed just before release, where upon, all they do is point out spelling errors and the fact that the format of your requirements is wrong.

      At a minimum, software QA should be working alongside the dev team making sure the papers are right, that things are progressing, that requirements and plans are being met, not being a hurdle.

      I don't care what anyone says, software is an artform. Repeat ARTFORM. The trap is that it looks like a scientific, engineering exercise. Its not.

      Besides, Japanese cars became popular for additional reasons, not the least of which was quality, including price, and fuel economy.

      --
      They Live, We Sleep
    29. Re:Outsourcing by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      " Software QA I have had to work with are unseen until some huge stack of paperwork is needed just before release, where upon, all they do is point out spelling errors and the fact that the format of your requirements is wrong. At a minimum, software QA should be working alongside the dev team making sure the papers are right, that things are progressing, that requirements and plans are being met, not being a hurdle."

      That is more of a problem with YOUR QA team, than QA in general. I agree that QA should be working together or at least provide feedback along the way. Also, the results and functionality of the program is more important than the paperwork. It seems your QA team needs some improvment.

      " I don't care what anyone says, software is an artform. Repeat ARTFORM. The trap is that it looks like a scientific, engineering exercise. Its not. "

      I disagree. Some software is art but most is not. The vast majority of software simply implements some well-defined functionality (eg. calculate some equation; display something on screen; parse some input; etc). There is very little art in any of this. There are only a few finite ways of doing these things. The only art in software is with designing something new or innovative. If you were designing a new GUI, that would be art. Or if you were implementing some website. Or whatever. And clearly entertainment products can be considered art (eg. computer games).

      " Besides, Japanese cars became popular for additional reasons, not the least of which was quality, including price, and fuel economy. "

      Fuel efficiency definitely helped in the late 70's/early 80's but QA was key to the rest of those things. Why were Japanese cars cheaper? Why were their engines superior? Why did they last longer? It was because of QA. The Japanese companies implemented QA systems that resulted in massive increases in quality, lower defects, decreased repair costs, and so forth.

      Having said that, software QA systems are very primitive nowadays (this is why even the best software has bugs). However, at some point the quality will improve simply due to better QA techniques...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    30. Re:Outsourcing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love you "pro-outsourcing" people. All of you seem to think of corporations as a bunch of benevolent entities, looking to make a little profit, and pass the benefits on. There are no plans to pass the benefits on. Thanks to globalization and technological advances, it is getting easier to outsource jobs.
      If you don't make it more difficult to outsource, all the jobs that are outsourceable will be outsourced eventually. What happens with the countries receiving the jobs decide to cut out the middle man? "Hey, why not have our companies make the products? We'd make more money then."

    31. Re:Outsourcing by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 1

      "And what happens when those skills get sent overseas? Are people in India or Korea any less creative than Americans?"

      Well, that would be the point in cultivating a creative and educated populace. In a global economy, you don't just compete with your neighbor, but with people on the other side of the world. So, ideally, yeah, we would strive to be a more creative and educated a populace. That would give us a distinct advantage.

      Also, what skills are most effective to get sent overseas? It's not product development or research. More effective are the jobs that require technical skill and little innovation. If you export your product development team, do you export your product managers as well? It starts to get inefficient when product management isn't in the same building as development, let alone not in the same country. If you do export your product management, then you lose a great deal of control over what the hell your team is even doing. This is where you want me to provide all sorts of proof and statistics - sorry, I don't have it, I'm not a sociologist or an investigative reporter. Lucky for me, I'm pretty sure that you are not, either. Anyway, I think it's still valuable to have a discussion based on anecdotal evidence, since most of this is conjecture.

      When new industries get created, it is also possible that they are new local service industries. You are correct in that we cannot export burger flippers, waitstaff, and plumbers. If we increase the rate of invention, we increase the chances of creating the types of jobs you like as well as other kinds of jobs that could get exported 5-10 years later.

      Another thing about a global economy is that as demand increases for cheap overseas labor, the overseas labor realizes they can raise their prices and get more money. Long-term, yes, it is clearly not in their interest to reduce their single competitive advantage, but, just like Americans, most of them are going to think in terms of short-term gains like "more money now." We are already seeing that in India the cost of hiring engineers is not as spectacularly cheap as it used to be. And the value of oversease labor is ultimately much less because of all the logistical problems with language, time difference, and so on. How much cheaper does it HAVE to be to be worth it to outsource? The supply and demand will find an equilibrium of price, just as it does here. Then The Phillipines or someone else is going to come and undercut them and then India will be left with a similar problem that we feel we have right now.

      Basically, creative skills are expensive. If Eastern Naquha can provide cut-rate dollar-a-day engineering consultants, it's likely because they don't have the training and education that more expensive engineers have. i.e. you get what you pay for. If they do have that training and education, they had to import it at some point, and then they have establish an infrastructure to proliferate and maintain those skills. Thus now they have the University of Eastern Naquha, increasing the costs of creating those engineers, and they find they are undercutting by so much they can raise their prices and still steal the business. It's only a temporary advantage. Their prices will become competitive at whatever level of quality they produce in the global economy. So if we want to be successful, we need to compete on quality - training, education, and creativity.

      Also, I get nervous with plans that involve jacking up taxes or assessing penalties for very specific situations. They create HUGE incentive pressures, but then no one is really sure what those pressures actually are until they they are applied. Whoops, you wanted to decrease offshoring, but you just retarded the economy in general.

      I do think that decreasing risk and lowering barrier-to-entry for small business across the board will help significantly stimulate the local economy and create local jobs. Whereas taxing Wal-mart into oblivion... I hate Wal-mart as much or more than the next guy, but I'm just not confident anyone knows what that will do.

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
    32. Re:Outsourcing by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 1

      Your major problem is opening your contribution to a civil and potentially constructive discussion with a personal insult. To put it in terms that you can understand: the people you want to convince (assuming that is your goal) won't listen to what you have to say once you take a combative tone.

      I'm talking about surviving as a group here. That's what I want, for the US to not only survive, but prosper. I just think that levying punitive taxes and otherwise hiding from globalization will HURT those survival chances more than help. Our economy is in competition with the rest of the world already. So if we retard our economy by looking at what everyone wants to do and then overtaxing that to discourage it, we are just going to be in a worse position later. Maybe we'll have kept our jobs for 10 more years... maybe.

      Sure, in the short term it leaves more money for overpaid executives. Believe me, I dislike that aspect of all this, too! But it also means more money for Indians. Then because Indians have more money, their stores realize, hey, they can charge more for everything in Bangalore or wherever (just like they do here in the S.F. Bay Area). Then the poorer people that do the jobs that can't be exported, like being a domestic servant or roti-flipper, in Bangalore can't afford to live off of whatever crap they make, so they have to get paid more or they have to leave the area. So that means the engineer that has to pay more for a McAloo Tikki and someone to do his laundry will demand more money! You can see where this is going. The global equilibrium will be established quicker than you think.

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
    33. Re:Outsourcing by Iffy+Bonzoolie · · Score: 1

      "I don't care what anyone says, software is an artform. Repeat ARTFORM. The trap is that it looks like a scientific, engineering exercise. Its not."

      I disagree. Some software is art but most is not. The vast majority of software simply implements some well-defined functionality (eg. calculate some equation; display something on screen; parse some input; etc). There is very little art in any of this. There are only a few finite ways of doing these things. The only art in software is with designing something new or innovative. If you were designing a new GUI, that would be art. Or if you were implementing some website. Or whatever. And clearly entertainment products can be considered art (eg. computer games).


      That's what I'm talkin' about! Some software is not art - this is what gets exported. The software that IS art, not just GUI and Game development, but any innovative research and development, this is what we need to strive to maintain our superiority in. This necessarily means having a creative and educated populace, and an environment that makes it easier to get new ideas to the marketplace (i.e. small business incentives).

      -If

      --
      Run a pencil-and-paper RPG campaign with your far-off friends: Gametable!
    34. Re:Outsourcing by bladernr · · Score: 1
      What about the state sponsored outsourcing?

      I don't know why this made me think of this, but my dad spent is career in the Boiler Maker's Union. From job to job, he was in the same Local his entire career. (btw, that was back when "trade union" meant something, and it took some qualifications to get in, and people took pride in their work, and a union stamp meant "quality," not "I'll strike if I don't get a raise, and I don't care if I bankrupt your business").

      Smart me and all my smart IT buddies insulted unions in the 1990's. The "old way" of doing things. We were living in the "new economy" (whatever that "new economy" was supposed to mean). This might be one of those (many, many) cases where us young guys should have shut our mouths and listened to what the old guys were telling us.

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    35. Re:Outsourcing by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      I thought his plan was to remove the tax cut that businesses already get for their overseas ventures.

      That's kind of an obfuscation. The tax break in question equalizes taxes on foreign operations in order to allow US companies to be competitive overseas. It has nothing to do with either offshoring or outsourcing --or offshore outsourcing, for that matter. US-based businesses that move jobs overseas do so to take advantage of lower labor costs. And they will continue to do so even if Kerry does nothing more than persuade Congress to roll back the tax break you referred to, because the net savings of moving (say) a call center overseas far outweighs the additional taxes that business would have to pay.

      The only way Kerry could effectively stop offshoring and offshore outsourcing would be to levy steep tax penalties, something which his plan does in fact include but that he usually neglects to mention at the campaign stop.

      Something like 30% of US corporations pay tax.

      That's not really an accurate description of the situation. It's much more complicated than that.

      Here's how it works: 100% of US corporations are required to pay taxes on their gross revenues. That's what makes corporations different from other types of businesses. Other businesses --partnerships, sole proprietorships, that kind of thing--pass their revenues on to their owners, and the owners declare that revenue as income on their individual returns and are taxed accordingly. (Which is, incidentally, why Kerry's idea of raising taxes on people who earn more than $100,000 a year would be terrible for business. That would hit virtually ever sole proprietorship and small partnership in America real hard. Kerry likes to talk about it like it's a tax on only rich people, but that's not really true. Sorry for the digression.)

      Just like individuals, corporations are eligible for tax deductions based on some types of expenses. If you give money to charity this year, you'll be eligible for a tax deduction on your end-of-year return. Deductions are subtracted from your gross income, effectively lowering your taxes.

      Corporations get deductions too. Operating expenses are deductible, as are legal and professional fees, business travel, insurance, depreciation and so on.

      If the total of a corporation's deductions approaches the total gross income of the company, that company pays little or no taxes.

      Now, because the tax code is so ridiculously complex, it's become possible for corporations --just like individuals! --to find ways to lower their tax burden that were never really intended by Congress. There are practices that are technically legal but that weren't foreseen when the laws were written.

      This is good for businesses, because they get to reduce their tax burden. The down-side, however, is that compliance costs for businesses are at an all-time high; the tax code is so complex, it costs a fortune for even a small company to have its taxes prepared. But the good news is that tax compliance costs for this year's return are deductible on next year's return! (The frogurt is also cursed.)

      Obviously, the solution is to fix the tax code. The code is too complex, which means (1) it costs WAY too much to comply -- twenty cents for every dollar paid in taxes--and (2) loopholes abound.

      George W. Bush's solution is large-scale tax reform. The time has come, he says, to look seriously at our federal tax system and consider alternatives. If there's a better solution than an income tax, let's find it. If the income tax is the right idea but a flat tax is best, let's talk about that. If it turns out that our progressive tax system is the right solution, then let's simplify the heck out of it to both increase receipts and reduce compliance costs.

      John Kerry's solution to falling corporate income tax receipts, apparently, is to raise the top rate. Comprehensive tax reform is not a part of his platform. The words "tax reform" do not appear anywhere in the

      --

      I write in my journal
    36. Re:Outsourcing by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Combative! We've long gone past the point of combative to mucho serious - the ballot box counts for nothing whatsoever.

      Now, you again obviously believe every country on the planet is a free market economy - India doesn't work that way - China far less so. They are "managed" economies - exactly what this economy has become - and you are either far too young or far too ignorant to understand that supply and demand are inoperative in "managed" economies. You obviously CAN'T see where this is going - you need far more education in mathematics and history, my friend!

    37. Re:Outsourcing by clambake · · Score: 1

      Might sound good to some, but the net result will be increased labor costs (or increased tax and tax-compliance costs) for business

      Because we all know how quickly prices drop when outsouring is unfettered... oh wait, no, it doesn't... it's just more money into the pockets of the executives.

    38. Re:Outsourcing by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Because we all know how quickly prices drop when outsouring is unfettered

      Have you priced call-center services lately? They've plumeted in the last four years or so.

      Another important effect of decreased labor costs: many hospitals are starting to outsource their radiology services. Technology makes it possible today to do CT scans, store them as encrypted DICOM files and transmit them relatively quickly over the Internet to a DICOM viewer on a home computer. The radiologist looks at the scans, writes up his analysis and sends it back.

      Now put the radiologist in Singapore. He's awake and alert during the middle of the night in North America, which makes it possible for hospitals here to get radiology services more quickly and with greater quality of service than if they had to get a radiologist out of bed and have him come into the hospital. Net result? Higher standard of care, reduced cost to the patient's insurance company, correspondingly lower insurance premiums the next year.

      I know you really, REALLY want everything that for-profit businesses do to be evil, bad and wrong. I'm sorry that that's not always --or even occasionally-- the case. I know you're all broke up about it, but trust me. You'll get over it.

      --

      I write in my journal
    39. Re:Outsourcing by Epistax · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I agree with a lot of what you say, but I have some of my own opinions as well. I think we need the system to be much simpler than it is, yet a lot of people should still be able to get out of paying a lot of tax (low income families and small businesses exclusively). I'm sure that business taxes get extremely complicated because of all the different things that can decrease the amount owed (which seems like practically everything).

      The problem isn't just on the tax end, but obviously on the spending end. For example the amount that Americans pay for health care right now is enough for everyone to get everything they want or need from the industry-- so how come most people can't afford it? I also belong to the group of people who say that our military spending is simply ridiculous. I'm not saying cut back on troops, I'm not saying stop supplying the troops. The unconventional weapon production (including our WMD) should be scaled back significantly as well as our outlandish air force purchases. There simply isn't anyone who presents a threat in these areas so we should spend the money wiser. Here we are with a crumbing education system, mass transit system and general infrastructure. I don't know how the US gets its money but I must agree it has enough if it would just set its priorities straight. Sorry to go off on a tangent but being a liberal who agrees with you about something I had to give a counter explanation ;)

    40. Re:Outsourcing by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      I think we need the system to be much simpler than it is, yet a lot of people should still be able to get out of paying a lot of tax (low income families and small businesses exclusively).

      That's what the flat tax + personal exemption (also known in some circles as a "fair tax," but that name has also been adopted for a specific national sales tax plan) is intended to do. The idea is that you pay no taxes at all on your first $X of income; in the old Armey proposal, for instance, that number was about $11,000. If you earn less than $11,000 in wages and pension benefits in a year, you owe no taxes at all for that year.

      Other proposals are more complex, involving ramping the tax rate up between about $7,000 a year and about $15,000 a year. The idea is that people who earn $11,001 are kinda taking it in the shorts under an Armey-style plan.

      Some plans that have been floated have included things like additional exemptions for each child in the family, blanket cost-of-living exemptions that increase each year with inflation, special exemptions for certain types of expenses like food or housing, that kind of thing. In general, the more complex the plan, the less popular it's been among those who support tax reform.

      For example the amount that Americans pay for health care right now is enough for everyone to get everything they want or need from the industry-- so how come most people can't afford it?

      Exactly. The solution is not some kind of single-payer pyramid scheme. The solution is to find ways to reduce the costs of medical care. For example, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) looked good on paper, but it included measures that drastically increased the cost of doing business for health-care providers, which in turn drastically increased the cost of health care for Americans. Protecting patient privacy is a laudable goal, but doing so in a way that involves mountains of red tape and off-the-charts compliance costs does more harm than good. Rolling back a few of the most burdensome aspects of HIPAA is a key part of the president's second-term agenda.

      The unconventional weapon production (including our WMD) should be scaled back significantly as well as our outlandish air force purchases.

      Well, "outlandish" is in the eye of the beholder. Because we have a wing of JDAM-equipped stealth bombers based in Missouri and on Diego Garcia, should the need ever arise we have the ability to put ordinance on any given square meter of the earth's surface in a matter of a few hours. If --worst-case scenario time here --if we detect an Iranian ballistic missile being fueled, we can destroy that missile before it can get off the ground, saving Tel Aviv or Kabul or Baghdad from annihilation. I personally consider that to be an important ability to have.

      Our enduring nuclear arsenal, likewise, is something that we need to keep our hands on for the time being, as a deterrent force. Will we ever need it? God, I hope not. But if we dismantle it, we'll have a hard time discouraging Kim Jong-Il from pointing his rockets at San Diego or Seattle.

      Incidentally, did you know that most of the money we're spending at our national weapons laboratories now goes toward new technologies for detection and defense? The guys at Oak Ridge and Livermore are working on new ways to defend us from the bad guys more than they are looking for ways for us to attack them. The world has changed. And I think that that money is money we need to spend right now.

      --

      I write in my journal
    41. Re:Outsourcing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Net result? Higher standard of care, reduced cost to the patient's insurance company, correspondingly lower insurance premiums the next year.

      Thousands of highly-educated capable people losing their careers in their prime earning years. Yep! Sounds GREAT!

    42. Re:Outsourcing by zxnos · · Score: 0

      you do realize, of course, that if you TAX THE HELL OUT OF THEM, [corporations] they have to raise their prices/fees to pay those taxes, right? or lay off a few people to recoup the cost. most businesses in america are small. many corporations are owned by a single person with less than a dozen employees.

      --
      always mosh clockwise
    43. Re:Outsourcing by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

      I wanted to respond to this, as well as the sibling posters. The idea that we can hold on to world hegemony by being 'smarter' or 'more innovative' is probably just impossible.

      Sure we may all be gunslinging, rugged individualists just itching to make a buck off our fellow man, but these features don't equip us to win in the battle of brains. The world econmy will transfer to the East. As the economy China improves they will have a cultural advantage over the U.S. in terms of education and innovation. Prior to the industrial revolution (and the shift of global economic power from the East to the West) China was the center of trade AND study. The Chinese meritocracy existed thousands of years before the foundation of our young nation... I think this gives them a special cultural advantage in academic pursuits -- and what is innovation if not a byproduct of synthesizing all concepts that have come before. China's masses will fill the labour roll necessary for Japan as their workforce retires (as their are not enough in the new generations to replace them).

      I mean it's really just a numbers game... if you take all people to have the same capacity for intelligence, then having 4 times as many brains has got to count for something. (And this is to say nothing for the millions of well educated Indians.)

      So that's my two cents. I know there isn't a solution there other than repeating what others have said - services are the key to the American worker's survival, until the rising world tide in labour has made us competitive again in ... 200 years or so. Over the next 50 to 75 years we will see dominance in Technology move to the Pacific.

      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    44. Re:Outsourcing by crazyphilman · · Score: 1

      There are a lot of different types of outsourcing. Government agencies outsource in two major ways: they hire consultants to come in and do a set chunk of work, and they hire outside companies to create entire projects.

      Some of this outsourcing is good. When an American company wins a bid, AND the American company is staffed by actual Americans, it's good for us and for our economy. Private companies that handle government contracting generally pay very well, and the work can be interesting.

      Similarly, when the outsourcing involves bringing an American contractor in to do a little work here and there, that's good too. Again, good for us and good for our economy.

      But there IS a problem with outsourcing. The problem is that since about 1999, companies hired to produce entire projects have sometimes outsourced THEIR entire operation to Indian firms, without even mentioning this to the government agency they're supposed to be working for. Other companies which supply staff have been using H1-Bs. Then they lowball all their bids and push other companies out of their niche. You see this a lot more than you'd like; there are departments where three quarters of the staff are noncitizens -- at agencies funded with taxpayer dollars!

      Outsourcing itself is not necessarily bad. If it is done in a way that keeps the jobs here in the U.S. it's fine. It's when non-immigrant foreigners are used that the whole thing turns ugly.

      ESPECIALLY when our tax dollars are being sent overseas. That's unforgiveable.

      --
      Farewell! It's been a fine buncha years!
    45. Re:Outsourcing by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      Not all corporations, just the largest N percent. They hold undue power and influence for an entity that is not beholden to anyone but its own bottom line.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    46. Re:Outsourcing by Sqwubbsy · · Score: 1

      You understand the only reasons the manufacturing firms left the U.S. was because of increased taxes and regulation.
      If you want them back, then cut taxes and regulation -- problem solved.
      Or you can get China and India to create as much bureacracy as we do. Fat chance. They're not that dumb.

  5. And the wheels go on.. by The+Slashdotted · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Does Kerry/Edwards remind anyone of the old "me too" sterotype of AOLers back in the day?

    Bush has his policy, Kerry says it sucks, but I'm make a very minor revision to it.

    FYI: This is minute 4 of the 5 minute hate.

    1. Re:And the wheels go on.. by Forbman · · Score: 0, Redundant

      The funny thing about Iraq is that in the span of a few months we seem to be in a position (ironically, France was involved in this, except that in helping them withdraw from the disaster at Dien Bien Phu because they got their asses bitch-slapped, we screwed them out of a bunch of $billion-blood dollar contracts with Saddam Hussain) which took us over 10 years to get in with Iraq (counting 1954, first US involvement, to mid-1960s when the build-ups got serious, but not really, if you count the first Iraq War a part of all this, as well as the no-fly zones, etc., finally peaking with the US invasion of Iraq).

      But now we have two local badddd-asses constantly trying to poke red hot pokers into the eyes of Uncle Sam, instead of just one.

      GW keeps harping on "vote for me and we'll win this!", when perhaps he should take a cue from Nixon, and be working to let Kerry win, so he's not the 2nd Republican to preside over a US withdrawl (retreat?) from one of its conflicts.

      Which sucks. Because if you believe the 90-10 rule, I would bet that 90% of what we're doing in Iraq is good, moral, right, honorable, appreciated, etc., but we just don't hear that, do we. Instead we hear of the 10% bad stuff: the prison fuckups, we continue to hear of Islamists capturing other Islamists and cutting off their heads [do they say a prayer for them first? is getting beheaded a bad thing for a Moslem?], not withstanding all the other people they get their bacon grease-stained hands on, yet the Arab world does not appear to be doing anything at all about it, and every day a few more Americans are killed every day in little terrorist attacks (why not ask for Israel's advice on how to deal with these). Where are the imams declaring in the press that the terrorists killing foreigners are unjust, because they are killing indiscriminately, not for the betterment of Islam, but merely for the advancement of their putrid dreams of power?

      A very real change in Iraq policy would need to send some serious messages. It might even require some mass civilian casualties. Drop a BLU-82 or MOAB on Tikrit and Fallujah. Stop interrogating Iraqi detainees, but killing them and letting dogs and pigs eat at their rotting bodies. Let them know that these little kidnappings and chicken-shit roadside bombings will be punished 100-fold, 1000-fold.

      And in the diplomatic circles, the US needs to air all the dirty shit hiding in the closets of countries who will, of course, be pissed off by this kind of action. France & Algeria. France & unilateral nuclear testing. France and unilateral terrorist activities. Russia & Chechnya. Recent, modern stuff. And on and on and on. If we're going to act all imperious and such in the world's affairs, better go whole-hog into it.

      Post-WWII democracy worked because the countries involved and their citizens had no other choice. We need to create the same kind of situation.

      Instead, we appear to be in a continuously reactive mode. We are reacting (by not appearing to really do anything) to terroristic bombings and kidnappings. If it was domestic, the FBI would be all over it, and the perps WOULD be found, and at least where they are at isolated and surrounded with a lot of hot lead projectors. But now, they fade into the dark.

      We are reacting to hit-and-run mortar attacks, because so many of our troops are holed up, etc., and the political fear of civilian casualties, for better or worse, sort of creates and abets this situation.

      Maybe we *SHOULD* pull out most of the serious hardware, and leave the job to the Greenie-Beanies and SEALs, along with some conventional forces (maybe a Marine flotilla and a carrier or two in the Gulf) to back them up, and a few strategically placed conventional units near by, but out in the open.

      We (or Iraq) also needs to somehow "flip" one or two highly influential people against the status quo, to help turn the tide and isolate (what is isolated is more easily removed) those who do not see the light.

      Of course,

    2. Re:And the wheels go on.. by Awptimus+Prime · · Score: 1

      A very real change in Iraq policy would need to send some serious messages. It might even require some mass civilian casualties. Drop a BLU-82 or MOAB on Tikrit and Fallujah. Stop interrogating Iraqi detainees, but killing them and letting dogs and pigs eat at their rotting bodies. Let them know that these little kidnappings and chicken-shit roadside bombings will be punished 100-fold, 1000-fold.

      You mean over 12,000 dead civillians are not enough to get our point across?

    3. Re:And the wheels go on.. by RWerp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A very real change in Iraq policy would need to send some serious messages. It might even require some mass civilian casualties. Drop a BLU-82 or MOAB on Tikrit and Fallujah. Stop interrogating Iraqi detainees, but killing them and letting dogs and pigs eat at their rotting bodies. Let them know that these little kidnappings and chicken-shit roadside bombings will be punished 100-fold, 1000-fold.

      Hello? This is 2004, not 1004. You're not on a crusade to get the Holy Grail from the infidels. It is apparent you have no respect for them if the human in question does not have an American passport --- a form of racism, I suppose.

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
    4. Re:And the wheels go on.. by RWerp · · Score: 1

      It is apparent you have no respect for them if the human in question does not have an American passport --- a form of racism, I suppose.

      Should have been: It is apparent you have no respect for human rights...

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
    5. Re:And the wheels go on.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it is apparent you (RWerp (798951)) are a moonbat and apparent you will be voting for Kerry.

      I wish you were in Iraq about to get your head lopped off. They don't give a rats ass if you're some sort of ultra-leftie liberal do-gooder. They'll saw it off just the same seeing as you are an infidel.

      I suppose I'll just have to be satisfied knowing your head will explode when George W. Bush wins the election. Liberal heads will be exploding so fast and often it's gonna sound like a stick of cluster bombs going off.

    6. Re:And the wheels go on.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Bush has a policy, please share it with us. In detail.

    7. Re:And the wheels go on.. by intnsred · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your comments are premised on the notion that there is a distinct difference in the fundamental worldviews of the Demopublican and Republocratic parties; that's a big mistake.

      Those two factions of our single party are both funded by the wealthy and corporations, and are both beholden to their funders. They employ different rhetoric to try to rally the populace, but there is no significant difference in their worldviews.

      Compared to the range of parties and political choice that a citizen of most any European country has, there is no political freedom in the US -- we're a one-party state.

    8. Re:And the wheels go on.. by intnsred · · Score: 1

      It might even require some mass civilian casualties. Drop a BLU-82 or MOAB on Tikrit and Fallujah.

      Yeah, that will show them the meaning of "freedom!" :-(

      Let them know that these little kidnappings and chicken-shit roadside bombings

      I'm sure that they would happily kill American GIs with Apache gunships and Bradley IFVs if we would be kind enough to give them the weapons. But since we don't, should we be criticizing them for resisting a foreign occupier with whatever tools they have?

      If you really want to stop the killing, take the US troops out of Iraq and send them halfway around the world back to Kansas -- that would do the trick.

      You mean over 12,000 dead civillians are not enough to get our point across?

      Please note that the dead cited by Iraq Body Count are by no means the total. The Iraq Body Count is only dead which are cited in the mass media -- it does not count the civilians who have the audacity to die without getting into the newspapers.

    9. Re:And the wheels go on.. by RWerp · · Score: 1

      And of course those that would die in American bombings are the people who cut off other people's heads? Not likely. What is likely, is that Zarkawi and friends sit in a hideout and laugh while American forces kill innocent people, making America more hated than before.

      --
      "Long run is a misleading guide to current affairs. In the long run we are all dead." (John Maynard Keynes)
  6. low unemployment compared to europe by vijayiyer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since it's so fashionable to compare our policy to the European powers, let's look at some of the numbers. In France, unemployment was 9.3% as of last year. Germany's unemployment rate was 9.7% as of 2 years ago. We had a bubble during the 90s, and it's only expected to pay the price now. The economy moves in cycles and is an extremely complex nonlinear system. To conclusively blame immigration and trade policy as the cause for an increase in unemployment is easy, but unfortunately also meaningless.

    1. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First of all I am pretty sure that a person without a job in Europe is much better off then a person without a job in the US.

      Having said that I really don't think that unemployment is measured the same in both places. In the US if a person stops looking for job (gives up for example) unemployment goes down. The unemployment figures only take into account people who are actively looking for jobs. I am not sure how it's measured in Europe but I would bet it's different. You may be comparing oranges and apples.

      Finally I really don't care how much worse Europe is. Do you? Does it really help somebody who lost a job to say to them "well other people have it worse then you".

      Reagan asked the question "are you better off today then you were four years ago" and the question is still valid. Compare your (and your countries) situation to four years ago and vote accordingly.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    2. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Does France stop counting their unemployed when their benefits run out like we do? Ooops. Maybe we shouldn't jury rig our numbers like we do.

      Or did the US unite with a state with rampant unemployment like West Germany did with East Germany? And if so, was our wall in Kansas?

      Ooops. Guess you should apologize.

    3. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by dmayle · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah, let's take a moment to look at those numbers. In the U.S., unemployment numbers are doctored so that they don't represent the actual cases. If you've been unemployed for more than 6 months, you drop off the charts because you're considered a lost cause.

      In the (mostly socialist) European nations, the government has a responsibility towards you. Many of those unemployed are on state-sponsored education and self-improvements tracks so that they'll be ready to re-enter the job market better prepared for the future.

      So, yeah, while other nations are experiencing the same job crunch that we are, most of them are actually doing something about it...

    4. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Immigration is also very difficult to understand, but here's some easy numbers:

      In California, there is an estimated 2.5 million illegal immigrants.
      In California, there is an measured 34 million legal residents.
      In California, there is a measured 5.9% unemployment.

      With simple multiplication, you can see that immediately removing 2.5 million illegals from the job pool opens (at least) 1.9 million jobs. While many of those jobs are for low income, unskilled labor, the removal of said illegals would also ease the burden on taxpayers, lower home prices (try finding a house in LA for under half a million - there aren't any, there's no homes left), and lessen congestion on freeways (all those people have to drive to work, you know).

      Completely ignoring legal immigration, illegal immigration is a very, very serious problem that neither party wants to touch. The republicans are whoring themselves out to the business interests that like the cheap labor. The democrats are whoring themselves out to the minority voters (and at least in California, are essentially trying to erase the border).

      Neither party seems to realize that 27 closed hospitals in California alone are just the beginning of the financial and social problems this country is going to have if we continue to be the economic saviors of the 3rd world.

    5. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being Economic Saviors has long term benefits. The 3rd world will turn in to the 2nd world and buy the products that they produce and we own. We will make money.

    6. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Economics shmeconomics...

      Let's just blame the immigrants, they haven't been here long enough to have any political power, so they can't defend themselves.

      We should especially blame those communist programmers from Finland, they're responsible for decimating our software industry, after all...

    7. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Neither party seems to realize that 27 closed hospitals in California alone are just the beginning of the financial and social problems this country is going to have if we continue to be the economic saviors of the 3rd world."

      Don't feel so bad. I bet we opened up 27 hospitals in Iraq already. That and a number of schools according to the president.

      As for the illegals I highly doubt any american wants to pick fruit for 12 hours at 2 dollars an hour.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    8. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by vijayiyer · · Score: 2, Informative

      Well, then let's look at a time history of France's unemployment rate (source: economagic.com): 1990 9.1 1991 9.5 1992 9.9 1993 11.3 1994 11.8 1995 11.3 1996 11.9 1997 11.8 1998 11.3 1999 10.6 2000 9.1 2001 8.4 2002 8.7 2003 9.3 They'be been doing something about it for 14 years, with little to show for it, if you ask me. The original article references Japan as a model, and it's economy has been in the dumps for just as long (just look at a chart of the Nikkei). It's what happens when the government decides that they can "play God" with the economy.

    9. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by N3WBI3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So to clarify: You're reasonably sure your better off unemployed in europe than the US but you dont know how? You're pretty sure unemployement is measured differently in europe then the us but you dont know how?

      --
    10. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for the illegals I highly doubt any american wants to pick fruit for 12 hours at 2 dollars an hour.

      No, but there are plenty that would do it for $7/hour.

      The extra $5/hour is nothing compared to the thousands of dollars taxpayers are forced to spend to pay for healthcare, for education, for increased home prices.

    11. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Pros_n_Cons · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      First of all I am pretty sure that a person without a job in Europe is much better off then a person without a job in the US.

      Maybe, but that is still one guy who might be workin g in the U.S. He did say 9.7% right? And since you used the word "Europe" unemployment can be MUCH higher than that, double digets. Europe's average was 11.3% wonder what they say to our 5.4 or 5.5 %?

      Finally I really don't care how much worse Europe is. Do you? Does it really help somebody who lost a job to say to them "well other people have it worse then you".
      I Kinda care when people start trying to make our country use thier system (socialized everything). I'd like to point out everything is a trade off.

      --

      -- "of course thats just my opinion, I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
    12. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the US doesn't count discouraged workers in its government statistics. The comparison isn't exactly fair. Less than two-thirds of people in the US 16 and over are actually "participating" in the work force. 62.4% compared to those 66% have found work. If you include children, half the US is employed.

      When you don't have a welfare state anymore 6% unemployment is much worse than 9% unemployment. In the former case, the unemployed are being "fucked by the upper 1%" as George Carlin says.

      What's more disturbing than unemployment is the rampant underemployment and substantial wage reduction among those who are finding jobs to get off the unemployment rolls. There was a big article recently on the front page of the Oregonian about this very trend.

      I'm working a shit job getting half what I should make doing half what I'm qualified to do. My wife has a master's in teaching and can't get a job to teach due to massive budget cuts of the public schools in our state, so she's working in the service sector at five bucks more than minimum wage.

      Both of us recently entered the work force after schooling, and all those professional jobs we were supposed to have access to due to our experience and education?

      Where are they now?

      That's why I support anybody other than Bush or Kerry. (Cobb, Nader, Walt Brown, or Badnarick -- sorry Peroutka, you didn't make the cut)

    13. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by GreeboNZ · · Score: 1

      > The 3rd world will turn in to the 2nd world
      What, they'll all become Soviets?
      Wikipedia says: Second World refers to nations within the Soviet Union's sphere of influence, e.g. Warsaw Pact countries. Besides the Soviet Union proper, most of Eastern Europe was run by satellite governments working closely with Moscow. This term may or may not also refer to Communist countries whose leadership were at odds with Moscow, e.g. China and Yugoslavia.

    14. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      It was a ridiculous oversimplification in 1984 and it remains so today. National elections are not votes of confidence. They are the process by which we choose our leaders for the next period of time (two, four or six years depending on the office). You don't vote based on what the guy in office has done. You vote based on which of the candidates you believe will do the better job going forward.

      It always dismays me when people on either side of the aisle try to make an election into a referendum on the past four (or whatever) years. It's not.

      --

      I write in my journal
    15. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes... what did you think i meant?

    16. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Coryoth · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Since it's so fashionable to compare our policy to the European powers, let's look at some of the numbers. In France, unemployment was 9.3% as of last year. Germany's unemployment rate was 9.7% as of 2 years ago.

      Unemployment rates are calculated differently around the world, as the "defintion" of unemployed changes from country to country. In the US I gather "unemployed" means you are actively drawing unemployment insurance. If you weren't working long enough prior to losing your job, have been on unemployment insurance too long and have stopped receiving it (someone in this thread claimed that could be as little as 6 months, I don't know), or collect disability instead, then you don't count as unemployed.

      I've seen the defintion game in action when New Zealand redefined "unemployed" and the unemployment rate shifted by several percentage points - so yes it can make a significant difference.

      Which is not to say that you aren't perfectly correct. It could well be that unemployment is a far more serious problem in France and Germany. But it might in fact be less of a problem. The definitons, and resulting figures can vary sufficiently that without knowing how those numbers are derived its all rather meaningless.

      You;re comparing a couple of fruit without telling whether they're both apples, or apples and oranges. As such, the comparison is meaningless.

      Jedidiah.

    17. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by here4fun · · Score: 1
      Grandparent: First of all I am pretty sure that a person without a job in Europe is much better off then a person without a job in the US.

      Parent: So to clarify: You're reasonably sure your better off unemployed in europe than the US but you dont know how?

      I know how. They have a ton of social programs that people in the USA don't have. They have health care which people in the USA don't have.

    18. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Alioth · · Score: 1

      In Britain at least, unemployment is measured in pretty much the same way (for the official figures) - people out of work and actively looking for work (i.e. claiming benefit, as to claim unemployment benefit you have to demonstrate you are actively seeking work). I think the 'actively seeking work' is the definition an economist would use, too.

      From that measure, Britain nearly has full employment at the moment.

    19. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good idea. I'm much better off today than I was four years ago, because I got off my goddamn ass, opened my own business, made a lot more money, and don't have to worry about being fired. I guess I'll vote for Bush. Maybe if the rest of you fuckers quit whining so much and took some goddamn responsibility for your own fucking lives, you'd be better off, too!

    20. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by AaronGTurner · · Score: 1
      Rather than take the official figures from the US government or French government (or the UK government - around 4%) it is best to take figures from international bodies that use the same criteria for determining what counts as unemployed. I remember back in thw 1980s when unemployment was very high in the UK and there were about 20 adjustments to how the figures were calculated, all of which had the effect of reducing the counts. I am sure the US, UK, France, Germany, etc cook the books to a certain extent, they may just be cooking them differently which makes comparasions difficult.

      www.ilo.org would be the obvious place to look for figures at least on a consistent basis (although not necessarily balanced and fair - the ILO has its own agenda I am sure) but I can't find an obvious link to unemployment figures on that site. There are probably other organisations, the ILO was just the one that sprung to mind in my pre-coffee state.

    21. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Europe's average was 11.3% wonder what they say to our 5.4 or 5.5 %?"

      AS I said they measurements are not the same. We stop counting people after 6 months.

      "I Kinda care when people start trying to make our country use thier system (socialized everything). I'd like to point out everything is a trade off."

      As opposed to what? Socialized some things? Which politician is advocating getting rid of social security, medicare, medicaid, public schools, state universities, farm subsidies etc? That's right NONE OF THEM.

      Wake up. We are already mostly a socialized system. There is not THAT much difference between europe and the US when it comes to socialism.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    22. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Or did the US unite with a state with rampant unemployment like West Germany did with East Germany?

      Hmm let's see that happened... A DECADE AGO. He's talking about yesteryear.

    23. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Did you miss the part about misrepresenting the numbers?

      --
      evil is as evil does
    24. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 3, Informative

      If you've been unemployed for more than 6 months, you drop off the charts because you're considered a lost cause.

      That's not actually correct. It's been repeated a lot, but it's false. The Bureau of Labor Statistics uses a number of methods to determine the nationwide unemployment figure, not just unemployment insurance claims. They also use something called the CPS, the current population survey. It's a statistical sample in which respondents are divided up into three groups. If you've got a job, you're employed. If you don't have a job but are available to take one and actively seeking one, you're unemployed. If you don't have a job and you aren't unemployed, you're out of the work force.

      The 5.4% number, which is the one we're talking about here, does not come from unemployment insurance claims. It comes from the CPS, which means it counts people as unemployed for as long as they are looking for work.

      The BLS has a web site, and on that site they publish the monthly employment report, a document called the "Employment Situation Summary." It's got the percentages (5.4% unemployment, employment-population ratio of 62.4%, etc.) but it also has all the raw data you could possibly want. Go look it up sometime. It's pretty interesting.

      --

      I write in my journal
    25. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      The extra $5/hour is nothing compared to the thousands of dollars taxpayers are forced to spend to pay for healthcare, for education, for increased home prices.

      Um, actually it is. Do you want to pay $4 for an orange? How about $8 for a head of lettuce?

      Every time you go out to a restaurant, do you want to pay 40% more for your meal?

      Illegal immigration is a huge problem. But so are farm labor costs. There's no easy solution. Well, that's not quite true; the easy solution is to increase subsidies. But that wouldn't be a good idea for obvious reasons.

      --

      I write in my journal
    26. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's silly. You have an incombent president and you have plenty of evidence about how he will continue to run the country.

      If he has not run the country to your satisfaction so far you have every right to expect that he will not run it to your satisfaction in the next cycle. If anything he will probably run it worse since he does not need to get re-elected.

      Again. If you are better off, if your country is better off, if the world is a better place then it was four years ago then vote for Bush. Otherwise vote for somebody else.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    27. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe if the rest of you fuckers quit whining so much and took some goddamn responsibility for your own fucking lives, you'd be better off, too!

      Res..Respon...re.. I can't even say it! Just give me money! Cause life is unfare and I had it tough.

    28. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Tlosk · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "I am pretty sure that a person without a job in Europe is much better off then a person without a job in the US."

      Which unfortunately contributes to joblessness. Good arguments can be made to have unemployment programs, but the more you increase the coverage period and the better the benefits, the higher jobless rates will go.

      And the comparison isn't being made by most people as a "well other people have it worse argument," rather it's meant to show that you need to be careful of the policies you institute because sometimes they make the problem worse, not better, despite your good intentions. Europe is an example, so before we charge ahead with policies that have been shown to fail, we should think twice.

      It's usually a lot easier to focus on the short term, but we really need to take a long term view of things. Opening trade and eliminating barriers to the free flow of labor is where the larger rewards are in the long term.

      Just as people have self-destructive tendencies with diet because we didn't evolve in an environment filled with calorie rich and easily obtained food, we also end up shooting ourselves in the foot when we decide to circle the wagons and protect members of the "tribe." It's not the world we live in anymore, and it requires a leap of rationality to recognize what is best for everyone in the long term.

    29. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by vijayiyer · · Score: 1

      For all the people that question the methodology of the calculation of the unemployment rate, and assume without any evidence that Europe somehow includes people who aren't searching for work, I thought it would be useful to find the actual number of people that aren't included because they're not looking for a job anymore (I don't see why such people should be considered unemployed) According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in August of 2004 there were 1.6 million persons "marginally attached" to the labor force and not counted. This is what everyone's hollering about. The total labor force is 147 million. So add on that additional 1.1%, we're still roughly 2% better off than France or Germany. And again, I've yet to see any proof that those countries include people who aren't looking for jobs as unemployed.

    30. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Uh, yeah, all we need is 7% more unemployment.

      You do understand that there are people who would prefer low unemployment to more socialism, right?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    31. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Tell me why I should give a shit what the unemployment numbers are in Europe (assuming they're even counted the same way as they are here, i.e., people who give up or drop off the unemployment rolls somehow magically disappear from the equation).

      Really - why should I give a rat's ass how Europe is doing? As an American I'm concerned with unemployment in THIS country and I have every right to question the situation without having some asshat say "look at country X and count yourself lucky!"

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    32. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Bender_ · · Score: 1

      Hmm let's see that happened... A DECADE AGO. He's talking about yesteryear.

      The is a totally irrelevant argument. The DDR had full employment before it broken down and was reunited with the west. Unfortunately almost none of the eastern companies was competitive enough to survive the coming years, even despite more than a trillion of state support.

    33. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      It comes from the CPS, which means it counts people as unemployed for as long as they are looking for work.

      This has to be crap. If you aren't drawing unemployment benefits the government has absolutely no way to track whether or not you're looking for work. It's not as if you have to file with the government whenever you apply for a job, nor do employers have to report that person X just dropped off a resume at their place of establishment.

      Unemployment figures *are* tied to unemployment benefits. There is no way for the government to determine what you're doing if you aren't drawing benefits.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    34. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by vijayiyer · · Score: 1

      Beacuse Europe tends towards socialist policies, and the US was built upon laissez-faire capitalism. To expect the government to "do something" about unemployment is to desire a more left wing economic policy. The natural question, therefore, is "how is unemployment in countries with more left wing economic policy"?

    35. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      If he has not run the country to your satisfaction so far you have every right to expect that he will not run it to your satisfaction in the next cycle.

      Again: not the point. We're not talking about what Bush will or will not do next time around. We're talking about which man, Bush or Kerry, is the better choice.

      If you are better off, if your country is better off, if the world is a better place then it was four years ago then vote for Bush. Otherwise vote for somebody else.

      I'm sure there are people out there with a dumber approach to casting their vote, but I'm damned if I know any.

      Better suggestion: If you think Bush is the better man for the job between the candidates on the ballot, vote for him. If you think Kerry is a better choice, vote for him. Shocking, I know, but I'm a rebel.

      --

      I write in my journal
    36. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      If you aren't drawing unemployment benefits the government has absolutely no way to track whether or not you're looking for work.

      Please open your fucking eyes and read, okay? The BLS takes a monthly statistical sample. This sample is called the CPS, the current population survey. That is how the government knows how many people are employed, how many are unemployed and how many are not in the labor force.

      This is exactly what I said the first time. You didn't read it. Nor did you go look it up for yourself. You just spewed.

      Would you do me the courtesy, this time, of actually reading my fucking post before commenting on it? I don't expect you to go digging on the BLS web site --though you damn well ought to if you don't understand how labor statistics work --but I do expect you to at least read and understand the post to which you are commenting before you render your oh-so-insightful verdict on it.

      --

      I write in my journal
    37. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      That is how the government knows how many people are employed, how many are unemployed and how many are not in the labor force.

      The figures are still bullshit. People are moved from the 'unemployed' to 'not in the labor force' how, exactly? The last classification apparently includes housewives/househusbands, even if they've joined that part of the sample involuntarily. In fact, from what I can see the GOVERNMENT decides who's looking for work and who isn't, not the people who fall into those classifications themselves.

      Yes, very unbiased that. Thanks for playing.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    38. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To compare? How do you have "low" and "high" without something to compare it against?

    39. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      did you completely ignore his point about "they count unemployment differently" or are you just being an ass for the fun of it ?

    40. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you've been unemployed for more than 6 months, you drop off the charts because you're considered a lost cause.
      I truely hope that is not the case. I was unemployeed for ~6 months in the UK. When I finally got an intaview(sp) I was given 150 UKP for new work cloths, and a months travel card (90 UKP).

      Alas this also means 250 UKP a month goes on N.I. :(

    41. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >To conclusively blame immigration and trade policy
      >as the cause for an increase in unemployment is easy

      Immigration is a problem for france and germany as well. Actually western europe in the whole as many people from eastern europe are moving west.
      Europe however is addressing unemploynment in a more positive way, basically saying that people don't have to work that hard anymore, and that if eastern europe advances, immigration will go down.

      It is still a big problem but it is addressed
      This is not the case in US, if the article is correct.

    42. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by doorbot.com · · Score: 1

      Compare your (and your country's) situation to four years ago and vote accordingly.

      But, but... if you vote accordingly the terrorists will win!

    43. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by McDoobie · · Score: 1

      "In the (mostly socialist) European nations, the government has a responsibility towards you. Many of those unemployed are on state-sponsored education and self-improvements tracks so that they'll be ready to re-enter the job market better prepared for the future."

      Isn't that counterproductive to the Socialist goal of eliminating the "Burgoise"?(The "Middle Class" for those who dont speak French.)
      At least that's the goal according to Karl Marx.

    44. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by johannesg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I live in Europe, and the notion that there is some sort of safety net should I lose my job is comforting. However, I also agree that for some people it makes it just too easy to never work again. That's why I feel that unemployment pay should be coupled to some sort of community service. It doesn't have to be hard work, or even particularly long hours, but if you want your unemployment money by all means do something for the community in return. Cleaning the streets would be a good example. The people involved would still retain their working rythm, they would have a reason to find a real job again, and the working part of the population would see some benefits for their money. From my perspective it looks like a win for everyone.

    45. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by pyro_dude · · Score: 1

      >"I Kinda care when people start trying to make our >country use thier system (socialized everything). >I'd like to point out everything is a trade off." >As opposed to what? Socialized some things? Which >politician is advocating getting rid of social >security, medicare, medicaid, public schools, state >universities, farm subsidies etc? That's right NONE >OF THEM. Try the Libertarian Party's Michael Badnarik. Truly a free market. :)

      --
      --pyro_dude
    46. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Minna+Kirai · · Score: 1

      Really - why should I give a rat's ass how Europe is doing?

      Any fool can learn from his own mistake. The wise man learns from the mistakes of others.

    47. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by SerpentMage · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Lets clarify this one. They in Europe have a ton of social programs that NOBODY can pay for that the US does not.

      Lets be very clear about this, Europe is going through some major problems themselves. The left leaning folks are making it difficult for Europe to restructure.

      Overall the problem is one where the Western Societies have to find a place for themselves. This is the globalization coming back to bite us in the butt.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    48. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, France is an interesting case, because people are paid something like half their wages for six months after they lose their job, then it slowly goes down from there. You could survive quite happily for a couple years on the unemployment benefit here, and a lot of people do. Often people take a long time to decide to get a new job.

      Now perhaps you don't agree with that system, and it certainly generates a high unemployment rate as it removes the incentive to rush back to work, but it works quite well in the sense that people don't panic when they lose their job. People don't fear government there the same way they do in the states.

      Europe is quite a diverse area, the UK has a very different system for example, where you're paid a pittance on unemployment, and thus has a very low unemployment rate. Best not to try to compare it en-bloc.

    49. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by aftk2 · · Score: 1

      Better suggestion: If you think Bush is the better man for the job between the candidates on the ballot, vote for him. If you think Kerry is a better choice, vote for him. Shocking, I know, but I'm a rebel.

      And how, praytell, would we ascertain whether Bush is the better candidate on the ballot? If only we had some guideline, some benchmark, some way that we could really determine whether this was the case. If only Bush had already shown his capability, during, perhaps, the last four years...

      Oh wait. He did.

      And it was dismal.

      Of course this is a referendum on whether Bush (the incumbent) is a capable president - that is the case with every mid-term election! Just because Kerry is untested does not make him invalid; Bush's complete incompetence and disturbing lack of credibility on any issue whatsoever makes him a less desirable candidate.

      I find it amusing that you found a way to remark, of the grandparent poster, that "there are people out there with a dumber approach to casting their vote, but I'm damned if I know any," when, if we compare your reply with his initial statement, there are really no differences. Allow me to demonstrate. His response is regular, while yours is in bold:

      If you are better off, if your country is better off, if you think Bush is the better man for the job between the candidates on the ballot, then vote for Bush. Otherwise, if you think Kerry is a better choice, vote for him.

      Heh, when juxtaposed, your statements are exactly the same. Yet, you're "damned" if you know anyone with a "dumber approach to casting their vote." Curious, that.
      --
      concrete5: a cms made for marketing, but strong enough for geeks.
    50. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by mvdwege · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The left leaning folks are making it difficult for Europe to restructure.

      And this is a good thing.

      Restructuring, as the current neo-con governments in Europe call it, is nothing more than:

      • Selling the national assets to big corporations (like the rail system and the communications infrastructure). What good is a privately held telephone company that both offers service and owns the infrastructure, for example? That's just a monopoly, where every cent of profit is exploited from the public, who see no improvement in service, and the only GDP growth is in the rising salaries for the executives. Same with all other public services being sold out. In the Netherlands they just launched a plan to privatise disability insurance. The buyers are all the big insurance corps, and I ask (as a syndicalist): why weren't the unions asked to participate to offer cooperative insurance to their members?
      • Crippling legislation that kills off the small and medium enterprises, the true engines of the economy, where most of the worthwhile jobs are, where the least money is wasted on the overhead of useless 'managers', where the most innovation happens.
      • A further slashing in public education, effective selling off our Universities to be nothing but the R&D arm of the big corporations.
      • Killing off unemployment benefits, effectively removing the power to bargain from the workers with their employers. And since the only remaining employers stand to be the big corps (see above), this is a huge setback. It's easy to say that jobs are merely free-market bargaining, but if there is a power disparity in the market, one party will end up exploited.

      Are you starting to see a pattern here? The so-called restructuring is nothing but a naked grab for power by the corporations and their toadies. The proof is in the pudding: all European politicians who participated in such 'restructurings' end up with cushy jobs at their friends' megacorps (do you hear me, Wim Kok?).

      Mart
      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    51. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by timlewis_atlanta · · Score: 1

      If you've been unemployed for more than 6 months, you drop off the charts because you're considered a lost cause

      Not so.

      That *may* be the case for state and local unemployment figures, but it is not the case for national figures : http://www.snopes.com/science/stats/unemploy.htm

    52. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You people I all hypocrites. When you say "much better off", do you also think of Eastern Europe, India, China and the other poor countries? Here if you don't have a job (or even if you do) you can barely sustain your life from it. You and your kind (look at the people from Germany) cry because from the unemployment you can't keep a car or something similar. Here even if both members of the family work you might not be able to sustain a car (if they both get minimum wage for example). If you truly believe in democracy you should let us get the money that we deserve for our work. Globalization is not your enemy. The stupid ideas that many things are for granted are.

    53. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lets be very clear about this, Europe is going through some major problems themselves. The left leaning folks are making it difficult for Europe to restructure.

      Yes they do have some problems. No restructuring will not be difficult. The liberals are to blame.

      Problem is they're going to be Islamic by the end of this century. Restructuring will consist of burning churches and building mosques and then sinking into abject poverty, all things Islamic countries excel at.

    54. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Problem is they're going to be Islamic by the end of this century.

      Sure thing, and the Alien will come tomorrow to propose cure for cancer. You are obviously an American. No wonder American people voted Bush, and still want to vote Bush.

    55. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Which unfortunately contributes to joblessness. Good arguments can be made to have unemployment programs, but the more you increase the coverage period and the better the benefits, the higher jobless rates will go.

      Yes. That's why Stalin's solution to the problem was the best: anyone who wasn't able to met the production quotas decided by the Party, was labeled a traitor, and at best was sent in Siberia, at worst shot dead. Now, *that*'s an incentive to work. Death penalty for the jobless!

      it's meant to show that you need to be careful of the policies you institute because sometimes they make the problem worse, not better, despite your good intentions.

      No it isn't really worst. Rather than having people sunk in misery while working 90 hours a week doing shitty job (I mean it: cleaning the shit of the toilets), being fed up with live, shoting each other, filling the US jails, in Europe, they are on welfare. This is a feature, NOT a problem.

      The goal is not producting goods for the sake of producing goods, the goal is hapiness.

      Many Northern European countries solved this issue by making unemployed people making non-productive but nice jobs (like green spaces).
      It's no surprise that the US is the one with most criminality in the "developped" world (and is worse than many countries which are less economically advanced in this respect)

    56. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by wobblie · · Score: 1

      while i don't neccessarily disagree with that, they did already give something - they all all those taxes.

      At least they get something for their taxes, unlike Americans, who get almost nothing from them except the comfort that their lining some bastards pockets.

    57. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by John+Betonschaar · · Score: 1

      Comments like this always get modded down to 0 (as opposed to the parent). Don't bother to waste your time, this is a US-centric site...

      Your sig is mine

    58. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by beakburke · · Score: 1

      Well, muslims are the fastest growing group in Europe, one of the few growing groups on a contintent with a shrinking population. I think that's what he was alluding to.

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    59. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by mrtrumbe · · Score: 1
      Here is the information you two are dancing around: http://www.bls.gov/cps/cps_faq.htm

      Ahh, the power of citations...

      Taft

    60. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by ploppy · · Score: 1

      FULL employment - total rubbish. You're believing the government's lies. Next you'll believe Iraq had WMD! Very funny.

      See my other post regarding this. People are "encouraged" to register for disability benefit rather than register as unemployed. We have 1 million unemployed but 2.7 million receiving some kind of disibility benefit. If that doesn't work the government pays employers to give people jobs.

      I'm unemployed (but not registered), my mother was unemployed, my older brother hasn't got a job (effectively he is self employed doing whatever he can find), but is not registered unemployed. Both my cousins are unemployed. Oh yes, we've full employment at the moment. Remove you head from out of your arse.

    61. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to make things a bit clear.

      1) Those who have given up on finding a job are called "Not in Labor Force"
      2) All OECD countries calculate unemployment the same way. This includes US, Europe, etc.
      3) Those who are unemployed in Europe are better off because of higher subsidies granted to those who cant find a job. However, this is offset by high income tax that workers pay. A good example is France's "i'd rather call in sick and go the beach, than work syndrome." French workers pay roughly 50% in income tax (state, local and federal). The question for the worker than becomes, "if i work, i only get paid 50% of my income, but that's not too much more than if I was employed. Let's go to the beach."

      Europe has had trouble getting their unemployment rate below 5% for as long as I can remember.

      ~anybody but Dick and Bush
      (albeit it's a nice combo ;) when you're out of work and have lots of time to f...)

    62. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Paulrothrock · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I agree that opening trade and the free flow of labor is a good thing, but only if there is a way to ensure that people's human rights are being protected, and that environmental regulations are upheld to first-world standards. Otherwise, it will *always* be cheaper to go to China, where they don't care about human rights or the environment.

      The WTO is widely seen by my fellow leftists as an evil entity. However, I can see it as a world trade regulator, if the influences of corporations are removed and it is chosen by a democratic vote. Imagine if the world could say to China or Saudi Arabia or Indonesia: "If you don't respect human rights based on what the world has agreed upon, and you don't provide this minimum environmental regulations, we will not trade with you." They would stop immediately.

      If we *don't* do this, free trade will simply be a race to the bottom: The country with the lowest cost of living, the lowest respect for human rights, and the lowest environmental regulations will get all the jobs, and other countries will have to lower their standards in order to compete.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
    63. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by ibi · · Score: 1

      In Western Europe only the big countries of France, Germany, Italy and Spain generally have higher unemployment than the US. This paper argues that most countries in western Europe - Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands and so on tend to have lower unemployment. If you believe that paper, it's a mistake to lump all of Western Europe in one basket. (It's also pretty funny to see those horribly socialist countries like Sweden and Norway with lower unemployment than the US :-) (Although Sweden is now closer to the US rate, Norway is still below.)

    64. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      As for the illegals I highly doubt any american wants to pick fruit for 12 hours at 2 dollars an hour.

      Well, duh. The linked article cites illegals a s a large problem because they are willing to work for $2/hr. If it wasn't for them, then the farmers would have to pay a higher wage for labor. Then they might have incentive to be more efficient. In any event, we won't be seeing a tripling in the cost of fruit - labor is only part of the cost.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    65. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by ikeleib · · Score: 1

      Cool. I want European style unemployment insurance. I'd like to get 80% of my former salary for three years. I wouldn't feel bad about being out of work at all.

    66. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      I know how. They have a ton of social programs that people in the USA don't have. They have health care which people in the USA don't have.

      Umm the US does have healthcare for the poor, old, and disabled its called medicare. 40 Million Americans qualify for medicare and it has a bigger budget (250$) than all health services in the UK (2.2 Billion pounds (2002), for 58 Million)

      In addition to this state also provide their own coverage *on top of medicare* (NY for example proviedes madicade)..

      --
    67. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, actually it is. Do you want to pay $4 for an orange? How about $8 for a head of lettuce?

      Every time you go out to a restaurant, do you want to pay 40% more for your meal?


      First, there's no way that tripling wages will cause the total costs to triple - while farm labor costs aren't trivial, they're not the largest factor in the cost of produce. Land, water, packaging, shipping all tend to have more of an impact than labor.

      Second, go to 'In and Out' for lunch today. Know what you'll see? A bunch of clean, shaven kids earning $10-$15 an hour to flip burgers. The result? One of the most successful fast food franchises in the nation (growing every day).

      If you pay fair wages, your prices may go up slightly, but people will do the work. Labor costs are almost never the defining factor - 'In and Out' pays their workers twice what 'Jack in the Box' does, and their food is not much more expensive (lunch is still less than $5).

      Finally, there has been, for many years, alternative to zero-skill labor - modernizing and replacing it with industrial equiptment. One time cost, easy to do, but people are cheap. Remove the incentive, they'll modernize, end of story.

      Stop spreading your lies. There's no need for illegal immigrants in this country.

    68. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      People are moved from the 'unemployed' to 'not in the labor force' how, exactly?

      You are not a very smart person, are ya? I will say this to you for a third time. The monthly survey puts respondents into three categories: employed, unemployed and not in the labor force. If you've got a job, you're employed. If you don't have a job and are available to take one if you find it --not disabled, for instance --and are actively seeking one, you're unemployed. If you're not either of those two, you're not in the labor force.

      That's the third time. Did you get it that time?

      The last classification apparently includes housewives/househusbands, even if they've joined that part of the sample involuntarily.

      The last classification includes anybody that's not seeking a job. If you're a housewife who's not seeking employment, you're not in the labor force. If you're a housewife who's seeking employment, you're unemployed.

      This is really not a very complicated thing, you know?

      In fact, from what I can see the GOVERNMENT decides who's looking for work and who isn't

      No, it's entirely self-selected. A respondent is asked a series of questions, and if that respondent indicates with his answers that he's looking for work, he's marked in the unemployed column. The survey is, in fact, exactly the opposite of what you think it is.

      Are you gonna come back with another post about how this is all bullshit, or are you gonna go look it up for yourself and become an educated citizen?

      --

      I write in my journal
    69. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 1

      I was going to say something but somebody else put it better.

      What is a better indicator on how somebody will run the country then the way he HAS run the country.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    70. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Of course this is a referendum on whether Bush (the incumbent) is a capable president - that is the case with every mid-term election!

      The expression "mid-term election" refers to those elections that take place in non-presidential-election years. The 2002 election was a midterm. The 2006 election will be one too. The 2004 election isn't.

      Bush's complete incompetence and disturbing lack of credibility on any issue whatsoever makes him a less desirable candidate.

      Setting aside your obvious hatred for a second, less desirable than what? Than Kerry? If that's your opinion, then you've already basically taken the approach I advocated, haven't you? You looked at the two candidates and chose the one you think will do the better job.

      I suspect, though, that that's not what you've done. I suspect that you're saying Bush is less desirable than anybody. I suspect you'd cast your vote for Scruffy the Janitor if that's the other name that was on the ballot. I suspect that you're one of the "Anybody but Bush" crowd, and I have no patience for people who make decisions based on hatred.

      Heh, when juxtaposed, your statements are exactly the same.

      I think you're confused. You just compared my words with ...my words. I'm glad they turned out to be the same, but beyond that, I'm unsure of your point.

      The other guy -- "killjoe" --said this:

      If you are better off, if your country is better off, if the world is a better place then it was four years ago then vote for Bush. Otherwise vote for somebody else.

      I said this:

      If you think Bush is the better man for the job between the candidates on the ballot, vote for him. If you think Kerry is a better choice, vote for him.

      You're clear on the way in which these two things are not the same, right? You see the difference? The other guy, "killjoe," says, "Vote based on Bush's record regardless of who the other candidate is or whether he'll do a better or worse job." He says, in essence, "If you're not perfectly satisfied, vote for the other guy. Period, end of discussion."

      I'm saying that this is an incredibly stupid position to take. When you go into the booth on November 2, you're not voting for or against Bush. You're voting for Bush or for Kerry. To cast your vote without giving even a moment's thought to whether Kerry would do be a better or worse president is incredibly wrongheaded.

      Unless you're in the "Anybody but Bush" crowd, of course, in which case it makes perfect sense to you. But I've already explained my opinion of those fuckups.

      --

      I write in my journal
    71. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 1

      You missed my point I think. We have spent 200 billion in iraq building hospitals and schools. In the mean time we are closing our own hospitals and schools because your state and mine is running out of money.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    72. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Man how dense are you?

      WE ARE ALREADY A SOCIALIZED COUNTRY. Ever hear of medicare, medicaid, social security, public schools, subsidies for every industry in tha nation?

      WAKE UP. You already live under socialism and both of the people who are likely to win will continue it.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    73. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is all well and good if you look at unemployment as a form of pay. This may very well be the case in europe I don't know.

      I see unemployment benefits as insurance. Like all insurance terms apply, one of which is the length of benefit. It is a great motivator to find a job before your benefit runs out. By being a government sponsered benefit we do get a bit of flexibility in terms for the harder economic cycles, but none the less the benefit should be seen as a bridge to something new employment wise.

      The safety nets in Europe really seem to be feeding grounds for malecontents more than anything. The surveys in my estimation are being charitable when they claim 9% unemployment in Europe. In the end Europe is running into problems with far to many idle hands and could very well go the way of the middle east. That is it will beocme a breeding ground for lazy radicals.

    74. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Socialism is not a binary condition. It is possible too be more, or less, socialist than one already is.

      Ass.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    75. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      What is a better indicator on how somebody will run the country then the way he HAS run the country.

      How about the plan for the country? Let's say you look at George W. Bush's plan and conclude that if everything goes perfectly for four years, things will turn out pretty okay. (Sustainable economic growth, security at home and abroad, lower costs of medical care, reformed tax code, etc.) Then you look at John Kerry's plan and conclude that if everything goes perfectly for four years, things will be pretty bad. (Significantly higher taxes, surrender in the war on terror, a nightmarish boondoggle of a public health system that we can't pay for and that can't work anyway, ever more complex tax laws, etc.) Who, then would you vote for?

      I'm not saying that your interpretation of the respective plans for the country will necessarily be the same as mine. I'm saying that failing to look at what the other guy on the ballot has planned for the next four years will lead to your making a really fucking stupid decision in the voting booth.

      I'm gonna repeat myself here. This election is not a referendum on the George W. Bush presidency. It is the process by which we choose the next leader of our country. Do not go into the booth thinking only about George W. Bush and 2001-2005. Go into the booth thinking also about John Kerry and 2005-2009.

      --

      I write in my journal
    76. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by jeif1k · · Score: 1

      Which unfortunately contributes to joblessness. Good arguments can be made to have unemployment programs, but the more you increase the coverage period and the better the benefits, the higher jobless rates will go.

      And the problem is what exactly?

      If people are happy to be unemployed and live off unemployment benefits, and if the society can afford it, it seems like a perfectly valid choice.

      In different words, I prefer a society in which 10% unemployed living reasonably happily than a society in which 5% are unemployed and live in abject poverty.

    77. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Really? Amazing! I would have never known that from your posts. Apparently you are under some delusion that europe is socialist and we are not.

      I guess what you really meant to say was that europe is a bit more socialist then the US. For the rest of the world that translates to "they get to have healthcare for their tax dollars and we get new shiny bombers".

      --
      evil is as evil does
    78. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Sinterklaas · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's why I feel that unemployment pay should be coupled to some sort of community service. It doesn't have to be hard work, or even particularly long hours, but if you want your unemployment money by all means do something for the community in return.

      I disagree strongly. This idea looks good on the surface, but there are so many problems with it that it should never be instituted. First of all, people who are jobless are supposed to spend their time looking for a job. Social security is a safety net, not a job itself. That changes if you start requiring people to work for a 'pay check'. Then people can legitimately claim that they earn their money and aren't required to find a job. You also get into all kinds of trouble, for instance, what happens when people get hurt on the job?

      Secondly, the notion that jobless people are lazy fu*ks is certainly not true. My father worked 60+ hours per week as a volunteer when he was unemployed (he is part of the so called 'lost generation' who got to the marketplace during a major recession and job drought). If he would be forced to do some idiotic job like cleaning the streets, he would probably kill himself. Then there is the sad fact that a considerable part of the jobless have physical or mental issues. Especially since in my country, only the very disabled/sick are counted as sick and get special social security for that. The rest are just counted as unemployed, but this certainly doesn't mean that they can necessarily do jobs like street sweeping (kind of hard from a wheelchair).

      Thirdly, there is a serious risk of having real jobs be replaced by this kind of community work. Last time this idea was tried by our local right wing party, the plan was to have these people clean the homes of people who are to old or sick to do that themselves. There is little doubt who the employers would choose, cheap forced labor or expensive workers. And not only is it an incredible blow to the people who do this job and an enormous underestimation of the expertise required to correctly and respectfully clean other people's homes, it also ignores the problem of letting uneducated, unmotivated and untrained people, who are not bound by a contract loose in the homes of people who cannot take care of themselves. Now, cleaning the streets is obviously a bit less of a problem, although people who do that now are bound to be replaced by 'cheap labor'. However, I believe that there is a big chance that politicians will not stop there.

      Finally, if you seriously want to combat unemployment, there are plenty of work projects and education that are possible. For instance, for people who lack a working rythm, there already exists a fake company where jobless people 'practice' having a job and prove to potential employers that they are good employees. Other possibilities are reeducation programs, such as the ones that were denied to my father who was written off due to his age. Then he finally got a chance to learn to be a programmer and now he is making his boss tons of money. Of course, this required an actual investment first, instead of just the tired old 'these people don't want to work' routine.

    79. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by rakerman · · Score: 1

      The US does not count prisoners as unemployed. The US has a huge prison population, and a much higher percentage of its population in prison than other G7 nations.

      See e.g. RE: unemployment figures

    80. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by lavaface · · Score: 1
      Well said. I completely agree.

      A previous reply noted their father, who volunteered 60+ hours a week would be devastated if he were forced to clean streets. I believe what the parent post was getting at is that he wouldn't be forced to do any particular job. A person receiving unemployment benefits should be required to spend a portion of their week working on a community service project that fits their abilities. If your father was an computer technician, perhaps he could work for a non-profit building machines for schools and churches. There are numerous other community pursuits that can suit a wide variety of interests (gardening, carpentry, etc) They wouldn't be expected to work on their projects full-time. Twenty hours a week should be enough to allow some time to find a job. Interestingly enough, volunteering time for community interest projects may even help you find a job. It's called networking; if I volunteer and see your abilities and dedication, I may be able to hire you or find you a job. I would also imagine it helps improve the self-worth of the unfortunately unemployed.

      Again, brilliant idea! Let's hope this sees some light.

    81. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      The US spends more on health care for the forty million poor than GB spenad on *ALL* of its people.

      My mother worked at a rehab clinic for drunks, my sister worked as a social worker for poor-disfunctional families, none fo the wanted for food shelter, or medical care..

      --
    82. Re:low unemployment compared to europe by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      Just as people have self-destructive tendencies with diet because we didn't evolve in an environment filled with calorie rich and easily obtained food, we also end up shooting ourselves in the foot when we decide to circle the wagons and protect members of the "tribe."

      But on the same note, we also end up shooting ourselves in the head when we remove all ethical restrictions in the name of those long term benifits. Just as captalism will be destroyed by too much restrictions, it will also be destoryed by too much freedom. What we require is a balance. Not isolationsism but also most certainly not free trade.

      As to it not being the world we live in and that we should do what is best for all, yes it is nice to help the rest of the world attain a higher standard of living but that is not what is being accomplished currently. Rather at the moment we are sacrficing our standard of living so that a very small percentage of us can attain an even higher standard of living than before.

      With that in mind, placing some restrictions on the rampant greed and short sightedness of those who wish to take advantage of this system to the deteriment of everyone seems a much wiser policy then to just let it all go and hope we all end better for it in the end.

      Just as people should be careful of programs that help the unemployed too much, they should also be wary of being too eager to throw everyone to the wolves in the name of long term gain.

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
  7. Oh, super! by illuminata · · Score: 0

    Based on this post, I'm guessing that Slashdot is working on another section, perhaps a subsection to the Politics one.

    I think it's gonna be called Propaganda.

    Makes me wonder if it's even worth the effort considering that line really blurs with the editors.

    Maybe they can make the slogan "Viewpoints for Nerds. As if journalism matters."

    Yeah, fuck that journalism stuff!

    --


    Until Slashdot fixes the funny modifier, use insightful or interesting. The poster knows your intentions.
  8. Oh no neither party is helping by redhotchil · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oh no neither party is helping? Gee.. wouldn't it be great if there were other parties besides the Dems and Reps? OH WAIT

    1. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      Yeah, though to be fair... Dems don't have President, House, Senate, SCOTUS, or Governors. So that leaves nothing. With no power they aren't helping. That's fairly obvious.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    2. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by FauxPasIII · · Score: 1

      Are you in Colorado? Then fight like hell to pass the referendum allowing electoral college votes to be assigned proportional to
      the popular vote. Not in CO? Then fight for a similar ballot referendum in your state. This could be the beginning of the rise of
      the Third Parties.

      More info.

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    3. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by krymsin01 · · Score: 1

      More parties are NOT going to help things. It would just give all the pundits out there more people to blame, and your average nascar dad's grasp of what actualy going on is going to slip furthur into the land of fiction. However good you think the US gov't is compared to the existing alternatives, democracy by proxy is flawed.

      --
      stuff
    4. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by Tatarize · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Couple problems. Firstly, it isn't going to inspire any other states to work in this way. Only a battleground state like CO would consider it. Even in states like Maine where it goes by district doesn't attack of the status quo this does.

      Take CA and TX for example, you'll never see them implement anything close to this. Because they start out for one side or the other and vote that way accordingly. Why would they hand off a 3rd of their electoral votes to the other party.

      The only way about this would be to trash the electoral vote system at the national level and convert to a real democracy. I would highly recommend one with a runoff or instant runoff system built in. I'd prefer a runoff system with a none of the above choice.

      You will only get battleground states to ever approve such a measure, and even then if this measure is approved you'll see it in a SCOTUS near you. It's damaging to the status quo, as damaging as could be done by a state in a democratic republic such as our.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    5. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by FauxPasIII · · Score: 1

      AOLV("I agree");

      Still, the CO model seems like the path of least resistance; you can talk all day long about how great it would
      be to ditch the EV system nationally, but at the end of the day, you've got to convince the national Democratic and
      Republican parties who collectively control... well, every branch at every level of government, to let others join in
      their reindeer games. They'd be insane to allow that to happen.

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    6. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by thamaht · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be great if there were parties likely to get elected besides the Dems and Reps?

      Oh wait. :/

    7. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      I'd not say that they have no power. Any time the minority in the Senat has more than 39 seats, they do have enough power to derail almost anything. At this time, the democrats have a 51-49 minority.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    8. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      However good you think the US gov't is compared to the existing alternatives, democracy by proxy is flawed.

      But can you imagine getting 250 million people to vote on the budget? With proper information sent out to everyone, it could be done. How about something like Sarbanes-Oxley (corporate governance) or Gramm-Leach-Bliley (banking privacy)? Could you inform enough people of the issues to get a good vote on it?

      Part of our problem now is that the people that we elect as our represtatives do not do their homework and think about (or care about) the effects of a law awaiting passage. How much worse would it be if we had a direct democracy were 250 million people voted on an issue because "Dateline NBC" said something about it?

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    9. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      Woohoo, the Dems can filibuster to death some bill! That will stike a blow towards some cause. I'm sure they shall be stopping outsourcing any day now with their great power to talk too long.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    10. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      Funny - but that's how it works.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    11. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      Well, it might open the door a bit, but it would stop the spoiler 3rd parties. Clinton probably would have lost in `92, Bush in `00. The real problem is it would take a constitutional amendment and those are fairly hard to pass. The CO model doesn't take such an amendment. It could fairly easily do away with primaries, just run all the people in the first election and so long as nobody tops out 50% the run off between the top two settles it.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    12. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      Not really, they can only stop a bill or confirmation. When it comes to passing their own law or changing anything they can't. The best they can do is try to preserve the status quo.

      I suppose it is some good, I mean, there were a few judges put up who believed some crazy stuff. Some of whom were stopped.

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    13. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      They can also prevent something the other party wants to do - like the annual budget or something. When they do that - they can slip in their own stuff.

      To be honest, the Federal government is at its best when it (can do) does the least.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    14. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      Which is why just stalling up one house in congress every now and then isn't enough. That's not going to grind anything to a halt. That's just a bit of tar on the road. Saying that having a minority in the Senate is still enough power to stop the government from passing laws giving the lumber companies public trees (Healthy Forests) or reducing air quality standards (Clear Skies) is patently untrue.

      You need not quote Thoreau at me. Given a house in congress and a president or so, then things will stop sliding in any particular direction

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    15. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      I didn't specifically or intentionally quote Thoreau - I do find it odd that I share the same point of view though.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    16. Re:Oh no neither party is helping by Izago909 · · Score: 1
      But can you imagine getting 250 million people to vote on the budget? With proper information sent out to everyone, it could be done. How about something like Sarbanes-Oxley (corporate governance) or Gramm-Leach-Bliley (banking privacy)? Could you inform enough people of the issues to get a good vote on it?
      To be fair, I doubt most politicians know about those either. Many have admitted that they don't usually read what they sign. Anyway, most votes aer bought and traded. Most votes for bills are recieved because people offer to sign bill A if the other person signs bill B.
  9. Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by stratjakt · · Score: 0, Troll

    Thats not an article or a submission, thats a two sentence observation.

    michael is so friggin transparent you hardly know when he's here, (except for dopey stuff like this)

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by Bill_Royle · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed. Twice today we've had whining that draws directly from the Kerry camp:

      1. It's a bad economy, and things are getting worse.
      2. Google's evil, because searching for John Kerry in the news section shows a lot of negative articles.

      First off, the economy isn't doing badly - I'm right here in the valley, and things are picking up quite nicely. Is it at dotcom levels? No - and that's ok too. After all, the dotcom era was essentially a lot of people spending money while providing no real service or product. Sooner or later, the economy pays the price for that kind of crap.

      Second, Kerry's getting more negative articles written about him because his campaign is virtually tripping over itself to incur more PR drubbings. The race was Kerry's to lose, and he's well on his way if they don't get it together.

      One way or the other, it's a joke to try to disguise this as some sort of outsourcing article... try attaching an example to your editorial commentary.

    2. Re:Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by Kpau · · Score: 1

      "First off, the economy isn't doing badly - I'm right here in the valley, and things are picking up quite nicely. " I'm so glad your provincial clue holds true for the whole country... sorry, try again. If we're going to compete with the global market...then the housing industry is going to have to figure out how to sell us decent housing for less than $10,000, the auto industry is going to have to create cars for less than $10,000... and the government is going to have find something other than personal income tax to gather money with because they are not taxing the wealth transfer in the top 1% and the rest of us are going to only be making $20,000/yr if we're lucky... if we're going to compete globally.

    3. Re:Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      Given a bad enough recession, the housing bubble will burst and your $200K house will be worth $10K.

      Problem solved.

      By the way - it's the same for farmers. In Iowa, they're paying $3k/acre for good corn land and competing against equally good land in Argentina that's worth something along the lines of a nickle an acre. Makes things tough.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    4. Re:Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by Bill_Royle · · Score: 1

      The housing industry is going to have to figure out how to sell housing for less than $10k?

      No - you're going to have to figure out a way to make enough money to pay for a house under current market conditions. Or, if you're confident that it'll happen, wait until the housing market tanks and buy when it falls that low. That goes for cars as well.

      Your expectations on market pricing just aren't thought out - after all, what happens to people that bought for $100k? They're supposed to get behind a crappy idea like shoving prices down?

      Those same people are the ones creating jobs, and are the same people working beside you. Do you want to explain to them why it's rational that the money they put in should be washed away just so you can have a house?

      I'm not a homeowner yet, and have been busting ass to get a mortgage (as you may have as well.) I completely sympathize with you when it comes to home prices - trust me - like I said, I live in the valley where prices *to start* are around $450k.

      I want prices down as much as you. At the same time, I also don't think that my happiness in owning a home should be derived by tanking someone else's investment.

      As well, if you think that a solution like the one you offered will offset any perceived recession, keep in mind that the equity lost by existing homeowners would destroy not their lives, but also the financial institutions which mortgaged them - and it would create an instant drain on social services.

    5. Re:Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by Kpau · · Score: 1

      You missed my point... if all your customers make less than $10K.... all those lovely $450K homes will sit unused. MORE likely... the housing industry will shrink and collapse because they won't be able to adjust to their customer's "new leaner lifestyle". The corporations engaged in destroying the middle class are indirectly going to destroy the housing industry... Of course, if you notice housing developers (like car manufacturers) prefer building a smaller number of high end units --- apparently better profit. Hence the neverending pleas for "affordable housing".

    6. Re:Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by Kpau · · Score: 1

      My $10K number was just a grab at our competitor's average salary in India --- THEY don't have to pay so much for transportation/housing, its all scaled down to fit the economy. So if we're going to be "global" (and not wait for India's average cost of living to grow as big as ours) -- we're going to have to figure out how a $10K/yr salary for engineer doesn't mean he lives under a bridge. Besides, we can't ALL flip fries... someone has to be the engineer.

    7. Re:Neither candidate is dancing the hoochie coo by Bill_Royle · · Score: 1

      I understand what you mean. If a US worker is paid $50 an hour and an Indian worker is paid $5 for the same task, the US will lose jobs.

      That's partially true. But keep in mind that those jobs only exist as long as we can pay for them. If we were only making $10k a year, I doubt that we'd be buying quite as many things - things that countries like India support. As a result, their industry would shrink.

      That's not to say that I like outsourcing - but I also don't believe that we'll ever have a "global" economy. There are so many different factors that go into it - geography, weather, resources, political stability. Thus, while you may end up with some Balkanized economies (like the EU), I don't think you'll ever see a global standard.

      As for the fry-flipping, someone does have to be the engineer... have you tasted fries at McDonald's? They could use a good engineering of that cooking process.

  10. ohh no... more complaining..more gov.. more probs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    People lose their jobs because they are not productive enough to keep them. Don't blame the hand that feeds you(Capitalism), blame the educational system that shields us from some real learning until we are out of college. Of course we are not productive.. most of us destroy our abilities to think straight due to high school and college education. Our generation is the one that is going to have to suffer... but lets get it over with, take the paycut, work for less, but start dismantling the cancer(gov edu,gov regulation) People... don't whine, learn www.mises.org

  11. poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by auzy · · Score: 0, Troll

    I dont think a story like this really belongs on slashdot to be honest, especially not the front page, and is a better choice for other sites. The reason I feel this is because a large percentage of readers are not American, and articles like this inevitably result in 50% of the forum threads being flamebait because of feelings towards the political parties at the moment.

    The story itself is just a massive advertisement to vote against Bush too.

    At least, thats just my personal opinion. Either way, I know I wont be trying to moderate anyone in this thread, because every second post will look like trolling or flamebait depending on the perspective of the reader.


    Anyone else agree?

    1. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by killjoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "The story itself is just a massive advertisement to vote against Bush too."

      Why? According to Bush the economy is doing great. If Bush is good for jobs then this thread may be an advertisement for voting for bush. It's only anti bush if Bush is horrible for jobs in the country.

      " I know I wont be trying to moderate anyone in this thread, because every second post will look like trolling or flamebait depending on the perspective of the reader."

      I have to agree with you there. I have never seen our country divided so much. The people who relish driving wedges to set the country apart have been very successful. I don't know what it would take to get the country back together again. Maybe if we had a president that was a "uniter not a divider" things would be different.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    2. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What matters. Good ? Bad ? Simply post.

      Advertisement. ( Bush/Kerry )Whigs. Simply post.

      Low rung on the ladder. Out of moderation points.

      These are not questions. Simply post.

      Slashdot. And. A fire-hydrant. A simple post.
      Psssst. Social Engineering.

    3. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one forced you to read this thread. This is an American site with American news. If you want some other kinds of news, submit an article.

    4. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by Goosey · · Score: 1

      agreed. Poor choice of a 'story'

      --
      --- "End Of Line" - MCP
    5. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by auzy · · Score: 1

      Umm, how could this post be considered to be trolling?

    6. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by skids · · Score: 3, Interesting

      First off, if you read the /. FAQ, you will notice that /. is primarily an American website intended to entertain a mostly American audience. They acknowlege this, so that is not grounds for complaint.

      Secondly, the topic of jobs is on the mind of a very large number of people among the /. audience right now, and not to give credit where none is due but articles that get more into depth about how to view the various available statistics are very interesting to thoughtful people who want to consider the issue in-depth, if not specifically "geek" oriented.

      The article is pretty iffy though. To start, while it is true that the unemployment rate does underestimate the severity of the problem in times like these when a lot of people give up aggressively looking for work tactically or out of desperation, it is not simply based on who draws unemployment checks, but rather on an ongoing survey process. Not getting this fact straight was one of the first indications that this article was not going to be completely accurate.

      As you go through the article, and consider each of the points, you can see that the author is indeed excercising signifigant bias -- not as a partisan, just to support his own premise. It's like a badly researched college essay. Which is too bad because the case he was trying to make is correct -- he just stretches the facts too far.

      It's also a pity because, given the way the campaign has been "anti-intellectualized" by the whole non-issue of flip-flopping the article is a letdown for those of us wanting a breath of fresh air.

      As a fallback, if you want to look at the quality of the job market, ask yourself how your employers, or if jobless, your potential employers, are treating you... do you feel expendible or treasured? In a bad job market employers will try to get away with things that inconvenience or annoy their workforce. In a good job market, employers will be attentive to the needs of their employees, sometimes to the point of pampering, for fear that a competitor will steal them.

      In my personal opinion, you really don't have to know the national rate to decide who to vote for. Factor your own *personal* satisfaction level in with the other issues that concern you. If everyone does so, justice is delivered at the ballot box. Unfortunately most people obsess on a single "sticking point" wedge issue and ignore their own welfare. While social conscience in voting is good, only you can vote for your own needs and you should allow your own self interests at least 75% of your vote.

      (I'm finding it hard to moderate in political threads as well -- there are whole entire threads that go way off topic and with only five points it is impossible to cut them down. The only solution would be if everyone who cannot resist responding to an off topic comment would please try to follow their response up with some sort of comment that brings the topic back into the thread.)

      (I do think main page articles should appear in the Meta Moderating section so /. primary "columnists" can get a numerical feedback on the quality of their selection process.)

    7. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      If everyone does so, justice is delivered at the ballot box.

      This is assuming that at least one of the choices offered is one you approve of. If the system only results in choices you despise then you'll never get justice at the ballot box.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    8. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never seen our country divided so much.
      Maybe it's cuz there are more people waking up these days to the idea that there are some issues on which there is no acceptable middle ground, contrary to what uniters would have you believe.

      Example:
      Guy1: I say 1 + 1 = 2
      Guy2: I say 1 + 1 = 3
      Guy3: I'm a uniter. Let's say 1 + 1 = 2.5
      Guy2: OK.
      Guy1: No, that's still just as false.
      Guy2: Stop trying to drive wedges between people.
      Guy3: Yeah.

    9. Re:poor choice of story for slashdot frontpage by Kohath · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It would be interesting to hear what you think a "uniter" would be like.

      I don't see how that person could be a Democrat. For years Democrats have been telling blacks that whitey is out to get them. Since 1984, they've been telling old folks that, if they vote wrong, their Social Security will be taken away and they'll have to start eating dog food. They hate the rich, hate corporations, and look down on church-goers, SUV owners, and Walmart shoppers. They also want to take money from one group and give it to another group. Needless to say, that divides the 2 groups.

  12. Any bias? by professorfalcon · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Randall Burns ... recently helped create the Kucinich campaign's position paper on H-1b/L-1 visas.

    I guess he hates both Kerry and Bush equally. Should we call him non-partisan?

    1. Re:Any bias? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess he hates both Kerry and Bush equally. Should we call him non-partisan?

      I personally would call him non-contributing.

    2. Re:Any bias? by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1

      Umm Kucinich has put his support behind Kerry, dont really think he qualifies as no-partisan..

      --
    3. Re:Any bias? by glarbl_blarbl · · Score: 1

      ...RTFA, since the last two paragraphs are all about telling you that the only rational choice this year is Ralph Nader. I listened to Mr. Nader speak the other day on C-Span, and was greatly moved. I wish I could vote for him again, but the danger of 4 more years is too great. JGB

      --
      I use friend/foe to signal strong [dis]agreement instead of mod points. What else are f/f good for?
    4. Re:Any bias? by professorfalcon · · Score: 1

      Ralph Nader believes $10/hour is a living wage. Why don't we make it $100/hour?

    5. Re:Any bias? by Cryofan · · Score: 1

      I would agree to it. That would lessen the power that wealth has to control the rest of us, and that is what is important,

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    6. Re:Any bias? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a coincidence! I listened to Nader, and my bowels were moved! Damn, its a small world!

  13. Simple: make your own job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    For software geeks it's easy. Lose your job and compete with your former boss who's outsourced everything oversees an now has communication challenges with his devel team.

    Sure his company's engineers are cheaper, but your new company's CEO is cheaper.

    1. Re:Simple: make your own job. by Veridium · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yeah, but unless your former company is small, you can't compete with your former companies advertising budget. Co-ops. I wish I could convince everyone of this. This is the answer to taking back the industry from management to the geeks who know their stuff.

      Anyone who can do PC Repair work and is interested in finding out about a tech co-op that is forming to provide such work, please email me at veridium@linuxmail.org. Geography not important, as long as you're in the States.

      --
      Think for yourself, destroy your television.
    2. Re:Simple: make your own job. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Co-op? Sounds suspiciously like "union". Not that I'm opposed to the idea.

    3. Re:Simple: make your own job. by Veridium · · Score: 1

      NO. A co-op is not anything like a Union in the Teamsters sense of the word.

      A Co-op is a co-operative business where members are owners/operators. Unions are labor organizations that lobby the businesses their members work in for pay, benefits, working conditions, etc... Two different beasts.

      --
      Think for yourself, destroy your television.
    4. Re:Simple: make your own job. by Veridium · · Score: 1

      I realized I accidently cut out a part there during editing, not just PC repair work, but general office IT work as well. Sys admin type work. If you're a sysadmin out of work, maybe doing some contracts here or there, and want to learn more, email me. Veridium@linuxmail.org.

      We're still planning, but we are getting closer to launch.

      --
      Think for yourself, destroy your television.
    5. Re:Simple: make your own job. by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      I do that but don't need to be in that because I've got my own niche carved out quite nicely here.

      On a side note, coops are a good idea. I'm from a rural area and we have a rich tradition in that form of business - elevators, power companies and the like. Of course, in those kinds of coops, the customers own the business.

      I'm not sure how your "geography is not important" coop will do, but the telephone and power coops I've dealt with have been far easier (and more customer-centric) than your public companies (Alliant and US West).

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  14. Thats not the major problem by lowell · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem is that these men who represent our presidential canidates, are the best that the parties could come up with. Out of everyone in the whole country. These four pricks. Thats insane. If this is the best that the dems and republicans can come up with then we need some different parties invovled in politics.

    1. Re:Thats not the major problem by Vectorferret · · Score: 1

      Both parties can come up with better, they just didn't. (John McCain and Wesley Clark come to mind.)

    2. Re:Thats not the major problem by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Arrogant much, Lowell?

      --

      I write in my journal
    3. Re:Thats not the major problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually bill maher has a good point about that. Niether of the best canidate's are eligable to run do to insane limitations on who can run for president. the Governator vs the Sperminator would be the ultimate grudge match as far as rep vs dem goes.

    4. Re:Thats not the major problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Arrogant much, Lowell?

      And Twirlip continues a 400-post streak of only using insults that apply better to himself!

    5. Re:Thats not the major problem by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

      It has nothing to do with being the best and a lot to do with charisma.
      People like Bush try to cover the whole electorate from center right to far right. Unfortunately it's in human nature to prefer the shiny things.
      Why should the parties give their best man if he won't win?

      --
      The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
    6. Re:Thats not the major problem by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      Or a better question is... why is the population voting for these lamers?

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    7. Re:Thats not the major problem by Maul · · Score: 1

      Bingo!!

      --

      "You spoony bard!" -Tellah

    8. Re:Thats not the major problem by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      Ok I'll bite. The truely sad thing is that these are considered to be the most electable. Don't blame the parties. Its us. If we as a people indicated we wanted different sorts of people, then that difference would be reflected in what our politician's images looked like. So maybe what your saying is really, "This is what people will vote for? What I really need to do is move somewhere where the population has a clue."

  15. Free Trade by lisabeeren · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Welcome to the wonderful world of free trade. Not only does free trade totally destroy 3rd world countries, it harms 1st world one's too.

    1. Re:Free Trade by Asterisk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because we all now how much better off everyone is when they can only consume the products they've made with their own hands.

    2. Re:Free Trade by DrAegoon · · Score: 1
      "Free trade screws everyone." I like it.

      Really this shouldn't be a surprise. In a fair/close fight all parties take their blows. To support real free trade, you need to be one cold hearted bastard and supremely confident in the security of your job and the ability of your country to make a better product.

      Since most people/countries aren't in that position, we have pseudo-free trade: every country for itself, whoever fights dirtiest wins. How else do China and India maintain their positions?

      The US's problem is this: to be viable in the knock down, drag out that is foreign trade, you have to get down in the dirt with the rest of them. The tactics that will hurt countries like India and China aren't very desireable and will inevitably hurt the US economy in the short run since they all involve making the foreign labor sources (and labor in general) more expensive. It's not easy to explain to the voting public that such moves are for its own good.

    3. Re:Free Trade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what Henry Ford thought when he said that workers should be able to afford the fruits of their own labor!

      (and Marx, too)

      oh, you added the word, "only".

      BTW, trade regulations aren't black and white -- tariffs and other trade taxes intended to mostly equalize comparative advantage do help, and they also help reduce the distance products travel in the marketplace (reducing pollution).

      So you can't get your Sharp Zaurus as cheaply. Waaah, waaah. It's time to grow up from your neoliberal economic childhood.

    4. Re:Free Trade by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Free trade is fine, so long as you confine it to the 50 states and nations whose economies are closely tied with our own *and whose pay scales are close to our own*. Japan, Canada, South Korea, certain Western European nations (but not all); sure, free trade is the way to go.

      Free trade with nations which don't operate by the same principles and whose average pay scale is considerably lower than that of a worker in America is just fucking begging for a disaster. When it comes to places like India, China, et. al. we should raise trade barriers and tariffs like they were going out of style; make it so expensive for companies to 'outsource' (really hate that word; I much prefer 'rape and ream the American public for a quick buck') jobs that it becomes less expensive to just build the damned plant in the U.S. and hire American workers.

      Inflation will go up - so what? It won't rise nearly as fast as average wage rates, nor will it counter the huge additional currency turnover in the economy. Not to mention the demand produced by now-employed or better-employed workers spending their excess cash on items produced within the United States. It'll damage the economies of India/China/et. al., but again, why should I give a shit? That's a problem for the Indian/Chinese/etc. people and their governments; it isn't part of the mandate of my government, nor do I feel the need to compromise the economic security of my friends, family and neighbors for people half-way around the world.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    5. Re:Free Trade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mention pay scales -- that's only one item of comparative advantage. There are many others like environmental and labor law non-parity, but otherwise, excellent point, considering you're willing to apply the restrictive trade band-aid only to where there's significant comparative advantage.

      Most people also ignore the increased pollution due to shipping that comes with rampant international trade. Rather than restricting trade, I prefer green taxes, such as a gradual increase in fossil fuel taxes up to sustainability levels (8 2004 US dollars per gallon).

      Green taxes (pullution/use taxes), geonomic taxes (tax the land but not the improvements), and a minimum and maximum income with an otherwise liberal market would make most comparative advantages moot. Combine that with a tobin tax, elminate corporate personhood and limited liability corporations, campaign finance reform (eliminate corporate contributions and instead publicly finance elections), proportional representation and STV for congress (approval voting for the presidency), give back the air waves to the public, and some other Green reforms, and we might just be able to live in a sustainable world with a thriving democracy.

    6. Re:Free Trade by EyeSavant · · Score: 1

      Welcome to the wonderful world of free trade. Not only does free trade totally destroy 3rd world countries, it harms 1st world one's too.

      That is fundementally not true.

      For the 3rd world countries it is the ONLY way they are going to get out of povety. If everyone had in the 3rd world had a job paying US salarys there would be little povety there.

      To get a US style salary they have to sell their labour TOO the US. Free trade is the only way they can do that. At the moment they have to sell their goods and services to the only people who have money. Free trade is the only way they will be able to do that.

      Now the 1st world. We get our goods and services cheaper becuase of this. So if you have a job then you are better off.

      That is the catch though isn't it? I totally agree. But you have to find something you can do better than these places and then sell them your stuff. The simple fact is that there are no jobs for unskilled workers in the west any more. Deal with it. Get a skill they don't have in india or get ready to work for indian wages. The west does not have a divine right to the well paying jobs.

    7. Re:Free Trade by Toby+The+Economist · · Score: 1

      It is unlikely that an individual can hold an accurate and well-formed opinion upon a subject when they are ill-informed.

      I may be totally wrong, but I suspect you may be ill-informed about economics.

      A short but excellent book on the free market is "Capitalism and Freedom", by Milton Freedman.

      A much longer and wonderful book is the original work in the field, "An Inquiry Into The Wealth Of Nations", by Adam Smith.

      I would say this to you: if you knew of a person who was presenting a strong opinion on a subject and you were pretty sure they'd never read anything about the subject, would you take their opinion seriously? bear in mind everyone reading this thread will react pretty much in the same way.

      --
      Toby

    8. Re:Free Trade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The simple fact is that there are no jobs for unskilled workers in the west any more.

      So true. One major problem here is the great influx of unskilled labor to western Europe and the USA from the third world.

    9. Re:Free Trade by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      Milton Friedman and his buddies totally destroyed Latin America in the 90's. It's kind of funny how left-leaning politicians are running some of those countries (eg. Brazil) and they are doing a better job.

      Adam Smith is good in my books. He was revolutionary and knew what he was talking about... but most of what he says is different now. In any case, Adam Smith wasn't in favour of pure free trade. If I'm not mistaken, he was wary of businesspeople and was ok with govt intervention...

      In any case, what is happening has always happened and is inevitable. People may call it outsourcing, or globalization, or whatever, but it happened 50 years ago, 100 years ago, 200 years ago, and so forth.

      I think USA will "lose" no matter what--just like how Britain lost. I think what will happen is that USA will devalue its currency (when China removes its peg, US$ will automatically decline 20%+). When USA devalues its currency, it will be more competitive but until then there is going to be suffering everywhere.

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    10. Re:Free Trade by Toby+The+Economist · · Score: 1

      > Milton Friedman and his buddies totally
      > destroyed Latin America in the 90's.

      I doubt it, because I know what advice they'd give and I think, from what I've studied, that it's right, and I know what the Governments in question were like, and I think it's much more likely they baulked at meaningful change, because reform simply doesn't happen. The only time real change occurs is when an externally imposed crisis happens.

      Adam Smith would, I think, have been completely in favour of the free movment of labour between countries. He was completely in favour of free movement inside countries, since it increases competition for labour, and movement between countries acts in exactly the same way.

      Adam Smith wasn't against Government intervention *per se*, but he was against *improper* intervention, and the sad fact is Government almost always intervene improperly, because their self-interest differs from that of the economy, and because of incompetence.

      --
      Toby

    11. Re:Free Trade by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      " I doubt it, because I know what advice they'd give and I think, from what I've studied, that it's right, and I know what the Governments in question were like, and I think it's much more likely they baulked at meaningful change, because reform simply doesn't happen. The only time real change occurs is when an externally imposed crisis happens."

      Argentina used to be the poster boy of capitalism. They followed pretty much everything these guys said and it turned into a mess--so did every other country that followed them. That is not to say that these guys were fully responsible--they weren't. Clearly the insane levels of corruption didn't help, but nevertheless they deserve some blame. Here is an article that sort of talks about the events in question (although the article doesn't cover Latin America).

      " Adam Smith wasn't against Government intervention *per se*, but he was against *improper* intervention, and the sad fact is Government almost always intervene improperly, because their self-interest differs from that of the economy, and because of incompetence. "

      Adam Smith was also wary of the private interests of the businessowners/capitalists. He even mentions a scenario of businesspeople meeting in a smoky room to plot.

      You can cling to your Milton Friedmanesque views (I have no idea how much you support him) but all of you will end up collapsing at some point. I predict this will happen when USA officially declares bankrupt and Alan Greenspan retires...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
  16. Wow, we're fucked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    I am one of the folks who is unemployed but not counted. I get sporadic work, so I forego even bothering with unemployment during the gaps. This whole situation sucks, there's no way out, and I'm depressed.

    1. Re:Wow, we're fucked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am one of the folks who is employed, and counted. I keep a steady job, show up on time, and avoid being fired so I dont deal with that whole unemployment thing. I use to not have a job, but then I went out and got one. I realized feeling sorry for myself never solved anything, and was actually counter-productive to the problem at hand.

      I do not pity you. Stop being such a pussy.

    2. Re:Wow, we're fucked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      During the depression unemployed meant you couldn't get ANY job - not that you couldn't get a job you wanted.

  17. Where is American Society going by Epeeist · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is difficult to be sure from a distance (I live in the UK), but what seems to be happening in the States is a move to what I can best call a neo-feudal society.

    At the top end you have the rich and super-rich, with limited call on their wealth in terms of taxes.

    At the bottom end you seem to have people who have to hold down more than one job to make ends meet, have limited access to medical care and whose children receive only a poor quality education.

    This leaves your middle classes, who are being squeezed. If they don't work in a service that requires personal contact then they are in danger of being outsourced to cheaper locations elswhere on the globe.

    Barons, serfs and guilds is the way it appears to be. It isn't quite as extreme here in Britain, but we are going the same way.

    1. Re:Where is American Society going by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Please reconcile your comment with recent Department of Labor statistics which report that entrepreneurship is at an all-time high.

      When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. When all you want to talk about is classism, every society appears stratified.

      --

      I write in my journal
    2. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Shouldn't demand for jobs be at an all-time high, then, too?

      Shouldn't the economy be turning for the better, instead of consuming on borrowed money, already in debts up to your ears?

    3. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When you incorporate a lot of small companies to obfuscate a paper trail or for tax purposes, many of which are in the Cayman islands, it looks higher.

    4. Re:Where is American Society going by Epeeist · · Score: 1

      > Please reconcile your comment with recent Department of Labor statistics which report that entrepreneurship is at an all-time high.

      You can argue this multiple ways. It may show the American spirit of individualism, there again it may be that the only respite of people who can't get a job is to start their own company.

      Here in the UK many single person companies are contractors plying for hire as programmers, project managers and the like. For some of them this is what they want to do, for others it is the only way of getting employment. Large companies are not interested in taking on permanent staff, they prefer to take on contractors and dump them or send their work offshore when times get hard.

    5. Re:Where is American Society going by shirai · · Score: 0

      At the top end you have the rich and super-rich, with limited call on their wealth in terms of taxes.


      Comments like this piss me off. Even with identical tax rates, a person who makes 100x as much as you pay 100x as many taxes. That means they pay your taxes and the taxes for 99 people just like you.

      But not only that, rich people get taxed at a higher *rate* as well which means they usually pay more than 100x as many taxes as you do.

      But most wealthy people recognize that paying a higher rate is part of the price you pay for the opportunities that a society based on capitalism offers and most don't complain because of the opportunities it has offered them. But what they have a right to be teed off at is people who complain that rich people are somehow slackers in what they give back to society.

      Hello. Rich people give the MOST to society (economically anyways) per capita. We want more rich people, not less and suggesting they have a "limited call on their wealth" is not just uninformative and uninsightful, it is downright insulting.
      --
      Sunny

      Be my Friend

    6. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe entrepreneurship is at an all-time high because people are unable to find jobs paying a living wage and open sideline businesses to make up the difference.

    7. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hello. Rich people give the MOST to society (economically anyways) per capita.

      This is stupid. They are also the people who TAKE the MOST from society (economically anyways) per capita. If they would do that benevolently, they wouldn't be a problem, but then they wouldn't be rich, which shows how stupid this argument is.

    8. Re:Where is American Society going by jsebrech · · Score: 1

      America currently has a regressive tax rate at the top end. The richer you are the smaller the percentage of your income you pay, mostly due to extremely low dividends and capital gains taxes. Most of the flat tax rate proposals aim to do away with dividends and capital gains taxes entirely, which would make the rich essentially untaxable (since they make their money through investment, not labor), and thus institute a completely regressive taxation system. The measures to eradicate progressive taxation are slowly shifting the tax burden. The bush tax cuts were a large instrument in this.

      Money has a natural tendency to pool because rich people can invest their money instead of having to spend it. You need a progressive taxation system to ensure the gap between rich and poor doesn't grow steadily.

      Look up the evolution of the GINI index, which represents income inequality. America has one of the highest gaps between rich and poor in the world, on the level of a third world nation, and almost every year it grows wider.

      Now, if the poor had a minimum quality of life, this wouldn't be a problem, but the figures are clear that the poor in the US don't have access to basic human rights like healthcare and education anymore.

      So, I say, let the rich be rich, as long as they pay enough taxes to ensure everyone who is willing to work has a minimum quality of life. If you're holding down a job, or trying to get one, you should be able to get affordable healthcare and send your kids to a decent college.

    9. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Even with identical tax rates, a person who makes 100x as much as you pay 100x as many taxes."

      If you had a flat tax with no minumums and no deductions whatsoever then this would be true.

      "But not only that, rich people get taxed at a higher *rate* as well which means they usually pay more than 100x as many taxes as you do."

      If there were no minumums and no deductions whatsoever then this would be true.

      Please note, these would only be true if this was the only tax or other revenue raised by the government. (Extracted from the population.)

      Reality, with deductions and other "loopholes" I seriously doubt the rich pay a larger percentage of taxes. You may however have fallen prey to what I think is one of the key tricks of the rich in this game:

      The rich "hide" and convince the poor that the middle class or at least the upper middle class are the rich. They then keep the poor happy (not exactly happy, but perhaps mollified) by letting them pass laws to stick it to the rich and make them pay their share.

      The concentration of wealth at the top is a problem and needs to be solved. I am not one who believes in the systematic, regular and ongoing re-distribution of wealth by the government.Never the less, the situation is a problem and it needs to be solved somehow before we find ourselves having to live through (live if we are lucky) another revolution.

      How about a flat tax with no minimums and no deductions.

      How about municipalities are the only ones who can tax individuals. Counties are the only ones who can tax municipalities. States the only ones who can tax counties. The federal government taxes the states. In each case a flat tax with no minumums (exemptions) and no deductions.

      Also, no other monies may be extracted by the government or by means of laws. That's all they get.

      Hey, and how about "no taxation without representation?" If they want to tax you, they have to give you the vote. (This would mean only individuals would pay taxes or we would have to let corporations vote?)

      Do any of these ideas make sense, or contain a seed of sense. (Not that they are likely to be implemented.

      A Nony Mouse

    10. Re:Where is American Society going by orasio · · Score: 1

      "Hello. Rich people give the MOST to society (economically anyways) per capita. We want more rich people, not less and suggesting they have a "limited call on their wealth" is not just uninformative and uninsightful, it is downright insulting."

      Rich people give the most back to society, per capita. They give the LEAST to society, per unit of capital. Of course, come to think of it, in a society where you have rich and poor people, it isn't about social justice, but about rentability. So, the per-capita numbers are useless. Rich people are a bad place for society to put their money, they give less rentability. From a capitalistic point of view, everything else equal, it would make economic sense to take money from the rich, and give it to the poor, because the give more rentability, or increase the rentability of rich people, taxing them much more, like some north european countries do.

    11. Re:Where is American Society going by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      You can argue this multiple ways. It may show the American spirit of individualism, there again it may be that the only respite of people who can't get a job is to start their own company.

      And there's nothing wrong with that. The guy that started FedEx submitted that idea as his MBA thesis and flunked it - was told that it was a silly idea. How do you think he would have done had he tried to shop that idea to whatever existing shipping outfits there were at the time? No better

      I've got great respect for those who will go out on their own and start their own company. That is a difficult thing to do, but the rewards can be great.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    12. Re:Where is American Society going by ozborn · · Score: 1

      100 years ago when the wife took in some extra laundry to help pay the bills after her husband lost his job they were a family fallen on hard times. Now she is an "entrepreneur". So entrepreneurship isn't neccesarily the sign of a growing or shrinking economy.

      BTW the US really is a grossly unequal society (especially by the standards of the developed world) as demonstrated by either Forbes magazine richest 100 Americans or the Gini coeffecient, take your pick. It is not a matter of outlook and I for the record certainly do not think I can solve my computer problems when I hold a hammer in my hand!

    13. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are such a Republican fool! I'm not sure why all of you see starting a business as the pinnacle of success. Starting a business doesn't mean much when the majority of them fail, and others get gobbled up by corporations who lay off the underlings and keep the execs.

    14. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As you all say in the UK, "spot on". I have decided to go after "Baron" and set up my immediate descendants as "Viscounts"; hopefully my far future descendants may possibly be "Earls".

      By the way - you in the UK are going to follow the same path.

    15. Re:Where is American Society going by torinth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Big deal. People lose their jobs and think they can start a little business until they find another. But almost all entrepreneurial ventures fail.

      The real statistic you want to consider is the poverty rate. The percentage of people who don't earn enough to make ends meet. The percentage of people who need to decide whether to eat or buy medical care. The percentage of people who need two work two 30hr/wk jobs with no benefits because low-wage employers refuse to hire one full-timer with expensive benefits when they can hire two part-timers for the same work.

      The poverty rate is higher in the United States than in any other first-world nation. When you look at the child poverty rate, which measures the percentage of children who live in poverty, the difference between the United States and other first-world nations is even greater.

      So obviously there's a problem in the American model somewhere. We can't just rest on our heels and pretend that current market regulations, taxes, and social programs are working according to plan. They aren't, and they haven't been for quite a long time.

      We need someone with the vision to either try something innovative and new or someone who can learn from the nations that have had more success. While neither presidential candidate is spectacular in this regard, one certainly stands out in comparison.

    16. Re:Where is American Society going by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 0

      The poverty rate is higher in the United States than in any other first-world nation.

      That's because our definition of "poor" is higher than any other "first-world" nation. (Given that there is no longer any "second world," the whole "first," "second," "third world" thing is antiquated and kinda silly, in my opinion.)

      Did you know that 71% of America's poor have cable or satellite TV?

      We can't just rest on our heels and pretend that current market regulations, taxes, and social programs are working according to plan.

      Depends on your definition of "plan." If your idea of "plan" is "widespread prosperity," then yeah, we're right on plan. If your idea of "plan" is "collectivist utopia," you're going to be disappointed.

      We need someone with the vision to either try something innovative and new or someone who can learn from the nations that have had more success.

      Actually, what we need is somebody with the courage to say that equality of opportunity is more important than equality of outcome.

      Hey, whaddya know. That's exactly what we've got. And according to the polls, that's exactly what we're going to have through January of 2009.

      --

      I write in my journal
    17. Re:Where is American Society going by torinth · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The comparison has nothing to do with a disparity between what "we" call poor and what "industrialized" nations call poor.

      Using a single and comparable measure of poverty, the United States ranks behind every single European nation. The only traditionally industrialized nation with a higher poverty rate than the United States is Russia.

      Now, do you think poverty--as a condition of living--impacts national productivity? Do you think someone who can't pay their current bills, let alone afford skills training, while working diligently 80 hours per week, and never seeing their children, impact the economy positively or negatively?

      If you're proud of the national results of the American economy, that's great. I encourage you to be proud of it. The economic figures are wonderful, and for that very large majority that can afford the benefits, we may offer one of the best standards of living.

      But just imagine how much better it would be if we could drop the poverty rate by 10% more Americans, so that they can concentrate on their jobs and be more productive?

      Reducing poverty is about equality of opportunity. Poverty is something that often strikes people by chance and circumstance, not personal decision, but once you've fallen into it, it's incredibly difficult to pull yourself out. Poverty is not the same thing as not having enough money for all the things you want, or all the things other people have. Poverty is when you don't have sufficient access to the very minimal resources you and your family need to survive--food, housing, health care, child care.

      Imagine being impoverished. The first thing you're probably going to imagine is living in some trailer with a car up on block, eating cheap fatty ground beef. But you'd be wrong. That's not poverty. That's just not doing as well as a lot of people.

      If you really want to understand it, think about being a married 40-something, with a few kids, while the industry you were trained for evaporates and goes overseas. Your bills don't stop just because you got laid off, and you know that because this episode of outsourcing is industry-wide, you can't get another job in your field of skill/expertise.

      In the interest of paying the bills, you get a couple part-time jobs doing unskilled work. Your partner, who used to be able to stay at home with the kids, does the same. You start paying out-of-pocket for day-care while you and your partner are each working 60 or more hours per week in dumb jobs that your far over-qualified for. You start paying out-of-pocket for health-care, because not a single one of the employers between you and your wife offers benefits to part-timers.

      You and your partner think about taking a skills-training class, to prepare you for a new industry, but realize that there's just no way to fit it into your schedule let alone pay for it.

      So in the course of a year, you've now gone from:

      *being a successful, but not rich, skilled-worker living contendly in a single-income family, whose family was taken care of.

      to:

      *being someone who works 60 hours per week in embarrassing jobs; who never sees your partner, who also works 60 hours per week; who barely gets to see, let alone supervise your kids; who has neither the free time or needed capital to change direction;

      At the same time your monthly bills went up, and you and your partner combined still can't seem to cover them all. So you constantly face decisions between day-care and leaving the kids home alone, getting medical treatment and waiting out some undiagnosed symptom, buying food and paying rent, losing the car and buying your kid a single birthday gift, moving your whole family in with your parents and maintaining your dignity.

      That's poverty. That's the economic and psychological burden that

    18. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Using a single and comparable measure of poverty, the United States ranks behind every single European nation.

      Dude, did you fail to notice the pattern?

      New York State, at 26.3 percent, ranks last in the industrialized world - behind Italy at 19.3 percent, the closest OECD (Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) nation. California is not far behind with 25.7 percent, and in President Bush's home state of Texas, 20.7 percent of the children live in poverty.

      Hmmmm...whatever could these states have in common?

      At the other end of the U.S. spectrum, North and South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas were the top-ranked U.S. states - with 13 percent or lower child poverty.

      You figure it out.

      When you import large numbers of third-world immigrants, you're going to have poverty.

      The lesson is to listen to the American people and cut immigration.
    19. Re:Where is American Society going by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please reconcile your comment with recent Department of Labor statistics which report that entrepreneurship is at an all-time high.

      Selling crap on eBay is now "entrepreneurship"?

  18. No one wants the job by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you are good enough to do the job of Prez, you are also likely to be sane enough to not want the job.

    1. Re:No one wants the job by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good Point. Also, the parties aren't coming up with the best candidates. They're placing their bets on the horse that they think can win. You might have some super intelligent guy with 5 different ph.d.s but who doesn't look presidential or can't give a speech or the very fact that he has so much advanced education would make him seem out of touch with Joe voter. So the parties pass him up for some guy that is kind of good looking, well connected, charismatic, and who served in some way in the armed services. Because that person is more likely to provide good 10 sec sound bytes on TV.

      Heck even people I know who hate Bush as a president would still like to have a beer with him at a bar. If you're some dude in middle America who cares more about football than who the leader of Pakistan is, who would you vote for?

      So are the candidates the best America can produce? No. They're just some guys that each party thinks has a chance at beating the other party's candidate.

    2. Re:No one wants the job by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Perhaps instead of voting for President and the Congress we should draw for them randomly, like jury duty. Although we'd have to make it considerably harder to get out of than jury duty is.

      I mean, really - could it possibly be any worse than the system we have now? Especially since the percentage of Americans who have a criminal record is considerably lower than the percentage of Congressmen who have criminal records? Or bankruptcies, for that matter?

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:No one wants the job by polecat_redux · · Score: 1

      If you're some dude in middle America who cares more about football than who the leader of Pakistan is, who would you vote for?

      Isn't that why we have the electoral college? From what I understand, the "Founding Fathers" didn't believe that Joe Voter could be trusted to make an educated decision in regard to a presidential election, so they effectively siezed some control from the average voter and placed it in the hands of a select few. IMO, the system is flawed, but so is any system that relies on the common man.

      Not until people get over themselves and stop operating with a personally-biased agenda do I think any system, political or economical will really "work". Hell, communism would work just fine if people could be trusted to pull their own weight despite the lack of potential personal advantage. Furthermore, I believe that one of the "flaws" of capitalism is that it promotes greed and elitism. No one man should deserve to have a personal fortune of $48B. Such a man is no better a human being than anyone else, yet he is allowed to attain and horde riches that could help millions of people. Yeah, democracy has its advantages, but it can nonetheless become rather depraved.

    4. Re:No one wants the job by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      No one man should deserve to have a personal fortune of $48B. Such a man is no better a human being than anyone else, yet he is allowed to attain and horde riches that could help millions of people.

      If he earned it honestly then why shouldn't he get to keep what he's made? What gives you the right to take it from him like a common thief?

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    5. Re:No one wants the job by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      I don't think he--or let's say me--want to take away that wealth. The point isn't that the billionaire is evil or bad or anything like that; instead, the point is that a society where such a huge discrepancy in wealth can materialize is an undesirable one.

      I certainly don't think anyone should go and take the billionaire's money, any more than I should take yours. However, a society where 10% of the wealthy control 70%+ of the total wealth is undesirable--and severely FLAWED!

      In essence, the production or output or wealth generated by the masses accrues to a small percentage of the people. That is not a good way to build society...

      Very few realize that the growing discrepancy in wealth is one of the biggest problems facing USA. It is getting so bad that you might see class wars happening in the not-too-distant future. This is like a forgotten demon....

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    6. Re:No one wants the job by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      " Perhaps instead of voting for President and the Congress we should draw for them randomly, like jury duty. Although we'd have to make it considerably harder to get out of than jury duty is."

      What you describe is pure democracy. A few civilizations in the past have had dabbled with such systems. If I'm not mistaken, Athens had a govt where some random guy was elected to senate (or something like that). It wasn't truly egalitarian or supported equality since some people were excluded (like slaves) but it was still interesting.

      Pure democracy calls for the government to be representative of the population, and the only way for that to happen is to either: (i) elect people randomly, or (ii) randomly allocate people fitting population characteristics by using a quota system (eg. 52% of politicians women; 15%(?) black; 40% old; 25%(?) single; 60%(?) married with 2 kids; etc). The first one (random picking) is the simplest and most elegant (quota systems are very complicated and cause all sorts of problems).

      The present system is nowhere near pure democracy because the people who are elected are not generally representative of the population. For example, you pretty much need to be a millionaire to be the US president (or raise around $1 million on your own). This means most US presidents are wealthy (I can't think of anyone who was not a millionarie in the last 20 years). Another example is the fact that people who have connections/contacts have a greater chance of gaining power than someone off the street. A pure democratic system tries to be representative of the population... Unfortunately, pure democracy is thought to be impossible to implement now. Maybe in 200 or 300 years but now it is beyond the understanding of humans. Humans need to be far more advanced (socially) for it to have any chance...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    7. Re:No one wants the job by polecat_redux · · Score: 1

      Thank you for elaborating on my original post. That was exactly my point.

  19. Looks different from where I sit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    His stated policies, among other things, are to enforce the tax laws already on the books. Something the Clinton administration was lax in, and something the Bush administration simply doesn't do, unless you're relatively poor. Close existing legal tax loopholes, and benefits for companies that outsource. As well as provide tax incentives for companies that don't. Which is of course just what he claims, but 180 degrees from what the current administration does, and admittedly plans to continue doing. He also planned to be more aggressive, and possibly heavy handed in dealing with trade organizations when it comes to protecting US interests. He also supports enforcement of current immigration laws, and proper funding for border patrols and NIS. (Which Bush won't do since a "let 'em run free" policy puts a downward pressure on what services cost.)

    The trade deficit, and outsourcing aren't about cheaper labor, their about unequal access to capital. People are forced to pool and discount their capital which no longer is used to build infrastructure in their local communities or the larger community of the whole of the US. But rather it's hemoraged out to other locales where a quicker short term gain is percieved, rampant corruption is considered a cost of doing business, and it's hard to blame people in other legal jurisdictions. We in America have the most capital and have to pay a premium for access to it. Thanks to the 80's the 'B' in MBA stands for "Bullshit".

    If Kerry followed his plan up with a pledge to subsidize lighting up a bunch of huge walk away nuclear reactors, I'd say his was the beginings of a perfect economic policy. Bush, yeah, that's not going to happen.

  20. Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Data just came out showing that Cleveland, Ohio has the largest unemployment rate of any major city in the US. Cincinnati is on the brink of (and has fallen into) racial and class conflict. The whole state is an unbelieveable mess and it appears that even with an inept Republican govenor that Ohio will vote Republican and give the rich and corporations more and more tax cuts which they, in turn, will use to buy more foreign products and fund more outsourcing projects.

    Distribution of wealth is an nasty necessity that is created by the greed in all of us (once I hit the million dollar threshold I will give to the less fortunate - then it's once I become one of the 331 billionaires in the US -- well you get the drift...). Anyway, the Republicans have never and will never talk about redistribution of wealth. Flat taxes and sales taxes are rigged against the poor, but people seem to think they are a great idea because of conservative thinktank spin.

    The Democrats may have become as much of the problem as the Republicans, but at least they are still talking about these issues. I can't for the life of me undersand why a the population of a state on the brink of disaster would vote for a party that still talks about supply side economics and trickle down. I shake my head and then realize that to be a politician these days you have to be rich already -- it's no wonder that we are where we are.

    There will never be another farmer from Illinois in the Whitehouse, and I just don't see any solutions on the horizon...

    1. Re:Ohio is a mess... by killjoe · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There was a study done recently that showed the people in the worst economic conditions tended to vote republican even though the bad economic conditions were caused by republicans. So places like Montana which have been controlled by republicans for over a decade and still have the some of the lowest wages and worst economies continue to vote for republicans overwhelminly.

      The author thought that it was due to cultural issues. I guess if somebody is doing bad you can always blame the homosexuals and the fornicators.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    2. Re:Ohio is a mess... by myowntrueself · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Data just came out showing that Cleveland, Ohio has the largest unemployment rate of any major city in the US. Cincinnati is on the brink of (and has fallen into) racial and class conflict."

      Thats an interesting observation.

      European nations can probably tolerate a much higher unemployment level before getting this sort of social unrest; in the US the unemployed have so much less to lose by being, uh, antisocial in one way or another.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    3. Re:Ohio is a mess... by blackcoot · · Score: 1

      i think you should be thanking the homosexuals and all the other people who pay property taxes but never have children to receive the benefits of the education systems that those taxes go to pay for. ditto the fornicators --- the porno business is *HUGE* and gets taxed mercilessly. if anything, i think you'd want to encourage more of these groups ;-)

    4. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Anyway, the Republicans have never and will never talk about redistribution of wealth.

      That's not true. We Republicans talk about it whenever the subject comes up. We say that the redistribution of wealth by the state is (a) immoral and (b) unconstitutional. The conversation rarely goes beyond that, granted.

      Cleveland is a mess because its economy is shot. For more than twenty years the city has had a distinctly business-unfriendly fiscal plan, and consequently has failed to attract any significant outside investment. It's a slippery slope, because a city that's seen as bad for business is going to have a hard time correcting that image. But it's not impossible. It just take sound fiscal planning.

      The seizure of private property by the state is not the answer. Not only is it not the answer, it's not even an answer. It's immoral and wrong, before you even get into a discussion about whether it's good or bad.

      Flat taxes and sales taxes are rigged against the poor

      Sales taxes do, in fact, hurt the poor more than the wealthy, because poor people spend a bigger fraction of their income than wealthy people spend. This is offset to an extent by exemptions. Proposals to replace the federal income tax with a national sales tax--proposals which have never gone anywhere--have traditionally included a fixed credit that effectively establishes a minimum taxable income level.

      Flat taxes, of course, are not "rigged against the poor" at all. All citizens pay precisely the same fraction of their income in taxes. The only way you can come to the conclusion that they're rigged is if you start with the assumption that the wealthy should pay a bigger percentage, which is circular reasoning at its finest.

      I can't for the life of me undersand why a the population of a state on the brink of disaster would vote for a party that still talks about supply side economics and trickle down.

      'Cause it works? Nice job with the "brink of disaster" line, though. That's a play right out of Terry McAuliffe's book. Good job.

      --

      I write in my journal
    5. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the case of Cincinnati, I'm not convinced that economics are the main issue.

      Born Margaret Unnewehr, she was the daugher of a Cincinnati, Ohio native who grew wealthy in the lumber business. She married Charles Schott, a member of a wealthy Cincinnati family, in 1952, and inherited his automobile dealerships and interests in other industries, when he died of a heart attack in 1968.

      In 1981, Schott first purchased a stake in the Cincinnati Reds. On December 21, 1984, Marge Schott purchased controlling interest for a reported $11 million and, making her a general partner and majority owner in the Reds organization and in 1985, she was named President and CEO of the club. She quickly became one of baseball's most publicly visible and outspoken owners.

      In 1992, Schott became embroiled in controversy after allegedly calling former Reds Eric Davis and Dave Parker, "million-dollar niggers." It was also alleged that Schott had a swastika armband at home. On November 14, Schott issued a statement saying that she was "not a racist." On November 29, she was quoted in the New York Times as saying that Adolf Hitler was initially good for Germany and that she didn't understand why the slur "Jap" was offensive. Major League Baseball appointed a committee to investigate Schott.

      On February 3, 1993, Marge Schott was fined US $25,000 and banned from day-to-day operations of the Reds for the year stemming from her use of racial and ethnic slurs. She returned to work on November 1.

      On May 18, 1994, Schott was again caught up in controversy saying that she didn't want her players to wear earrings saying that "only fruits wear earrings." On May 5, 1996, Schott again said that she thought Hitler "was good in the beginning, but went too far." In response, Major League Baseball again banned Schott from day-to-day operations through 1998.


      -- from Wikipedia's Marge Schott entry

    6. Re:Ohio is a mess... by WindBourne · · Score: 1
      Flat taxes and sales taxes are rigged against the poor, but people seem to think they are a great idea because of conservative thinktank spin.

      Sales tax would be a disaster esp. in light of the Internet.

      The flat tax is a totally different matter. The general idea is that there is a floor above which a person pays money at a certin rate at. So somebody who earns at povety rate would pay minimal to nada. Zip, zero, zilch. Why is that unfair to the poor. The money that is earned is taxed at a rate with no exceptions. Now, the real question is does this apply to earned income only? Or should it apply to gains as well?

      Assuming that flat tax is applied to gains, how is this unfair to poor who are paying little to nothing?

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    7. Re:Ohio is a mess... by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      receive the benefits of the education systems

      You mean that despite the fact that we're paying more per child (adjusted for inflation) in our schools than at any previous time in American history, our literacy rates (among other measures) have been steadily declining? That in fact, when this country rebelled in 1776 the average literacy rate was 98% despite having no forced schooling, and now, with this enormous forced schooling infrastructure we now have a literacy rate of around 68%?

      You mean *those* benefits?

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    8. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The wealthy consume far more in the way of government services. Poor people don't need a military to defend them for instance.

    9. Re:Ohio is a mess... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Flat taxes and sales taxes are rigged against the poor

      A sales tax is just plain evil, I'll grant you, but a flat tax doesn't unjustly burden the poor. Especially when you consider that most flat tax plans completely exempt people earning below a certain income level.

      If you had a 20% flat tax rate, then a person earning $30,000 a year would pay $6,000. A person earning $300,000 a year would pay $60,000. How, exactly, is the second guy getting a better deal than the first? I don't see it, and I suspect I'd have to be some pseudo-socialist yahoo looking for revenge against the rich 'cuz, like, I'm not one of them, to truly comprehend the logic in your statement.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    10. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The issue here is that all the Jesus freaks and fundies migrated to the middle of the country like Montana and Ohio. The Republicans have tricked them to thinking that they are on the Jesus freaks' side, and the Jesus freaks are so fucking stupid that they bought into it. They will vote Republican no matter what, because that's what the Republicans have fooled them into thinking God wants. Amazing!

      Case In Point. Real quotes from real fundies regarding what I just said. I feel sorry for how gullible they are.

    11. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Why is a sales tax "just plain evil"? Having the Left come down on Bush for making the merest suggestion that a federal sales tax should be investigated was the biggest piece of Democrat bullshit I'd seen in a long time. There are multiple ways to ensure that a sales tax is applied fairly, including providing an annual sales tax rebate each year or exempting any item considered to be necessities of life. Not only does a federal sales tax *greatly* reduce the paperwork burden on the government and the public, and not only does it close the countless loopholes present in the current nigh-undecipherable tax code, but it also encourages savings, investment, and charity by making all those things tax-deferred by nature. That's good for the economy, and what's good for the economy is good for the people.

    12. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, don't understand why a flat tax is evil and why we need redistribution of wealth (it's called social stability by the way)? Well, let's try this one more time...

      Flat tax of 10%

      Family 1 of with 1.3 kids with $30,000 income pays $3000. $27000 left for necessities.

      Family 2 of 1.3 kids with $300,000 income pays $30,000. $270,000 left.

      Hmmmm....

      Family 1 is lining up at the soup kitchen, Family 2 is buying Buffy a Mercedes for her high school graduation from the private prep school.

      The $3000 hit on Family 1 means eating or not eating. Not so with the trivial $30,000 hit on Family 2.

      Want to be a Banana Republic with the wealth in the hands of the "10" families - go right ahead amd create a flat tax - it'll help build that villa on the hill surrounded by high walls with crushed glass embedded in the concrete to help keep out the starving rubbish.

      Let them eat cake...

    13. Re:Ohio is a mess... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Take a look at the states with sales taxes. With just a few exceptions they also have income taxes, property taxes, and a whole host of 'administrative fees' which are somehow exempt from being called taxes. In most of these states the sales tax has steadily climbed over time, without a concurrent decrease in other forms of taxation.

      In nearly all of these cases the poorer you are, the harsher the burden of a sales tax. The sales tax you refer to doesn't exist in any state in the union. And there's no reason whatsoever to believe that a federal sales tax will be any different than your average state sales tax.

      And why should I approve of any plan which will *increase* my tax burden? Are you going to eliminate property and income taxes when you levy this sales tax? Or is it going to be in addition to other forms of taxation, as has been the case with state taxes? If so, do you honestly believe that Congress will, out of the goodness of its heart, balance these forms of taxation or adhere to any publicly proclaimed cap, barring an amendment to the Constitution?

      No thanks, I'll pass on the sales tax. Don't have one, and sure as hell don't want the fucking feds forcing one on me.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    14. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Preferred+Customer · · Score: 1

      Flat taxes, of course, are not "rigged against the poor" at all. All citizens pay precisely the same fraction of their income in taxes. The only way you can come to the conclusion that they're rigged is if you start with the assumption that the wealthy should pay a bigger percentage, which is circular reasoning at its finest.

      Ever heard of marginal utility?

      An additional dollar to someone making $25K is worth more in improving his living conditions than that same additional dollar to someone making $250K.

      In addition, since a large part of taxes go to the military who protect the wealth of those that have, shouldn't the wealthy pay a higher percentage for that?

      How about a progressive tax on wealth?

    15. Re:Ohio is a mess... by jsebrech · · Score: 1

      when this country rebelled in 1776 the average literacy rate was 98% despite having no forced schooling

      I believe that was the literacy rate among voters, not the overall literacy rate.

    16. Re:Ohio is a mess... by jsebrech · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Religion has always been used to subdue the lower social classes. A lot of religions glorify poverty and promise the poor that they will be rewarded for a life of misery in the afterlife. Organized christianity is especially guilty of this, with it teaching people from a young age to "accept god's plan" and not rebel against the system that gives them less opportunity in life than someone born in a rich family. Note that I'm not bashing christianity as a religion, which I think has very nice values (being nice to your neighbor, helping those in need, peace, love), but you need to make a clear distinction between the religion and the people and organizations who claim to represent it.

    17. Re:Ohio is a mess... by mjh · · Score: 1
      Anyway, the Republicans have never and will never talk about redistribution of wealth.

      Redistribution of wealth is the least effective mechanism for combating poverty. Robert Lucas put it this way:

      "...of the vast increase in the well-being of hundreds of millions of people that has occurred in the 200-year course of the industrial revolution to date, virtually none of it can be attributed to the direct redistribution of resources from rich to poor. The potential for improving the lives of poor people by finding different ways of distributing current production is nothing compared to the apparently limitless potential of increasing production."

      If you're interested in the plight of the poor, you should stop listening to those who would swindle you into believing that redistribution of wealth will work. You might need another metaphor

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    18. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Flat taxes and sales taxes are rigged against the poor..."

      Sales taxes may be but I don't think flat taxes are except as implemented with loopholes and other exemptions that make them non-flat flat taxes.

      See my post here: http://politics.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=12309 0&cid=10347915

      I would appreciate further discussion.

      A Nony Mouse

    19. Re:Ohio is a mess... by SofaMan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Flat taxes, of course, are not "rigged against the poor" at all. All citizens pay precisely the same fraction of their income in taxes.

      Flat taxes *are* rigged against the poor, since any given fixed percentage of a person's income in going to mean a lot more to a poor person than a rich one. Let's pretend the rate is 15% - A person who only earns $10,000 a year is going to be hurt a lot more losing $1500 a year, than some who earns $100,000 losing $15,000. The rich guy still has $85,000, the the poor guy now only has $8500.

      --

      SofaMan -- Occasionally Battling Evil With His Mighty Powers Of Indolence.

    20. Re:Ohio is a mess... by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      yeah, because I'm SURE all those slaves could read and write. Guess what, slaves made up much more than 2% of the population in 1776, and the slaves sure as hell were not literate. Unless you don't want to count slaves as people, in which case, you are a horrible human being. Thanks for arguing for public education, your ignorance of even the most rudimentary facts about our country's history does insurmountable good for the people you are trying to argue against. Keep up the good work!

    21. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Baldrson · · Score: 1
      We say that the redistribution of wealth by the state is (a) immoral and (b) unconstitutional.

      I call bullshit.

      The government protects legal rights. Wealth is a legal right. The cost of that protection is born by those who produce -- via taxes on income, capital gains, sales, value added, etc -- not by those who own the rights protected by the government.

      That's what is immoral.

      Redeploying ownership rights based on correction of this situation would radically change society for the better.

    22. Re:Ohio is a mess... by TykeClone · · Score: 1

      The flat portion of our tax system (FICA) IS at 15.3%. Those on the very low end do qualify for an "earned income credit" to get some of their social security taxes back, though.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    23. Re:Ohio is a mess... by ikeleib · · Score: 1

      Sales taxes do, in fact, hurt the poor more than the wealthy, because poor people spend a bigger fraction of their income than wealthy people spend....

      Flat taxes, of course, are not "rigged against the poor" at all. All citizens pay precisely the same fraction of their income in taxes. The only way you can come to the conclusion that they're rigged is if you start with the assumption that the wealthy should pay a bigger percentage, which is circular reasoning at its finest.

      Oddly, the same reason that a sales tax hurts the poor is the same reason that a flat tax does. The other side of poor people spend a larger percentage of their money, is that they have a lower percentage of disposable income. A flat tax takes more of this disposable income and therefore impacts poor people more than rich ones.

      Incidentally, the reality is, even after Bush's tax cuts, the wealthy pay the lion's share of US income taxes. The highest earning 20% of the population make 50% of the money. One can conclude that without a drastic cut-back in government spending, that the flat tax rate would be higher for most Americans than the rate they pay now.

      Oddly enough, taxes don't usually pull the wealthy down to being not wealthy. It usually has to do with market forces. The "income redistribution" in the US is not a major force. The rich continue to get richer. When you think of it, this makes perfect sense. If you take, on average, a person that has $100 to invest per month and then take another that has $1000 to invest each month, the person with $1000 is going to do better. Why? The person with $1000 has more types of investments to choose from and lower overheads.

    24. Re:Ohio is a mess... by lemur337 · · Score: 1
      There will never be another farmer from Illinois in the Whitehouse, and I just don't see any solutions on the horizon...


      www.just6dollars.org looks promising to me.
    25. Re:Ohio is a mess... by upsidedown_duck · · Score: 1

      I don't know anything about Montana, but it seems a lot of Republican support in the south-east is for religious and "states rights" types of reasons. I've heard people say that "it's good to have a president who prays" and that "Bush isn't a baby killer," for example. Actually, Kerry and Bush both argue in different ways for about the same amount of states rights and federal intervention--meaning people are not voting Republican or Democrat for political ideology but for their moral ideology (abortion issues, etc.). The reason the election in November will be 50/50 is that the moral issues have equally sound (and unsound) arguments on both sides, convincing equal amounts of people on both sides. Essentially, I wonder if the election is completely arbitrary to the point that it will again be decided by the margin of error as in 2000.

      --
      -- "Makes Little Debbie look like a pile of puke!" - Moe Szyslak
    26. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      One particular Congressman has been working for some time on a plan that would wholly replace the federal income tax with a federal sales tax. Not add it on, not sneak both into place at one time, but replace. He includes an annual rebate equal to the tax that would be paid on expenditures up to the poverty line. And you don't actually have to spend that much money to get the full rebate - everybody just gets the money in their pocket. (The amount is, I believe, dependent upon number of dependents, but that's the only factor.)

      I personally prefer a system where the necessities of life are exempted from the sales tax by category - food, clothing, utilities (gas, water, electricity, *not* phone or cable, hehe), public transportation, medical expenses, that sort of thing. Most (not all) states with sales tax have exemptions for certain items, especially groceries. But either way, the concept of a *properly implemented* federal sales tax, replacing the monstrous income tax system we have today, is very appealing to me.

    27. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It works for the good ol' boys and their "white is right" mentality. I guess you're one of them. The funny thing is that you Republicans are definitely in favor of the redistribution of wealth... except that you believe that the money at the bottom and middle should rise up to the top.
      Besides, I suspect the Republican dislike of public education is part of the problem in Ohio. You'd rather the lower classes remain poor so that they never rise up.

    28. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good thing commies like you are on their way out ..
      They should be - after 80 years of creating disaster after disaster people tend to get wiser ...
      Not all of course.

      People like you should be shot. Just to make sure they never get to practice what they preach.

      In your case , most likely it won?t be necessary ? you don?t look to healthy on that picture.

    29. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Phleg · · Score: 1

      By your exact line of reasoning, it would only be fair if the rich person were taxed 91.5%, thus bringing his income down to $8,500.

      Ever consider the fact that the guy making $100,000/yr is doing work of more value than the one earning $10,000/yr? And that he *should* be paid 10x the other guy's salary?

      --
      No comment.
    30. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      How about a progressive tax on wealth?

      Three things. First, it's unconstitutional. The 16th amendment gives Congress the power to tax incomes, not net worth.

      Second, taxing wealth is inherently immoral. A tax on income is a levy on economic activity. When a dollar changes hands, that dollar is taxed. The government, in essence, takes a piece of what you earn. And since you can't earn the same dollar more than once, it will never be taxed more than once. (There are exceptions, of course. Various Congresses have managed to jack up the tax code to the point where you are sometimes taxed twice on the same dollar of income. These are mistakes that must be rectified.) But a tax on wealth is a levy that's applied to the same dollar in your piggy bank every year. You don't just get taxed twice, you get taxed every year for as long as you hold on to that money. That amounts to the arbitrary seizure of property without due process. It's made worse because the only purpose for such a tax is to rob from the rich and give to the poor. No, a tax on wealth is unacceptable purely on moral grounds.

      Finally, and most pragmatically of all, it would make it essentially impossible to save. We're trying to encourage working Americans to save money for their retirement so they don't become a crippling burden on public services like Social Security and Medicare. If we then turn around and tax those savings, we're lighting the fuse on a big ol' bankruptcy bomb.

      "Ah," you say, "but we'll build in exemptions and shelters for people to save for a rainy day." The problem with the tax code today is that it's already too complex. And I don't mean that just because it's a pain in the rear. There's a very real cost associated with the complexity of the tax code: it's called the compliance cost. It's the sum of money that Americans and American businesses spend every year to comply with the tax laws. Know how much it is? Twenty cents on the dollar. For every dollar the American people and American businesses pay in taxes to the federal government, they're paying twenty cents in compliance costs. That includes everything from the accountant you hired to prepare your return to the penalty you had to pay because you screwed it up last year to the cost of the stamp you used to mail in your check. Compliance costs are completely out of control.

      So making the tax code more complex isn't a very good solution to anything, unless you happen to be a tax accountant. And as we've seen, shelters erected with good intent end up being used for other purposes entirely. So a shelter-ridden wealth tax would end up not working anyway.

      No, a wealth tax is not a good idea.

      --

      I write in my journal
    31. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Wealth is a legal right.

      Um. Not really. Property is a right; wealth is just the accumulation of property. People with more property don't have more or fewer rights than people with less property.

      The cost of that protection is born by those who produce -- via taxes on income, capital gains, sales, value added, etc -- not by those who own the rights protected by the government.

      Huh? Everybody enjoys property rights. I don't know what "those who own the rights protected by the government" means.

      Redeploying ownership rights based on correction of this situation would radically change society for the better.

      Well, obviously you're wrong--that experiment has been tried many times over the past century, remember --but that doesn't really matter. It doesn't matter if it would make everything perfect and wonderful, because it's still wrong. It's still morally wrong. So it doesn't matter what the net effect would be.

      --

      I write in my journal
    32. Re:Ohio is a mess... by killjoe · · Score: 1

      I know zealots like you don't like to be bothered with facts or anything but have you considered that 1776 illiteracy rate only measured rich white people?

      BTW according to the CIA word factbook the literacy rate in the US is 97%. Again I know facts are not really important to jihadists like you but I wanted to include that for other readers who may be thinking that nearly helf of the country does not know how to read or write.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    33. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Baldrson · · Score: 1
      The cost of that protection is born by those who produce -- via taxes on income, capital gains, sales, value added, etc -- not by those who own the rights protected by the government.

      Huh? Everybody enjoys property rights. I don't know what "those who own the rights protected by the government" means.

      Ask any property insurance company to ignore the value of the property they insure and they'll laugh in your face. Call property insurance premiums "communist redistribution of wealth" and you'll get the same reaction.

      The concept is easy to understand.

      Hell, even Lysander Spooner said that government is legitimate when it is considered as a mutual insurance organization.

    34. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the solution to your problem is to take off the rose colored glasses so that you may see clearly in the light of day. Some of your comments are just totally bogus.

      For example how can any flat tax be considered rigged? A flat tax would be one of the msartest moves we as a people could make. Yeah that also means the elimination of alot of special clauses, many of which benefit special interest but so what. What can be more fair than knowing that each and every American gets taxed at the same rate?

    35. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They vote republican because it is the right thing to do. It has nothing to do with cultural issues, homosexuals or fornicators.

      The problem comes down to this would they be better off in Montana voting Democrat. The answer is clearly no. I mean really just look at the south, the economic conditions are far worst there than in Montana. The difference is that the democrats have institutionalized poverty and the people affected at to uneducated to realize that their problems are directly the result of the way that they vote. I mena really the democrates have it made in the south, keep the voters dumb, feed them some bull shit about helping out and you get reelected.

      Contrast this with Montana where people simply are not bothered by the government and in fact want a minimal of contact with it. At least they are free to pursue their economic goals. The people in the south are simply slaves of the democratic party.

    36. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, the reality is, even after Bush's tax cuts, the wealthy pay the lion's share of US income taxes.

      That's not an accurate statement, but it's so incredibly easy to understand why you'd think that it is. It's got to do with the way business income is reported and taxed.

      If you are the owner of a sole proprietorship or a part-owner in a partnership, your company's gross revenue shows up on your personal income tax return at the end of the year. It looks like you earned (say) three million dollars last year, but in point of fact that's the gross revenue generated by your business. When you apply your deductions --operating expenses, legal and professional fees, supplies, travel, depreciation, etc. --you might end up with a net taxable income of $300,000. But that isn't necessarily personal wealth. Odds are that that money went back into the business to pay for things that aren't strictly deductible.

      So when you say that "the wealthy pay the lion's share," what you really ought to say is that "individual tax receipts in the top bracket account for the lion's share." That includes both wealthy individuals and the owners of non-incorporated small businesses.

      One can conclude that without a drastic cut-back in government spending, that the flat tax rate would be higher for most Americans than the rate they pay now.

      You'd think that, but the math doesn't work out that way. A flat tax of 13% and no deductions beyond a basic EITC would, according to some people who are much smarter than I am, result in increased total tax receipts at the end of the year. People who are in low brackets now and who take essentially no deductions would have their tax burden drastically reduced, while individuals that occupy the top bracket in gross income but that take advantage of a plethora of deductions would have their net tax burden increased.

      We don't have to just argue about this in the abstract, either. Three years ago Russia instituted a 13% flat tax across the board, and they've seen both significant GDP growth and significantly higher tax receipts.

      So on paper, a flat tax plus EITC is very compelling.

      --

      I write in my journal
    37. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

      It's the Republican Echo Chamber.

      If you ever watch or listen to any of the conservative mouthpieces, you'll notice that they are all distributing the same message at the same time - Rush Limbaugh is saying the same thing as Fox News, is saying the same thing as Bush and company, etc. Usually down to the exact same phrases.

      It's what Hitler said once - you tell a big enough lie loud enough and long enough, and people will believe it.

    38. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Preferred+Customer · · Score: 1

      But we already have taxes on wealth. Aren't real estate taxes based on the value of a home? And isn't the cost of wealth protection (military defense) an ongoing cost?

      I don't want to see more taxes. I'm again' em too. But I'd like to see more fairness. Simplify, yes, but in a fair way.

      Tax that guy behind the tree!

    39. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Oh, now I see where you're coming from. You're thinking of government in completely the wrong terms. That makes much more sense.

      You're wrong, but at least I understand why you're wrong now.

      (Hint: Government does not pay out settlements when things go wrong. From there you should be able to figure out for yourself why the "government as insurer" model is wrong.)

      --

      I write in my journal
    40. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Aren't real estate taxes based on the value of a home?

      Property taxes you mean? Yes. But those are not federal. They're collected at the county level and used to fund things like public education. Which, if you think about it, is a massive problem and a complete mistake. The idea that the quality of public schools should be entirely dependent on the value of the property surrounding them is a recipe for ...well, for just exactly the kinds of problems we see in public education today.

      If I were king of the world, property taxes would be among the first things to go. I'm not, unfortunately ...unless Proposition 209 passes, and we all pray to God it will.

      --

      I write in my journal
    41. Re:Ohio is a mess... by graffix_jones · · Score: 1

      Well, if a flat tax is to work then it'll have to be based on sales rather than income... the marginal utility of each dollar spent (not earned) has about equal value with both levels of wealth.

      The only thing you wouldn't tax is food and rent... and since the majority of the $30,000 families income is tied up with these two necessities, they'll pay hardly any tax at all, whereas the family buying Buffy her new Mercedes will be contributing 10% of that cost to the government...

      It's a progressive tax, with flat properties... the more you spend on non-necessities the more you pay... and unless you wish to be wealthy yet live like a lower-class family, there's no escaping the tax.

      Win-Win.

      There would also have to be taxes on interest-bearing accounts and taxes on investment, but I think a plan like this would have a good chance of making it.

    42. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, once you get over your Christian bashing, you'll learn that Christianity structurally promotes entrepeneurship and small business. Of the 12 apostles, most were small businessmen or self employeed. It was the tax collector whoe betrayed him.

    43. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Matthew was a tax collector... although I do agree that people should not hold a grudge against Christians just because the Good ol' boy in the whitehouse claims he is. He talks about pride a lot for someone who claims to be a Christian:
      Proverbs 16:18 Pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall.
      Also from Proverbs:
      16:19 It is better to be of a lowly spirit among the poor than to divide the spoil with the proud.

    44. Re:Ohio is a mess... by ikeleib · · Score: 1

      That's not an accurate statement

      You got me. I forgot to say lions share of personal income tax. Corporate income tax is a large chunk of change, and I should not have left that out. But I get the feeling, that's not what you meant.

      If you are the owner of a sole proprietorship or a part-owner in a partnership, your company's gross revenue shows up on your personal income tax return at the end of the year.

      This is true. A subchapter S corporation, some LLC's, LLP's, partnerships, and sole-propierterships are pass-through tax entities. As you say, you inherit the revenue and some expenses of the entity.

      But that isn't necessarily personal wealth.

      This is where I disagree. The entity generates some net-income that results in increased owner's equity. While it may not be cash, it is personal wealth. It's wealth, since it's worth something and it's personal because it is a pass-through entity.

      Don't give me the line about how the wealthy aren't really wealthy and just are small business owners. If the small business owners really are being taxed so much that it would be cheaper to convert to a subchapter C corporation, they would; it offers many other advantages. Incidentally, the personal subchapter S investment holding company is one of the oldest tax dodges there is.

    45. Re:Ohio is a mess... by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Alot of the problem with Ohio (like many Mountain West states) is one-party rule.

      Where I live, I am represented by a Republican from city council and County Commissioner all the way up to President. Our State Supreme Court elections are partisan, and is controlled by Republican judges.

      Republicans (and many Democrats) have put Issue 1 on the ballot, which bans gay marriage, and according to some interpretations, may ban businesses from recognizing gay relationships as well. That is, if John wants to put his partner on his health care plan, the company may not be allowed to do so, even if they agree!

      Also of note:

      Ohio is the only state to have never ratified the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution.

    46. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      The entity generates some net-income that results in increased owner's equity.

      It's not personal wealth, though, which was my point. It's equity in a business venture. Different. Different how, you ask? Gross revenue generated by a business is a sign of economic activity, whereas personal income is usually not.

      If the small business owners really are being taxed so much that it would be cheaper to convert to a subchapter C corporation, they would

      There are lots of excellent reasons not to incorporate as a C-corp. My lawyer walked me through them the last time I started a business, about ten years ago. I won't pretend to remember exactly what they were. Liability was involved.

      --

      I write in my journal
    47. Re:Ohio is a mess... by jsebrech · · Score: 1

      I wasn't bashing invidual christians or christianity, just the organized church structures that teach people to be subservient to authority figures and to be satisfied with their position in life, even if they are at an unfair disadvantage compared to other groups of people.

    48. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      How many of these poor voters are educated or have time to read the newspapers when working 2 or 3 jobs to make ends meet?

      Do they make rational discisions on their own or do they make their descicons based on Swift boat vets for truth ads? My guess is the former.

      They hate Bush but end up believing Kerry is so bad they might as well stay home and not vote.

      Karl Rove knows this and that is what he is hoping. Americans are niave and gullable and hate politics so he just has a henchmen(never bush himself) define Kerry and voila! No one will take Kerry serious when ever he says anything.

      QUite clever actually.

    49. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 1
      We Republicans talk about it whenever the subject comes up. We say that the redistribution of wealth by the state is (a) immoral and (b) unconstitutional. The conversation rarely goes beyond that, granted.

      Do you mean, for instance, using eminent domain to take away private holdings and getting the state to tax the people in order to fund a private venture? Such as President Bush did with the Texas Rangers Stadium?

      article 1
      article 2
      article 3

      --
      http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    50. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Do you mean, for instance, using eminent domain

      Eminent domain is a HUGE problem. I don't know why you dug all the way back into the dusty past to dredge up the story of the Ballpark in Arlington. (Beautiful park, by the way. The Rangers break my heart every time, but they sure do play in a gorgeous stadium.)

      It's way more topical to discuss the ongoing controversy that's happening in New London. There's a big fight going on over eminent domain in that town. If we're lucky, the Supreme Court will announce as early as the first week in October that it will hear the case.

      and getting the state to tax the people in order to fund a private venture?

      I don't know what you're objecting to here. Are you upset that the city --not the state, incidentally, just the city of Arlington --raised sales taxes by a quarter of a percent to pay for a bond that helped to fund the building of the Ballpark? Or are you pissed that the Rangers are privately owned and not a public utility?

      The Ballpark in Arlington, incidentally, is one of the most successful sporting arena projects in history. Because of increased sales tax revenues generated by the Ballpark, the city of Arlington was able to pay off the bond completely in only five years. After those five years the increased sales tax was repealed and today Arlington is back to 7.25%. The project didn't go off without any hitches, but it was a smashing success compared to most similar ventures.

      --

      I write in my journal
    51. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There was a study done recently that showed the people in the worst economic conditions tended to vote republican even though the bad economic conditions were caused by republicans.

      That makes no sense. You'd think the poor would want to vote democrat so they could get everything paid for. Isn't that one of the two primary principles of the party - socialism and racism?

    52. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Or are you pissed that the Rangers are privately owned and not a public utility?

      Dusty past? Right. No, what bothers me is that the city, as you pointed out, taxed the people to get the thing built to the tune of $191 million dollars and George and Co. had it negotiated so they could then buy it back for $60 million. If that isn't welfare for the rich I don't know what is. It may be privately owned, which I'm all for, but it just so happens that it's not really owned by the people who paid for it.

      --
      http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    53. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 0, Troll

      what bothers me is that the city, as you pointed out, taxed the people to get the thing built to the tune of $191 million dollars

      Right, which is common practice.

      and George and Co. had it negotiated so they could then buy it back for $60 million.

      Also common practice. The city, as I pointed out, paid off the bond in five years. Everybody's square.

      If that isn't welfare for the rich I don't know what is.

      Then you don't know what is. Cool. We've established a baseline.

      --

      I write in my journal
    54. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

      The seizure of private property by the state is not the answer. Not only is it not the answer, it's not even an answer. It's immoral and wrong, before you even get into a discussion about whether it's good or bad.

      Private property rights to an extent are granted by the state, not by natural law. It is only right that you be given the rightful rewards of your labor but when you misuse those rights to gain an unfair advantage in obtaining the rewards of others' labor, then it is no longer immoral for the state to balance such a situation by a redistibution of wealth. In simpler terms, it is your right to recieve the rewards of your labor as long as you don't misuse the system and hence infringe on the rights of others to get the rewards for their labor. For example, let us say you misuse the system to gain an unfair advantage or a monopoly and then use that to obtain far more rewards for your labor then your labor is obviously worth.* In such a situation, it only makes sense that the state would correct the flaw in its system by then requiring that person to use that ill gotten wealth afforded by the state, for the betterment of all, in this case by giving more wealth to the state than an ordinary person.

      Now there are a lot of arguments to make about this and I'll skip most of them except the most often overlooked one: that an over concentration of wealth is in itself a flaw of the system. In an ideal system everyone would get as much and only as much as they need. The fact that you are getting more than you need (which usually means more than you can make use of), even if it does not deprive someone else, is not an intended consequence of a perfect system. Now of course there is also the matter of unequal labor, in a perfect system everyone would contribute an equal amount of labor but that is another discussion. There is also the matter of social responsibility and American indivisaulism that has gone from self reliance to self absorption but I will not address that here.

      Now, I'm not trying to argue whether you may or may not be right, I am merely pointing out the obvious that the issue of property rights is not as black and white as you make it out to be.

      * - This of course opens its own philosphical nightmare - how much is labor worth? What the market says? Not exactly since the market has a number of externalities that are governed by the state for the betterment of all the members of that state.

      --
      There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
      most of us won't be able to afford it.
      -- Lemmy
    55. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      Private property rights to an extent are granted by the state, not by natural law.

      Oooh, man. You lost me at hello. We will agree to disagree.

      --

      I write in my journal
    56. Re:Ohio is a mess... by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

      As Willie Sutton the bank robber said when asked why he robbed banks, "because that's where the money is". You should tax people who make more money at a higher rate than you do those who make less for the same reason that those who are at a subsistance level shouldn't be taxed at all. As you move from a subsistance level upwards and more and more of your meta needs are being met, a higher level of taxation is less of a burden. "Its immoral and wrong." If God told you so, maybe your right about the morality. I admit it angers me. Otherwise, though, I'd suggest you are choosing a solution that does best for you considering the position your currently have. Calling it immoral is mere rationalization. Your position might be consistent, and yet still consistently wrong.

    57. Re:Ohio is a mess... by rhuntley12 · · Score: 1

      Nice assuming that he wanted the rich taxed 91.5. You could not tax the person who makes 10,000 a year and then tax the one who makes 100,000 30%(Which btw is what I pay now and I don't make 100,000) So the government ends up with the same amount, the poor has his 10k, and the more wealthy has 70k. This is just a quick example, And ever consider the fact that the guy making 100,000/yr might not be doing work of more value then the one earning 10,000/yr? How do you say which is more important? My mother is a social worker and makes quite a bit under 40k a year. My father a policeman makes about 28k a year. My brother is self employed, and does not have to work, makes in excess of 400k a year. I'm a computer operator and I make about 40k a year. So, who's work is of the most value there? Can you guess who pays the higher % in tax? I can tell you it's not the guy who can't spend his money fast enough. Explain how this is fair?

    58. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Data just came out showing that Cleveland, Ohio has the largest unemployment rate of any major city in the US. Cincinnati is on the brink of (and has fallen into) racial and class conflict.

      What party is in control in those two cities? Add to that East Cleveland's mayor was indicated on corruption charges. The state's been a mess for a long time.

    59. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the government ends up with the same amount, the poor has his 10k, and the more wealthy has 70k.

      Why not 50k? If you're going to take someone's money, why stop at 30%?

      And ever consider the fact that the guy making 100,000/yr might not be doing work of more value then the one earning 10,000/yr?

      So? Value -- by whose account?

      How do you say which is more important?

      By freely paying (or donating time, or whatever) to them, not by forced charity from the state.

    60. Re:Ohio is a mess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you were king... HA! When the fourth reich comes, you'll be the first to go.

    61. Re:Ohio is a mess... by ad0gg · · Score: 1
      Most flat tax plans have a set amount of money before taxes are accrued. The last one I saw was at $40k. So with you numbers the poor guy will make $10k, the rich guy would bring in ~$93k. With your 15% tax.

      What I don't get about US tax policy is that, earned income is subjected to higher taxes than unearned income.

      --

      Have you ever been to a turkish prison?

    62. Re:Ohio is a mess... by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Actually, Karl Marx was a foreign correspondent for a GOP newspaper and encouraged his followers to join the GOP. There was a pretty serious "socialist" camp in the GOP until they split into the Progressive movement with Robert Lafollete.

    63. Re:Ohio is a mess... by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Actually, my understanding is that the current rulings are the constitution _does_ give the Federal government the right to control _monopolies_. That could pretty easily be applied to vast personal wealth. There are already federal regulations on how wealth folks can trade in financial markets.

      Anyhow, I suspect that if a constitutional amendment were proposed that introduced a limited wealth tax and reduced the income tax on most of the population, such an amendment would pass.

    64. Re:Ohio is a mess... by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      There is no reason why the federal government can't apportion say a land tax among states-it would just be up to the states to figure out how they want to collect it.

  21. OT: Sig? by EnormousTooth · · Score: 1

    Wasn't it the Two Minutes Hate? Great book, btw.

    --
    I don't use Emacs; it uses me.
    1. Re:OT: Sig? by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Except two minutes isn't enough time for all the ichor to be spewed against two very prominent asshats.

  22. Bang! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah but here we have the right to bear arms! Woo hoo! I know what I'm doing with my last $1,000!

  23. Pathetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This article is not economics, not public policy, not even deserving opinion. Just the typical xenophobic, bigoted kind of rant that the nativist crowd likes to engage in. Anti-immigrant sentiment is the omnivorous reptile in the fauna of politics. A recession with falling wages? Cheap immigrant labor must be to blame. Terrorism? Without immigration there wouldn't be any. Traffic? Too many immigrants must have moved in. Whatever the issue at hand, the subterfuged racism of the nativist crowd always translates into an immigration problem.

    The fact is that economic theory is perfectly clear: everyone is both a consumer and a producer, so if a worker moves into an economy, he or she creates his or her own job. If anything, migrant labor helps to smooth out local recessions by being able to move back and forth across the border.

    Please, keep cheap-ass bigotry off the front page.

    1. Re:Pathetic by DarkZero · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This article is not economics, not public policy, not even deserving opinion. Just the typical xenophobic, bigoted kind of rant that the nativist crowd likes to engage in. Anti-immigrant sentiment is the omnivorous reptile in the fauna of politics. A recession with falling wages? Cheap immigrant labor must be to blame. Terrorism? Without immigration there wouldn't be any. Traffic? Too many immigrants must have moved in. Whatever the issue at hand, the subterfuged racism of the nativist crowd always translates into an immigration problem.

      The United States has millions of illegal Mexican immigrants who live in fear of getting caught and are regularly abused by employers who can get away with paying them slave wages. Both from the point of view of the immigrants and the citizens, we do have some sort of immigration problem. It isn't the key problem behind everything wrong in the United States, but at the very least, SOME sort of problem is there. There's no reason to jump between the extremes of "the immigration problem is the new apocalypse" and "there is no immigration problem, you bigot". There's a very wide area between those two ideas, and I believe that the United States is somewhere within it.

    2. Re:Pathetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it was pretty clear that "immigration problem" as used in my post meant the nativists' "excessive immigration problem," and of course there is no such thing. Immigration at current levels, legal and illegal combined, is barely enough to remedy the shrinking of the native population due to low birth rates, and by itself accounts for a large proportion of American economic growth over the last decade, since increases in population directly translate into increases in GDP at the wage multiplier. Compare to economic stagnation in Western Europe, where the population of many countries is shrinking. As life expectation increases, Europe is approaching a 1-to-1 worker/retiree ratio, with obviously dire consequences for the incomes of both segments.

      There is, however, great need for immigration law reform. Reform has been stonewalled for over a decade by the loud nativist minority of the Republican party, and the undocumented population has reached the size of a true underclass. So as we approach the retirement of the baby boomers, we'll be increasingly relying on the payroll and income taxes of an underclass with no rights and subject to the incessant threat of deportation, all for an offense - crossing the border - which is not even criminal. It's a civil violation, somewhere below a traffic infraction and around the level of a parking ticket.

      The last two major wars fought on American territory were due to taxation without representation and to the exploitation of an underclass, respectively. There may not be any civil wars on the horizon this time, but we should at least have learnt the moral lessons of our own history.

    3. Re:Pathetic by gorbachev · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The illegal Mexican immigrants are NOT squeezing the middle class in any way. There is nobody in the middle class that would their jobs.

      Several researchers have actually said the illegal immigration is good for the country, from the job market perspective, that is. Sure, illegal immigration brings other problems, but they sure as hell aren't taking any jobs away from the us middle class.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
    4. Re:Pathetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your right.

      Those middle class jobs are being taken by legal residents in India and China. ;)

    5. Re:Pathetic by GOD_ALMIGHTY · · Score: 1

      Maybe you and the researchers should explain this phemomena to all the white guys I see doing yard work in Florida. The argument itself is a bit difficult, since the measurement has to be taken with a control situation, ie when immigrants are not doing the labor, and then after the immigrants take over the jobs.

      In most cases, such as farm workers and food processors, anti-union efforts allowed the wages for these jobs to drop below a rate acceptable to natural citizens. During times of good job growth, people were willing to allow cheap labor in to take jobs with little or no wage growth. Had these industries, and others automated when labor became expensive, there would be more opportunity for middle class workers providing these high tech solutions.

      You have to take these factors into account when discussing the effect of immigration on the job market. Cheap labor is bad for the economy, it reduces the need to innovate and hides poor social policy from view. Outsourcing is going to have the same effect.

      This is not to say that unions have been perfect, I personally think they dropped the ball in the 80's when they fought automation. On the other hand, unions have caused far less damage overall than nearly any of the capitalist scandals such as the S&L's, Enron, WorldCom or the Bush-Cheney administration. I'd rather have imperfect unions than these multi-headed hydra running amock.

      --
      Arrogance is Confidence which lacks integrity. -- me
  24. Re:ohh no... more complaining..more gov.. more pro by detlev409 · · Score: 1

    Wow, thanks. I'll be sure and let my Dad know that his 24.5 years of working for the same company were obviously not productive enough. Isn't it funny how we all become unproductive just before retirement? F=ing Troll.

    --
    Howdy.
  25. Civilizations A Call To Power (so underrated) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Called it a Corporate Republic.

  26. I'm a micro-view of the job situation by parliboy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I graduated in May with a degree in Education and another in Computer Science. I can't get permanent work in either. In Houston. The epicenter of Bushism.

    All the layoffs of recent times have flooded the teaching ranks with people getting alternative certification. Add to that a recent flood of people who spent years in other roles in education just now finishing their degrees, and the new teachers are getting pushed out. That whole ETS scoring fiasco didn't help either.

    Read again to understand this: there are too many teachers. People in other countries may not understand the gravity of this, but for people who are used to teachers being the most pissed on of American professionals, this should be the ultimate sign of how bad things are right now.

    --
    "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
    1. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Dunno about the immigration issues, but Britain is currently moaning about a teacher *shortage*. Sure, if you move to Britain you won't get paid anywhere near as much.

    2. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      I graduated in May with a degree in Education and another in Computer Science. I can't get permanent work in either.

      If you had a degree in nursing or an M.D., employers would be fighting tooth and nail just to get you to come by and see them. We have a huge shortage of medical professionals in this country. Not just RN's and MD's, either. Lab technicians, medical technologists, phlebotomists, EMT's, you name it.

      The fact that the computer industry tanked around 1997 doesn't extrapolate to the entire economy.

      Read again to understand this: there are too many teachers.

      That is absolutely false. We don't have nearly enough teachers in this country. And the reason we don't have enough of them is that we can't pay even the ones we have decent salaries. When I figure out how to solve that problem, I'll drop you an e-mail.

      Meanwhile, go get your EMT certification. You'll have a job within a couple of weeks.

      --

      I write in my journal
    3. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      That is absolutely false. We don't have nearly enough teachers in this country.

      This would be assuming that you buy into the entire idea of forced government schooling, despite the abysmal failure of the system. Which I don't.

      And in that case, there certainly are too many so-called professional 'teachers' in this country.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    4. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by Amigori · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I personally don't think the problem is too many teachers, but rather the whole US education system. There are many theories as to why it has degraded in the past 30 years; declining tax base (which should NOT happen with a growing population), bureaucratic meddling, inflexible unions, ever changing demographics, lowest common denominators, etc. I also question many of the actual skills of numerous teachers I've had in the past. The general American culture has changed dramatically in the last 25 years, and the education system has not adapted well.

      I will graduate college in Ohio in May with an International Business degree, and I have no intention of looking locally for a job. Why? Because when I entered the program, I understood that the markets that have demand for the positions I qualify for are elsewhere. At the job fairs I've attended, teachers are in great demand in Florida and Nevada, but not here in Ohio. I don't know your specialties, but perhaps you are limiting your job search to only jobs you want to work and not all the jobs you qualify for. Perhaps you are also limiting your location as well, saying that you will only work for the Cypress-Fairbanks district in NW Houston versus moving to where you can find work.

      Personally, I think we need to drastically increase funding for the whole education system, not by raising taxes, but cutting other governmental programs which have little effect on society as a whole. And I don't think that extra money should go straight to the teachers' and administrators' pockets. The salaries should be determined by supply/demand with a significant qualitative factor. Excellent teachers should make more than poor teachers. The extra money should be used to build, update, and maintain facilities. I also favor a general, liberal education program in public schools (K-12) versus trade/technical programs at the high school level; leave the job training for post-secondary programs, i.e. trade school, college, university, etc.

      That's enough ranting for this thread from me, but to reiterate my rebutal 1)Bushism has little to do with jobs, 2)There are NOT too many teachers, 3)The education system needs a major overhaul, and 4)Don't limit yourself.--Amigori

      --
      "The quality of life is determined by its activites."--Aristotle
    5. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by greenrd · · Score: 1
      That is absolutely false. We don't have nearly enough teachers in this country. And the reason we don't have enough of them is that we can't pay even the ones we have decent salaries.

      Not can't - won't. Milk the rich, and put a squeeze on the so-called "Defense" Department, and you'll be able to!

    6. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      The problem is that we don't have enought good teachers. If the unions don't suck the life out of them, then disorderly classrooms and disrespectful students will.

      In college, my roommate was an elementary education major (he went on to become a teacher). I remember on class he was taking - a math class on teaching elementary math. Some of the students in that class, in college were having trouble with the concepts.

      I'll agree with you on the medical field, but it does take a bit to be an EMT, and it's not for everybody. I live in a small town, and I volunteer to drive the ambulance and my wife's an EMT. I'd not ever be an EMT. As a driver, I can remove myself from situations where I'd be squeemish - you can't do that as an EMT. (Plus I get to drive a nice vehicle really fast with lights on)

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    7. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by UserChrisCanter4 · · Score: 1

      I'm don't want to come out and straight-up condemn your situation, because I don't know you, but I'm almost forced to.

      You must be doing something wrong. Were your grades just spectacularly terrible?

      CS, yes, I can certainly understand. Anyone on this site knows that the days of the .com bubble have left job seekers in a difficult position. But Teaching? In Texas? Come off it, my Man. The only way I can effectively believe that you aren't getting a teaching job is if you are insisting on teaching computer science, a course not even offered at many 5A schools, and not Math (which any CS major would certainly have a hearty background in).

      Texas had a massive amount of Teachers retire last May. The rules regarding the collection of spousal Social Security funds were about to drastically change, possibly reducing some teacher's retirement amounts by as much as 40%. Thousands of teachers who were anywhere remotely close to retirement all of a sudden decided that it was time to call it quits. On top off all of that, most of these people were career teachers, and since teacher salaries are almost always based on the number of years of experience, these were (relatively speaking) much more expensive teachers than any newbie could ever hope to be. These people effectively cost two to three times as much as a beginning teacher might, especially when you factor in higher insurance claims and absentee rates that might be produced by people closer to retirement.

      You complain about people who have spent years in other roles that are just now finishing their degrees, but wouldn't those people be nearly identical to you? Having just earned their degrees, really, they're no different from someone who wasn't a teacher's aide or something similar (what I'm assuming you're referring to) who is just earning his or her degree. The alternative cert. teachers are a point on which I'd certainly agree with you, but I'm not seeing any major data that's pointing to them being a huger influence than they always were. While I personally believe that then alternative or emergency certification should have been done away with under the No Child Left Behind plan, it's here to stay, and you need to deal with it. If you're not prepared to tell an interviewing administrator why your extra year's worth of classes and student teaching are more worthwhile than someone who last saw a classroom 20 years ago, then you need to just stay home from that interview. Alternative cert. teachers are a poorer investment for a school, as they tend to leave the career more readily and cost more for the district to educate (if the district is fronting the cert. money). That's why you tend to see them more in higher demand positions such as Math and Science, not English or History.

      Man, I can stroll down the halls of the 5A school I'm at, and almost the entire Freshman English department is under 30; ditto for a goodly amount of science and math teachers. Teachers aren't doing any better, really, but there's no major problem I'm aware of with a teacher glut in anything other than historically low-demand areas such as the infamous health/coach degree holders.

    8. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      This would be assuming that you buy into the entire idea of forced government schooling, despite the abysmal failure of the system.

      Feel strongly about it much?

      I'm not gonna argue with you, but I'm going to give you a counterpoint. Education is the only solution to every social problem we have: crime, drugs, child abuse, public health shortfalls ...you name it. The incidence of social problems among the more educated is less than it is among the less educated even when all other factors remain constant.

      I'm all for privatizing things like health insurance and retirement insurance. Privatizing these things allows adults to take responsibility for themselves. But privatizing public education does nothing of the sort. A nine-year-old kid can't take responsibility for his education, and expecting parents who are undereducated to somehow acquire the means to thoroughly educate their kids when all too often the can't even be bothered to feed or clothe them properly is a joke.

      The one honest-to-God way we have of making live better for successive generations is public education. If we pull dollars out of public education, all we're accomplishing is to give kids different levels of opportunity based on how much money their parents have or where they live. Are you okay with the idea that a kid's access to education ought to be dictated by what street he lives on?

      The public education system in this country is flawed. The solution is to fix it, not to abandon it. Public education can work, we saw it work during the baby boom. Between about 1950 and about 1980 we educated some seventy million kids in this country. All of them perfectly? No, of course not. But the system worked. It's tested and proven. When things start to slip, the right answer is not to scrap the system. The right answer is to fix it.

      Somehow. Like I said, I haven't figured that part out yet. Neither has anybody else, really. But the Bush "No Child Left Behind" initiative is a good start. Let's stop the hemorrhaging first; let's identify and fix the schools that are squeezing out woefully undereducated kids. Let's get every school up to a minimum acceptable standard, then let's start raising those standards every year. If we can pump more money into schools, great. If we can't, make 'em do more with the money they're already getting. Raise the tide, raise the boats.

      Just a counterpoint.

      --

      I write in my journal
    9. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by parliboy · · Score: 1

      Actually, I graduated in a much smaller community east of here. I moved to Houston specifically because of the supposed abundance of teaching positions compared to where I was.

      I didn't limited myself to one district; in fact, with the help of the teacher's fairs held around here, I hit pretty much district in the area, plus quite a few out of area, and even out of state. In one of these fairs, it was literally standing-room only, with up to two hours to interview with some districts due to the lines. I had a genuine concern of just what the limit was before the fire martial intervened.

      Now, I will concede that my specialties (I took two) don't help matters. I didn't focus in need areas. Math and Science definitely are in more demand. Regardless, they've still got enough applicants to go around.

      As to the educational system, the fact is that lots of changes have been made over the past three to four decades. Some of them were good, some of them were bad. But none of them had a great impact on the situation. There's a general disengagement of students and of parents that make the education of many an uphill battle before they ever report for kindergarten. Teachers cannot solve that.

      Historically, increasing funding to the education system has been fruitless. There are some districts on the extreme left, imporverished, end of the curve that could see marginal benefit. But the truth is that pouring money into the problem hasn't worked in fifty years, and it will continue to not work. See: "California"

      In many cases, there are measures in place to award more pay to better teachers. In addition to various incentives programs, there is often assessment of teachers in regard to classroom performance etc. If a teacher, even one with tenure, doesn't perform, s/he can be denied credit for that year of service. Since salary is tied to that variable, it means less money. Granted, that doesn't do anything to get rid of teachers who suck, but it's something.

      --
      "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
    10. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      EMT's and paramedics require lots of very hard training and most flunk out.

      My cousin is in training and only a handfull graduate.

      Anyway EMT's and 9-11 emergency management is being outsourced to the private sector in many counties across the country.

      My cousin who is almost done in paramedic school is looking forward to making 22k a year!

      This is after 4 years of school and 2 years of working in a hopsital.

      In rural counties where I live in Florida, some make onl 14k a year!

      With outsourcing, all the work is being biddered to the lowest possible wages.

      So being in the medical field may not be a good idea unless your a nurse or doctor right now.

      Perhaps if Teachers had the same intense certification as paramedics we could increase the quality but the process is two-fold.

      Teachers are being laid off with 50-1 student/teacher ratio's with less and less pay. I think the average salary is like 17k a year now for new teachers in most states!

      With salaries so low why would someone intelligent and bright want to teach?

    11. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      Agreed on teachers.

      As far as EMT's go, I'm not sure what the pro's make. Like I said, my wife and I volunteer (but I only drive - none of that nastiness for me!) and we do get paid a pittance each December - it helps for Christmas.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    12. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by professorfalcon · · Score: 1

      I know a software company in Houston that let go of a few developers this year. All of them got new development jobs within a month.

      Companies are even more willing to hire cheap graduates.

      I don't buy the bit about teachers. There is a teacher shortage in Houston, just like other places. And what in the world does an "ETS scoring fiasco" in New Orleans have to do with Houston?

    13. Re:I'm a micro-view of the job situation by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      I live in the Houston area, and have been a professional developer/dba for 12 years now. The problem Houston currently has is that it's extremely heavy in Oil/Gas, Banking, and Insurance companies, all of which are not doing terribly well right now. Let's not forget that in 1992, Enron, Dynegy, and El Paso flooded the market with a few thousand qualified IT professionals.

      My most recent contract is in Dallas for a major telco. As I drive through Dallas, I am constantly reminded why there are so many more IT jobs there. It's an extremely diverse city with regard to industry, and many companies there are IT dependant.

      Houston's industry is old-school, and finding work there has been difficult for the past few years now. I would either consider a move, or taking a contract with a per-diem until local industry picks back up.

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
  27. Immigration policy by Tim+C · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, it's always the fault of those pesky foreigners...

  28. Racismdot by Lurker+McLurker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, I never expected to see this story on the front page of slashdot. What next?

    --
    Mod parent up!
    1. Re:Racismdot by js7a · · Score: 0, Troll

      Up next, Michelle Malkin describes why her dual Phillipino citizenship means she should be placed in an internment camp until the threat level turns green.

    2. Re:Racismdot by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Please elucidate.

      Saying the immigration policy is bad is not the same as saying we should stop immigration.

      How is the headline racist?

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    3. Re:Racismdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not really racist because it refers to a bunch of races/ethnicities/etc. It's xenophobic. The somewhat disturbing part is the similarity between "Immigrants are taking our jobs" and "The Jews are taking our jobs." Well, you know where the latter usually ends up going.

    4. Re:Racismdot by Moofie · · Score: 1

      It's not xenophobic to say "Gosh, this is a difficult situation. Let's examine it."

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  29. Labour Force Survey by Epeeist · · Score: 4, Informative

    > I am not sure how it's measured in Europe but I would bet it's different. You may be comparing oranges and apples.

    There is a common measure of unemployment across Europe, the Labour Force Survey. The survey seeks information on respondents' personal circumstances and their labour market status during a specific reference period, normally a period of one week or four weeks (depending on the topic) immediately prior to the interview.

    The LFS is carried out under a European Union Directive and uses internationally agreed concepts and definitions. It is the source of the internationally comparable (International Labour Organisation) measure known as 'ILO unemployment'.

    On this measure the UK jobless rate is just under 5%, with France, Germany and Italy all at around the 9% mark.

    1. Re:Labour Force Survey by sql*kitten · · Score: 1

      There is a common measure of unemployment across Europe, the Labour Force Survey.

      It's still open to manipulation. The present UK government massages the figures by a) creating non-jobs in the public sector b) creating made-up courses for universities.

      Everyone who's a "coordinator" or a "facilitator" in the civil service, or a "media studies" student at college would otherwise be unemployed. It's just a more expensive form of welfare, that's all. The true unemployment figure in the UK ought to count systematic state-sponsored underemployment too.

    2. Re:Labour Force Survey by ploppy · · Score: 2

      You also forget we have 1 million unemployed, but 2.7 million on some kind of disability benefit, which is simply unemployed but called a different name.

      Incidently, I'm jobless, looking for a job, but NOT registered unemployed. My mother was umemployed, getting benefits, but to retain them has had to go back to work for 15 hours per week, BUT the government will pay her employer to employ her. Both my cousins are umemployed AND my older brother. What do you say about FULL employment. Bollocks.

      I don't the UK "government" with the unemployment statistics or anything else.

  30. Those numbers are doctored everywhere... by Gorimek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The unemployment numbers are political dynamite in any country, so they're pretty heavily doctored everywhere.

    My native Sweden has fairly low official numbers, but they are achieved by having some 10% or 20% (*) of the working age population that is not working being classified in other categores. The big ones are long term sickness, early retirement and "education". Some of that education is no doubt useful in the way you describe, but most is little more than long term people storage, and everybody involved knows it.

    In all these categories you are getting paid fairly well by the government, to a much larger extent than in the US, which you may or may not think is a good thing.

    So where is the unemployment really highest? Who lies the most and the best? I don't have that information, though I'm sure there are plenty of studies someone can look up. But as a Swede living in California I have no doubt at all that there are far more Americans gainfully employed, and that it's much easier to get a job here.

    (*) I haven't seen actual numbers in a long time, and these things are very hard to measure precisely anyway, but that's the range.

    1. Re:Those numbers are doctored everywhere... by johannesg · · Score: 2, Insightful
      But as a Swede living in California I have no doubt at all that there are far more Americans gainfully employed, and that it's much easier to get a job here.

      Well, that makes sense. In Europe any private enterprise is effectively competing with the government in terms of pay. They must at least match unemployment pay before people will show up for the job. Secondary benefits (things like education subsidies for unemployed people) tends to make things even worse, and have in fact created a situation in which taking a low-paying job usually means significant loss of income compared to getting unemployment pay.

    2. Re:Those numbers are doctored everywhere... by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Remember that here in America *any offer of work* is enough to disqualify one from unemployment benefits even if the offered job doesn't pay as much as you get from unemployment.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:Those numbers are doctored everywhere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      But as a Swede living in California I have no doubt at all that there are far more Americans gainfully employed, and that it's much easier to get a job here.

      Yeah, but don't forget the 2% of what would be in working population which is currently in jail in US.

    4. Re:Those numbers are doctored everywhere... by greenrd · · Score: 1
      Well, that makes sense. In Europe any private enterprise is effectively competing with the government in terms of pay.

      That's why the government should institute non-means-tested Basic Incomes to replace unemployment benefits and state pensions - paid for by progressivizing the tax system: taxing the rich more and taxing resource use more.

      Then all pay would be on top of the Basic Income, not instead of it.

  31. Sad Day For /. by R.Caley · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When the rantings on a xenophobic loonie site are presented as fact.

    --
    _O_
    .|<
    The named which can be named is not the true named
    1. Re:Sad Day For /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't let on. I'm hiding in my cellar. Next to a jar of dill-pickles.
      Politics. Drives me too fits. Convulsions.

    2. Re:Sad Day For /. by Filik · · Score: 1
      I totally agree. This thread is so filled with "I want" and "I deserve" that it makes me sick.

      As for voters in US: It's too late now, you should instead concentrate on getting some better senators. At least there are some very worth candidates there.

      -Filik

    3. Re:Sad Day For /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They were not presented as fact- they were presented as an article found on the internet, as a topic for discussion. Leave /. alone, you #$%@#$@!

    4. Re:Sad Day For /. by balster+neb · · Score: 1

      Ditto. Very sad day. Never expected this sort of stuff from slashdot. Also note that the submitter of the article is Randall Burns, the same guy who wrote the article.

      The article is from some fascist site (affiliated with this looney one), and the slashdot story was submitted by the author of the article himself. This is not what I visit slashdot.org for. Truly sad.

    5. Re:Sad Day For /. by R.Caley · · Score: 1
      They were not presented as fact- they were presented as an article found on the internet,

      We, yes, this guy `found' his own article and submitted it.

      It's bad enough when people dont read the original article, but clearly you didn't even read the bloody /. summary!

      --
      _O_
      .|<
      The named which can be named is not the true named
    6. Re:Sad Day For /. by khallow · · Score: 1
      Well, suppose hypothetically that I was traveling up to Mr. Burns' fortified compound in a few months. Is there anything to your sadness that you'd like me to convey other than "Yea, a bunch of pathetic losers on slashdot were whining about how sad their day was"?

      You may not know this, but often the submittor of slashdot stories links to articles that they wrote. Slashdot routinely posts "toot your own horn" stories.

  32. Indeed So... by MMMDI · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The job market in this particular state (Delaware) is completely shot to hell and back. In February of 2002, the local DuPont plant laid off almost half of the entire work-force, including myself. I have been unemployed since then, and those unemployment benefits ran out back in November 2002... not fun. At first, I was a bit picky about my next job, I'll admit; having just lost a $15/hour job (with no college education, which is another rant for another time), I really didn't want to drop down to a McDonalds job due to the obvious decrease in the weekly check. After I realized that finding a similar-paying job wasn't going to happen, I went out to the usual teenie-employers to try my luck... Wal*Mart, Burger King, etc etc. I've been unsuccessful even with these places, and have been since I've started my job-hunting two and a half years ago. For the record, there's nothing about me that would lead someone to not hire me, such as criminal records, disability, race, any of that nonsense. (Obviously, those aren't supposed to matter, but speaking for this state, it does). Wrapping up my sob-story, moving to a new state is out of the question due to personal reasons involving my daughter, so we're stuck here. Always nice to hear Bush on TV saying that the economy is great, hah.

    1. Re:Indeed So... by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      What I find ironic about your situation, is that you are no longer counted as unemployed. IOW, They assume that if you are not getting an Unemployment check, that you must be doing something else.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    2. Re:Indeed So... by HyperCash · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "After I realized that finding a similar-paying job wasn't going to happen, I went out to the usual teenie-employers to try my luck... Wal*Mart, Burger King, etc etc. I've been unsuccessful even with these places, and have been since I've started my job-hunting two and a half years ago."

      I'm sorry, but if you can't get a job at one of those places, or any job at all for that matter, then the problem lies with you even if it makes you feel better to blame it on someone else.

      I live in CA but I quit my job and went away for the summer. I didn't have a job when I came back but it took me less than a week to land a new one. I wasn't willing to take just any job, either, I wanted something that paid decent and that had a good working environment. So I'm making about $20 an hour (depends on tips, I'm waiting tables) and I get benefits. I'm 21 years old and had very little experience in food service.

      I have however had some management experience. When people come in and ask for applications or to talk to a manager about a job I can tell right off the bat which ones definetly aren't going to get hired. Are they well kept, are the articulate, etc. If you can't get any job after two and a half years, any job of any type, then it is definetly you doing something wrong so stop blaming other people for your problems and get your act together.

      --HC, who has not tolerance for woe is me bullshit.

      --
      So I'm jump'n up and down screaming show me the money.
    3. Re:Indeed So... by timlewis_atlanta · · Score: 1

      Not true for national figures.

      http://www.snopes.com/science/stats/unemploy.htm

    4. Re:Indeed So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Make a difference - vote wisely.
      This is a bad deal for all, as one is supposed to sock away money for their pension etc.
      Secondly, its a crime true unemployment metrics are not being measured - a casualty is a casualty - unless its in Iraq, or unemployed.
      Yep, 21 year olds get simple jobs, as its true they flip burgers/wait tables faster. Send a clear message, offshoring jobs kills employment multipliers, which should worry the local congresscritter.

    5. Re:Indeed So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      My first comment on slashdot, and I get IP banned. Wow, was I that out of line?

      Due to excessive bad posting from this IP or Subnet, comment posting has temporarily been disabled. If it's you, consider this a chance to sit in the timeout corner . If it's someone else, this is a chance to hunt them down. If you think this is unfair, please email moderation@slashdot.org with your MD5'd IPID and SubnetID, which are "c95d481b725dcea276128bb9c6695a6d" and "4967cedef3c158bd36bf54b0ff3a1218" and (optionally, but preferably) your IP number "XXXXXX" and your username "MMMDI".

      Anywho...

      then the problem lies with you

      I wouldn't mind some explaining on this one. As I mentioned in my original post, there's nothing against me which would prevent anyone from wanting to hire me, and it's not exactly rocket-science to fill out an application, turn it in, and call back every few days. The problem isn't me or anything that I am or am not doing, the problem is that places simply aren't hiring, and when a few jobs do open up, there's more than just a couple of people eyeing those jobs.

      I live in CA

      That explains a lot right there. Check around on google and find some statistics for California as opposed to Delaware; the population difference will blow your mind. Here, I'll even do the work for you. Check out your town as opposed to mine (Sussex County, Delaware). More people = more places of employment = easier to land a job.

      so stop blaming other people for your problems...

      There's a very large number of things I could blame Bush for, and all of them would be true. Check out the news some night, you may see what I mean.

      ...and get your act together

      See my first point up above.

      who has not tolerance for woe is me bullshit

      That would make two of us. I was merely contributing to the conversation; if you take that as "woe is me bullshit", then I apologize.

    6. Re:Indeed So... by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      Hey, thanx. I was of the understanding that it ws done via UI checks. Of course, the question is how do they derive their 60K? Is it similar to the Voting polls? If so, it is still inaccurate. But it still is better than using the UI checks.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    7. Re:Indeed So... by irf · · Score: 1

      MMMDI (815272),
      These are times of structural adjustments in the economy.
      So, don't bank on regaining your former $15/hr job,
      notwithstanding whether the economy will rebound or not,
      as that job will no longer exist.
      You should consider training in a lucrative field
      which meshes with your own interest.
      Delaware has a relatively large economy, which rivals
      many sovereign nations, and i'm sure that with the right
      skills and motivation your state's economy will give
      you your own slice of the american pie.
      seek and you shall find...
      hth
      and the best of luck

    8. Re:Indeed So... by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

      Maybe you weren't paying attention when he said he already went to the lowest echelons of the job market (fast food places and Walmart) and _still_ can't get a job.

    9. Re:Indeed So... by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1
      then the problem lies with you

      I wouldn't mind some explaining on this one.
      I think what he means is that you are a legal citizen, and therefore can't be forced to work for less than minimum wage.
    10. Re:Indeed So... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sense a bit of an attitude problem here, maybe that is why you are not finding a job.

    11. Re:Indeed So... by ggwood · · Score: 1

      "I live in CA "

      I suppose you can't envision a part of the country where any job, even at Wal-Mart, is highly competitive? A place where minimum wage is enough to get by (survive, probably not with health care)? There are really poor areas within America. If the poster lives in one, I'd recommend for the grandparent poster to move elsewhere first, then, if that doesn't help, blame themselves.

      --
      a war on terrorism? How can we end a war on a method?
    12. Re:Indeed So... by MMMDI · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, but if you can't get a job at one of those places, or any job at all for that matter, then the problem lies with you

      I took that as meaning "if you go out and try to get a job, and the job-hunt ends up in less than stellar results, it's your fault".

      Could be wrong however, was just my reading of it.

    13. Re:Indeed So... by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Obviously, the 2.5 million jobs we lost have nothing to do with it whatsoever.

    14. Re:Indeed So... by HyperCash · · Score: 1

      "I suppose you can't envision a part of the country where any job, even at Wal-Mart, is highly competitive?"

      No, I really can't. Even if the original poster had a reason he couldn't leave Delaware many people don't have anything holding them there. If things in a state are so bad that a minimum wage job at Wal-Mart is so highly competitive that people who are trying to get such a job can go two years without getting one then people will leave. At which point there will be less competition for said jobs and they will be easier to obtain.

      Even in the poorer hilltowns of western MA, where I spent the summer, there are jobs to be had. I can envision a situation where getting a job is impossible, I can even see that in some locations in this country, say a poor mill town in Maine but I cann't see that in the state of Delaware. Delaware might not be Marin County CA but its not a backwater where there aren't any jobs to be had.

      --HC

      --
      So I'm jump'n up and down screaming show me the money.
    15. Re:Indeed So... by MMMDI · · Score: 1

      Actually, there's upper Delaware, and then there's lower Delaware. Your statement is correct about upper DE, as there is a number of large cities up there. Lower Delaware, as you can see by one of our great merchandising themes, is quite the opposite. Making the eight-hour (round-trip) trek up North daily for a job is out of the question, considering I don't own a car... the town is indeed small, but we have a decent public transportation system; with that in mind, and considering that I'm barely into my twenties, a car of my own wasn't a high priority. Hindsight rocks. Moving is impossible (for the moment) due to a lack of funds to do so.

      Once again, this is not "woe is me", nor is it pity-fishing, and no blame is being put on anyones shoulders for my individual situation. I fully plan to leave this place when circumstances allow (see my other reply down the page a bit; I'm not retyping all that); things will be much better then. My original post was merely pointing out the unemployment problem here, nothing more, nothing less.

  33. As an American I can say... by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 0, Troll

    If Americans were better workers employers wouldn't be looking oversees for employees.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
    1. Re:As an American I can say... by brxndxn · · Score: 0

      That's just about one of the least educated comments I have ever read on the Internet. The American worker, on average, works longer hours than any other country - including Japan. Also, our culture has fewer holidays and days off than any other culture. Our economy produces more money per work-hour than any other.

      As an American I can say that your comment is un-American and completely wrong.

      --
      --- We need more Ron Paul!
    2. Re:As an American I can say... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And here I thought that having your own oppinion and being allowed to express it were American.
      Duh, stupid of me...
      I should have known that the American constitution dont mean squat and its either "shut up, do as I say or be shot" that rules.

      As a non american, I am amazed by your lack of americanism. Read the consitution again and read the bible. Jesus say "Love thy neighbor" not tell him to shut up just because you dont like what he says.
      People like you are the reason USA is so hated in the world today. You cant blame that on any other than yoruself and your short sightedness.

      Perhaps he does have a point? Every thought of that?

    3. Re:As an American I can say... by cheezehead · · Score: 1

      The American worker, on average, works longer hours than any other country - including Japan.

      Probably correct. However, working longer is not always a good thing. In my experience (IT environment), working ridiculously long hours isn't all that productive.

      Also, our culture has fewer holidays and days off than any other culture.

      Holidays are actually comparable to a lot of other countries. Vacation time though is way too low in the USA, in my humble opinion. As a good friend of mine once said: "I can do 12 months worth of work in 11 months, but I can't do it in 12 months."
      Really, 10 days of vacation is a bad thing for the US economy...

      --

      MSN 8: Now Microsoft even has bugs in their ad campaigns.

    4. Re:As an American I can say... by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 2, Insightful
      If Americans were better workers employers wouldn't be looking oversees for employees.
      I'm sorry, but it appears that you misspelled "cheaper."
      --
      "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
    5. Re:As an American I can say... by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      The American worker, on average, works longer hours than any other country

      Correct (and over a lifetime has worked 40% more hours than in other comparable countries), but it does not mean they are more productive. Both France and Germany have a higher GDP/head/hour than the US. See this based on an Economist article based on a Goldman Sachs report. In effect, it implies that working looong hours ain't doing you the world of good.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    6. Re:As an American I can say... by jsc19702 · · Score: 1

      My last company was a Fortune 5 and we got 4, yes 4, holidays per year. That was for the whole company not just for specialy needed groups that needed to be on call etc. The vacaction time was comparable to everyone else.

    7. Re:As an American I can say... by Kpau · · Score: 1

      I call bullshit... by most measures Americans compete or outcompete most other countries. What you're seeing are little robber barons lining their pockets for THIS quarter by outsourcing vital corporate work to overseas people who can afford to work for less because they don't have an artifically high cost of living (aka housing with minimum costs or $50000/$100000/$200000). These robbers get bonuses and rewards.. by the time the shareholders figure out they've screwed what makes the company a good long term investment, these robbers are exiting stage right. The last full time company I worked for (before my current "freelancing" status ... and obtw I'm not on any Unemployment List either thanks to the way the state counts its data) ... sliced and diced this way... highly productive and profitable company -- new management moves in with cronies on Board of Directors -- while they're all getting much higher bonuses, company loans (never paid back), and perks... they're screwing up our price structure and moving us into the Fortune 100 market (total customer base abandonment) where we can't compete with the Top 4. Result: 10 branch offices go under... the remainder of the company is a facade under which the management slurps whats left of cash on hand.. we drop off the NYSE (its all in the plan they say). All you morons supporting this line of thinking: message - YOU AREN'T IN THE COUNTRY CLUB. These thieves use you and your ideological theories while laughing all the way to the bank.

    8. Re:As an American I can say... by Kpau · · Score: 1

      I'd be happy working in the US for $10000/yr ... just explain to the auto and housing industry that they need to sell their products for less than $10000. Oh... and let the Feds and the corporate industrial complex know that their business model is about to become toast because a bunch of serfs making $10000/yr won't pay for their cute toys like Hummers, plasma tvs, B-2 bombers, subsidizing corporate fun like logging roads, oil refineries... Hell, even the closet nazi Henry Ford knew you had to pay your workers enough to buy product and pay those lovely corporate welfare supporting taxes...

  34. Another tax-and-spend liberal flip-flopper... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but we all know the facts are biased!

    Why don't you go scare some old people by puting big government between them and their doctor (who's not taking it in the pooper from an HMO *)

    * That's just the invisible hand, turn your head and cough.

    1. Re:Another tax-and-spend liberal flip-flopper... by FauxPasIII · · Score: 0

      You forget, not only is Kerry a flip-flopper, he's also teh most liberal senator in the history of Earth!
      In other news, holding two mutually contradictory opinions in your brain at once and believing both of them
      absolutely does not mean you're insane either, so stop saying that!

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    2. Re:Another tax-and-spend liberal flip-flopper... by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Huh?

      On what grounds do you claim Kerry is "teh most liberal senator in the history of Earth!"? How is John Kerry more liberal than, say, Barbara Boxer? What about Dennis Kucinich? Technically a representative, not a senator, but still so far to the left of Kerry that it's a wonder they can cohabit the same political party.

      Next, on the question of flip-floppery. Why isn't Bush a flip-flopper for vacillating on his reasons for invading Iraq? Before the war, it was, "We have to take Saddam out to make America more secure! He has weapons of mass destruction and he's putting them on boats to the U.S. even as we speak! He'll detonate a nuke in New York by year's end!" Then when all the reasons he told us we had to go to war evaporated, he just starts talking about how wonderful it was that he removed Saddam Hussein from power, and how Iraqis are free from his brutal regime. Anyone who doesn't see the value of the war must have been glad that Hussein was in power.

      But it's not like that. Sure, Hussein was a brutal dictator, a cancer on his country that needed to be ripped out. But he's been precisely that since he took power in the '80's. On the basis of human rights being violated by crazed dictators, there are dozens of countries equally worthy of consideration. We're not invading those countries, there's no indication that we're looking to invade anyone else for such reasons, and it's clear that America had little desire to go to war solely to remove Hussein from power. But the alternative is for Bush to admit that he shouldn't have gone to war, so he flip-flops.

      Kerry, far from flip-flopping on the war as his critics claim, has been as consistent as we have a right to expect. He didn't vote to go to war, but to give the President the authority he needed to be credible in the U.N. Kerry voted for a process, whose end result might have been a declaration of war, but also included several intermediate steps which Bush ignored in his obsessive drive to remove Hussein from power.

      After the war began, Kerry "voted for the $87B before he voted against it." But that lovely, oft-replayed soundbite doesn't fully convey the complexity of the situation. The bill Kerry voted for and the bill Kerry voted against were not the same bill. President Bush threatened to veto the version of the bill that Kerry supported, so if Kerry is a flip-flopper, then so is President Bush.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  35. LOL!! by here4fun · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The problem is that these men who represent our presidential canidates, are the best that the parties could come up with. Out of everyone in the whole country. These four pricks. Thats insane. If this is the best that the dems and republicans can come up with then we need some different parties invovled in politics.

    LOL, Out of everyone "these four pricks"? I don't think it is the party that picked them. It is special interest and money that picked them. The candidates that can be purchased get picked. Look at Cheney and Haliburton. Look at Edwards and the Trial Lawyers. It does not matter what party gets in the white house, they are pretty much the same. What we need is campaign finance reform.

    1. Re:LOL!! by blackcoot · · Score: 1

      maybe what we need are better parties to choose from instead... legislating campaign finance reform is political suicide; however, if america were to move from a two party system to a multitude of parties (one for each substantial issue, for example) which are forced to cooperate because every party is forced to accomplish its goals through coalition building... (i'm sure you can see where i'm going with this)

    2. Re:LOL!! by Pros_n_Cons · · Score: 1

      More party's does little to fix the real problem, They'll be just as corrupt only on different things.
      I don't pretend to know how to fix it, maybe nobody does thats why its still here.

      --

      -- "of course thats just my opinion, I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller
    3. Re:LOL!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fat chance. That would require sweeping political reform by our current leadership, and not many political leaders would push to destroy the political establishment that lead to their rise to power. Gorbachev did it, but he had the advantage of next to absolute power, and isn't even fondly remembered for doing so.

    4. Re:LOL!! by maxpublic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What we need is campaign finance reform.

      Exactly how is that going to help anything? So long as you have a two-party system dominated by the DemoRepublicans then you can fuck with the money system any way you please and you'll STILL get one Democrat and one Republican running for the Presidency every four years.

      Campaign finance reform is the issue that the DemoRepublicans use to distract us from the real problem: that the current system is rigged so only they can play the game.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    5. Re:LOL!! by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      It won't solve everything but campaign finance reforms (assuming this is not some watered down junk) can help. What this will do is to limit funding for the major parties. Right now, the Democrats and Republicans raise millions of dollars whereas the other parties would be lucky to raise 1 million. By limiting the money to the major parties, you'll limit their propaganda and media influence. It isn't a magical solution to fix all the problems but it'll weaken the Democrats and Republicans.... don't forget that the majority of the population are influenced by rhetoric, tv ads and stuff like that, than by the actual party platform...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    6. Re:LOL!! by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      Govt will be less corrupt because the dominant party will have less power. This is how British style systems are. The downside is that the govt is less stable and can collapse more often (but I consider that to be a good thing).

      In many British-style systems, the smaller parties may not have total power but they actually influence the policies. For example, in some European countries (like Germany) the Greens have actually shaped key legislation over the last 10 years while just having a little bit of power. In Canada in the early 80's, the NDP (the 3rd biggest party) shaped how the Constitution was written even though they were the 3rd party (as a side note, one of the fingerprints of the NDP is that the Constitution that was written does not protect property rights as strongly as USA; generally left wing parties favour stronger worker rights and weaker property rights). Another example in Canada (late 80's to 90's) is how the Bloc Quebecois (#3 or #4 party in Canada, depending on year) have managed to shape a lot of the laws in the 90's even though they didn't have direct control.

      So to sum up, don't underestimate minority parties. They may be extremist, weird, and weak, but nevertheless they will impact the laws. A Green Party in USA with only 20% of the seats will mean that environmental regulations will be stronger; or a Libertarian Party with 20% of the seats will mean that individual rights will be stronger (something like the Patrio Act will have a tougher time making it through).

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    7. Re:LOL!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only we had two parties! Last time I checked, Republicans/neo-conservatives run the House, Senate, Presidency, and Supreme Court.

    8. Re:LOL!! by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

      Only way to do that is to change the voting system (I prefer approval voting myself). Start at the local level; it would be easiest to institute an approval voting system in your home town. Enough places do this, you get people wanting to institute it at the county level, then state, then nationally.

    9. Re:LOL!! by blackcoot · · Score: 1

      approval voting makes more sense when you've got a bunch of people running for several of the "same" position (e.g. states choosing seats in congress) but when there's only one seat to be filled, i prefer instant runoff voting.

    10. Re:LOL!! by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      What we need is campaign finance reform.

      Hahaha!! You mean, "What we need it more campaign reform again, differently", because campaign finance has been reformed, removed, reconciled, many times over. The problem, very simply, is that citizens WANT politicians to fuck with companies. Companies then have an interest in fucking with politicians. The only way to get companies to stop fucking with the political process is to prevent politicians from fucking with companies. That way, any companies that buy politicians will be wasting their money. Other companies that don't waste their money will be more profitable, and will out-compete the other companies.

      First step is a constitutional amendment: "The right of the people to trade shall not be infringed."

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  36. You cannot separate "Job Crunch" and intl trade... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    Seems extremely myopic to me to bandy about a term like 'job crunch' while ignoring other factors which contribute and effect the overall situ.

    We're s(p)ending billions of dollars in trade over to the People's Republic of China, where the govt. has so much control over the people and trade that they've given themselves extreme advantages which have resulted in extreme amounts of Chinese made goods just about everywhere. Meanwhile, we're losing tons of manufacturing related jobs in this country and STILL our own government doesn't even seem to blink?!! WTF? And not only that...what about intellectual property? Huh? Hardly enforced (not surprising considering their ideological backgroud)

    I'm those who's job it is to study these things could certainly comment much more accurately and in greater detail, but my perception is that our govt. aside from not being able to stimulate the economy sufficiently to create enough jobs, seem to be sitting on their well-paid asses not giving a tinkers cuss about how trade affects job growth.

  37. Disappointment by Beek · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I thought this article would be about a cereal from Apple :-(

  38. Re:Simple: make your own job. UNLIKELY by infonography · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Tried it about in May 2001,

    Internet bubble bursting = no funding = no work.

    Then your out your savings and 911 hits. worst your stuck in a area code recruiters ignore and don't find this out till two years later. Now I nolonger equate MBAs as idiots who can't do like Gym Teachers teach Gym. However I still don't like their choice of clothes.

    --
    Sorry about the writing. Robot fingers, you know? Cliff Steele in DOOM PATROL #23
  39. Xenophobic Bullshit by billstewart · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "Bad Immigration Policy"? My ancestors let your ancestors move to North America, so don't bitch if we let other people move here too. Meanwhile, when I moved to California from New Jersey, I came twice as far as a typical Mexican immigrant, and I only speak one of the four or five main languages used here in SF, but nobody made me ask permission from some bureaucrat to move here.

    Yes, we've got a job crunch in this country, and we had a severe job crunch in the dot-bomb technology industry, with an estimated 49% of San Francisco's high-tech jobs disappearing, so my friends were affected much more strongly than the average American, and there's a non-trivial chance I'll get laid off next week.

    • One reason we're having trouble is that technological change created a lot of temporary opportunities for jobs until the market figured out what the web business was really worth and the VC money all dried up.
    • Another reason has to do with rapidly rising interest rates in Y2K, which _is_ something politicians had a lot of influence on, which happened as the Y2K-conversion software boom jobs dried up and the dogfood-on-line.com companies were running out of their early funding rounds.
    • Another reason is that Bush's protectionism raised the price of steel, hurting any American manufacturers who used steel, harming a lot more business than it saved.
    • Moore's Law really zapped the telecommunications industry, by suddenly giving us near-infinite fiber bandwidth when everybody's construction funding had depended on selling it at slowly declining prices, and the "Internet capacity demand doubling every 15 minutes" phenomenon only slowed down the crash a bit.
    • Information wants to be free and the Internet lets anybody work from anywhere in the world. That seemed like a good reason for everybody to move to San Francisco, but in fact anybody in the world who's reasonably educated can compete with us, even if the xenophobes don't let them move here. That's not just the software business - almost any white-collar job is really about either manipulating information or talking to people face to face; the cost of phone calls dropped to near-zero once government monopolies in most of the world realized that white-collar jobs were more important than ripoff telephone prices.
    • Container shipping means that not only can information go anywhere in the world, physical stuff can be transported cheaply too, so manufacturing jobs can easily be done around the world.
    • The American Education System has been declining over the last 30 years, just in case you thought this was a purely Libertarian rant. School systems aren't putting out the quality of education they used to, which means that students aren't prepared for high-value jobs, but schools also aren't teaching mechanical skills that laborers would use.
    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Minor detail:

      and the "Internet capacity demand doubling every 15 minutes" phenomenon

      Isn't this derived from the then-bogus claim that internet demand doubles every 15 months? I think it might have been MCI or some other telecomm that ended up bankrupt and execs indicted for fraudulent and misleading statements.

    2. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by colonslash · · Score: 1
      "Bad Immigration Policy"? My ancestors let your ancestors move to North America, so don't bitch if we let other people move here too.
      Your ancestors were native americans? Look at where they are with their lack of a strong immigration policy.

      Of course there are some economic failures that can't be helped, but that doesn't mean our government's economic policies are meaningless and ineffectual. Right now they are geared to gut the middle class.

      As a peraonal example, I was in a dotcom that is no longer. My company was bought by Microsoft, who laid off 50% to start. They swallowed our company up because we were innovative and competitive. This is the same Microsoft that was convicted for anticompetitive monopoly practices and than let off with a slap on the wrist by the Bush administration.

      People can compete for our jobs from anywhere in the world. I don't have to like it, and I don't have to support companies that offshore jobs.

      Guest worker programs are not and never have been necessary. The US already has immigration policies in place - the guest worker loopholes drain jobs and IT expertise, at the expense of workers, for the benefit of the owners.

      It would be nice if the US could give jobs to everybody in the world, but you can't fill an ocean with a teacup.

      Not allowing "guest workers" employed by the US and its companies is not the same as xenophobia. A little self interest here can keep our information technology sector strong, allowing us to continue to drive the technology and increase the standard of living for those around the world.

    3. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by mantera · · Score: 1


      "The American Education System has been declining over the last 30 years, just in case you thought this was a purely Libertarian rant."

      It's ironic that your title includes the word "Bullshit" in an other-critical way yet its content contains such bullshit statement.

      And here's why; I am almost sure that for you to say such statement you have not experienced education elsewhere in the world. I am absolutely sure that you have not been an exchange student or had contact with many of them to know what you're talking about if you make such claim. I, personally, experienced American education for my highschool, then sense of adventure in my youth took me to experience European education for my graduate and post-graduate at two of their top-three universities in my field for well over a decade, during which I remained actively in interaction at levels of good acquaintance, friend and boyfriend with over 300 American exchange students who spent time in Europe, and various European and international students the majority of which were the upper-crust of their generation academically.

      Here's what is unequivocally my view, and the view of the vast majority of those who had direct experience; American education is the most modern, focused, effective, efficient, and well-resourced education anyone can get, unequivocally, and by far!

    4. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I graduated college in 1981 and even back then it was a common view that the U.S. had a non-top education up to the end of high school but that it got to near-top or top for college and post-graduate levels.

      One thought was that younger minds needed more discipline and structure, but for true advances you need more free-wheeling and that is what you got in the U.S. for college and later.

      A Nony Mouse

    5. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The original poster was probably talking about the American highschool education system which is horrible. Students in Europe and the Carribean who move to the US find that they are 2-3 years ahead of American highschool students of the same age. Even the best college education system can't make up for the horrible highschool education system: garbage in, garbage out. The students who most likely to excel in American universities are students who did their pre-college education in another country. I remember having American classmates who could barely read in my freshman year of college. The American pre-college education system is a disaster.

    6. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      #1, Libertarians suck. You suck.

      #2, This country belongs to U.S. Citizens, and when we decide we've had enough H1-B's, illegal aliens, and legal immigrants, we're shutting the door. We will not commit national suicide because some nit-wit libertarian doesn't believe in national integrity.

    7. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by leandrod · · Score: 1
      > Bush's protectionism raised the price of steel

      I'm just a non-US American (from Minas Gerais, BR in fact), but AFAIK protectionism, and thus high costs of living and doing business, started with Woodrow Wilson's protection for farmers.

      All kinds of protectionism ultimately hurt the poor, who pay higher to protect a few. There are no reasonable moral excuses for it.

      --
      Leandro Guimarães Faria Corcete DUTRA
      DA, DBA, SysAdmin, Data Modeller
      GNU Project, Debian GNU/Lin
    8. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by khallow · · Score: 1
      "Bad Immigration Policy"? My ancestors let your ancestors move to North America, so don't bitch if we let other people move here too. Meanwhile, when I moved to California from New Jersey, I came twice as far as a typical Mexican immigrant, and I only speak one of the four or five main languages used here in SF, but nobody made me ask permission from some bureaucrat to move here.

      I can top that. My ancestors sometimes let my ancestors move here. Sometimes they didn't though that usually didn't last as my stronger ancestors killed off my ancestors who got in the way. No matter how it turns out, there's this citizenship thing. I happen to be a citizen of the US with free speech and all that. And someone immigrating in, well they aren't a citizen of the US. Well, anyway, if I want to complain because those immigrants are making my pay go down, or just because I think they look funny, or even because I'm a xenophobic freak, well I got the right to bitch no matter what my ancestors did or didn't do.

      Frankly the only part of your post that I strongly agree with is the very last bit. As a high tech society, there's no point to producing massive numbers of overpaid third world workers which is effectively what the public school system in the US does.

      I don't think steel tariffs proved to be that big a problem. The WTO moved pretty quick on the issue and the US provided only token resistance. I think the government spending spree and mortgage credit bubble after September 11 will have a more lasting negative impact.

      Moore's Law isn't what was responsible for the telecom mess. They just overbuilt infrastructure. You can have too much of a good thing. Moore's law actually would have played to their benefit since they need something to consume the vast amount of potential bandwidth they created.

      As far as the platitude that "information wants to be free", you need to understand the concept of service. Ultimately, every bit of knowledge you ever need might be on the Internet, but some information is a lot more valuable to you than other bits. For example, the information that "the computer is broken" is far less valuable than the exact instructions for how to fix the problem that's causing the computer to fail. Or even having someone perform those instructions in your stead.

    9. Re:Xenophobic Bullshit by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      protectionism is much older than that. Abe Lincoln was a protectionist(i.e. it was a major part of his politics). My own view here:
      it is one thing to borrow from abroad for capital improvements. It is another to borrow for operating expenditures-which is what the US is now doing.

  40. Hmmmmm... by kmeister62 · · Score: 1

    5.4% jobless rate. Economy growing at 3-4%. Jobs being created every day. All sectors of the economy are coming back nicely. Even the interest rates are starting to climb back up. A good sign that the economy is stronger. Stock market is back up, investments are growing. There's another indicator about jobs to. The household index which looks at people who have jobs by households instead of calling up employers and asking "How many people did you hire?". The houshold survey takes into account small businesses and self employed. That survey is through the roof. Very good as far as the economy. People are going out on their own for jobs (can you say consultant). BTW, the emplyment rate is lower now than it was in 96.

    1. Re:Hmmmmm... by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      Unemployment rate doesn't count people who've stopped looking, and the people for whom benefits have run out. You really think nationwide unemployment is at 5.4%?

      Also, there's a well-known effect in the household index, which is that lots of people don't like to admit to being out of work and will instead say "I'm self-employed".

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    2. Re:Hmmmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      5.4% jobless rate

      Benifits ran out, so they are no longer counted as jobless.

      Even the interest rates are starting to climb back up. A good sign that the economy is stronger.

      Interest rate is adjusted by a small group of ppl who are looking at a number of items. One thing is inflation. Another thing is how fast money is being shifted out of the country. When interest rate goes up, people want our dollars. At the moment, people such as Warren Buffet are switching from Dollars to Euros. They no longer trust the US (way too high of a deficit) and the interest rate was too low. I would suspect that this had a higher impact than did inflation.

    3. Re:Hmmmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Increasing interest rates will destroy any hope the commoners have of recovering... wages are still stagnating, the minimum wage will not be increased any time soon (which drives up all wages and increases consumer spending, which benefits the economy).

      BTW, what say you about the rising cost of homes and health care?

      Stocks and investments are unearned income. If actual jobs aren't being made (or resources aren't being extracted), those unearned incomes are merely adding to a bubble of fictional value. Even Proudhon knew that.

    4. Re:Hmmmmm... by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      Just on extra net job would count as a job rise but it wouldn't be much use to the 150,000 (or whatever) per month required for new job seekers.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    5. Re:Hmmmmm... by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      and the people for whom benefits have run out


      Benefits run out? What kind of crazy system is that?

    6. Re:Hmmmmm... by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      The kind the US has.

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
  41. Not Surprising... by AntiGenX · · Score: 1
    Both parties are equally out of touch as usual...

    Although something that suprised me was an interview with Ralph Nader the other day. In it he decried the Democrats and said the blame lay mostly on their heads for outsourcing. I thought it was a little odd because a lot news sites seem to be trying to only blame the Republicans. Of course he also said that both party's have gravitated to an imaginary middle and are virtually indistinguishable. I don't know what to think, it's almost a farce at this point.

  42. The jobs are out there by Greg_D · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    There's a difference between "I can't find a job," which is what many unemployed people say, and "I can't find the job that I want," which is what they actually mean.

    People seem to have grown so accustomed to getting everything their way that they have forgotten that the world isn't the rosy little wonderland they want it to be. The only people sitting at home unemployed in this economy are the ones without the balls to find a job and succeed at it while waiting for the right opportunity.

  43. Thank god for that article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thank god for that article. I was beginning to wonder if *I* might be the one responsible for my unemployment due to my choice of remaining in a one factory town, with my limited skill-set, narrow education, zero-ambition and unwillingness to take any job that was far beneath my abilities that can apparently be replicated by someone who grew-up in a third world country without indoor plumbing while educated in a classroom with a dirt floor. I'm so glad I can blame them foreigners and people in Washington. I was almost thinking that I was some kind of loser slacker who spent all my time on message boards downloading music (cause it was meant to be free!) and not trying to make myself into someone with valuable assets. Not my responsibility. There's no way you can convince me otherwise now. Forget the "data", this economy sucks because all my loser friends are out of work too.

    1. Re:Thank god for that article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      And they say that Americans can't do sarcasm (that was sarcasm, right?).

    2. Re:Thank god for that article by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      What's really telling here is that you posted as an anonymous coward, apparently because you don't have the guts to do so *even under a pseudonym*. Talk about losers.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:Thank god for that article by jsc19702 · · Score: 1

      Someone talking about responsibility posting as an AC. Now that's funny!

  44. Baby boomers and out of demand jobs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does this study even take into account the greater number of retiring baby boomers?

    With the huge numbers of people in their 50s and 60s hitting retirement age, we can't blame the decreased labor force on the recent recession or outsourcing. I do believe that may contribute to the issue, but I don't think it is the sole factor. On the other side, many baby boomers are working past retirement. The dot coms didn't end up to be the best place to stick retirement money.

    The unemployment numbers are deceiving, as percentages can be swayed in many directions as to exactly who is unemployed. The labor force participation rate is the percentage of those who are willing and able to obtain a job. Willing and able aren't exactly purely quantitative variables.

    Anyone here know someone who majored in CS and can't find a job? Guess what, the tech bubble didn't really burst, it just sunk to the other side of the planet. Of course US CS majors aren't employed, the demand for their profession has dropped severely. It may be harsh, but the simple truth is that the US needs to reorient its workforce in a new direction.

  45. Bah... by Danj2k · · Score: 1

    I clicked on this headline in the Slashdot RSS feed thinking it'd be an Apple story.

  46. Montanans don't care who puts what in who's pooper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know, I happen to be here visiting family.

    They quite correctly observe that much social policy is dictated to them by cities. While they have a nice generally helpful demenor, but they resent the influence of the cities, which can occasionally seem like edicts. (It's interesting to ponder whether we'd still have these same kinds of problems with Senators being appointed as was originally concieved.)

    A big one is gun control. Hunting and just shooting a bunch of rounds off at some stumps is an important social activitiy, which has been significantly impinged. It's now far more unusual for a child to recieve a firearm as a present. They don't understand the greater percieved risk for firearms in a city, and don't much care. If someone locks their firearms in a truck cab and their stolen, sold, and subsequently used in a crime, that's entirely the fault of the last criminal. (Who should pretty much be summarily excecuted) For their community, that works. They don't see themselves as asking those in the city to take on an additional risk. Naturally, it's far away, so it's not important. But when one recalls the crime waves of the 30's and characters like Pretty Boy Floyd, they do have a point. It has been worse, and some of them used actual military hardware and frequently outclassed *all* police firepower. Naturally, with liability being what it is, such a thing wouldn't be sustainable for a city, and so they look to sue gun companies who certainly should take at least as much of a share of the liability as the government.

    But also there's a thread of self-reliance which is antithetical to a 'nanny' government, and a little bit afraid of it. To them, it's like a real person coming into their house and passing judgement on them as a person. Very personal, and extremely offensive. But to illustrate what I mean by self-reliance: A certain crochety fellow objects to the taxes levied by cities. He thinks things like police and fire should be paid for like any other service. Such that if you didn't pay for fire service and your neighbor did, the fire department would come out to your house, watch it burn to the ground, and save your neighbors. Which of course makes no economic sense, but scores high marks in individual freedoms.

    But Montana is going to have a Democratic Governor and a Republican Lt. Governor. Their ad is one of the best I've ever seen. I haven't run into a lot of actual fans of Bush, more like they think Kerry means more government they'll have to personally deal with.

  47. I hope this crisis gets the middle class to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    .. stop whinily suckling their corporate and/or public sector feeding/cocoon pods and shed their fat middles and go do some real inventing and entreprenuering. Its shameful to see so much whining from the offspring of those who kicked Nazi and Soviet ass, gave us the moon landing, modern computing etc etc. Sheesh, at the very least these whiners can daytrade on indian and chinese and korean companies' stocks from a starbucks for crissakes...

    1. Re:I hope this crisis gets the middle class to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Gee, I hope this crisis gets you stupid name-callers to wake up and smell the coffee for once. It would be ideal for everyone to take care of themselves, to start their own companies, etc. Unfortunately:
      • Government regulation, an inconvenience to large enterprises, can be quite stifling to small businesses.
      • The government spends my tax money trying to give my job away and/or lower my salary. For example, the state of Florida has in the past placed ads in Northern trade journals that basically say "move your company here and you can pay people less." That benefits nobody except existing business owners. Northern employees get screwed, and Floridians have government-induced job competition. That's just one example, of course.
      • While we're on that subject, competition isn't necessarily king. The goal of a good capitalist is to reduce competition, not revel in it. Microsoft does this all the time. Why is it evil when I want to? It's not xenophobic, it's smart.
      • The only thing that keeps a lot of people from starting businesses, even ones with a large amount of uncertainty of success, is that the penalties for failure go beyond money. We have a (government encouraged) system of employer-sponsored health insurance in the US. Somehow my insurance premiums are magically lower if I belong to some arbitrary group than if I want to purchase it myself, and God forbid I actually have used it in the past, because then it really gets unaffordable. Retirement works the same way. Get the government out of both: medical prices will fall, we can use health "insurance" to cover major, unexpected expenses like we used to, and I can handle my own damned retirement if I don't have to trip over stupid IRS rules doing so.
      • If everyone was an entrepeneur, nobody would make money. Remember when everyone was going to be a "web developer". That went well. The economy needs all kinds of people, not just the ones you hold in high regard.
      • Our government protects the assets and interests of multinational corporations while at the same time giving them large tax breaks and encouraging them to outsource jobs. It's not just the free market doing this. Some of that situation is artificailly created by people who supposedly work for us. We have every right to demand allegiance from these corporate robber-barons for all the money we spend protecting them. It's called smart business, and our "business" (the US) is being mismanaged by a bunch of morons who need to be replaced with people loyal to their employers.

      You "conservatives" must hate people like me: I want the government to stop helping AND stop hindering me. You just want the government to stop helping. I guess that makes you half smart.

      By the way, your people who kicked Nazi ass did so after a large period of isolationalism and ignoring that particular problem until it blew up in their faces. We kicked Soviet ass by having a larger credit balance than they did. I'll give Reagan credit for figuring that out, but we're still paying it off and thanks W for making it worse. Also, the moon landing was possible in large part because we didn't have accountants and finance people pouring over every expenditure looking for ROI like we do these days. Further moon landings and other space projects were killed by budget officers, not by lack of vision. Please note I'm not trying to insult any of these accomplishments--I'm just pointing out that there's a bit of harsh reality to go along with the romantic nostalgia.

      People are capable of some pretty amazing things when you leave them alone and let them do stuff. We have a system of artificially-created hoops that stifle creativity, innovation, and benefit no one except of course for government and multinational corporations.

    2. Re:I hope this crisis gets the middle class to ... by starfire-1 · · Score: 1

      Apparently "Anonymous Coward" has alot of pent up anger.

      I'm a new small business owner. I dropped out of the work force two and a half years ago to re-engineer software that I had developed over my career, but as my own IP. I've run across many of the same things that this guy has seen. (So I guess I'm one of the "millions" who have given up as I don't hit the payroll radar and don't hit the unemployment radar and have no insurance. Oh no ... help me! :)

      But instead of getting angry and blaming "conservatives" let's remember a few things.

      - One candidate has stressed changing the insurance and retirement structure to give individual small businesses a fair shake (Bush).

      - No one administration is responsible for the inner workings of the bureaucracy. It is a huge machine that abhors change and protects its own paychecks. Since entrepeneurs cut against this philosophy, it's not surprising that there are problems.

      - Which leads to the stance of the another candidate which is to largely maintain the status quo with marginal changes to the business tax code and attempt to "punish" corporation that export jobs (Kerry). This protects his biggest union constituancy (Government employees) and plays to fifty year old fears.

      Bottom line - Each of us live in the world of microeconomics, but the country and the planet run s in the world of macroeconomics. To discuss free trade, job competition, the squeezing of the middle class without focusing on the macro problems is useless.

    3. Re:I hope this crisis gets the middle class to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "People are capable of some pretty amazing things when you leave them alone and let them do stuff. We have a system of artificially-created hoops that stifle creativity, innovation, and benefit no one except of course for government and multinational corporations."

      Hear, hear.

      What would happen if we changed the law such that only real live people could hold shares in corporations and corporations paid no tax, but dividends were taxed as regular income?

      A Nony Mouse

  48. What a bullshit? by admp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hey, this is strange: the "lowest grade" people from east europe, asia etc. get new jobs in US sector, while the "middle grade" people loose them? Don't you see there is a problem with the americans on themselves?

    1. Re:What a bullshit? by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      Agree with the idea, disagree with the use of "lowest grade". It's mostly to do with suitability for a job, you are not going to pay someone with a PhD to work in a call centre any more than you are going to trust an unskilled labourer in aircraft design.

      There are simply more jobs in the unskilled sector and most natives to a country who have been through education are too highly skilled to be an economic viability if employed in the unskilled sector.

      --
      How many people can read hex if only you and dead people can read hex?
  49. Statistics show that unemployment is down... by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1

    But only because they don't count those who have been out of work so long they're no longer eligible for unemployment assistance.

  50. As a Canuck working in the U.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have to say that a lot of issues presented in that article are the same sort of crap that's been tossed around for decades.

    For instance, mining and metallurgical refining are extremely high-risk cost-dependent ventures, and they always go wherever is cheapest. My dad's been designing mines for decades, works around the world, and sometimes you can't even get a gold mine going in a place with incredibly low labour costs like Costa Rica! So to point to a shift of refining work to Canada and Mexico as being a fault with NAFTA is just incorrect-- it's exactly what NAFTA was designed to do, in order to make it cheaper for Americans to buy products.

    As for Visas, many people on HB-1s, J-1s, etc... leave the U.S. after a few years. They're here for training, and that's it-- and when you consider the legal hurdles that companies have to go through in order to get foreigners (like moi) into the country in the first place, you should realize it's not going to happen if companies could easily find adequately skilled people here in the U.S.

    No, I'm afraid what's really wrong with the U.S. job situation is very simple-- there are extreme disincentives for companies to hire new employees if they can make current employees work overtime.

    'Fess up. How many of you work overtime for little or NO pay? 50% of you? 75%? How many of your companies had massive layoffs in the past decade, then been very slow to rehire even as the bottom line improved?

    I'm good at what I do, and I'm willing to work hard, but realistically, the company I work for should have hired half a dozen more people instead of just me.

  51. The parties or the voters? by Stephen · · Score: 1

    The parties only picked people that they thought could get elected. Maybe you should blame the electorate instead of the parties for the quality of the candidates.

    --
    11.00100100001111110110101010001000100001011010001 1000010001101001100010011
  52. Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Frankly it is tiring, Western Europe and what is today's EU has always respected free enterprise and private ownership, cornerstones of a capitalist economy.

    People in the US have no idea what they are talking about when they say EU countries are socialist.

    They may be more socially responsible than the US goverments perhaps, but private property and free enterprise has never been stopped.

    If you want examples of Socialist countries look at Cuba or North Korea, where everything is Socialized by means of state control and ownership.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In my opinion, if a government is claiming ownership to the larger part of the financial rewards of your hard work - then this is an example of a government that is not respecting private ownership.

      This ongoing robbery goes on in the US and EU and my guess is that this is a major obstacle to job creation.

      Personally, I had enough and chose to run my business in a country where this continous confiscation does not occur. As a consequence 4 high paying jobs have been lost in the EU and subsequently created in Switzerland.

      If you really are interested in understanding what is happening - then this book is for you:
      http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/ -/0684 832720/qid=1096106965/sr=8-1/ref=pd_ka_1/103-81391 86-0734265?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

    2. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Cuba and North Korea aren't socialist; the first is closer to fascism than anything else, the second is an old-style absolute dictatorship.

      The country closest to true, economic socialism would be Sweden, in my opinion.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      Sweden has dramtically changed since the 60s & 70s. In the index of economic freedom, Sweden comes =22 of 123 countries, the same level as Taiwan.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    4. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In my opinion, if a government is claiming ownership to the larger part of the financial rewards of your hard work - then this is an example of a government that is not respecting private ownership.

      This is utter bullshit, because 95% of the financial rewards of your hard work, come from the successfully, well organized, stable, nice organization of the country and society that others set up for you. If you don't believe me, just go in Uganda, and watch you will be able to sustain the same life style: it should be the case if your productivity wasn't dependent on others.

      Your refusal to acknowledge the tremedous and decisive effect of the work of others in you getting a decent life, is only an illustration of your ungratefullness, and a clear example of the selfishness promoted by the US society, which is an extreme example in the world (no Asia doesn't work that way for instance).

    5. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by hanssprudel · · Score: 1

      Which just goes to show that a single dimensional value is not enough to show economic freedom. If you look at the categories, you will see that Sweden is at 118 of 123 in the size of the government, and 89 out of 95 in labor market regulations. Sweden's fall in wealth among the OECD nations has been accordingly.

    6. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by CptNerd · · Score: 1
      95% of the financial rewards of your hard work, come from the successfully, well organized, stable, nice organization of the country and society that others set up for you.

      So, by your math, I "owe" 95% of my income as tax to pay for everyone else's "hard work?"

      Remind me never to set up shop in Anonymous Cowardia...

      --
      By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
    7. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First I have to disagree with you premise that the American perception of Europe is wrong. It is spot on.

      Europe has created a huge class of people not willing to work and are sustained via the state. It is prety hard to deny this. This is ripe feeding ground for radicals, nurderes and rapists. Frankly bin Laden must be smilling widely at the thought.

      You can call Europe Socialist or what ever you want, the reality is that they are a threat to the new world order! There is nothing worst than communities (look at the Arab world) that want the benfits of work yet aren't willing to work themselves. Such environments are degenerate and a danger to humanity.

    8. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by Loopy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, global taxes to support the world's poor (whether poor by choice, ignorance or circumstance is outside the scope of this thread) is a lynch-pin of capitalist dogma. Nationalized health-care is another core capitalist notion. Oh yeah, and forcing business into immediate changes that will kill off many but the top tier that can afford to make the mandatory changes (Kyoto anyone?) is another long-time basic capitalist building block.

      Try again.

      Now, if you meant, "Please don't generalize all of Europe socialist because it's mainly the leadership of some countries and certain governmental portions that are socialist or socialist leaning, not all of us," then I totally agree. There are as many folks in Europe that believe in personal responsibility, private property ownership, free enterprise and non-confiscatory tax rates as there are in America, possibly more. But to just flatly deny that folks like Jaques Chirac would love to see America paying every country on earth 20% of our GNP is a bit of a trip down the river Nile, isn't it?

    9. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by dbIII · · Score: 1
      People in the US have no idea what they are talking about when they say EU countries are socialist.
      In comparison the average church charity must be run by a bunch of goddam unamerican communists! The world view shifted so much that government for the people by the people is seen as being socialist. The good of the country should be seen as more than the good of the companies that donate to the party - that is far too narrow a view.
    10. Re:Can you guys drop the Socialist moniker please? by MemoryDragon · · Score: 1

      Not even that, there was a time in the 70s when several countries had lots of core companies under government control. Times have changed. Whats left are governments who still try to govern for the people. If the US sees a government which prefers to work for the people instead of dumping cash into weapons, then you can call those countries socialist. But bear in mind of those are socialist then aid organisations are purest communist extents :-)

  53. Not around here by Gunfighter · · Score: 1

    My area must be an exception to the norm. Employment is up, want ads are filled to the brim with great opportunities (including some pretty outstanding IT jobs), and I'm giving IT consulting work away to colleagues because I'm too busy to handle it.

    --
    -- Stu

    /. ID under 2,000. I feel old now.
    1. Re:Not around here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where's "here"? Bangalore?

  54. Blame it on the weatherman. by l3v1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Bad immigration policy-and bad trade deals are combining to decimate the middle class in America.

    In the country where I live now I'm an immigrant, having settled and got citizenship about 8 years ago. I have been through many arguings and blind quarrels over the years over "immigrants take our jobs" and the like.

    What I've found is the people who complain the most are those who are just down in the dumps, not necessarily because they couldn't get a job, but because they didn't want to accept any job, or just politicians who are what they are, anyplace, or just bloody ignorant.

    It's the most easy to blame increasing uneployment rates on others who have jobs, especially if they come from abroad.

    Really no offence and forgive my ignorance, but I have to tell, U.S. people also have their history on intolerance, racism and xenophoby.

    You also have to take into account that some effects of the late dotcom boom and blow are still showing today. I mean there was a continuing very large over-employment of IT "professionals" , very many of which are dismissed even today.

    What I want to point out is that there are very many aspects that lead to the given rising unemployment rates in the U.S. (and just that you know, that is _not_ that high if you consider other countries as well, which americans tend not to do), and only one of them may be connected to immigration of qualified professionals (I intentionally don't mention seasonal uneducated workers, that's another area of the problem).

    --
    I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
    1. Re:Blame it on the weatherman. by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      U.S. people also have their history on intolerance, racism and xenophoby.

      Which makes us no different than any other nation on the face of the Earth.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  55. is it me by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

    or has the level of intelligence slipped a few notches aorund here. somehow anecdotal evidence for a few people suddenly means gospel truth. didn't you guys ever take a statistics class? holy crap. look, you could use the payroll survey or the household survey, and see huge differences. one of the unheralded changes of the tax cuts was to Chapter S corps. Small firms can claim personal taxes rather than corporate taxes, which has saved them lots of money, and spurred a huge growth of small businesses. they aren't figured in the payroll survey. the economy has been seeing good growth, and it can't be growing without new jobs.

    people are complaining about bush, but he inherited a recession and we've been at war. plus, what the hell would yo have him do. okay, not cut taxes. but then what. we have a 8 trillion dollar economy. what exactly can the federal government do? it can change the rules and regulations that make it a bitch to start a business, etc. but that goes beyond simple fiscal policy, and everyone has irons in the fire there. both parties are basically identical economically. Bush wants all his tax cuts, kerry wants 99% of the tax cuts, with more for middle class. and the difference is...

    one other thing people forget, is that europe is in a long term slump. they have been at 9-10% unemploymenty for years. they have aging populations and increasing welfare rolls. we've been the only economy in the west that has had real growth. china is experiencing very good growth as is india. but they have living standards well below ours. give that a few years. rememebr japan? you want to hate bush because he's religious, pro-life, pro-war, pro-patriot act, pro-whatever, fine. claiming that he has some magical power to outsource jobs or create rapid growth is asinine. clinton governed as a moderate republican. balanced budgets, eventual tax cuts, welfare reform, spending cuts, etc. if he wasn't a democrat, y'all'd be calling him a fascist. the business cycle is going to happen. what needs to be done is to look at long term economic conditions. we need a better business climate, tort reform, a flat tax, monetary discipline, fiscal restraint, among others. but w live in a overly political, sound bite driven society. we can't have an honest debate. it's our own fault. but don't put the finger on any one person, bush, clinton, etc.

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
    1. Re:is it me by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      complaining about bush, but he inherited a recession

      As they should. Bush did not inherit the recession, it started (officially) two months after he came into office. Revisionist history

      --
      Did he inhale?
    2. Re:is it me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      china is experiencing very good growth as is india. but they have living standards well below ours. give that a few years. remember Japan?
      Have you actually been to India or China? I have and I can tell you that the poverty in these countries literay blows your mind. For example poverty is such a way of life in India that it is a Hindu tradition to good out and beg once your children leave home. These are places that show your how complete illrelivent money is in comparison to the problems of getting people fed and shelterd. I can say with great confidence that these are countries which will never have a standard of living even close to that of a western country. Sure, you might have alot more rich people but if you think Culcutter will end up looking like Denver then your living in a dreamland. Hell, in the last Indian election the then party in power got booted out of office because the vast majority of people in that country have not seen any significate change in there living standard despite the recent economic success.
      Also Japan is a really bad example, being - they have a much smaller population then either of these countries, around 200 million. Have been in recession for the last 10 years and were rebuilding after the second world war. A better example would be Korea who will obviously be the next japan as soon as the south swallows up the north.

    3. Re:is it me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I say F bush anyway. He's a moron and everybody knows it...

    4. Re:is it me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is the stupidest statement i ever heard. no wait, i've heard some pretty stupid shit from my fellow teachers. i get it, the economy was growing at 5% in Jan and Feb, but in March, bush waved his "fuck eevrybody" wand and poof. recession. yeah, he could've stopped the year long slowdown. keep drinking your kool aid. i'm not defending bush, it's just that you're a moron.

    5. Re:is it me by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      A coward and anonymous with no information to back up your puerile rant.

      --
      Did he inhale?
  56. Or not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny, but reality doesn't agree with your portrayal of the employment picture in Delaware. It seems that the unemployment rate in Delaware as of July 2004 was 3.9%. Delaware Unemployment Statistics

  57. Base your economy on military expansionism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    oil and what not .. run out of enemies and yerp your whole meaning for existance goes out the window. Invent an invisible enemy and presto its fixed .. or IS it?
    I have to ask what purpose does the US serve? What is its ambition as a nation 'cause the status quo just won't work. The world is running out of resources and will do so ever faster by "democratising" & "consumerising" china and creating a large consumerist middle class in India.
    I really don't care who wins the US presidency, neither of them will stop the inevitable slide to ultimate doom!
    In short wipe out 4.5billion humans and we might survive but I doubt thats gonna happen.
    Have fun in the unemployment lines people!

    Oh one last thing "so long and thanks for all the protein"

  58. Re:Simple: make your own job. UNLIKELY by Veridium · · Score: 1

    Ya gotta be flexible. There is no box. There was a time when I had sweet geek dream jobs, but due to my new geographic location, I had to adapt.

    Now I do mostly POS/online store integration for small business and handle small business IT needs and home user repair/upgrades. Not as exciting, nor as prestigious, but it pays. It sure beats working in a company worried about whether or not they'll be downsizing soon.

    --
    Think for yourself, destroy your television.
  59. Funny... by rasteri · · Score: 1

    Funny how nobody complained when the working classes were decimated. Oh wait, that's right, anyone earning less than 10k a year must be a crack addict and deserves to be poor.

  60. Re:low unemployment compared to europe [proper] by pyro_dude · · Score: 1

    >"I Kinda care when people start trying to make our
    >country use thier system (socialized everything).
    >I'd like to point out everything is a trade off."

    >As opposed to what? Socialized some things? Which
    >politician is advocating getting rid of social
    >security, medicare, medicaid, public schools,
    >state universities, farm subsidies etc? That's
    >right NONE OF THEM.

    Try the Libertarian Party's Michael Badnarik. http://www.badnarik.org/

    :O

    --
    --pyro_dude
  61. 68% literacy rate!? by johannesg · · Score: 1

    Please tell me you are kidding... Or if not, tell me how one-third of the population of the worlds single remaining super power cannot even read or write. Is it lack of education? Are the school so bad? Are students no longer interested? Why?

    1. Re:68% literacy rate!? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Functional illiteracy is defined as not being able to read or write above the fourth-grade level. This may not be the way you think about literacy, e.g., not being able to read or write *at all*.

      However, by most measures a person who can't read above the fourth-grade level is incapable of comprehending even basic newspaper articles unless someone else reads the articles to them. They can't deal with paperwork, with legal documents, even with basic forms (e.g., job applications). This is what is meant by 'functional illiteracy'.

      Is it lack of education?

      How can it be? We pay more money per child than ever before in our history. School districts bitch and moan about a lack of funds despite the fact that thirty years ago these same districts would be slavering at the mouth to have today's budgets.

      Are the school so bad

      This isn't a new problem. All absolute measures of student achievement have been declining since the advent of the modern schooling system in the late 1800's. The government gets around these absolute measures by devising relative ones and then lowering the standards over time. For example, the SAT test given today is considerably easier than the one given twenty years ago, as are all standardized tests used in grade schools and high schools. The requirements for getting a passing grade in school subjects have also declined markedly, resulting in rampant grade inflation (I'm sure you've heard of this, if not the changing test requirements). And so on.

      Forced government schooling has been an abysmal failure from the get-go, *if you assume that education is the goal of schooling*. If you instead assume that the goal is to produce a stupid, uneducated proletariat willing to work for slave wages and who'll be unable to properly question it's own government or corporate economic entities, then school has been a spectacular, unparalleled success. But for this last you have to be paranoid enough to do some research on the topic, which is pretty damned disturbing when you get into it.

      Are students no longer interested?

      Student disaffection with forced schooling isn't a new problem; it's been a problem right from the beginning. Teacher's associations like to blame 'society' or parents for student disaffection and point to it as a growin problem, but the simple fact is that it's always been a problem and that it's no worse today than it was a century ago. In fact, a century ago schools not only had to deal with unruly, unwilling students, but also with parents who would storm schools to 'free' their children, refuse to send their kids to school, in some cases hang teachers and administrators, and even engaged troops in battle in order to prevent their kids from being forced into school. Of course you don't learn about *this* in public school, now do you?

      If anything, overall disaffection has *declined* because parents no longer string teachers and administrators up, nor do they form off-the-cuff militias and go to war over the idea of mandatory schooling.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:68% literacy rate!? by johannesg · · Score: 1
      How can it be? We pay more money per child than ever before in our history.

      If that money is spent well it should not be a problem. However, my dad is a teacher and when I hear his complaints I usually get a strong feeling that for the amount of money that is being spent, much more education could take place. To give just one example: I do not think it is necessary to buy new computers for the entire school (in his case, that's 30.000+ students) every three years, especially if trade-related equipment is typically 30 years old and coming apart at the seams.

      And I will not quickly forget the day when a news program did an interview outside a teacher-school here in the Netherlands. They asked the students (i.e. future teachers) about the quality of their own education. They followed that up with the simple question "what is one-third plus one-half?". It was sobering to realize that these future teachers were unable to answer this question without using a calculator.

      The requirements for getting a passing grade in school subjects have also declined markedly, resulting in rampant grade inflation (I'm sure you've heard of this, if not the changing test requirements)

      Not only had I heard of that, but I also know why it happens (at least, over here): schools are paid a bonus per succesful student. This creates immense pressure to pass students that should really be failing, which in turn had the effect of significantly reducing overal student quality over the last ten or so years.

      Still, we don't suffer from a 68% illiteracy rate just yet. Is there any correlation between illiteracy and other factors (location, race, wealth, whatever)?

  62. All I know is... by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    before that, your sister, your friend, and his wife were thinking ... hmmm... perhaps we can go to Europe for a nice vacation, and never realize that their own jobs were hanging by a rope.

    Wake up, people.

    Don't blame "bad immigration", or "globalization", blame YOURSELVES for being COMPLACENT !

    This world we live in is increasingly interconnected. Whatever we'd seen playing in the halls of UN 20 or 30 years ago today is playing right at our doorsteps - and that is, we aren't compete against other Americans for our own survival, but against THE WORLD !

    Yes, globalization goes both ways. While the third world countries are whinning about "Developing world conspire to re-colonize us", we, who live in FIRST WORLD COUNTRIES, must realize that while those sons-of-bitches are whinning, their cheaper labor is taking away our jobs.

    Usually, we single-minded Americans will yell and shout and demand our "representatives" to "DO SOMETHING" - which, more than always, mean "closing our borders", "stop outsourcing" etc, which in itself WILL NOT WORK ANYMORE IN THIS WORLD WE ARE LIVING.

    Instead of closing up, we SHOULD be OPENING UP EVEN MORE, and yes, that means, we should roll up our sleeves and COMPETE AGAINST THE CHEAPEST LABOR IN BANGLADESH, by using OUR BRAIN.

    Our plush lifestyle is at threat. If we don't do something, our high cost of living ain't gonna last. We gotta figure out ways to be BOTH the CHEAPEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD TO DO SOMETHING, and THE COUNTRY WHERE WE CAN LIVE In WHATEVER LIFESTYLE WE WANT.

    I am saying this base on my experience of a guy who have traveled and worked in all over the world. I am not that type of "Americans" who coccoon himself in the "protection of Uncle Sam". Rather, I go out into the WORLD and see what's going on, and btw, making money at it.

    Yep, there are people in the third world countries who will accuse me of "exploitation", but I don't mind. If they won't let me exploit them, then they won't get jobs. It's that simple.

    And then, there are Americans who accuse me of "exporting jobs to other countries". Again, I don't mind.

    You see, if I can't make a toaster oven in America under U$ 2.25, then I won't make money selling them not only in America, but also all over the world. I gotta find the CHEAPEST PLACE IN THE WORLD to do what I need to do, and if that means doing it OUTSIDE AMERICA, I'll do it in a jiffy.

    In the same token, the money I earned, I sent back to my good ol' U. S. of A. for safekeeping. No matter how I like the world outside America, America is still my country.

    To to those who want to close our borders - please don't buy any clothing, any furniture, any electrical appliances, any thing, in fact, because 90% of them are MADE OUTSIDE America !

    You can close the border to "immigrant, but you can't stop those things from coming in. It's us, the Americans, who demand CHEAP but QUALITY goods, so something gotta give.

    Until the day you realize you can't live the way you did, you wouldn't understand which world we are living in, my friend.

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  63. Kerry is an IDIOT ! by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    What Kerry says, essentially, is "I AM GOING TO TAX THE AMERICAN COMPANIES SO THAT THEY CAN'T OPERATE AT A PROFIT ANYMORE, SO THAT THE JAPS WILL WIN THE COMPETITION !"

    Stopping outsourcing just ain't the solution, my dear.

    We need to go back to the ROOT CAUSE of WHY there is a NEED for oursourcing. We can no longer afford the SIMPLE-MINDEDNESS that we are so used to.

    Company outsource not because they like to, but they had to.

    Why ? Because out of the 60,000 biggest companies in the world, our American companies are at a VERy DISTINCT DISADVANTAGE - our cost is SIMPLY TOO HIGH.

    And why is that ?

    Because WE PAY OUR AMERICAN EMPLOYEES TOO MUCH !

    Yes, if we come to the root of it, it is US, the AMERICANS, who are at fault. Not the companies.

    The companies, like other entities, just want to survive. They can't afford to pay UNION WORKERS U$80-200 per hour indefinitely, while they can hire HIGHER SKILL PEOPLE outside of America for one tenth of the cost !

    The market today ain't USA anymore, but THE WORLD. If our American companies have survive, we have to survive not only in America, but also in France, Hongkong, Zimbabwee, and Peru.

    Everywhere you go, you see the Japs and Gooks company EXCEL AT WHAT THEY DO.

    From SHIP CONSTRUCTIONS to ELECTRONICS to TEXTILES, you see them - the Samsung, the Sony, the Hyndai, the Toyota - leading.

    And while we American can compete now, we are losing, and losing fast.

    We are just not fast enough. Outsourcing is just ONE of the way to UNBURDEN part the load the American companies have been carrying all along.

    No, I am not pro-companies. I am just being realistic.

    If we force the American companies to pay through their noses to hire Americans at EXUBERANT COST, one of these days the American companies are going to shut their doors, and when that happen, it will be the Japs and the Gooks who will take over, and when happen, do you think them Japs and Gooks are gonna pay us whatever price we ask ?

    Be realistic, and stop being an idiot.

    Kerry is an idiot, and anyone follows him is an idiot too !

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:Kerry is an IDIOT ! by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

      What Kerry says, essentially, is "I AM GOING TO TAX THE AMERICAN COMPANIES SO THAT THEY CAN'T OPERATE AT A PROFIT ANYMORE, SO THAT THE JAPS WILL WIN THE COMPETITION !"

      You mean he might actually get them to pay some taxes? 82 Big U.S. Corporations Paid No Tax in One or More Bush Years.

      --
      Did he inhale?
    2. Re:Kerry is an IDIOT ! by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      Of course they didn't. Corporate taxes are a sham in general. They're just another way for politicians to hide from you how much you as an individual pay in taxes. When a corporation DOES pay taxes, because it did not disburse its profits to its shareholders, those tax dollars come from the company's customers. You pay them in the higher cost of goods, and it helps hide your tax burden from you.

      Now, let's see how corporations pay taxes, and how this differs from how an individual pays taxes. When you work for somebody else, you do work, the employer sends your taxes to the government, and you keep the rest to spend on your expenses. Work, tax, spend. When a corporation operates, it does work for a customer, the customer pays the corporation, the corporation pays its expenses, and then pays taxes on whatever is left over. Work, spend, tax.

      This may seem unfair, but when it comes down to it, it has to work this way. Different businesses operate on different profit margins. If a high volume, low margin corporation (say, Wal-Mart) got taxed 10% on its gross, it would never make that 1% of gross that's the net profits.

      Just because the corporation itself does not pay taxes does not mean that they did anything wrong, or that taxes were not paid. They were paid by the employees and the shareholders. I'm self-employed, and I own a corporation that I also work for. Last year the corporation did about $100,000 in business. It had $60,000 in expenses, and the rest was disbursed to me as salary and dividends. On my corporate tax return, it says we made $38. Does that mean no taxes were paid on the $40,000 profit? Of course not! I paid those taxes as my personal income tax.

      Just because a corporation pays no taxes does not mean that no taxes were paid on the corporation's profits.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    3. Re:Kerry is an IDIOT ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We need to go back to the ROOT CAUSE of WHY there is a NEED for oursourcing.

      Simple. Managers want to see the look in some poor dumb sonofabitch's eyes when they are informed their career-track paycheck has just been shipped blue-label to elsewhere.

  64. HAHAHAHAHA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I quit my job as a protein biochemist at the UW, turned down multiple offers at Microsoft and went into theatre work backstage. Hauling boxes and breakin a sweat.

    I'm in the best shape I have ever been in, I enjoy writing code for fun now, and we just bought our first house!

    Life is good. My blue collar fits me better!

    and yes, I predicted the dot.calm halcyon days were doomed and made the migration by choice ahead of schedule.

    IMHO, as a species we need a collapse.

    It is not a factor as simple as inability to balance the national books or to create a competitive strategy. The problem is simpky that as humans we do not have the neural processing ability to observe the ramifications of our actions outside of ourselves. It is a failing of the species, and although I am most likely wrong to a degree.... we are definately seeing some effects at this point of society collapsing.

    It will be an interesting thing to onserve. Would be depressing to be raising kids right now.

  65. As someone else pointed out, meaningless figures by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
    How are the figures measured. It been pointed out already but apparently people keep falling for the simple "lets compare measurement A method with measurement B method" lie. There may be lies and damn lies and then there may be statistics but they all are nothing to when people compare different statistics.

    In europe we got slightly more experience with it since it is so easy to get the news from another country. Pretty common for politicians claiming that their country does better because factor X is lower/higher then in other EU countries. Neatly forgetting that factor X is being calculated differently in all the countries.

    It is so simple to do. First of all you can mess around by counting how many people there are in your country. In the modern world with illegal immigrants this can really screw up your stats. After all one way or another they are either taking jobs or being unemployed.

    A second one is determining who is looking for a job. Is a student looking for a job? Most have side jobs so they have to count somewhere but are not in the market for a fulltime job. Same with 2 parent families, if one parent stays at home is that because they are unemployed or is that a life choice? If I can afford to retire but am still working age where am I counted? Just because I don't have to collect benefits doesn't mean I am not looking for a job.

    Then there is how you count jobs. Not all jobs are equal especially not in non-minimum wage america. You can say 20.000 jobs or whatever have been created but what has really happened? If X high paying jobs have been replaced by X+20k starvation wage jobs then yes you have had job growth. Not sure if this is a good thing however.

    Of course there is the nice thing of having seasonal work. Some seasons have more work then others. Very nice to measure at a seasonal peak to show how many extra jobs there are.

    I don't know much about america but I seen to many shows and "documentaries" were american families are working 2 jobs per parent and still barely making ends meet to have much fate in your style of economy. A simple stat like the number of unemployed has very little meaning when you can have a 4 job household and still be in debt.

    I am to lazy to look it up but I remember a movie with 2 ex american presidents being forced on a roadtrip together. At one point they take hitch a ride in car with a family. At first it is all peaches but then the presidents keep being to full of themselves and it comes out that they both created policies that make the family loose their job and their house. The family is not on trip. They are living in their car.

    American really needs a third option but until things really hit the fan I don't think it will happen. Just a constant change between two sides who both are determined to screw america up and the rest of the world along with it.

    Don't feel bad about it. Dutch politics is in the same shitter. The party that when I was young was totally ruining the country is back and they are taking off where they left off. Making holland into an american style ghetto with all the dis-advantages and none of the advantages. No matter how bad the americans screw their country up, we can do it better.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  66. What do you want by the_womble · · Score: 1

    Free trade is always good in the long run. What do you prefer to it: protectionism or socialism?

    1. Re:What do you want by Triskele · · Score: 1
      Free trade is always good in the long run.

      It is? Where's your proof?

      What do you prefer to it: protectionism or socialism?

      Socialism of course! I like the welfare safety net. I just wish it was as comprehensive as more civilised countries like Sweden and Norway.

      --

      --
      USA: home of the world's largest terrorist training camp.

  67. "Peer-Reviewed" Journal by Dachannien · · Score: 1

    So does Randall Burns get to put being mentioned on /. on his CV as a publication in a peer-reviewed journal?

  68. whatever his merits by cinemabaroque · · Score: 1

    regardless of the article's merits, he does link to a good page on the underground economy that is well researched and presented.

    --
    00010111 always try everything twice
  69. vdare is a racist and xenophobic site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Sam Francis

    "The brute fact," warned Sam Francis, editor of the white supremacist Council of Conservative Citizens' Citizens Informer, "is that unrestricted immigration has allowed the American Southwest to be invaded by aliens who may well in the near future ... break the American nation apart."

    1. Re:vdare is a racist and xenophobic site by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, go fuck yourself. Sam Francis is an American treasure.

  70. "..decimate the middle class in America." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your looking at the glass half empty.

    Its a revitalization of the lower class in America.

    'For the meek shell inherit the earth'
    whats left of it that is.

  71. Inaccurate and improper by Toby+The+Economist · · Score: 1

    I may be totally wrong, because I've not read the full report nor have I sat down and done the research necessary to properly address the arguments raised in the report, and anyways, a ./ reply is hardly the place to properly reply to what is a very long article, but my strong feeling is that what is written is entirely incorrect; the reasoning presented seems simplistic, sensationalist and highly selective, and reflects the authors pre-existing beliefs rather than accurate objective conclusions.

    --
    Toby

    1. Re:Inaccurate and improper by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      I was _not_ paid to write what I did--which is more than I can say for the folks at the Federal Reserve et al that have white washed the facts that US job growth isn't happening as fast as population growth-and that population growth is driven largely by immigration. Please, read my article--and check the links. I would appreciate constructive and substantial criticism if you can offer it.

  72. Bad immigration and trade deals by nuggz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bad immigration?
    Bad immigration are the social leeches, criminals and terrorists.

    Anyone who comes and works is good. Being born in the US isn't a right to a nice high paying job, it is just a better opportunity then almost everyone else has. Since when is more people a bad thing? They can only 'steal jobs' if someone owned it to begin with. When I buy my gas from one gas station and switch to another you don't see the owner complaining the other guy stole his customer.

    Bad trade deals? Walmart and your local car lot are full of the results. Cheap goods available to raise your standard of living.
    The trade deficit is just a choice that people make. If you choose to buy a hard drive made in taiwan, or a chinese chair, the trade deficit will increase.
    The only way to stop this is protectionism, which will cause a downward spiral in the economy.
    Plus this is also self correcting, the US dollar will eventually drop relative to other currencies if the trade defecit doesn't change.

    1. Re:Bad immigration and trade deals by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      If you choose to buy a hard drive made in taiwan, or a chinese chair, the trade deficit will increase.
      You don't seem to know what the term "deficit" means. We can still import hard drives and chairs if we don't have a deficit, but they have to buy stuff made in America. Only they choose not to buy stuff made in America. Guess what, we import more from Canada than we do China. The only difference is that Canada doesn't have any barriers to import goods made in the US, versus places like Taiwan, China, and India which have HUGE barriers put in place against importing American products, but they have no problems selling stuff to the US.
      To me, that isn't trade, it's importing stuff and exporting green bills with dead men on them. All these countries extoll the virtues of free trade when it means selling stuff to the US, but all of a sudden change their tune when it comes to importing. They want to have their cake and eat it too....

  73. What's with the mods? by Gentlewhisper · · Score: 1, Funny

    Ah, the old saying:

    A recession is when someone you know is out of work.
    A depression is when you are out of work.


    This should be insightful.

    Then we are in a MAJOR depression.

    This should be funny

    ...and a recovery is when George Bush is out of work.

    This should be +5 funny!

  74. From what I remember from my "Wellfare 101" course by hendrix69 · · Score: 1

    It goes like this:
    High Degree of Wellfare = High Unemployment
    Low Wellfare = Less Unemployment, but a large "Working poor" class.

    IOW, you wish you had Germany's economy (assuming you're an American) and enjoyed the social wellfare benefits that these countrys enjoy, earned as much money as they individualy do, enjoyed as much vacation time as they do each year, etc.
    The strength of a country's economy and the measure of its social well-being are not measured by the rate of unemployment. Remember that in a eutopic idealic country noone would have to work (or at least very few would), and everyone would still enjoy life to the fullest.

    --
    The power of Christ compiles you!
  75. You hit the nail on the head by Gopal.V · · Score: 1

    Welfare State != Socialism....

    Socialism != "Down with the rich"

    There are places in the world where socialist economies are bringing into being a Middle Class world. As the percentage of very poor (desperate) and very rich (lazy) reduces the economy seems to stabilize. Especially the crime rates are seen to fall ...

    Unfortunately "Get Rich Quick" is the modern version of "laissez-faire" Capitalism ... sad .. very sad. Reminds of the Douglas Adams's Aorist Rods ...

    --
    Seen on National Highway 1 to New Delhi
    "When you go home, tell them we gave our today ,
    for your tomorrows . -- Indian Army"

  76. OK, stop blaming/crediting presidents for jobs... by vudufixit · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Presidents don't create jobs, unless it's a massive make-work program like the Civil Conservation Corps in the 1930s. The real responsbility lies with the hundreds of CEOs who decide to lay off or add more workers. Period. And it's been far more of the former, than the latter - and that's been the case for about the last 30 years or so. Shedding workers is really a redistribution of wealth - from rank and file workers at the bottom, to the executive leadership at the top and the shareholders. But this is something that a sitting US President has little control over - each of these business leaders indivudually decides, "I want fewer workers and therefore more money for myself" which adds up to a grisly collective result. Since the early 90s I've read Business Week, Forbes and the Economist on a fairly regular basis, and I never once recalled reading about a specific economic policy of Clinton's that lead to the spectacular economic growth of that decade. In fact, his tax increases shortly after he took office probably had the effect of dampening growth. He was the lucky beneficiary of Greenspan's aggressive rate-lowering from 1990-1992, and a wave of IT investment and payoff. Am I writing this to defend Bush? Perhaps a bit. But I sincerely believe that it's easier for people to blame a President than an amorphous mass of private sector executives for their economic woes.

  77. Wrong by KontinMonet · · Score: 1

    The rich employ clever tax lawyers to avoid paying alot of tax. Even Bush admits it: The rich hire lawyers and accountants so that the middle class gets stuck with the bill.

    --
    Did he inhale?
  78. Welfare advocates = looters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.atlasshrugged.tv/speech.htm

  79. Liberal? Progressive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is this some kind of joke?
    Look at their links page. It's nothing but immigrant bashing. This like the KKK calling themselves liberal progressives.

  80. All you know is nothing... by voss · · Score: 5, Informative

    "He not only turned a routine recession into the great depression, he instituted the practice of the federal government taxing the wages of each and every worker in the country."

    In 1933...

    When FDR entered office the unemployment rate was 25%, with an underemployment rate of 50%. He had to close the banks to stop from them from failing. Germany that year would appoint an austrian named Adolf Hitler as their leader. Veterans the previous year had rioted in washington. If you want to make the argument that FDR had prolonged the depression through bad policies...you can make that argument but calling the economy of 1933 "a routine recession" is idiocy.

    Second of all the relocation camps didnt happen until TEN YEARS LATER in the middle of a little conflict called "world war II".

    Other than not knowing anything about history, economics, or politics the author of this comment seems relatively well informed.

    1. Re:All you know is nothing... by intnsred · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "He [FDR] not only turned a routine recession into the great depression..."

      When FDR entered office the unemployment rate was 25%, with an underemployment rate of 50%. [...] calling the economy of 1933 "a routine recession" is idiocy.

      No it's NOT! I heard it on Rush Limbaugh and again on Fox News so it MUST be true! :-)

    2. Re:All you know is nothing... by Richthofen80 · · Score: 1

      Actually, dig a little deeper. Money supply wasn't as much the government's job as it was private banks jobs up until the turn of the century.

      what used to happen is the public would often have 'runs' on the banks... economic news was bad and people would fear bank failure. Doing so, they'd go to the bank and take all their money out. Now the banks had no money to lend and were forced to call in loans, which would bankrupt farmers and business owners. So banks routinely denied withdrawals during runs... they simply closed and waited out the hysteria, and mortgage payments came in and the money supply returned to normal and the public calmed down. This entire practice is due to the fact that banks don't keep your money in a vault... they keep 'some' cash on hand and lend out most of the money in accounts to others. When the banks lend out the money, then people come knocking looking for it back in large numbers, the banks go insolvent.

      During 1911 , a particularly rash series of bank refusals and insolvency forced through federal legislation that allowed the federal government to keep banks open through federal money promises... not free federal money, but guarunteed payment on money from other banks so that banks stayed open. What happened during the great depression is that when banks weren't given the choice to close, or a false promise of solvency when they were insolvent, it triggered a massive collapse of banking. When FDR was elected, the first thing he did was declare a 'banking holiday', which closed banks that day in order to calm the hysteria of the citizenry. the policy which caused the great depression was founded in 1911, not 1933. FDR's reforms are up for debate, but he didn't turn a recession into a depression.

      for more information , pick up 'freedom to choose' by Milton Friedman

      http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/01 56 334607/ref=pd_sim_books_1/103-3328389-5976627?v=gl ance&s=books

      --
      Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
    3. Re:All you know is nothing... by jcr · · Score: 1

      If you want to make the argument that FDR had prolonged the depression through bad policies...

      Let's see: the recently-instituted Federal Reserve shakes the country's confidence in the currency, so FDR decides the answer is to outlaw the posession of Gold, borrow more money than ever before and spend it on Potemkin-village projects, while trying to pack the supreme court with his cronies? Yeah, I'd say that's at least a few bad policies.

      you can make that argument but calling the economy of 1933 "a routine recession" is idiocy.


      Well, fuck you too for the ad-hominem. We'd had bank panics and stock crashes before, and they didn't result in massive expansions of federal power.

      the relocation camps didnt happen until TEN YEARS LATER in the middle of a little conflict called "world war II" ..which is also when federal income tax withholding on our wages was instituted as a "temporary", "emergency" measure.

      Oh, and FYI: the feds did indeed call them Concentration Camps, until the public got wind of what the Germans were doing, and they needed a quick shift in public perception.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    4. Re:All you know is nothing... by Mr.+Droopy+Drawers · · Score: 1

      Please provide links. It seems that you are mis-representing conservative positions.

      It makes you disingenuous

      --

      To Copy from One is Plagiarism; To Copy from Many is Research.

    5. Re:All you know is nothing... by intnsred · · Score: 1

      Note the smiley :-) following the line.

      A smiley used like that denotes humor, sarcastic humor in this case.

  81. more about VDare by Simon · · Score: 4, Informative
    This page from that news article explains what V-Dare is about.:
    V-DARE
    www.vdare.com

    V-DARE - shorthand for Virginia Dare, the first English child to be born in what is now the United States - is a web site run by a "coalition" whose most prominent member is Peter Brimelow.

    Brimelow, a leading anti-immigration activist and author of Alien Nation, argues that America is historically a predominantly white nation, and that Americans have a right to demand that it remain that way.

    A past columnist for the conservative National Review, Brimelow says he once considered adding a fictional end to his Alien Nation, a nonfiction critique of immigration, about the last white family to leave Los Angeles.

    V-DARE posts anti-immigration articles by Brimelow's twin brother John; right-wing columnists like Paul Craig Roberts and Joseph Fallon (Brimelow's main researcher on Alien Nation); and defenders of The Bell Curve - a controversial book arguing that whites are more intelligent than blacks - like Steve Sailer.

    Both Brimelow and Fallon have defended Jared Taylor, who edits the racist American Renaissance magazine. Taylor's deputy, James Lubinskas, has returned the favor by writing for V-DARE.

    Brimelow has close ties to several other leaders on the anti-immigration scene, among them John Vinson of the American Immigration Control Foundation, Llewellyn Rockwell and Jeffrey Tucker of the Ludwig von Mises Institute, and John H. Tanton of the Federation for American Immigration Reform.

    *sigh*, it is just great to see this on the front page of Slashdot... :(

    --
    Simon

    1. Re:more about VDare by setmajer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Slashdot? I thought this was Little Green Footballs.

      --

    2. Re:more about VDare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I can't believe it took 865 posts for someone to NOTICE that that was blatantly obvious white supremacist site. Christ you people are stupid.

    3. Re:more about VDare by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like they have the facts and aren't afraid to use them.

      Oh, you think blacks are as smart as whites?

    4. Re:more about VDare by JInterest · · Score: 1

      *sigh*, it is just great to see this on the front page of Slashdot... :(

      Sorry, but I stopped falling for ad-hominem attacks and guilt by association a long time ago. If you have an objection to the article that is based on facts relevant to the issues presented in the article, I'm listening. If the best you can do is to say "Hey, everyone there is all about anti-immigrant racism", you haven't said anything that contradicts the points raised in the article, which means you haven't convinced me of anything. Understand?

  82. FDR was our GREATEST President by Cryofan · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And income taxation is the best thing that ever happened to civilization. We just need more of it.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:FDR was our GREATEST President by morgandelra · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Gawd I hope your joking! Personally, I think Teddy Roosevelt was the best president.. and as for income taxation, I'd prefer the http://www.fairtax.org/ plan to anything else I have seen proposed.

    2. Re:FDR was our GREATEST President by Gord.ca · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, that actually seems like a good idea, moving from income to consumption taxes. The problem is, these guys seem to want to switch entirely in one shot, which would create revenue chaos. Why must excited progressives always frame their ideas as unreasonable plans?

      --
      The opinons expressed are those of the voices in the author's head and are not necessarily those of the author.
    3. Re:FDR was our GREATEST President by mjh · · Score: 1

      I definately like the fairtax proposal. But I actually prefer the "Bleeding Heart Libertarian" approach much better.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    4. Re:FDR was our GREATEST President by sjames · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Income Tax as implemented by FDR was not the mess it is today (it still may or may not have been a good idea). The tax brackets were such that most people were below the level where they were even required to file or have taxes witheld. Those who did have to file likely had accountants anyway.

      Unfortunatly, the tax brackets are defined by specific numbers rather than being indexed to inflation, so over the years just by having income (almost) keep pace with inflation, more and more people were sucked into the morass until we get to the situation today where only the poorest people don't have to file at all.

      It seems to me that a more reasonable strategy for shifting to consumption taxes would be to phase them in while simultaniously pushing the brackets UP one at a time. A good idea at the same time would be to index the current brackets to inflation to make sure they don't creep down faster than they are pushed up. Eventually it will return to FDR's original plan. Soon after, it will be gone.

    5. Re:FDR was our GREATEST President by Gord.ca · · Score: 1
      The tax brackets were such that most people were below the level where they were even required to file or have taxes witheld.
      Hmmm, I hadn't heard that, but it sounds believable.
      It seems to me that a more reasonable strategy for shifting to consumption taxes would be to phase them in while simultaniously pushing the brackets UP one at a time.
      But, as we are so wisely told here, that would make the US fall into the same trap as Canada and Europe, where they "layer their consumption taxes on top of their income taxes, producing a predictable drag on their economies." The only smart way to do it is to completely remove the US government's power to raise income taxes by repealing the 16th amendment immediately. It's all under the heading Let's not make the mistake Europe and Canada have made near the bottom of that link.

      This is what I'm complaining about: All the good ideas seem to be championed by the overzealous who make them look like bad ideas.

      --
      The opinons expressed are those of the voices in the author's head and are not necessarily those of the author.
    6. Re:FDR was our GREATEST President by John+Miles · · Score: 1

      You know, you're allowed to send in more money than your 1040 form calls for, right?

      How much additional tax did you contribute last year?

      --
      Dahlmann tightly grips the knife, which he may have no idea how to use, and steps out into the plain.
    7. Re:FDR was our GREATEST President by sjames · · Score: 1

      I haven't read that yet xpdf doesn't seem to like it.

      I do agree that whatever is done, it must be made as difficult as possible for future sessions of Congress to reverse or corrupt by holding on to both. That was actually the problem with income ntax legislation in the first place. It was just too easy for Congress to passively allow bracket creep to sweep the majority of the population into income tax . To add insult to injury, when they finally adjusted the bottom bracket to provide 'tax relief for low income housholds' they claimed to be champions of low taxes.

      Perhaps the best approach for a smooth transition of revenue is to open by adding a sunset clause to the 16th ammendment. It would be a lot harder for a regressive Congress to stop the process if they had to rally support for an additional ammendment to the Constitution.

      I only suggest that because an instant transition of revenue could indeed cause some problems. I imagine those problems would be exaggerated greatly in the FUD against such a transition. So, real or not, those 'problems' must somehow be addressed without opening the door to sticking us with both taxes forever.

  83. What About the Constitution? by King+Louie · · Score: 2, Insightful
    One thing that always seems to be left out of discussions of the economy is any mention of the federal government's legal role. The form and function of the United States government is ultimately controlled by the US Constitution. Nowhere in the Constitution is there any mention of the economy or business. And per the 10th Amendment, those powers not specifically given the federal government are reserved for the states or the people at large.

    In short, it is not the government's function to create jobs. It's the government's function to get out of the way and let businesses create jobs. Yes, government has a place in regulating businesses to ensure they are not endangering people or the environment unnecessarily. Every government regulation costs businesses money -- money that might otherwise go to hiring new employees to produce more product. These are especially hard on small businesses (who are responsible for over half of all US jobs). These regulations also affect the quality of your work life, so don't think they only affect the fat cats.

    About three years ago, my employer was working out the details of a formal telecommuting program, which would make my work life easier and save them money (fewer people on site == lower expenses). This would have included picking up part of the tab for internet connections, new computers, etc. Unfortunately, the Labor Department announced that they had the power to regulate home offices used for telecommuting the same way they could regulate those office spaces provided by the emloyer. This extended to inspecting home offices just as they do employer-provided spaces, and the intention to fine employers for regulatory violations found in the home offices. Employers could also be held liable for injuries incurred in the home office.

    Needless to say, the telecommuting project died before it began -- the potential liabilities were so great they posed a significant risk to the company's future.

    This is but one example of the government often doing more harm than good. And there's not much any president can do to alter that -- the people who came up with this hare-brained idea are probably still there, waiting for a more favorable time to put this idea into action. They can't be fired because they're civil servants, so they don't change with the administration.

    There really isn't much a president can do to create jobs (and it's not his responsibility anyway). The best thing he can do is push policies that give businesses the freedom to act.

    Also, note that the Labor Department just declared they had this regulatory power -- no act of Congress granted it, they just assumed it -- such is the power-hungry nature of any bureaucracy. And any entity that has the power to find you a job has the power to have you removed from that job. Be careful what you wish for, you just might get it.

    1. Re:What About the Constitution? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Something that is worth noting here:
      Until 1875, immigration policy was largely handled by the states. Exclusive transfer of immigration policy to the federal government was part of the gradual expansion of federal powers that I expect you would oppose.

      Recent US immigration policy is an extreme example of corporate welfare of the type you oppose. Literally companies and the affluent are using immigration policy to further concentrate wealth in their hands.

  84. Tentacles of Rage & Treason by Cryofan · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The main reason we are in this mess is that our leaders, our elite, operate not in the best interests of the general welfare, as the Constitution requires them to, but in the best interests of the corporations and the investor class. Bush is the most extreme example of this, but Clinton did it, too, as did Reagan. Bush the Elder may have been the worst. Carter practically started it.

    The reason our leaders have been able to do all of this is because some ultra-rich people and the multinational corporations spent billions of dollars over the last 30 years or so to convince all of America that liberalized trade and immigration policies would benefit Americans. In a way, they obtained our consent to do this, but they actually "manufactured" our consent.

    For a more detailed explanation of this 30-year propaganda blitz, See this September 2004 article in Harpers magazine about these "Tentacles of Rage."

    The massive propaganda machine was built around think tanks and foundations that literally from the ground up built a vocabulary and worldview favoring free trade (and liberal immigration, which just one part of "free trade"), all designed to drive down wages and taxes for corporations and the rich, and increase corporate profits and increase unemployment and underemployment, and in general disempower the average worker.

    It worked! Corporate profits are way up, and they pay less in taxes, while the average worker is scrambling.

    What do you call politicians and bureaucrats who willingly go along with such a scheme?

    I call them traitors, guilty of treason. I think our leaders, including our Presidents, present and past, should be held accountable in a court of law for this treason.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:Tentacles of Rage & Treason by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      On the issue immigration, there is serious difference between elite and popular opinion.

  85. Ever heard of the "General Welfare" Clause? by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    You might want to read about the Constitution's "General Welfare" clause.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:Ever heard of the "General Welfare" Clause? by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Technically, that clause is in the Preamble. You'll probably get a lot of people pointing that out to you ad nauseaum.

      I do agree, though. The government was founded to promote the general welfare (as well as provide for the common defense), so it only reasons that the government should have inherent powers to promote that welfare, except where the Constitution specifically denies power to the Feds.

  86. A Lousy Article by Amigori · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Stylistically, this is a terrible article to read. Since when did one sentence equal an entire paragraph? (Yes I know the newspapers often do it.) Although, after checking other articles on this site, they all seem to be written this way. The author could have written the entire page using bullet points.

    All he did was state data, interpret, and generalize. He indicts rebuplicans and the current administration for corporate decisions; democrats for their failure to understand their constituents. He is assuming the Kerry-Edwards campaign will succeed in November by advising them in what they should be doing, manage the trade defecit and immigration. By doing so will magically grow the middle class and their disposable income.

    For being an economist, why doesn't he understand that and unemployment rate of 5.4% is very good and one of the lowest in the world. Its certainly better than the double-digit numbers in most of the world and certainly this overall number from India.

    As for the shifting of capital and the growing divide of the classes, name one successful society, where the controlling power had a monetary policy will divide the currency exactly among its citizens. Just one... Nope? I didn't think so. The closest example I can think of is the USSR, and they still had the rich elite controlling the working class; and it only lasted 70 years.

    Last time I checked, my blue-collar, low-wage friends and I all have the same opportunity of wealth as the rich kids we tend to resent. Notice, I did NOT say that it would be easier because often capital is more difficult to obtain, but we have the same basic opportunity to start a business as the next person. We have the greatest entrepreneurial environment in the world and its ours to take advantage of. People from other countries see this and other advantages our country offers and immigrate. Is the global playing field level? No, it never has been and it never will be. Life is not fair. Life is hard. Get over the idea of being employeed in one place for your entire life in a job that a trained monkey or robots can do.

    Will the election in November help? No. Its just a corporate sponsored figurehead with a puppet administration. Either one. What about a third party? Well, we effectively shut them out a generation ago and now, they're just a talking point.--Amigori

    --
    "The quality of life is determined by its activites."--Aristotle
    1. Re:A Lousy Article by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Since when did one sentence equal an entire paragraph?
      In Moby Dick it can almost cover a page.
    2. Re:A Lousy Article by khallow · · Score: 1
      Stylistically, this is a terrible article to read. Since when did one sentence equal an entire paragraph? (Yes I know the newspapers often do it.) Although, after checking other articles on this site, they all seem to be written this way. The author could have written the entire page using bullet points.

      Welcome to the web. Short paragraphs are far more readable than long ones.

      For being an economist, why doesn't he understand that and unemployment rate of 5.4% is very good and one of the lowest in the world. Its certainly better than the double-digit numbers in most of the world and certainly this overall number from India.

      Er, you mistake those collecting unemployment insurance with the as yet unreported unemployment rate.

      As for the shifting of capital and the growing divide of the classes, name one successful society, where the controlling power had a monetary policy will divide the currency exactly among its citizens. Just one... Nope? I didn't think so. The closest example I can think of is the USSR, and they still had the rich elite controlling the working class; and it only lasted 70 years.

      Read the article. You aren't addressing any issue brought up there. One doesn't need to be the USSR to be concerned about businesses using dubious political and social means to reduce labor costs.

      Last time I checked, my blue-collar, low-wage friends and I all have the same opportunity of wealth as the rich kids we tend to resent. Notice, I did NOT say that it would be easier because often capital is more difficult to obtain, but we have the same basic opportunity to start a business as the next person. We have the greatest entrepreneurial environment in the world and its ours to take advantage of. People from other countries see this and other advantages our country offers and immigrate. Is the global playing field level? No, it never has been and it never will be. Life is not fair. Life is hard. Get over the idea of being employeed in one place for your entire life in a job that a trained monkey or robots can do.

      Why? What's in "getting over it" for me? The vast majority of us don't have to "get over it". We don't have to agree that "life is hard". This isn't complicated. People are willing to work harder and for lesser to get intangible benefits like not having to move every three years or working at the same place for twenty years. But why can't the market adapt to the labor?

      As far as the "greatest entrepreneurial environment" goes, it could be better even if it is the best out there. There's bureaucratic economies of scale and rent-seeking going on that new businesses can't just break into. Eg, a small business can't be a "prime contractor" for the Federal government. They can't hire H1-B workers. They can't buy their own politicians or work their way into the chokepoints of the financial world.

  87. Decimated middle class? by mjh · · Score: 1

    I hope you're not reading the Washington Post for your conclusion that the middle class is getting decimated. They've simply been misreporting the data. Because while it's true that the middle class is getting smaller, it's not because they're moving into the poor class. The data simply doesn't support that conclusion.

    The "middle class squeeze" is a myth. If anything, the middle class being "squeezed" up into wealthier classes.

    --
    Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    1. Re:Decimated middle class? by tepples · · Score: 1

      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn.

      The only way for me to do that would be for me to spend negative because no IT firm in town wants to hire me, and I lack the up-front means to relocate.

    2. Re:Decimated middle class? by mjh · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you live, but I'll bet that IT jobs are not the only jobs in town. If you can't find a job and you can't afford to relocate or can't convince an employer to pay for your relocation, you have to consider another occupation. In your case, I might recommend IT Audit. There are *LOTS* of IT audit jobs available as a result of Sarbanes-Oxley. It'll at least keep you in IT until you can find another IT job and it'll let you earn some level of money until you can get back into IT.

      I did IT audit for the last three years and finally got back into IT just this month. I'm sympathetic to your situation, but there are lots of options.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
  88. On the other side of the world ... opposites ? by Gopal.V · · Score: 1
    I graduated last year in August from a very good college in South India ... I've got permanent (or what goes for permanent in Software) work right now.The four years that I studied saw the entire indian software industry go WAAAAY up in '99-2000 and then come down crashing in 2001-2002 and stabilized in 2003 (almost).

    We had no qualified teachers ... yes, we had 3 people who had Masters from IITs - but the rest was pure JUNK. Anyone and everyone who knew to use a mouse got a job in IT . The choice of faculty jobs was left to a very small minority of "I can't get no job in IT" graduates. I mean, who'd quit a job that would pay 5-6 times that of a college teacher ?.

    We (As in students) were pissed ... I was in the top 50 students in my state and I still couldn't get a teacher who understood datastructures properly ?. It's very frustrating when the people teaching you have just passed out a year or two ahead of you and still have no idea what they are teaching. We were even more angry at the system when the dotcoms crashed in 2001 - we were going out into the big bad world very very unprepared . Anyway, some of us did learn a bit on our own .... but we could have done a lot better with teachers who knew things better than us (rather than teaching off a textbook).

    In my opinion, if you people have to dig yourself out of this position - get good teachers , people who know programming as an art, build a second line of good programmers instead of letting it die out because there's no future in IT assumptions.

    1. Re:On the other side of the world ... opposites ? by parliboy · · Score: 1

      When I say teacher, I don't refer to the college level, but to the primary and secondary school systems, for ages ~5-17. We generally don't refer to college instructors as teachers over here, so it will help future cultural confusion for you so separate that out. Instead, I mean I have an actual degree in education -- a four-year degree plan designed for training teachers for one of the aforementioned school systems (in my case, secondary). That's in addition to the other sheepskin, of course. At the risk of being insulting, I need to shout back something that a lot of disgruntled IT's over here think, whether it's politically correct or not: Why should we improve our programming skills? Right now, no matter how good we get, we're always replaceable by an Indian IT that makes 10% of us? My best friend is out of college barely a year, and she's seen three rounds of layoffs in her IT department.

      --
      "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
    2. Re:On the other side of the world ... opposites ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'We People' here in the USA are largely employed in IT because of what we taught ourselves. True, there are plenty of guys that don't care any more about computers than I do Kobe Bryant, yet still make a living at it .. mostly because they have been able to find work that is subpar, and pays less too.

      My 2 bits is that when I went to college, it was for the 'credentials' .. not to be taught how to 'be an IT employee'. I am completely self made in that way, and self trained as well .. and that is what differentiates me from the flood of H1-B's who rely on someone else to teach them how to think. I have spent my own $6000 on books because I want to use IT to solve business problems with technology .. I am _not_ some opportunist looking for an easier ride than manual labor ...

      It's not hateful in the least .. as people, noone should be slandered. It's just the facts of the matter, largely speaking on the trends that I see every day, in front of me, in modern-day Silicon Valley.

      Additionally, there is a huge divide in the US's stance on work (we develop, create and charge ahead with products and technologies .... I have yet to own anything substantial with a logo of an Indian or Chinese company.. but I have Japanese, for instance.). And this is the stuff that the countries with all this supposed IT 'talent' should focus on .. loosen up the reigns and create your own opportunities. It's as though there is nothing left to invent or develop and you have India and China sitting there as lapdogs waiting for the USA's job-related table scraps.

      Help yourselves for all of our sake's ...

  89. Europeans get YEARS of unemployment benefits by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    Most European countries give laid off citizens YEARS of unemployment benefits if they need it. How can they afford to do that? THey tax the rich and upper income earners more than we do (50% at least), and then they do not spend all that tax money on military and war, but instead spend it on unemployment/welfare benefits and healthcare for everyone. What a concept!

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:Europeans get YEARS of unemployment benefits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why their GDP is 30% lower than that of US.

    2. Re:Europeans get YEARS of unemployment benefits by Cryofan · · Score: 1

      GDP is the rich investor/corporation's favorite statistic.

      Leisure time off with money to spend is the working person's statistic. Funny, though...the American mass media never seems too concerned with that particular statistic. I wonder why....

      Also, the availability and affordablity of healthcare is another important statistic. THe Euros beat the hell out of us on that one.

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    3. Re:Europeans get YEARS of unemployment benefits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      THey tax the rich and upper income earners more than we do (50% at least)
      So who do you consider rich?

      How about the top 1% of US house holds, those making over 292K a year. Increasing the federal tax rate to 50% on those households would only generate about 247 Billion dollars in new tax revenue. Hmmm...not even enough to pay for the current deficit let alone extend jobless benefits.

      How about the top 5% of US house holds, those making over 127K a year. Increasing the federal tax rate to 50% on those households would generate about 772 Billion dollars in new tax revenue. Well, you have covered the current deficit, and may have something left over for extending benefits.

      Of course, this would put the total tax burden on the rich at much greater than 50% since they still have to pay State and local income and property tax, sales taxes, and taxes hidden in a variety of fees and higher prices for goods.

      And of course this assumes that 127K a year is "rich" and that people would still continue to work in these high stress, highly skilled jobs simply for the enjoyment the work provides instead of financial compensation.

      Based on 2001 data
    4. Re:Europeans get YEARS of unemployment benefits by MemoryDragon · · Score: 1

      Notreally, the unemployment is done via a national insurance program over here, the same goes for the health care.
      Basically a hidden tax, yes.

  90. I'm always better off. by GomezAdams · · Score: 1
    The only time a president made any difference to me is when Jimmy Carter and his administration let the wheels fall off the economic wagon. Other than that I have always done better irregardless of which party was in office, or their tax laws, or price of gas, etc. That's because I have always taken responsibilbity for my own education, career development, and well being. I work harder and smarter than the next guy and have a track record of results and valid solutions. If I get laid off, and I have been, and I have quit bad jobs, getting another is a matter of hustling one up. And so far at higher pay each time.

    What I'm saying is get off your duffs, keep up to date in whatever your field is, and don't look to the gubmint to provide. Waiting for them is like waiting for your lazy brother-in-law to pay you back that money he borrowed. Ain't gonna happen. I lived in near poverty as a kid and decided I didn't want to live like that. I saw the politicians only wanted to help a few and to keep the rest poor as a pool of need they could point to as a reason for increasing the bureaucracy and taxes.

    So quit your whining, vote for which ever party/person you want and remember you are the one resposible for your life. We wouldn't need so much help from the government if we weren't already getting too much help from the government.

    --
    Too lazy to create a sig...
    1. Re:I'm always better off. by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Yes that damned govt. We should immediately end all welfare, social scurity, medicare, medicade, farm, logging, mining, all other subsidies too.

      Let's go back the way things were before the great depression and throw our sick, homeless, unemployed, and elderly out on the street where they can beg and commit crimes.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    2. Re:I'm always better off. by GomezAdams · · Score: 1
      I never said all government's bad. We just don't need so damn much of it and a lot more personal initiative when it comes to caring for yourself. If you're able bodied then get off your ass and work or go hungry. Period. There must be plenty of jobs because we have a steady stream of illegals breaking into the US to get them. I've swept floors, drove a delivery truck, scrubbed toilets, carried groceries, even delivered Chinese take out. Been there, done that and didn't let it keep me down or make me feel that someone owed me something that I didn't earn or make me envious that someone else had more than me. Welfare should only go to those who are not able physically or mentally.

      As for the other "entitlement" programs. Scrap 'em all. They only serve to redistribute the assests of working people into the hands of none or lesser producers. (socialism) and to create and maintain a vast bureaucracy. What part of keep your hands out of my family's resources is not clear? I work hard to provide for my family, not some lazy ass politician and his welfare constituency. The sooner people take some pride in what they are and what they accomplish, the sooner they will achieve independence from government and need less of it.

      --
      Too lazy to create a sig...
  91. USA == Europe evaluates to TRUE. by gd23ka · · Score: 2, Funny

    I live here in Germany in the economy and one thing for sure, I'm in no way better off here than I would be in the US. The ruling socialist party has decided to stop unemployment benefits altogether after the year of unemployment insurance is up and have decided to switch those unemployed over to the welfare system where they all get a monthly EUR 345 ($360) and even less in the eastern part of Germany. In addition to the $360 they get another modest housing allowance which is capped at around $250. Personally, if I were out of luck I wouldn't even qualify for their welfare because I would have to report all of my and my wife's property and income which is not allowed to exceed $7000 for people our age.

    You lose your bet: If a person here stops going through the unemployment or welfare system then they are dropped from the statistics. The labor department actually works hard to bring unemployment statistics down by actively expelling people from the system whenever and by whatever means they can.

    The newest development over here is workfare where they plan on putting millions of qualified people to work in menial jobs for welfare money.

    Looks like we're comparing oranges and oranges here.

    Finally you don't care how much worse Europe is. Think of it this way.. Europe is another place you can not escape US unemployment. Wouldn't it be great to be able to say, fuck you, Bush I am taking my business elsewhere? I would sure as hell love to say Fick Dich, Schroeder you fucken sierra club commie!

    People over here are comparing their situation to four years ago before the socialist party took over. They voted for the fascist party in the state elections.

  92. America is not allowed to control its immigration? by Cryofan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So you are saying that because America is majority white, then white Americans are not allowed to say that America should stop or slow down immigration? Are their any other policies that should be tied to skin color?

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  93. As as an Indian , I reply .... by Gopal.V · · Score: 1
    >> The American worker, on average, works longer hours than any other country - including Japan.

    I work 14-13 hours days - this is actually the time I spend in office. I work on saturdays (like today) and sunday afternoons as well.

    > Really, 10 days of vacation is a bad thing for the US economy...

    Last year I got 5 days of vacation time .

    I work here ... now you know why outsourcing works ?.

    * Managers overcommit
    * employees work their a$$es off
    * ??? (random bugs, bad documentation)
    * Profit !!!

    Sadly my office is airconditioned with free coffee , while at home on a hot day is totally different... (oh, and I DON'T HAVE A LIFE).

  94. Read the BLS page by beakburke · · Score: 1

    ... then GAFC.

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  95. You are a TRAITOR and should be punished as such by Cryofan · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    You, in my judgement, are aiding and abetting economic treason, and you are therefore a traitor.

    I call for economic treason to be punished according to rule of law, like any other form of treason.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  96. Is montana really that bad? by beakburke · · Score: 1

    NT

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    1. Re:Is montana really that bad? by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Look up the stats. It, wymoning, the dakotas etc all have dismal ecenomies and decades of republican leadership in the governor and the local legislators.

      The idiots in those states refuse kick out the republicans who have been fucking them over for over a decade because the "demoncrats" would take away their guns and invite the hippie-faggot-commies in to their pristine state.

      I guess it's better to be paid peanuts then to let the homosexuals marry.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    2. Re:Is montana really that bad? by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

      You have no idea what you're talking about when it comes to Wyoming and looking at your posts, the ones about databases are the only ones where you're not indulging in juvenile name calling. You have a serious chip on your shoulder and I will bet quite a bit that you're only brave with name calling online, not in person of course.

      As far as Wyoming goes, you might try taking a look at the education and crime statistics. Or unemployment. Or any other stat you rambled on about but really have no idea what you were talking about. My family is trying to hire people to work on the ranch and we're having no luck with the unemployment rate as it is in Wyoming. Anyway, if you need to call someone names, try doing it in person. Not like a coward behind your computer.

    3. Re:Is montana really that bad? by killjoe · · Score: 1

      Go look at this site. http://www.bls.gov/cew/state2002.txt

      You see where wyomings wages are? That's right amongst the worst in the country along with Montana, west virginia and the dakotas. Years of republican leadership have gotten you to the basement of wage earners in the country.

      What's wose is that giant rural states like wyoming tend to be leeches. They get much more in federal handouts then they pay in taxes. The liberal faggots you hate so much in NY and California are paying your farm, logging, and mining subsidies. Maybe you should be glad they are getting paid more then you otherwise you'd have to pay your own way.

      On the other hand I am glad there is such low unemployment I guess that's what happens in a state that's almost all empty. Having said that, it does not surprise me that nobody is willing to work as a ranch hand for the pitiful wages your family is probably paying.

      "Anyway, if you need to call someone names, try doing it in person. Not like a coward behind your computer."

      Fuck you asshole. I do what I want. Retarded fascist nazis like you need to be countered and I have taken the job on.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    4. Re:Is montana really that bad? by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

      You don't have the balls to say any of what you type in person. Try checking the cost of living in Wyoming.

    5. Re:Is montana really that bad? by LittleLebowskiUrbanA · · Score: 1

      Just checked my posts and just because you're knonw as a "liberal faggot" locally doesn't mean everyone who disagrees with you on /. calls you that. I know I didn't. You generalize to an astonishing degree. And you're still a coward. And you wouldn't say any of this to someone in person. Seriously, people CAN argue and debate without name calling.

    6. Re:Is montana really that bad? by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      LOL, thats the problem with any homogeneous political system go to Buffalo NY and look at the crap hole that democrats have turned that into. Every year business leaves and the city rund deeper in the red, and every year they elect the same pathetic liberal democrats to run the place.

      Its almost like things should change from time to time, oh wait I forget you cant see that if your a partisan knee-padder... Go about your business..

      --
    7. Re:Is montana really that bad? by N3WBI3 · · Score: 1
      Hi my name is statistics, I can be a useful tool if you dont misuse me. Lets look at an example of statistics abuse...

      You see where wyomings wages are?

      See this is called a half truth, he tells you something which is true without putting it into context.

      Lets look at the whole picture..

      28,043$ The average slasry in WY
      29,131$ This is Lousinanna who BTW have a Governer from the Democratic party.

      Keep in mind that he is also ignoring things like the cost of living which is far lower in WY than say CA or NY..

      Notice he also brings up West Va and callls these staets leeches, I guess the former clansman and Democratic senator from that state dont have anything to do with the pork it receivs right?

      On the other hand I am glad there is such low unemployment I guess that's what happens in a state that's almost all empty.

      Guess he does not understand per capita either..

      --
    8. Re:Is montana really that bad? by killjoe · · Score: 1

      "Guess he does not understand per capita either."

      Learn to read. Those wages were per capita.

      All rural states are leeched. They are the welfare mothers who enjoy tax dollars provided by urban states like NY and California. Yes that includes West Virginia no matter who the senator, representitive or the governor is.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    9. Re:Is montana really that bad? by killjoe · · Score: 1

      " You don't have the balls to say any of what you type in person."

      Really? How do you know?

      "Try checking the cost of living in Wyoming."

      I bet it does not cost much to live in a trailer park.

      --
      evil is as evil does
  97. Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Cryofan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We Americans have a right to protect our jobs. And we have the means to do so.
    This economic treason by the elites all started decades ago when they shipped out our advanced manufacturing jobs to Japan. Advanced manufacturing jobs are not assembly jobs, but more like fabrication jobs. See this article for more info.

    Now they are doing the same thing to office work (like software, financial etc) that they did to advanced manufacturing. But we office workers are more able to stop them this time, mainly because we have some access to the media via the internet and boards like Slashdot.

    Tariffs do make things worse, but only for the upper income group. For the average working person, tariffs are good.

    Let me ask you something: if free trade is so good for lowering prices, then why is an average car costing more of the average salary now than it did 25 years ago? For more details on this check out Marshall Brain's Concentration of Wealth blog.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by jpop32 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We Americans have a right to protect our jobs. And we have the means to do so.

      I'm really having trouble understanding how can someone defend import tariffs, and point to works of Noam Chomsky, all in the same post...

      Tariffs do make things worse, but only for the upper income group. For the average working person, tariffs are good.

      Yup. Tell that to third world cotton growers (hundreds of thousands of them), whose lives are held hostage by a couple of thousand of US cotton growers for which the US government keeps the sky high import tariffs. Or to the african cattle herders who live on less money _monthly_ than an european _cow_ receives from the government _daily_! Yeah, all good and fine.

      The western powers would like to have their cake and eat it too. When they export high value industrial goods into the third world, they demand free trade and no tariffs. But, when those same third world countries try to leverage their position by importing cheap agricultural goods and offering cheap labor, out comes the 'protect our workers' rethoric, and import tariffs. Hypocrisy, anyone?

      Capitalism is fine, but only to the extent that it benefits us, right?

    2. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Soviet Russia... no wait..

    3. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by mike2R · · Score: 1

      I think your plain wrong on this issue (disclaimer: I'm from the UK).

      If the US can't compete in the global marketplace ('scuse buzzwords), then there really is no hope for you're country. You're king of the hill in so many ways at the moment, and yet you are willing to sacrifice the dream of global free trade simply for short-term protection of a few industries.

      Not only does this handicap the US consumers of these industries (often themselves healthy industries and employers), but how do you think it makes other countries react when you won't open your markets to them? More healthy US industries are damaged since they can't service foreign markets which otherwise they could dominate on merit.

      I'm not saying tariffs are always evil - the early US for example made very good use of them to protect and grow it's domestic manuacturing industries in the face of British (then the Workshop of the World) competition. But they are a way for a relatively underdeveloped country to grow its economic infrastructure, not for the dominant economic superpower to avoid moving with the times.

      I would also advance a moral argument against developed countries protecting their markets from the developing world, particularly in agriculture, but even without these I simply don't think it makes sense from the US's own interests. Britain for decades protected (nationalised even) then-core industries such as steel production and coal mining. Result: these industries stood still relative to their potential foreign competitiors. When protection was removed they collapsed under their own weight (plus also costing the rest of us tax-payers huge sums and damaging the rest of the economy which should have been able to buy cheaper foreign goods).

      --
      This sig all sigs devours
    4. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Bombcar · · Score: 1

      Let me ask you something: if free trade is so good for lowering prices, then why is an average car costing more of the average salary now than it did 25 years ago?

      Why does an average car today pollute less, last longer, and get better milage than a car 25 years ago?

      Why is it illegal to even sell a new car that has the exact same specifications as a 25 year old car? (Government pollution laws).

    5. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by maxpublic · · Score: 2

      Capitalism is fine, but only to the extent that it benefits us, right?

      Of course. What are you, master of the obvious? Our government has a mandate to promote the general welfare of the AMERICAN people, not all people world-wide. It is the business of the Chinese government to promote the welfare of the Chinese people, the Indian government to promote the welfare of the Indian people, and so on. China and India are not our problems, nor should we feel obligated to damage our own economy to promote theirs simply because some idiot liberals start yakking about the 'greater good' and 'hypocrisy'.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    6. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 1

      Tariffs raise prices for consumers. Many workers are consumers too.

      Look around the world. The countries with the highest trade barriers are the poorest.

      Look at the 1930's. Look at what the Smoot-Hawley tariff act did to the US economy.

      >Let me ask you something: if free trade is so good for lowering prices, then why is an average car costing more of the average salary now than it did 25 years ago?

      I actually have one new car and one 25-year-old car. The old one barely passes state smog tests. The new one is an SULEV. The new one is heavier and gets 50% better mileage anyway. The new one tunes itself up about a hundred times a second, the old one takes manual intervention. Cars cost more because they (have to) do more today.

      Pick a more comparable example, like TV sets.

    7. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      Your understanding of economics is proportional to a massuse's understanding of brain surgery. Tell me, if tariffs are so good, why not have tariffs between states? Between towns? Between people?

      A tariff only serves corporations who cannot compete and thus lobby legislators. IDIOTS LIKE YOU allow legislators to favor these corporations. This has many pernicious effects, chief among them is to give corporations an incentive to buy legislators.

      Tariffs are evil.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    8. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by jeif1k · · Score: 1

      We Americans have a right to protect our jobs.

      The US is already getting a disproportionate share of world economic activity, courtesy of the US government and its international dealings. I'm sorry if that's not enough for you, but it's naive to think that the US can get even more.

      Tariffs do make things worse, but only for the upper income group. For the average working person, tariffs are good.

      How exactly do you think it is "good" for "the average working person" if US goods can't be exported to the rest of the world anymore? You know, things like Pentiums, Windows, Ford automobiles, IBM mainframes, Hollywood movies, etc.? Because that would be the immediate consequence if the US imposed tariffs unilaterally.

    9. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we office workers are more able to stop them this time, mainly because we have some access to the media via the internet and boards like Slashdot.

      Don't forget, we also have petitiononline. Surely that will help stop them too.

    10. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by lavaface · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry, but I thought I should pipe up here. It seems to me the fundamental problem plaguing humanity is our myopic ability to pen ourselves into nationstates. You mention that our government has a mandate to promote the welfare of American people, at the exclusion of others. Likewise for the other national governments of the world. Essentially, you accept economic warfare as a fact of life.

      I understand there are many differences in regional ideologies, but essentially we (meaning humanity) are all in the same boat. I don't think it's naive to postulate that humanity would be better off if we began to recognize our fundamental similarities rather than remain content (even demand!) to be isolated in what Buckminister Fuller likened to cattle holding pens. Corporations are free. Why aren't we? I may be overstating the case but not by much. In 5 more years, if the prevailing political winds continue their course, I'll be even more right.

    11. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by droopycom · · Score: 1
      But we office workers are more able to stop them this time, mainly because we have some access to the media via the internet and boards like Slashdot.
      Sir, you made my day... Nothing like a good laugh to start.

      You'd better stop reading Slashdot at work if you want to keep your job...

    12. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The average car costs so much becase fools accept paying that much. You can buy used and never buy a new car, and it is feasable to keep a car for 20 years.
      When I was a lad, you learned to fix and build your own stuff, and save mad cash doing it. Cars are not horrendously hard to work on.

    13. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup. Capitalism is good for the top 1% of America.
      You don't really think any of us at the bottom give a rats *ss
      about capitalism, or free trade. There is no hypocrisy here. You are trying to equate the wants of the insanely rich with your average Joe slob working for a living. I am so sick and tired of idiots and morons screaming "You complain your jobs are going to india or china, but you wanted open and free markets. You get what you deserve and if someone else can do it cheaper rhetoric. It's BullShit and you fuckers know it! Show me the average Joe who said "Yeah, we can ship all our jobs to India and the we can afford the kind of crap they make us build, and then we will talk. I'd probably have to ask him how much you paid him first though.

    14. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by Wewtness · · Score: 1

      Please elaborate what you mean more when you say "if the prevailing political winds continue their course, I'll be even more right." I am curious. Thank you

    15. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by jpop32 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Our government has a mandate to promote the general welfare of the AMERICAN people, not all people world-wide.

      Yeah. And the US should probably reinstate slavery, right? It would be a great boon for the AMERICAN people, as it has been in the past. The economy would probably soar, fuck the dim-witted africans whose governments failed to protect them! While we're at it, it's probably also OK to carpet bomb the entire middle east and then when all people are dead (hence, no terrorists) you can take the oil without problems and probably ensure another 50 or so years of prosperity. Hey, it's good for the AMERICAN people, and that's what the US government should be thinking about, right?

      I'm deliberately exaggerating here, but when you establish 'us, only us, and fuck the rest' principle it follows from it quite nicely.

      The sooner the general americal public gets that we are all living on the same planet and share the same fate, the better.

      The real kicker in all of this would be if you consider yourself a religious person.

    16. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      The big thing to remember about tarriffs: they are substitutes for _other_ taxes. So the real question here is :which is worse, an income tax or a tarriff?

    17. Re:Tariffs make things BETTER, not worse by lavaface · · Score: 1

      I won't elaborate too much, but essentially corporate power is increasinglly dictating government policy. Rights are slowly being eroded, language is changing in a most Orwellian manner, and more of our time and money is devoted to weaponry, rather than livingry (another Fullerism.) So much money is devoted to destruction rather than creation. I believe, like Fuller, that the Earth has the resources to adequately support all humans; unfortunately there is incredible inefficiency. I remain optimistic because there is a large global movement rejecting inordinate corporate control and affirming individual human liberty. Hope that clarifies a little. I'll followup if you have any more questions. Cheers!

  98. Addressing Unemployment by beakburke · · Score: 1

    How is that addressing unemployment in a "more positive way". It actually sounds like it isn't being addressed at all, they are just waiting for Eastern Europe to catch up and accepting a more frugal lifestyle. Sorta "spreading the misery." rather than reducing it.

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  99. Re:OK, stop blaming/crediting presidents for jobs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, you're saying that the sitting president can't be blamed, but if GW isn't responsible, then isn't the same true of Clinton? Wasn't he set up by Reagan-Bush?
    Basically I would agree that it has little to do with presidents personally, but much to do with policies that are often drafted and always signed by the executive. The fact that corporate monopolies were given extended powers by the Reagan administration in direct revocation of controls put in during the previous Great Depression is a fact that cannot be disputed. This, is the source of the bubble and it's no wonder. The Reagan administration repealed the safeguards put in place after the 1930s. You cannot deny that because it is a fact and the Republicans were proud of it. Now that the chickens are coming home to roost, it's not spoken of much but the evidence is plain.

  100. We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Labor costs are the PROFITS of the worker. You don't hear business owners complaining when their profits get too high, do you?

    Look, the highest standards of living in the world are in the social demcracies of Europe, and they have HIGH labor costs--they have minimum wages levels of like $12/hour. High lahor costs are a GOOD THING...IF, and ONLY if you are a WORKER. Now, if you are an investor or business owner, that is a Bad Thing.

    Fortunately, over 90% of Americans are WORKERS. Your problem is that you have been tricked by investor/corporate propaganda into thinking that YOU are an INVESTOR. Well, you AIN'T an investor. YOu are a WORKER. Deal with it. Accept it, and then help organize your country to HELP THE WORKER, like they do in Scandanavia.

    The reason the 3rd world IS the 3rd world is that they have LOW LABOR COSTS. That is the DEFINTION of being 3rd world.

    The reason many of the countries in NW Europe have the highest quality of life is because they have the HIGHEST COST OF LABOR. And it aint no accident. The two concepts are DIRECTLY RELATED.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by shaka999 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I see how your system works.

      What happens when all the jobs go to areas with low labor costs?

      --
      One should not theorize before one has data. -Sherlock Holmes-
    2. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 0

      That is where tariffs and trade barriers come into play. See, the thing is that once you have a good infrastructure and a big middle class, then THAT is when you need to enact tariffs and erect trade barriers.

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    3. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by intnsred · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is always amazing how people bash high labor costs. You're right, high labor costs are good for the US.

      Economic historians often point out that throughout the latter 1800s the US had very high labor costs (and strong tariffs) compared to most European countries. Those high labor costs were a key to attracting immigrants from Europe, and those high labor costs also played a key role in automating American industry.

      Fortunately, over 90% of Americans are WORKERS. Your problem is that you have been tricked by investor/corporate propaganda into thinking that YOU are an INVESTOR.

      This is quite true. See www.inequality.org for some illuminating stats about what percentage of the stock market is owned by the ultra-rich.

      What always amazes me is how the corporate mass media report "productivity" increases. Productivity increases, like the gains in productivity by using computers, are great. But the mass media never talks about who benefits from those productivity increases. Look at the percentages of corporate profits over the past 20 years -- the gap between the rich and poor or the gap between the rich and middle-income workers is not increasing for nothing!

      If those productivity increases are so great, how come I'm working over 40 hours a week?!

    4. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the power of corporate/investor propaganda has been incredible. If you could time travel back to 1970 and tried talking about how bad all these "high labor costs" are, you would have been put in an insane asylum (we had the tax base to care for our mentally ill back in those days; the corporate propaganda has robbed us of our progressive tax system).

      But nowadays, after 30 years of concerted corporate propaganda, we have all these bots walking around moaning about high labor costs and tariffs and protectionist trade policies. What is so sad is that they are workers themselves.
      Read more about the details of these "tentacles of rage", the corporate propaganda machine, in this month's Harpers magazine.

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    5. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said my friend.

      When will people realize the goals of the shareholders and the goals of the workers are not the same and in fact many times opposite.

    6. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Rahga · · Score: 1

      ... once you have a good infrastructure and a big middle class, then THAT is when you need to enact tariffs and erect trade barriers.

      That sounds great, because we all know America doesn't depend on foreign resources at the moment. (/sarcasim)

    7. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 0

      again, you make the assumption that investor/corporate interests are identical to the interests of American workers and Americans in general.

      When you walk into a car lot to buy a car, do you also assume that your own interests are identical with the interests of the car salesman? If so, I would guess that you have made a lot of car salesmen very happy.

      Yes, INVESTORS and CORPORATIONS depend on foreign labor to increase their profits. But over 90% of Americans depend on their own LABOR to make a living, not on investments....

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    8. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by dlcarrol · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How in the WORLD did this get modded up?

      That's nothing less than the labor theory of value . Their labor costs are so high not for *profits of the worker* but so that when the government takes their "rightful" huge bite in order to pay for that high standard of living there will still be something left over. Inflationary systems let you bring home more, it's only more 0s on the check, not more buying power.

      And NW Europe may have the highest "quality of life" (HIGHLY debatable) but only in a system where the definition of "quality of life" revolves around central state control. I'll keep my liberty over the "high standard" of letting the government decide what I support with my capital. But then, I guess I'm not being a good wage-slave, huh?

      Seig Heil, I guess.

    9. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      Good try man, I wish I could mod you up against the socialistas around here.

      Too bad the guys who think NW Europe is so great never seem to just go there. Let me spell it out for guys like Cryo: If NW Euro is such a utopia, GO THERE! I'm not kicking you out, but logically, if place A is so much better than place B, why not go there??

    10. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Too bad the guys who think NW Europe is so great
      >never seem to just go there. Let me spell it out
      >for guys like Cryo: If NW Euro is such a utopia,
      >GO THERE!

      Maybe because they are patriots who want to
      improve conditions in their own country?

    11. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

      Oh, I have looked into it. It is very hard to immigrate to Scandanavia (only refugees from 3rd world countries, marriage emigrees, and fellow EU citizens are allowed to become citizens, in most cases). Why? Because unlike America, the people -- the workers there -- are basically in charge, unlike America, where the elite are in charge.

      THe workers there know that too much immigration lowers wages. And they want high wages. High wages are a GOOD THING.

      THey know that. We do not.

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    12. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Let me spell it out for guys like Cryo: If NW Euro is such a utopia, GO THERE! I'm not kicking you out, but logically, if place A is so much better than place B, why not go there??"

      Maybe because somebody who thinks his country is going to the dogs (as it surely is) might want to help FIX it? Can you fucking comprehend that? Can you?

    13. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 0, Troll

      It always kinda cracks me up when I see another unrepentant communist come crawling out of the woodwork. It's like, "Where've you been for the past eighty years, man? How come you're living in the 1920s?"

      --

      I write in my journal
    14. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by aggieben · · Score: 2, Informative

      First of all, you should be drawn and quartered for using all-caps the way you did.

      Labor costs are the PROFITS of the worker.

      You are sorely mistaken on this point. Labor costs only hurt the business that workers work for; they don't benefit the worker in any way. Particularly when you're talking about labor costs in the for of taxes, there's no benefit to the worker. Hurting the business a worker works for is of course a negative thing. Ever heard of layoffs?

      Look, the highest standards of living in the world are in the social demcracies of Europe...

      Measuring the "standard of living" is a totally impossible thing to do. Different people have different priorities and mean different things when they say "standard of living". Is the gap between rich and poor in Sweden lower than in the US? You betcha. Would I rather live there than in the US? You're out of your mind. ...and they have HIGH labor costs--they have minimum wages levels of like $12/hour

      I don't think that number is right. But those European nations do have higher minimum wages than in the US; they also have higher unemployment, lower job growth and lower overall economic growth. Go figure.

      Fortunately, over 90% of Americans are WORKERS. Your problem is that you have been tricked by investor/corporate propaganda into thinking that YOU are an INVESTOR

      Did you know that over 85% of all statistics are made up? Almost everyone I know is an investor of some sort. Do you have a savings account? Thne you're an investor. Ever heard of employee stock programs? Employee ownership programs?

      The reason the 3rd world IS the 3rd world is that they have LOW LABOR COSTS. That is the DEFINTION of being 3rd world.

      Wow, that's a pretty strict definition of 3rd world. If that's the only definition, then the US should strive to be 3rd world.

      The reason many of the countries in NW Europe have the highest quality of life is because they have the HIGHEST COST OF LABOR. And it aint no accident. The two concepts are DIRECTLY RELATED.

      I don't think you even know what the term "cost of labor" even means. Go troll somewhere else.

      --
      Don't become a regular here, you will become retarded. -- Yoda the Retard
    15. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

      I wrote:

      "Labor costs are the PROFITS of the worker."


      You wrote:
      You are sorely mistaken on this point. Labor costs only hurt the business that workers work for; they don't benefit the worker in any way.


      No, they do not. THey hurt the Business OWNERS, not the workers. If the labor costs are higher, the workers can afford more consumption, which means MORE revenue for the business itself. But the owner has higher costs, and so he can afford only 2 tricked-out SUV's, instead 3. Boo-hoo. Cry me a river...

      I wrote:

      Look, the highest standards of living in the world are in the social demcracies of Europe...

      You wrote:
      Measuring the "standard of living" is a totally impossible thing to do. Different people have different priorities and mean different things when they say "standard of living".


      How about lots of leisure time off, and money to spend when doing it? You might want to see who travels more: the europeans or the Americans. If you travel to MOST travel destinations outside of Europe or America, you will find more Europeans than Americans. How about rate of computer ownership? THey are right up there with us: http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/med_per_com_ca p


      But those European nations do have higher minimum wages than in the US; they also have higher unemployment, lower job growth and lower overall economic growth. Go figure.


      Yeah, it must be terrible to take a long sabbatical from working your ass off. And with the rich people paying for it. Oh, the horror....

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    16. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by dspfreak · · Score: 1
      Look, the highest standards of living in the world are in the social demcracies of Europe, and they have HIGH labor costs--they have minimum wages levels of like $12/hour.

      They also have much higher unemployment than we do - many western european countries have unemployment on the order of 8-10%. We'd be crapping our pants if we had that over here.

      --
      "Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions." -- G. K. Chesterton
    17. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, I've never before seen someone on slashdot who I actively wanted to kill before.

      You disgust me, you filthy diseased parasite, trying to spread your civilization-destroying socialism.

    18. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      Sigh. Labor costs are the costs of the customer. Or did you think that business owners have extra money sitting around that they can afford to pay more for labor? In an ongoing business, all costs are accounted for: labor, goods, and capital. Anything left over is an accident, and if it persists, will be competed away by other companies entering the field.

      So where do profits come from, if they're always competed away? They come from entrepreneurs creating new businesses and new products.

      By the way, if you have a pension, or a retirement fund, then you're an INVESTOR, and the profits of corporate america are very important to your future retirement. Don't screw with them unless you want to work until you're 80.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    19. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

      You wrote:

      You know, I've never before seen someone on slashdot who I actively wanted to kill before.

      You disgust me, you filthy diseased parasite, trying to spread your civilization-destroying socialism.



      You need to read my posts about the rightwing movement, and how the current leaders of it are essentially encouraging the more hateful and intolerant aspects of humans. They have essentially and implicitly given approval for intolerance and a low-grade species of fascism in return for re-election.

      You are in part a reflection of this dynamic.

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    20. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by jeif1k · · Score: 1

      The reason many of the countries in NW Europe have the highest quality of life is because they have the HIGHEST COST OF LABOR. And it aint no accident. The two concepts are DIRECTLY RELATED.

      Well, but it's not quite that simple. You don't just get to set your labor costs: you are competing internationally. And you don't just get to set tariffs unilaterally: tariffs and trade relations are negotiated bilaterally and if others don't feel treated fairly, they'll refuse to let US products into their countries.

      Europeans accept higher unemployment, lower consumption of consumer goods, they maintain a highly educated workforce, and they have legislated a redistribution of wealth. And they still have had to accept scaling back their benefits. Does the political and social will and ability exist in the US to do the same?

    21. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

      you wrote:
      Europeans accept higher unemployment, lower consumption of consumer goods, they maintain a highly educated workforce, and they have legislated a redistribution of wealth.


      They also have a welfare state that pays them benefits far beyond what we have. Years of unemployment, for example. Universal healthcare. Tuition-free universities. (Benefits vary from country to country, but without dispute, their welfare state dwarfs our own).


      And they still have had to accept scaling back their benefits.


      NO, very recently, the elite have gotten away with some shenanigans, especially in Germany. They will be put in their place shortly. Unlike America, most EU countries have a true democracy.


      Does the political and social will and ability exist in the US to do the same?


      All of my posts in this thread pretty much speak directly to this issue. What I am doing here is helping to create that will. Actually, I am helping people to see what is going on. At least I hope so.

      --
      eat shiat and bark at the moon
    22. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by droopycom · · Score: 1


      >>> If those productivity increases are so great, how come I'm working over 40 hours a week?!

      Well, maybe it increases because you are working more than 40 hours a week but still get paid 40h?

      Lets say you are working 50 Hours a week, but your still paid 40 hours like every good geek.

      So officially your doing the work of 50h in 40h: congratulation you increased your productivity by 25%

    23. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by JCCyC · · Score: 1

      I went there.

      It IS great.

      Spain, Netherlands, Germany... (gasp) FRANCE!

      Great infrastructure, public transportation, high standard of living... this isn't Pravda talking about the wonders of the Worker's Paradise, it's the real deal.

      And that's why RW people hate the place so much.

    24. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by jeif1k · · Score: 1

      All of my posts in this thread pretty much speak directly to this issue. What I am doing here is helping to create that will. Actually, I am helping people to see what is going on. At least I hope so.

      What is going on is simple. Primarily, Americans are living beyond their means. Secondarily, distribution of income and wealth within the US is highly unequal.

      Now, the second fact would allow the US to compensate a little for the consequences of the first: if the US has the political will to go back to more a more progressive tax system, the economic impact of facing the first fact could be lessened (but not eliminated) for the majority of Americans.

      NO, very recently, the elite have gotten away with some shenanigans, especially in Germany. They will be put in their place shortly.

      Germany went from having some of the highest taxes to roughly the European average; I don't see how that represents "shenanigans". Furthermore, all those reforms were carried out under a center-left government, so there isn't anybody left in Germany to "put [the elite] in their place".

    25. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      Too much immigration doesn't lower wages, except among the immigrant community. The problem with too much immigration in a socialist society like NW Europe is that their socialism only functions on the level it does because of shared cultural assumptions. Remove those assumptions, people stop supporting each other, quit their jobs, expect public support, and very rapidly your entire society devolves as everyone expects everyone else to support them.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    26. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by pcb · · Score: 1

      Too bad the guys who think NW Europe is so great never seem to just go there.

      I can tell you have never been there or you would never say that. Most Americans I know who go over to Europe are usually very surprised. I personally would not want to live there for other reasons, but not because of their "quality of life" or their lack of "freedom". Which is, btw, total BS! I would argue that most EU countries have a greater amount of liberty than the US (especially lately). Oh, and their cities are much nicer that most of the cities here. American cities are so ugly.

      And telling people to go way because they don't like something is such a shallow and closed-minded argument. You're probably the type of person who tell immigrants who complain that "if they don't like something they should just go home" Right?

      --
      'Men never commit evil so fully and joyfully as when they do it for religious convictions.' B. Pascal
    27. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      Nice try. I was in Wales for 6 months, been all over the continent. Nice place, I don't care to move there though.

      All I'm suggesting is, if it's such a paradise and you love it so much (collective "you"), why not just go there?

      I'm not saying it to be mean. I'm saying it as pure logic and reason: Why suffer here if it's as bad as they claim it is?

    28. Re:We WANT high labor costs! It's a Good Thing! by pcb · · Score: 1

      Point taken, I may have jumped the gun.

      --
      'Men never commit evil so fully and joyfully as when they do it for religious convictions.' B. Pascal
  101. Nice flamebait re: FDR by quarkscat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    FDR tried to alleviate the suffering caused by
    the depression's very high unemployment rate by
    instituting SS, and work programs like CCC and WPA
    that provided a public benefit. He did not make
    lies, half-truths, and political doublespeak
    an Executive Branch SOP. He did not slash
    corporate taxes, and the tax rate of the very
    wealthiest Americans, and then shift the tax
    burdeon onto the backs of the shrinking
    middle class. FDR did not encourage the flight
    of American jobs overseas because "what's good
    for General Motors is good for America". FDR
    did not open the floodgates of illegal
    immigration into this country to force wages
    lower.

    George W. Bush has done all these things, and
    more. It is pretty sad when the only decent
    paying jobs available to unemployed Americans
    is to drive a truck through Iraqi free fire
    zones. The high point of Bush's "job creation"
    record was 135,000 new jobs in a month -- which
    unfortunately doesn't even cover students from
    high school or college entering the job market,
    let alone those unemployed. Bush has embraced
    "corporate national socialism", and abandoned
    the working class. From all reliable accounts,
    one of the Bush administration's top policy
    goals was the invasion of Iraq, from before his
    inauguration. All the lies and doublespeak that
    was employed (WMD, terror links, and "imminent
    threat" were cobbled together and used after
    9/11/2001 as cover for this war. Each have
    proved to be false. The Bush "war plank" was
    an agenda hidden from the voters in 2000 by
    such promises as "no foreign wars", "no nation-
    building", etcetera, all while planning for
    Saddam's ouster. Bush mismanagement of the
    war in Iraq, and of domestic policy decisions,
    have been equally disasterous to this country,
    with the sole exception of the GOP-aligned
    multinational corporations. George W. Bush
    spoke the truth (finally) at a Washington,DC
    fundraiser when he said "the HAVE's and the
    HAVE MORE's are my base (constituency)".

    If this country should be cursed with yet another
    George W. Bush term of office, do not expect that
    there will be any improvements in job growth,
    health care, international relations, or the
    war in Iraq. Do expect more tax cuts for the
    corporations and wealthiest 2% of taxpayers.
    Do expect SS and Medicare to be gutted, as Bush
    finds new ways to drive the country deeper into
    debt. Do expect greater loss of personal freedom
    in this country, as "Patriot Act" extensions
    are subverted to crush political opposition.
    Do expect Bush to continue promoting religious
    organizations as the only source of welfare
    and social assistance. Do expect America's
    open borders to continue to encourage illegal
    immigration, because America's businesses
    want ever cheaper labor.

    1. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by maximilln · · Score: 1

      Bush has embraced "corporate national socialism", and abandoned the working class

      The way things are going, I'd like to abandon the working class as well. Is there a HOWTO on Linuxdoc.org for how to do it?

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    2. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by slew · · Score: 4, Informative

      FDR wasn't quite the saint that many portray him to be. Perhaphs a little research on FDR and his tenure as Assistant Secretary of the Navy under Woodrow Wilson may dissuade you of that notion...

      Basically President Woodrow Wilson "decided" that Haiti would be a strategic port in case of war, and pretty much directed the US to take over the country. FDR lead the occupation of that country and was effectively the "administrator of Haiti" during that occupation. By many accounts, it was a boondogle of Iraq proportions (prison abuse scandels, contract skimming scandels, etc.) At one time he tried a "gore-ism" claiming that he single handedly wrote the Haiti constitution.

      As president FDR, during the London Economic Conference in 1933 which called to coordinate efforts stabilize the world wide economy, he pretty much unilaterally pulled out angering and alienating all the European delegates and eventually leading to the breakdown of the conference. Some historians feel that this breakdown of this conference contributed to prolonging the recession/depression in europe and led to the rise of dictators in some countries which eventually led to WWII.

      As part of the "good neigbor" policy of the FDR administration, he helped to push through the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934, which tried to increase export trade and decrease tariffs into the United States with central and south american countries. I'm sure some of the "job protectionist anti-wto democrats" would take great issue with that type of stance today.

      Later on in his tenure as president (after he broke the 2-term "tradition"), FDR had quite a few run-ups with the supreme court and was probably the only president with enough gall to try to stack the court (by trying to simply appoint new justices instead of waiting for them to retire and maintaining the "traditional number"). Not really the spirit of the law type person (I guess since he never got to practice law, he wasn't too concerned about all this law stuff).

      History has a mixed report on FDR, certainly the US was in need of a change during that time to shake things up, but it's hard to know if any of his policies were really effective since the general consensous is that it was really the WWII that had the bigger impact on the state of the country at that time than anything FDR did.

      By the way, one of FDR's biggest legacies is the Federal Income Tax (instead of a traditional property tax or wealth tax). Although originally targetted only at the wealthy, has since become essentially a tax on the middle class. Of course the wealthy get to defer their income by purchasing property which goes up in value w/o being taxed, and since the relative tax burden of income vs property has shifted, they in fact get a defacto tax break. Yeah, that morgage interest deduction is a token that gets thrown the middle class's way, but if you look at the percentage of wealth of individuals and the percentage of federal income tax collected from those individuals, you can easily see how the Federal Income tax has slowly but surely become the tax on the middle class that keeps the poor from entering the middle class and the middle class from becoming more wealthy (by introducing an artificial economic class structure in its progressive rate structure).

    3. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by Man_Holmes · · Score: 1

      You know less than you think you do. Most people aren't aware of it but the genesis of most of FDR's programs was the Hoover administration.

      Yes, that's right poor maligned Herbert Hoover has proposed these same programs several years earlier but the Democratic controlled Congress wouldn't pass them. Yet as soon as FDR was elected the names changed and they became law.

      Did those programs end the great depression? No, though they alleviated the people's suffering. World War II ended the great depression.

      Those who want to blame Bush for the current economic condition have got to ask themselves what Al Gore would have differently if he had inherited a recession from Clinton and then lost over a million jobs after 9-11. I am willing to bet if Gore had been in office we would have fared worse, far worse.

      Man Holmes

    4. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by s4m7 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Great post. You manage to imply blame for FDR for starting World War 2 through a rather flimsy connection, and simultaneously give WW2 credit for pulling the US out of the depression.

      Would you be interested in a job with the Cheney administration?

      --
      This comment is fully compliant with RFC 527.
    5. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by coaxial · · Score: 1

      By the way, one of FDR's biggest legacies is the Federal Income Tax (instead of a traditional property tax or wealth tax). Although originally targetted only at the wealthy, has since become essentially a tax on the middle class. Of course the wealthy get to defer their income by purchasing property which goes up in value w/o being taxed, and since the relative tax burden of income vs property has shifted, they in fact get a defacto tax break. Yeah, that morgage interest deduction is a token that gets thrown the middle class's way, but if you look at the percentage of wealth of individuals and the percentage of federal income tax collected from those individuals, you can easily see how the Federal Income tax has slowly but surely become the tax on the middle class that keeps the poor from entering the middle class and the middle class from becoming more wealthy (by introducing an artificial economic class structure in its progressive rate structure).

      You can thank the anti-New-Deal Republicans (Yes, they STILL exist.) for that. The problem came from supply-siders that kept arging that cutting taxes on the richest 1% is a a panacea. To blame FDR for the perversion of the system by fisically irresponsible "conservatives", is silly. FDR was long dead when this happened.

    6. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by jasmusic · · Score: 1

      World War 2 DID pull the U.S. out of the depression. You could use a little study of Keynesian economics.

    7. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by s4m7 · · Score: 1

      I wasn't arguing that point at all. I was just noting the incongruity of the rhetoric. Drawing a logical conclusion from parent's statements, if FDR was somehow-in-a-round-about-sort-of-way responsible for starting WW2, then he would also be just as responsible for the economic turnaround.

      But PLEASE do tell me what else I ought to study. And, IMHO Keynesian economics is a load of crap, unless your primary concern is aggregate growth statistics. I wonder why a tax-everything style state would push such statistics so hard. Government intervention is what fscks up the system in the first place.

      --
      This comment is fully compliant with RFC 527.
    8. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by casehardened · · Score: 1

      Dude. You don't have to put line returns in; they'll be inserted automatically.

    9. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just a note, HTML supports
      automatic line wrapping so
      you don't have to hit enter
      after each and every line.

    10. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by jasmusic · · Score: 1

      Fair enough.

      I would argue that the absence of government regulation allowed the 1929 crash. I fully support the SEC and FDIC to prevent economic anarchy, but anything beyond that is knee-jerk and frivolous in my book.

      I don't particularly like Keynesian philosophy, but it does a better job than most to explain the stabilized economy in Hitler's Germany and WW2 U.S.A.

    11. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by OldAndSlow · · Score: 1
      This is modded informative??

      As president FDR, during the London Economic Conference in 1933 which called to coordinate efforts stabilize the world wide economy, he pretty much unilaterally pulled out angering and alienating all the European delegates and eventually leading to the breakdown of the conference. Some historians feel that this breakdown of this conference contributed to prolonging the recession/depression in europe and led to the rise of dictators in some countries which eventually led to WWII.

      I'd like to know who these historians are, so I can avoid them. Mussolini took power in Italy in 1922. Hitler came to power in January 1933, before FDR took office. Stalin pretty much controlled the Soviet Union by 1926. What dictators came to power because of the failure of the London Conference in the summer of 1933? Franco? He was neutral during WWII.

      By the way, one of FDR's biggest legacies is the Federal Income Tax

      Say what?? The 16th ammendment to the constitution (which allows the federal income tax) was passed in 1913. And by the end of WWI, the higest tax rate was 97%.

      Where do you get this stuff??

    12. Re:Nice flamebait re: FDR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well... Not saying that FDR started WWII or anything but...

      WWII did help the economy and put the US on top of the World Supremacy list.

      Not only did the US put many people into the factories to produce weapons of war it also employeed science to a never before seen level that would not have happened otherwise in peace time.

      That and the US sold and leased massive amounts of war material to countries around the world which poured money back into the states.

      And lastly and more morbidly...

      500,000 healthy bodied men from the states had died due to the conflict and no longer needed jobs back home.

      Weren't we discussing how large deaths in the population lead to better economies (IE Black Death and old age death of baby boomers) due to more jobs to go around and less people looking for work?

  102. Re:As someone else pointed out, meaningless figure by beakburke · · Score: 1
    The movie you are thinking of is "My fellow americans." (Jack Lemon and James Garner)

    "I don't know much about america but I seen to many shows and "documentaries" were american families are working 2 jobs per parent and still barely making ends meet to have much fate in your style of economy. A simple stat like the number of unemployed has very little meaning when you can have a 4 job household and still be in debt."

    I would say just the opposite, it's very hard to tell how representative your documentary family is w.r.t most poor people. Naturally, the documentary maker has an agenda, which is fine but we do have to assume that he/she found the worst case they could for their film.

    The other problem is that debt isn't just about income, it's about spending. The average poor person in the US has a larger house, more cars, etc, than a poor person in the EU, even though the EU has (relative to it's economy) a more generous safety net. The reason is pretty simple, the median income in the US is significantly higher, thus some people who are poor by US standards would not be considered poor in some EU member countries. The higher median income in the US also influences the cultural definition of "subsistance". I would bet that some things that poor people in the US would consider necessary or normal would be considered normal or luxury. In other words, expectations are higher, thus many poor people feel the "need" to go into debt. Just look at things like Cable TV, cars, etc in the US.

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  103. Campaign Finance by Craig+Ringer · · Score: 1

    As an Autstralian seeing the US political system from the outside, I couldn't agree more - at least about the need for finance reform.

    Australia has its fair share of problems too, but many of the things that are routine for politicians in the US would be illegal here. Sadly, we seem to be on a trend toward a system more like the US - lately conflicts of interests by politcians have barely merited a mild telling off.

  104. Don't Bitch About Outsourcing Until ... by tabdelgawad · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... you're willing to give up all those cheap imports (including practically all your PC and electronic hardware) and live in economic isolation from the rest of the world. THERE IS NO ECONOMIC DIFFERENCE BETWEEN OUTSOURCING A JOB AND IMPORTING A GOOD. Here's a short argument to convince you. If you're still not convinced, ask your favorite Econ professor, or even anyone who paid attention in their International Trade class.

    I'm always amused when presidents take credit for good economic times, and receive blame for bad times. Fact of the matter is, despite what the campaigns would like you to think, the Fed chairman probably has more influence on the economy than the president, and even the Fed chairman probably doesn't have that much influence. I say, by all means, go ahead and vote Bush out of office for the mess he created in the world and the assault on civil liberties at home, but don't think protectionism is good for the country, or that Kerry will solve the unemployment problem.

    --
    Imposing Libertarian views on everyone online since 1992.
    1. Re:Don't Bitch About Outsourcing Until ... by Vermifax · · Score: 1

      Wish I had moderator pts.

      --

      Vermifax

      Logout
  105. America is the Already the Richest Nation by XScB · · Score: 1

    The United States are already the richest country on the planet. So, immigration is bad because you don't want other people from poorer nations to have any of that wealth? And trade deals are bad because poorer nations that produce much more cheaply because they're poorer are unfair?

    At the risk of sounding troll-like, wake up. This sounds like the richest nation on earth being greedy.

  106. NO, that is the OPPOSITE of hypocrisy by Cryofan · · Score: 0

    Hypocrisy/hypocritical means LOW ("hypo") levels of self-criticism.
    See here:
    If I commit Bad Act A, and then do not admit it or do not criticize myself for it, then, that is hypocritical.

    If I commit Bad Act A, and then admit it, that is NOT hypocritical.

    The owners of Slashdot outsource. Then they published this article encouraging criticism. That is the OPPOSITE of hypocrisy.

    (Geez....and I wonder why corporate propaganda has had such huge success in America...)

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  107. Typical mistake by beakburke · · Score: 1

    Utility is ordinal, not cardinal. This means that we cannot make comparisions between two different groups/individuals/nations, because they all have different utilities at different levels. Thus it isn't a good logical basis for a progressive tax system. The flat-tax argument is an "equal share of burden" argument too. The point being that if you cannot equalize marginal sacrifice, then the best way is proportional sacrifice (flat income tax). I agree your idea would be better, if you could compare utitilty across individuals/families.

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  108. Outsourcing - a huge negative by SpinyNorman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I disagree... Outsourcing means taking money out of the American economy (wages that would be paid to someone getting taxed and buying stuff over here), and sends it overseas where that money (generated with the assistence of US-taxpayer funded US infrastructure, and taxpayer funder corporate tax breaks) now instead helps a competitor to America. That's not a good thing.

    The free trade of high paying AMerican jobs for cheap overseas labor also would not naturally end until some natural balance in global salary levels has been achieved... Now, when you realize that the US *currently* has one of the highest salary levels in the worls, but only represents ~5% of the global population, you'll begin to realize where that eventual equilibrium may be achieved... it wont be the midway point between current US and Indian/Chinese/Russian salaries, but rather it'll be much closer to what those Indian etc salaries are right now, since their population sizes swamp our own.

    Now, if you actually give a crap about quality of life over here, and your ability to earn a wage that'll pay an American mortage rather than paying for a Chinese apartment (not much use unless you live in China), then you'd be concerned about this, but don't go looking for enlightened CEO's to stop gunning for expense-cutting bonuses in this way, especially since there duty to shareholders is to maximize profits for them, regardless of anythign else (such as whether by doing so they're screwing the American economy, and screwing the job prospects of their shareholders and everyone else).

    The only thing that will stop the quality of life in America being dragged down to what'll be supported on an Indian salary is indeed, as Kerry says, to have the government provide disincentives to do so... What I'd support is tax penalties that are proportional to the difference in cost of living between the US and where a company outsources to, since that levels the playing field. I'll happily compete with anyone in the US for a programming job, since I'm good at what I do, and my competitors have pretty much the same cost of living as myself... but trying to compete with someone on the same skill level who's cost of living is 20% of mine is going to be a losing proposition since they can work for 20% of the salary that I need. That's not competition, it's slaughter, and it may be good for globally reducing labor rates to a minimum (if that for some reason is your goal), but it's sure not good for the Americal lifestyle that we enjoy, even if you want to roll out the old excuse that I'll be able to buy a VCR at Walmart for $28.99 instead of $32, because of the Chinese labor.

    I'd be voting for Kerry anyway based on the danger to America that Bush represents, but I certainly also support him on this issue - his policy will be good for working Americans, while Bush's outsourcing-happy policy is only good for the independently wealthy and business owners to which lower US labor costs are a plus rather than a negative.

    1. Re:Outsourcing - a huge negative by Toby+The+Economist · · Score: 1

      >I disagree... Outsourcing means taking money out of
      > the American economy (wages that would be paid to
      > someone getting taxed and buying stuff over here),
      > and sends it overseas where that money (generated
      > with the assistence of US-taxpayer funded US
      > infrastructure, and taxpayer funder corporate tax
      > breaks) now instead helps a competitor to America.
      > That's not a good thing.

      There are a couple of fundmanetal misunderstandings here; that an increase in competition is bad and that jobs going overseas takes money out of the US.

      I'm not going to address your whole post, 'cause it's long, and it would be insensitive to critique extensively.

      I would say, try giving Freedman's "Capitalism and Freedom" a go. It's a short book, and a *superb* introduction to economics. Economics is a science, a vague science a lot of the time, but some of the basics are aboslutely clear and they are rules, just as F=P/A is a rule. Some of those rules you've said are wrong, in the first paragraph, so you've gone amiss. If you do some reading, you'll see why those rules are correct.

      --
      Toby

  109. Let's not forget the underemployed... by jlanthripp · · Score: 1
    In 2000 I was employed by an engineering firm's IT department, making $15.00/hour (decent wages in the Southeast, and that was starting pay). Company-paid health insurance with dental and vision plan, a decent amount of paid vacation, and a generous 401k plan went along with the job.

    Fast forward to 2004. I'm working in a menial factory job, making $8.00/hour, no health insurance, no paid vacation, working through a temp agency. If I get hired on permanently at the plant, I've already been told there will not be a raise involved for at least a year, and the payroll deduction for health insurance is about 15% of my gross pay. The plant recently lifted a 2-year freeze on raises and gave its permanent employees a 3% raise. Inflation is currently running about 5-6%, so the net effect of that 3% raise is that the employees are making a bit less than they were before the raise freeze. In the same plant meeting in which the raise was announced, they announced yet another record month for production and sales, and also informed the permanent employees that their health insurance costs were going up yet again. Yay. Meanwhile the company executives are buying new luxury autos and boats and swimming pools. Gee, thanks for that 3% raise. Oh, wait, I don't even get that because I'm one of the ~40% of the plant employees who work through a temp agency and thus don't get raises or insurance or vacation pay.

    How do I make ends meet? I do small home improvement jobs on the weekends. Anyone want their kitchen remodelled in the Chattanooga area?

    --
    "Alcohol, Tobacco, & Firearms" should be a convenience store, not a government agency.
    1. Re:Let's not forget the underemployed... by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      What did you do, and did you think about freelancing a bit?

      If you're working at a factory job, how many hours are you working? If it's less than 50, have you considered freelancing IT after hours?

      I see that you do some carpentry - that's probably paying as well as freelancing on IT would. Are you also keeping good books and paying your 15% self employment tax off the top? (if so - keep good books and expense everything you can!)

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  110. Disagree by beakburke · · Score: 0, Troll

    The welfare state IS socialism. It's not Pure Socialism, but it is socialism.

    --
    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
  111. Posting this crap is a sad indictment of Michael by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is fucked up from an editorial point of view.
    An editor who chose to post an article from an immigrant bashing group that uses the double speak of referring to itself as liberal and progressive is clearly acting on an agenda.
    What's the point Michael? Why don't you just go ahead and espouse your racist views directly instead of playing this dumb transparent game.
    Fuck you, you racist pig.

  112. Re:You are a TRAITOR and should be punished as suc by big+tex · · Score: 1

    OK. Reality check.

    The computer you typed that post with -
    were all of the circuit boards domestically made?
    Own a cell phone? Pull the battery cover off and see where it was made.
    Oo-h! My coffee cup! Made in Mexico!! Do you have an American made coffee cup? I've got about a dozen that aren't. Watch? Japanese.
    There could be more great examples, but that's what I see in front of me right now.

    If you can't catalog your life and say 'yes, I have no forign made products', than YOU'RE THAT GUY that Taco Cowboy is talking about.
    Pot calling Kettle...

    Oh, here's a fun scenario for your economic treason (i.e., where do you draw the line):
    I work in construction, and we use a lot of cranes. Now, there is a certain class of cranes called Duty-Cycle cranes, mainly for heavy foundation work - slurry walls, drilled shafts, tasks that beat the crap out of equipment.
    The best American made entry is the Manitowoc 1015, which is a huge POS. Just doesn't do the job. (Too bad really, since the rest of their cranes are wonderful products.) On the other hand, the German Liebherr makes an excellent duty-cycle crane, the HS 833 HD.
    Should I be punished for buying the Liebherr? Should I buy the Manitowoc out of some sort of loyalty to USA?
    What you are proposing by such a law is rapidly approaching the "anti-dog-eat-dog rule" from Atlas Shrugged. Honestly, you don't have to agree with everything (or most) of what Ayn Rand says, but it should be very self apparent that rules like that are misguided, idiotic, and self defeating.

    --
    I think I need a new sig here.
  113. America is the Already the Greatest Debt Nation by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    $500.000.000.000+ and rising each day.
    That too will have some impact on the economy. GLOBALLY. Thank you mister Bush!

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
  114. Slashdot becoming fascist? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Someone wondered why Slashdot is right wing and this story proves it. How could Slashdot quote from a fascist site like vdare.com? What's next? An article from the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan? Or maybe Aryan Nation?

    --
    Sivaram Velauthapillai
    Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    1. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by EnderPax · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know about becoming fascist, but I would have thought someone would check the credentials/site before approving the article. From vdare.com:

      "The articles on VDARE.com are brought to you by The Center for American Unity."

      So, on to The Center for American Unity:

      "The Center is concerned with what has been called the National Question - whether the United States can survive as a nation-state, the political expression of a distinct American people, in the face of these emerging threats: mass immigration, multiculturalism, multilingualism, and affirmative action."

      Regardless of what you think about affirmative action, I would hardly see mass immigration, multiculturalism and multilingualism as "threats". It seems that vdare.com is funding by yet another one of those groups that forgets that the founders of America were immigrants, America has always had immigration as one of its strengths and that a large portion of the economy is supported by immigration. Idiots.

      Shame on whoever approved this claptrap. It's a step above the KKK, at best. I wonder if any of Slashdot's staff members are immigrants or first generation Americans. I wonder how they feel knowing this sort of crap gets posted to the main page.

    2. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      The article that was quoted isn't that bad. It's someone who calls himeself progressive when in fact he isn't one. But it's not THAT bad. Some of the other articles on VDare.com are really bad. These guys ARE fascists--just not the Nazi-type.

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    3. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by liposuction · · Score: 1

      You sir, are a monkey's bottom. The fact that you think Slashdot is right-wing is evidence enough.

      --
      "Thoughts are more powerful than any weapon, and I don't even let my people own guns." --Joseph Stalin
    4. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by stinerman · · Score: 1

      Can you say "Ad Hominem"? I totally agree that vdare.com isn't exactly "fair and balanced", but that doesn't mean their analysis is inherently flawed. Fox News happens to be correct a lot of the time. It hurts yourself when you self-censor certain news sources. True liberals keep and open mind about everything . . . including closed-mindedness.

    5. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      The thing is: vdare has tried to focus on the immigration issue-which is something on which there is a huge gap between elite opinion and that of the mass of the american public. Recent US immigration policy was made by and for the rich. Why is it facist to expose that?

    6. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying these guys shouldn't have the right to express their views or that they should be banned; all I'm saying is that a website like Slashdot shouldn't be posting stuff from there. OR if they want to post stuff like this, how about posting stuff from the far-left to "balance" it out?

      As far as censorship is concerned, Slashdot is already heavily involved in censorship. I mean, picking a story involves censorship.

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    7. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      I would suggest I'm more of a progressive in the tradition of folks like Norm Thomas and Henry George than most folks that call themselves "progressive" today. A lot of rich folks have made a lot of money by recent US immigration policy at the expense of the broad range of the American public. Those rich folks should pay to clean up the mess they've made. What is sad is how many "progressives" are rally just catering to the opinions of political and economic elites today.

    8. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      Why be so "diplomatic" about it? ;) Why don't you just say I'm a fucking idiot?

      Slashdot has been moving to the right for quite some time. The posters are mostly left-leaning but the site isn't. If you remove the libertarian influence, Slashdot will end up as nothing more than a right wing site with some tech news thrown in there for entertainment...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    9. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      Most of the contributors to that site are fascist--and that's what I call them fascist. They don't just talk about immigration but also fascist issues of the past like eugenics (i.e. one race superior to others--guess which one is supposed to be superior?), and so forth. Most of their articles have little to do with the immigration issue and more to do with white supremacy. The are not against immigration per se; instead, they are just against immigration of certain etnic groups.

      If you are a conservative, these guys may be up your alley... but if you are a liberal, these guys are closet fascists.

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    10. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      By your definition Abraham Lincoln was clearly a fascist-which IMHO makes your definition absurd. Folks on both the Nationalist side(Nazi's) and Internetionalist side(Communists) have committed atrocities. What makes you so willing to think that the Vdare folks are inclined to become mass killers?

    11. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      One thing to get: with folks like Malkin, Roberts, Francis and Sailor Brimelow has to take pretty much _all_ their columns. Now, I agree that it is a shame that the entire topic of immigration policy has been left up to the Right-and most of what is published the by the left on the topic is just plane stupid. I'd like to help change that. Now that said, the real corruption in the US is in the Center-the Right folks like Buchanan are at least sincere-which is more than I can say about either Bush or Kerry.

    12. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by elflord · · Score: 1
      Slashdot has been moving to the right for quite some time. The posters are mostly left-leaning but the site isn't.

      Take a look at the commie BS that shows up whenever they talk about copyrights. The protectionist xenophobe platform isn't strictly left or right -- you get commie wackos and right wing wackos who embrace it. It seems that slashdot also embraces it. Because the editors are a bunch of tinfoil-hat wearing wackos. IMO they're largely left-leaning, but first and foremost, they're wackos.

    13. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      Abraham Lincoln, as well as guys like Thomas Jefferson, WOULD be fascists by modern views (although note that the times were different back then). Lincoln clearly believed that blacks (and I guess non-whites in general) were inferior to whites. So yes, if someone were to hold Lincoln's exact views right now, they would be racists and also likely fascists.

      "What makes you so willing to think that the Vdare folks are inclined to become mass killers?"

      Fascism doesn't mean an ideology where people are mass killers. You can easily have a fascist system without much violence (early Nazism was like this--remember that the Nazis largely started their mass killings after they couldn't expel the "inferior people"). As you point out, any totalitarian system can kill people. Fascism has nothing to do with violence. Instead, it is more accurate to consider it as a system where something, usually a trait like ethnicity or religion, but it can also be nationality, chivalry, or stuff like that, is used to classify people into a hierarchy. What seperates fascism from most other systems is that some people are considered to be superior with some being inferior under fascist systems. Examples include whites being superior to native Americans; Aryans superior to non-Aryans; Indonesians superior to ethnic Chinese; men superior to women; and so on.

      So, I'm not saying the VDare contributors are going to be mass killers, no more than you or I. All I'm saying is that they are mostly fascist. They may end up killing people or they may not--but that's beside the point. These guys base most of their opinions on white supremist ideology, and as long as they stay that way, they are fascists in my eyes...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    14. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      The reason the left never deals with immigration is because liberalism is inherently in favour of immigration. The reason the right deals with immigration a lot is because conservatism is inherently against immigration. Conservatives are generally against change and immigration brings on a lot of change; liberals generally favour change so immigration is part of the ideology.

      This is not to say that people on either side don't deviate. However, from an ideological point of view, the left has always been immigration-friendly for hundreads of years. The whole right wing should be against immigration but it hasn't happened because (in my opinion) capitalists control the right. Capitalists are in favour of immigration, even though their conservative ideology will lean against it, because of demographic reasons. The fertility rates in most Western countries are too low and in order to prevent the economy from contracting, capitalists favour immigration (to replace aging workers). If that were not the case, I'm sure all the right wing parties (such as the Republican Party) would be against immigration.

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
    15. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      It is really pretty easy to allow folks to have kids. The question is why the powers that be have chosen to stay attached to social policies/tax structures that prevent westerners from having kids and import a new population rather than change those tax structures and social policies. For example, I fully expect that if Ralph Nader's tax proposals were adopted(Which would move the US towards a tax structure more similar to what it had in the 50's) we'd see an increased family size.

    16. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      From October 2003(the XXII Socialist International
      Congress)


      Internationally the left is more willing to

      deal with immigration than the US left.



      The permanent influx of labour has a significant
      influence on the labour market in the receiver
      countries, especially in the developed countries. The effects differ depending on market regulation. If the labour markets are more flexible, immigration tends to have a lowering effect on wages. If they are more inflexible, they tend to increase unemployment.


      This isn't a fly by night operation-it is the same organization Debs and Thomas belonged to.

    17. Re:Slashdot becoming fascist? by Baldrson · · Score: 1
      (i.e. one race superior to others--guess which one is supposed to be superior?)

      The VDARE articles on race are pretty much in tune with Rushton's thesis that holds east Asians as the race with the highest IQ. Have you seen a preponderance of Asians writing stories on VDARE? Are they North Korean fascists or something?

  115. Its All About Perception by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    To the upper class, which most high level politicians are in, the job market IS good.

    They don't really see the real world, just what circles they run in. So, they honestly don't see a problem.

    Meanwhile, I agree that us down here in the middle class is getting beaten to death, between the job market and increasing taxes, and prices.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  116. Re:America is not allowed to control its immigrati by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    nah, it's not about the race or color..

    it's just that it's easier to think that "somebody took ourr jobbbsss!!!!!" than to be reasonable about it().

    besides, america has not exactly been welcoming for immigration in the last, what, 80 years?(compared to times before that)anyways.

    but it's not like isolation from the world is going to help anyone.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  117. Ahh...circular logic! by Cryofan · · Score: 1, Interesting


    you wrote:

    The computer you typed that post with -
    were all of the circuit boards domestically made?
    Own a cell phone? Pull the battery cover off and see where it was made.
    Oo-h! My coffee cup! Made in Mexico!! Do you have an American made coffee cup? I've got about a dozen that aren't. Watch? Japanese.
    There could be more great examples, but that's what I see in front of me right now.


    THe reason that I have foreign goods is that the foreign goods are cheaper and better. They are cheaper and better because of low labor costs.

    If I deliberately buy AMerican-made goods, then I pay more and get less. The reason I pay more and get less is that labor costs more.

    Now, if I deliberately buy AMerican-made goods, then I pay more and get less, which means I have less money to use for rent, mortgage, food, transportation, etc. That means I am less able to survive.

    I am in essence being FORCED to buy foreign goods, and my own government is doing it by not using tariffs.

    Also, I am killing my own livelihood by buying foreign products.

    THis is all brought on by my own government, which I pay to support. THey have sold us out by forcing us TO MAKE COMSUMPTION CHOICES AGAINST OUR OWN BEST INTERESTS.
    If they would enact trade barriers and tariffs, then I would not be forced to make these destructive choices.

    When you posed your question, you used circular logic.

    And, BTW, I read Rand years ago. Pure crap...

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:Ahh...circular logic! by big+tex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      OK, look at it like this:
      1) You propose economic treason for a guy that wants to buy a $2 toaster from overseas.
      2) You buy foreign goods, even though you say the gov'ment 'made you do it.'

      Statement 1 + Statement 2 = Do as I say, not as I do.

      Tariffs lead to this:

      http://www.bethsteel.com/BethSteelEstate.com/index .shtml

      The US steel industry, with tariffs so restrictive and protective that he Europeans brought out the WTO, is shit.
      Bethlehem and USSteel had no need to innovate, no need to get better, no need to control the labor costs. Look where it got them.

      --
      I think I need a new sig here.
    2. Re:Ahh...circular logic! by Richard_at_work · · Score: 0

      If there were trade barriers and tariffs in place to force you to purchase your own countries goods, do you think you could afford that PC that you are typing your post on? The price of goods wouldnt just go up, they would go up dramatically. The consumer is the one who is to blame for all of this, because they constantly demand cheaper and better products. Would the consumer be willing to part with double the amount for locally produced items? Youve already answered that question yourself, no. The choice is already there, and people are already making it. Get used to the global economy, or are you one of these that thinks its ok to exploit the global economy until you yourself start feeling the negative effects?

    3. Re:Ahh...circular logic! by Malc · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, introduction of import tariffs would result in retaliatory tariffs by others against US exports. This too will result in job loses in other parts of the US economy and reduce cash flow. The US has forced others to open up their markets for good reason, but ut also means the US has to apply the same standards to themselves. Although steel, softwood lumber, etc are all examples of the hyprocrasy.

    4. Re:Ahh...circular logic! by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

      You are not in essence being FORCED to buy foreign goods. If you were being FORCED, then there would be somebody with a gun (e.g. your own government) FORCING you to buy foreign goods. Instead, you are proposing that your own government FORCE sellers of foreign-made goods to pay taxes.

      By the way, if we don't buy goods made in foreign countries, they won't have the money to buy our goods. In essence, you desire that people who work in the export trade lose their jobs in order to protect people who work in the import trade. How is that good? How is that kind? You want to use the proxy violence of government to hurt some peaceful people in order to help others.
      -russ

      --
      Don't piss off The Angry Economist
    5. Re:Ahh...circular logic! by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even by usual Slashdot standards, it's stunning that the above crap actually got modded up.

      His argument, explicitly spelled out, is that he buys foreign goods because they are cheaper than American goods and that if he bought American goods he would have less money for the rent and therefore, he argues, the government should FORCE him (and you and me and everyone else) to pay higher prices for all goods, bringing the foreign ones at least up to the price of the American ones he's unwilling to pay for, and thus to have less money to pay the rent. And someone somewhere bought into this?

      Leaving asside the morality of forcing foreigners into poverty, leaving aside the practicalities of the negative effects on markets that we depend on, leaving aside the effects of retaliatory measures, you actually want the government to FORCE you to pay higher prices because it's not a choice you'd make on your own? This is insanity.

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    6. Re:Ahh...circular logic! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "THe reason that..."
      "AMerican-made goods..." x 2
      "THis is all brought..."
      "THey have sold us..."

      QUestion: ARe you mental, or is your keyboard broken?

  118. Hard times harden attitudes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    with all that "Fuck you, I got mine" stuff. But it works both ways I guess. I used to be sympathetic to people who got laid off and were in shock because they always thought layoffs happened only to losers. But I can just say "Fuck you, you got yours".

  119. Here is a much better url. by khasim · · Score: 1

    http://www.econedlink.org/lessons/index.cfm?lesson =EM219

    Pay particular attention to the line where the government DOES NOT COUNT 75 MILLION PEOPLE (retired, students, individuals choosing not to work).

    "individuals choosing not to work"

    That includes people who still can't find jobs so they're given up actively looking for them.

    I want that number taken OUT of that calculation.

    I can see lumping students and retired people together. They are either still training up for the workforce or have retired from it.

    But not counting people who CAN work but have given up LOOKING for a job is wrong.

  120. Want the best job in the world? by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Read the Good News bible and spread it to others. God seriously spoke to me,"Good news" and later that day I recieved a Good News bible from my dad! I'm not lying here, go get a bible, read up on it, and start spreading the message to the best of your ability. I do have a job, but its almost a waste a time, that I could be spreading the Gospel. I've seen tons of miracles, I 100% know God exists.

  121. The answer to all prolems... by plopez · · Score: 1

    Cut taxes!

    Terrorism?
    Cut taxes!

    Health care?
    Cut taxes!

    Crime?
    Cut taxes!

    Crumbling roads?
    Cut taxes!

    Poor Sunday church attendance?
    Cut taxes!

    Seriously, as long as politicians can get away with empty quick fix slogans, don't expect anything to change.

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  122. Belive it or not... by WhatAmIDoingHere · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You're not guaranteed a high paying job that you like.

    Outsourcing is what makes the free open market free and open.

    --
    Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
  123. Surplus or Shortage? by Zoop · · Score: 1

    Seems to depend on what you're teaching, and where:

    Shortage areas by skill and geography and year
    NEA has a whole section on shortage
    Article for administrators on the shortage and need to attract teachers
    Same source, saying how some disagree in view of low pay, but some districts are increasing pay
    State of FL forgiving student loans for 04-05 for education students
    more on where and in what areas teachers are needed

    That's just with a quick Google search, and the only reason I bothered is because I live in the DC area, where schools last year were increasing pay and offering signing bonuses in the VA suburbs of DC. DC itself has trouble holding on to teachers, but that's because it's a hellhole.

    1. Re:Surplus or Shortage? by parliboy · · Score: 1

      One: your first link cuts off in the year 2000, post-recession. Two: the loan forgiveness trend is in "high-needs" areas, which tend to be mostly math and hard science. Doesn't really apply to me, unfortunately.

      We get those articles every year, no matter what happens.

      At the risk of coming off like a conspiracy theorist:

      If a district were to say that they had all the teachers they needed, and they were paying them what they were supposed to, what would happen when they still sucked? Yeah, exactly.

      So you're never going to NOT get these articles, just like you're never going to NOT get RIAA propaganda about just how much they're losing to filesharing.

      --
      "You're never ready, just less unprepared."
  124. All we have left... by whitroth · · Score: 0

    I saw one reply to this article claiming that the "middle class was being squeezed upwards". I'd love to know where he lives, and if he has any friends. I live in Florida, moved here from Chicago after not finding a job in a year and a half (8/2001-1/2003), and didn't find work until April...and got laid off last month.

    I know folks in Chicago, and Philadelphia, and Boston, and Austin, and it's the same everywhere. The raw numbers, not the spun ones, are far worse than the Bush administration's reports.

    The unemployment rate is *way* higher - I, for example, not "eligible" for unemployment, am "not unemployed". Come on, "gave up, and is no longer in the workforce"? So I'm homeless?

    No, it's a *LIE*. We're all still looking - it just ain't there.

    I agree that cheap imported goods is as bad as offshoring. A *lot* of us were VERY unhappy with the Eisenhoweresque Clinton's NAFTA and GATT. That China, instead of the US, is "the world's workshop", as I heard in a news report the other day, is appalling. I've also just read that 80% of US production is not in this country. Appalling doesn't even *begin* to describe how I feel about that.

    Have any of you screamed at your Congresscritter and Senators to cancel the H1-B, etc, visas?

    Enough of us scream, esp. right now during the election, it might get their attention.

    Remember, with Raygun's breaking of the unions in this country, the *only* thing we have to protect us against Big Business is the government.

    That stick in your craw, [Ll]ibertarians?

    mark

  125. Holy crap by HangingChad · · Score: 4, Informative
    And the problems with these times are a carryover from the Clinton administration's disastrous policies. There is only so much recovery one president can do in one term, despite how good Bush is.

    I can guarantee you if a Democrat gets in again you'll be sliding deeper and deeper.

    Almost four years later you're still trying to blame Clinton? And what are we sliding deeper into? When Clinton was president the economy was booming, people had jobs, we had a budget surplus. America was a lot stronger under Clinton than it is under Bush. If Clinton was running against Bush then dubya wouldn't have a chance.

    I will say this, though. This time around we can blame the supreme court. But if Americans actually elect that idiot, then we deserve what we get the next four years.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Holy crap by doktorjayd · · Score: 0

      americans might deserve what they get if they elect bush again, but does the rest of the world deserve it too? :(

    2. Re:Holy crap by walterbyrd · · Score: 2, Informative

      Pffft. The economy colasped during during the end of the Clinton administration. GWB *did* inherit the recession. During Clinton, NAZ went from over 5000 to under 1650.

      So please, stop this none-sense that Clinton was some kind of economic miracle worker. He wasn't. Most the Clinton era prosperety came from the internet bubble. Which means false prosperety.

      GWB certainly could have done better. But let's keep things in perspective.

      BTW: yes, I'm the same guy from yahoo.

    3. Re:Holy crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Contract with America? Sound familiar?

      Part of is was deregulation of energy, communications, securities, and banking industries. Yeah. The bubble that went up in flames. Blame Newt.

      Funny how the republicans everyone loves most were famous for busting monopolies and freeing people from the tyrany of the super-rich, and those policies traditional republicans want NOTHING to do with. Which incidentally makes a lot of sense if you're super-rich. But if your driving a rusted out chevy? Or quite frankly anything less than upper end mercedes....

      Also check out the republican congress's unwillingness to settle things with North Korea under Bill Clinton's banner, once and for all.

      For a party with an elephant as a mascot they sure do a lot of forgetting.

  126. How to block Political section? by Moderator · · Score: 0

    Has anyone had success excluding the political section from their homepage? I'm tired of "Bush is a Moron," and stories from the Karl Marx institute. My preferences has two listings for Politics, both of which are checked to exclude such stories, and yet stories like THIS keep appearing on the homepage.

    Does Slashdot want Kerry in office THIS bad?

    --
    The World is Yours.
  127. Garbage by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    This is a terrible frigging article.

    Anyone with first year stats should know this guy is totally out there.

    Plus it's a useless non-technical political post what's up with that?

    Solve joblessness by stopping immagration they must be mad!

  128. Time to throw out our current tax system? by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

    I think many of the problems that are plaguing our economy is caused by our progressive income tax system with its very complicated deductions. It's too easy to cause unintended changes in our economy due to this issue.

    We should start all over again with a true flat tax system (no tax with income up to poverty line, 3.5% up to median income, and 6% above that) that has effectively no deductions. Not only would Americans save some US$250 billion per year in compliance costs alone, but a true flat tax system would ensure we don't get strange effects on the US economy like way too much emphasis on building expensive housing. Also, with such an extremely low tax rate, you'll see huge amounts of money being invested in the USA because we would approach tax haven status.

    1. Re:Time to throw out our current tax system? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Flat tax" is generally used to refer to having a single rate for all incomes. What you propose is not a flat tax.

      Also, I don't think we could get out of the deficit with only 6%. Maybe if we taxed corporations more, to leave the individuals alone, that would work.

      I would propose the following: tax %17 of all money paid out of a corporation to individuals; that is, 17% of dividends, distributed earnings, and payroll. The goal would be to collect enough money from the corporations directly, that we could avoid having personal income tax at all, and thus eliminate the need to have social security numbers and the government keeping files on everyone.

      Of course, some rich businessmen will conduct all their business personally. Because they operate outside the liability protections of a corporation, that won't be as many as you might think. Noneless, it be enough that we won't be able to get rid of income tax completely -- we will probably still need it on people who earn over 200k or something.

      I think that would be a better tax system, at least a better way of collecting the same amount of money. But we're still fucked unless we quit spending more than we collect. We need to cap social security benefits at something that's just enough to keep the elderly off the bread lines, and start executing the corporate boards of the drug companies that are causing us to spend twice as much to get the same health care as Canada.

    2. Re:Time to throw out our current tax system? by MtViewGuy · · Score: 1

      .... start executing the corporate boards of the drug companies that are causing us to spend twice as much to get the same health care as Canada.

      That would be great except that here in the USA, our litigation system has driving up the cost of medical care because pharmaceutical companies and medical providers MUST factor in the cost of liability lawsuits and exorbitantly high malpractice insurance. If we just use the British system of litigation--where the loser pays all legal costs--that will quickly weed out the frivilous lawsuits and keep the lawsuits that have real merit, which means drug companies and medical providers won't have to put aside so much money to protect themselves in case of these lawsuits.

    3. Re:Time to throw out our current tax system? by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      I would propose the following: tax %17 of all money paid out of a corporation to individuals; that is, 17% of dividends, distributed earnings, and payroll. The goal would be to collect enough money from the corporations directly, that we could avoid having personal income tax at all, and thus eliminate the need to have social security numbers and the government keeping files on everyone.

      And you think you've seen layoffs now! Payroll is the largest single cost of doing business for most companies. And any tax on employment (both halves of FICA, unemployment insurance, benefits) is a form of payroll - you cost your company substantially more than what your paycheck says at the end of the week.

      Of course, thinking about it a little more - 17% is a fairly small increase in the amount of taxes paid for employees by companies - FICA alone is 15.3%.

      I agree that we need a better tax system. One of my duties at work is to do taxes each spring. It's terrible that people who have what should be fairly simple tax returns require help in filing them. Not because they're doing any "interesting" things - because the laws are so complicated that they need help to get the best deal.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  129. Check your timeline by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Roosevelt came into office when the depression was three years old, and Hoover had done nothing to alleivate any suffering. Stock market crash October 1929, election November 1932, inauguration March 1933.

    Some "routine recession", it had lasted three years so far with no uptick in sight, far longer than any recession to date.

    The Japanese internment was despicable, but it could be more fairly blamed on lies and forged evidence by his lackeys. He should have had enough backbone to not sign the executive order, but it wasn't his idea. Furthermore, that was 1942, February I think, 9 years after he came into office, after the war had started, and after the economy finally came out of the depression.

    How many of the rest of your beliefs are backed up by facts as accurate as this?

  130. Re:That IS correct by rush22 · · Score: 2, Informative

    They don't count people who're no longer collecting unemployment and have simply given up.

    That's not correct

    You are misinterpreting the point. Though the "collecting unemployment" part may be incorrect and not a factor in determining unemployment rate (as per the snopes article you cited), it is correct that people who have "simply given up" are not counted.

    Unemployment rate:
    The unemployment rate represents the number unemployed as a percent of the labor force.

    Labor force (Current Population Survey):
    The labor force includes all persons classified as employed or unemployed in accordance with the definitions contained in this glossary

    Unemployed persons:
    Persons 16 years and over who had no employment during the reference week, were available for work, except for temporary illness, and had made specific efforts to find employment sometime during the 4-week period ending with the reference week. Persons who were waiting to be recalled to a job from which they had been laid off need not have been looking for work to be classified as unemployed.

    http://www.bls.gov/bls/glossary.htm

    also look up "Discouraged Workers".

  131. The flow of Dollars by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I see that you have bought into the idea that the media have been trying to plant into our collective consciousness - that the "Dollars going out is unattainable" crap.

    Stop thinking of the flow of money in the Zero Sum term. You have to understand, whatever that's flowing out of America is in US dollars, and whatever flowed out of America will flow into some other people's hands, and when they accumulate enough, they will use that money to BUY something !

    After all, what else is money for, right ?

    So, we shouldn't concentrate in how much our money has flowed out, we should instead, think of ways to get those money back - by earning it !

    When those people want to buy something - and they ain't buying toaster oven, for sure - we better be prepared to provide them with whatever they want to buy, and charge accordingly for it.

    The market isn't a static one, it's dynamic. So, don't worry.

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:The flow of Dollars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You have to understand, whatever that's flowing out of America is in US dollars, and whatever flowed out of America will flow into some other people's hands, and when they accumulate enough, they will use that money to BUY something!"

      Can't argue with that. But your assumption is that it will be something purchased that did not come from that country. If they spend the money in their own country, which is quite possible, well your whole concept kind of goes to shit now doesn't it?

      Globalization and Communism seem quite similar.

      # Communism

      1. A system of government in which the state plans and controls the economy and a single, often authoritarian party holds power, claiming to make progress toward a higher social order in which all goods are equally shared by the people.

      We have corporations crying out for "free trade". Well, basic logic should be applicable. What is the benefit of this free trade and what is the cost of this free trade? I don't give two shits about a corporations "right" to fuck the people of this country and guise of "free trade". All you right wing Repudlicans can kiss my ass.

    2. Re:The flow of Dollars by r_j_prahad · · Score: 1

      When those people want to buy something [...] we better be prepared to provide them with whatever they want to buy, and charge accordingly for it.

      So just who's gonna sell it to them? Not the U.S.A. We don't build anything for sale anymore; we sent all those jobs to China last month.

      Thankfully, the assault weapons ban expires this year. I think that's gonna be the most valuable personal investment a U.S. citizen can make in the next decade.

  132. Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by Proudrooster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's easy to blame immigration and say, "Look at all the foreigners coming into our country and stealing all our jobs."

    Let me ask you this? Why must we have immigration?

    The answer is that you want you society to resemble a pyramid with the youngest at the base of the pyramid, the middle aged in the middle, and the eldest at the top of the pyramid. If your society is not shaped like a pyramid, social programs and the system of collecting taxes completely fall apart.

    In order for society to maintain a balance, every woman needs to have on average about three kids. How many kids did your parents have?

    How many kids are you going to have?


    Because citizens don't have enough kids to fill in the bottom of the pyramid we must have immigration or, we have to re-engineer our social systems and methods of tax collection. Take your pick.

    This is why France has the largest muslim population in Europe. Native France citizens didn't have enough kids to support the country. SOo to supplement they had to allow immigration.

    This is why Japan is doomed without immigration. Women there are now refusing to marry and having kids later and later (post 35). Pretty soon the population pyramid of Japan will be inverted with the oldest at the top. I predict they will allow immigration soon.

    Africa's population has no middle. Only the very young and very old. The middle was wiped out by AIDS.

    So that's the long and short of immigration. If you want something different, you have three choices:

    1. Have more kids.
    2. Change your system of collecting taxes (shift the tax burden higher up the pyramid).
    3. Change your system of social programs. Maybe public education is no longer free. Maybe social security vanishes. Lot's of cuts will have to be made since there are fewer older people to pay taxes and usually they pay less.

    The sad thing is that our politicians don't explain the social engineering of our country and let everyone jump to their own conclusions. The Repulicans know that if they do not capture the Hispanic/Latino/Mexican vote that they will NEVER win an election again. That is why Bush speaks spanish and was going to open the immigration flood gates to Mexio prior to 9-11. Right now, it's a giant mess and we really need some good social planners to figure out how best to manage our society in the direction that we want it to go.

    1. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      If your society is not shaped like a pyramid, social programs and the system of collecting taxes completely fall apart.


      False. There are simple fixes.

      In order for society to maintain a balance, every woman needs to have on average about three kids.

      Um. 2.2 or so should do the trick. Are you just making this shit up?


      This is why France has the largest muslim population in Europe


      No. France has largest muslim popluation in Europe because the are cowards and refuse to implement sane immigration policy.

      Japan is doomed without immigration

      Japan is doing just fine and will do fine. So what if there's more old people? It's not that big a deal. Japan wil be less crowded and depressing eventually leading to a higher quality of life. You do not need a pyramid structure to have a high quality of life. You're just making shit up, again.


      Bush speaks spanish and was going to open the immigration flood gates to Mexio prior to 9-11


      Bush wants to open immigration even more. Just check out his state of the union speech. He's totally for cheap labor.


      we really need some good social planners to figure out how best to manage our society in the direction that we want it to go.


      We need someone to just say "NO" to stupid immigration policy.

    2. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      Um. 2.2 or so should do the trick. Are you just making this shit up?

      You are correct, 2.2 is the accepted value if you factor in approximately 12 million immigrants per year. I rounded up to 3, which should allow us to close the borders and throw out the immigration factor. Do I have a hard formula to backup the 3 kids per woman statistic? No, but I could write a simulation if you like :)

      Japan is doing just fine and will do fine. So what if there's more old people? It's not that big a deal. Japan wil be less crowded and depressing eventually leading to a higher quality of life. You do not need a pyramid structure to have a high quality of life. You're just making shit up, again.

      First off, Japan IS NOT OVERCROWDED. There are areas of high population density, but it is far from overcrowded. The pictures you see on TV usually show Tokyo. Second, Japan is NOT doing well. Japan went from kicking America's butt in the 80's to a decline.

      Here are some stories you can use to draw your own conclusion: Japan's economy in more trouble
      Population Trends Pose Major Risks For Stability In Japan, Elsewhere: Japan's population would drop to 100 million by 2050

      As for presidential politics. All policitians are for BIG BUSINESS, (period). This year, we have a choice between, "Give Big Business Anything They Want" and "I Like Big Business a Lot Less than Bush and Cheney, but they are still my good friends."

      When Clinton signed NAFTA, that was the beginning of the end for the American middle class. When the Republican's came to power, the middle class really took a beating. Until we can all figure out how to deal with each other fairly and kick big business out of Washington, the decline is going to worsen.

      Thus with the middle class dying off and contributing less money through taxes, we are going to need even more immigrants to come in and prop up the tax base since I doubt the Republican's will shift the tax burden to their rich friends. Because people will have less money, they buy cheaper good, forcing Wallmart to stock 100% of it's inventory from China. It's a viscious cycle.

      Additionally, we have a $800 million/day sucking chest wound funding GW's war in Iraq and making Cheney's old company Haliburton rich off no-bid contracts. The debt is growing out of control and the Republican's are cutting taxes.

      We need planners to help make our society livable, fair and equitable. As a white-male, I am glad that the day of the stupid white male running the country into the ground is coming to and end. Hopefully the new immigrants with large families will come to power and change the social structure of our country and get it back on track. However, neither Bush or Cheney have a clue about the "gathering storm" except for the fact that their Big Business Buddies are raking in the cash. I think GW and Cheney live in an insulated bubble and wear rose colored glasses.

      The truly sad thing about America is that before anyone will deal with a long term problem it has to come crashing down from the sky on fire. We are a reactionary society. We need to look 5-10 years out and PLAN! Failing to PLAN is PLANNING to FAIL! Really, I'm not making this stuff up.

    3. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      I think you need to look at how tax and trade policy have made it very, very difficult for young Americans to have children.

    4. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      Is it "tax and trade policy" or is it rampant materialism which leads to massive debt?

      While I agree that "tax and trade policy" has hurt a lot of people, especially manufacturing employees, there are many people who have combined annual incomes of $300k which live paycheck to paycheck. It's not how much you make, it's how much you spend. If you outspend your income then mom is going to have to go find a job.

    5. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      The folks that I've known that were having trouble making ends meet on large incomes were typically:
      1) folks with families
      2) in very high rent areas

      It really is rediculous how much it takes to raise a family in the Bay Area. I live in a fairly modest house in Washington and an equivalent house in the bay area would easily involve 4 times the cost and 8 times the debt that I have--and would involve much higher auto, tax and insurance expenses. If I were offered a $200K/year job in the Bay Area I would commute back and forth on weekends rather than try to raise a family there. If you look in the links in my article, the key here is disposable income. One the whole income left after:
      taxes, housing, transportation, insurance has _decreased_ the last 30 years-even with two folks working. That goes beyond what you are talking about. Now _part_ of the phenomena here is that a lot of white folks are travelling _long_ distances to avoid raising their families in urban areas in which they feel rather out of place-and may not be entirely safe for their families(or at least that is how they perceive it).

      The way I personally see it:
      extreme racism/bigotry is tolerated among the rich. Hell, there is even a large country club in LA that explicitly excludes Jews still!

      Poorer whites get _crucified_ for even milder forms of xenophobia.

      Now, I see that as a basic problem. IMHO the moral standards for those with extreme privelege ought to be _higher_. Just FYI I _don't_ like seeing folks unkind of unfair to those unlike themselves-however there are other problems operating here. US Immigration and Trade policy may be Politically Correct Sociopathy-aimed at people that are "racists" but that doesn't mean there isn't a very, negative sum game being played here.

    6. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      Now, I see that as a basic problem. IMHO the moral standards for those with extreme privelege ought to be _higher_. Just FYI I _don't_ like seeing folks unkind of unfair to those unlike themselves-however there are other problems operating here. US Immigration and Trade policy may be Politically Correct Sociopathy-aimed at people that are "racists" but that doesn't mean there isn't a very, negative sum game being played here.

      I see your point. It would be nice if our leaders and corporate officers had higher moral standards. Instead of doing what is "right" or "fair" they do whatever they can get away with and these days, they seem to be getting away with quite a lot.

      As for the rich being racist. Pick up an annual report and look at the picture of the corporate officers. Do you see any women or non-white men? The answer is probably not. I always find it humourous that they put "multicultural" stock photos in the annual report, but the composite shot of the officers is 100% old-white male.

      The way I see it is this, in order for "good ol' boys" to maintain their outrageous compensation levels in this low-margin economy they have to do it on the backs of the American worker. So you're right, it's a negative sum game and the average worker is on the side that is growing more and more negative.

      This summer I tried to find a house on the water in a Bay area and was depressed when I saw the proprety values. I couldn't help but wondering who owned all those empty castle houses. Are there that many rich people in this country or is the "real estate" bubble going to burst when executive compensation can no longer be sustained?

    7. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by randall_burns · · Score: 1
      Part of what drove H-1b was the need to prop up Bay Area real estate values.


      The thing is the extreme compensation of executives is needed in part to keep these guys identifying with the present system. Japanese companies get run with _much_ lower levels of compensation-and Japan isn't exactly a low rent area. However, a lot of common behaviour in the US would get a Japanese exec killed I expect.

    8. Re:Immigration in and of itself is NOT the problem by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      The tax regulatory structure in the US has made it relatively expensive to have kids-particularly if you aspire to raise them the way most middle class folks were raised. That structure could be changed. It might be a seriously adjustment for some wealthy people-but it _could be done.

  133. anti-immigration sentiment by heby · · Score: 3, Insightful


    did anybody read the article or is this just about comiserating about unemployment?



    American trade policy has been pro-"free trade" without requiring that the trading partner have equivalent environmental or employee protections. These blind spots have, for example, caused the export of almost all American non-ferrous metals processing jobs to Mexico and Canada.



    while "made in china" might mean this, i can't believe how this article tries to take a shot at the NAFTA countries. Mexico might not live up to US standards (but i want to see the American consumers pay the prices for "made in USA" DVD players etc. ...), but it certainly does not apply to Canada. yes, i'm sure, you can always find one or the other rule where Canada's rules are looser but the next thing you look at, it will be the other way.



    immigrants are an important economic factor in the western world.
    -look at Europe: europe is struggeling because of its aging population which causes health and old age pension costs to skyrocket; not so the US. the birth rates are no higher in the US but immigration keeps the average age at bay because young people enter the country.
    -immigrants are not only workers; they are also consumers. so they don't take jobs away from americans, they simply increase the population.
    -legal immigration should be simpler because legal immigration is much better than illegal immigration - legal immigrants work under the same labour and health standards as Americans and they pay taxes. none of this can be said of illegal immigrants. they are at high danger of abuse in many ways by their "employers" (or slave drivers) and they have no way of defending themselves because any legal action would cause them to be kicked out.



    in my opinion, this article is full of xenophobia and uses the current anxiety about jobs to try to convince people that immigration and immigrants (clearly one of the weakest groups of society who have little or no political voice) are the root of all evil. this is simply disgusting.

    1. Re:anti-immigration sentiment by scoobrs · · Score: 1
      Don't forget that consumers in America aren't necessarily helping the economy. Just because immigrants are consumers doesn't change the fact that the federal trade deficit is at an all-time high and most of the low cost items they buy don't give back to American workers in terms of raises. Ultimately, any job can be sent overseas until our lives get cheaper and our world leadership destroyed. Do we really want our houses and jobs to be pushed aside like a sand castle against the waves?

      The real problem is corporations that refuse to respect America and outsource the skilled jobs that are the core of our economy now that manufacturing is pretty much gone already. Corporations need to be controlled by the folks who really own them, not their management, nor even the stockholders they habitually lie to every quarter, but the workers and pensionholders with their 401Ks who own American industry. The same workers who have no say in it whatsoever because their brokerages vote against America every time. They will make a numbers case against American workers, but ultimately, they're taxing our economy. We can't live on Walmart retail alone.

      There is no economic sense in the bottom line, only greed that leads to more greed. This greed destroys economies. Corporations don't consider, as Henry Ford once did, that employees need to make enough to buy a Ford in order to sell them. First it's moving jobs to India, then it's moving Indian jobs to Central Africa. What next? Will you continue to live in a sand castle?

      --
      -Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase temporary safety deserve neither. -Ben Franklin
    2. Re:anti-immigration sentiment by blackcoot · · Score: 1

      you'll forgive me for pointing out the obvious here, but it's congress and the president who control the deficit, not the immigrants. if you look at the actions of the bush presidency you'll find a much more direct explanation of the ballooning deficit than you will in immigrant workers not spending enough.

    3. Re:anti-immigration sentiment by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Over 75% of the American public object to the current immigration policies. Those policies are put in place by monetary influence over the political process--that is what I would suggest is truly objectionable here.

  134. It's straight up xenophobia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question is why it was posted at all. What was going on here? This thing reads like it was written in 1931.

    1. Re:It's straight up xenophobia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm scared of the xenophobia too. There is a lot of it around, just look here at the jokes about Indian programmers and the cheap shots at their accents.

      But the reason why we see stuff writen that sounds like it came from 1931 is that there is a lot in common with our economy right now and 1931.

  135. Religion is the opiate of the people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least that's what Marx said.

  136. Those aren't necessary. by khasim · · Score: 1

    We don't need trade barriers.

    What we need is no "free trade" UNLESS the other country matches our levels of worker/environmental protections.

    If everyone in the world is working 40 hour weeks (or less) and has health care and so forth (not counting China's prison labour here), then I don't see a problem with the jobs going where it is most profitable.

    The problem I see is NOT looking at those factors and letting the corporations use slave labour. Your tariffs and such will NOT stop that abuse nor will they stop the jobs from going to overseas slaves.

  137. Re:America is not allowed to control its immigrati by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Well, there's the whole "all men are created equal" bit that suggests that citizenship to those that truly desire it should not be denied to anybody by basis of accident of birth (or are you suggesting a "divine right of natural-born citizens?"), and our constitution only says Congress can set naturalization policy (how people can become citizens) and doesn't say anything about them being able to set immigration quotas and who gets to go through said naturalization process.

    So it's not so much that you're white, it's that you don't have a moral leg to stand on in light of what this country is supposed to be based on. If you're worried about maintaining any sort of social demographic by way of law (be that immigration law or otherwise), you're in the wrong country.

  138. What an embarrassing typo! by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

    everyone be of above average intelligense

    Oh well, at least I caught it before someone else rubbed my nose in it.

  139. BLS's own "U-6" includes those who gave up by michaelmalak · · Score: 2, Informative

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics itself keeps track of those who have given up looking for work. It measures these in a statistic called "U-6", but it's "U-3" that is called the "official unemployment rate" that is reported by the mainstream media. The mainstream media -- and it seems also snopes.com -- never mention U-6. See my blog article Real U.S. unemployment rate is 9.5%.

    1. Re:BLS's own "U-6" includes those who gave up by helix400 · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the link, out of all the responses to my parent post, this was the most insightful.

    2. Re:BLS's own "U-6" includes those who gave up by helix400 · · Score: 1

      I searched around some more for other U-3 through U-6 employment figures. This site and it's accompanying U-6 graph were very helpful. http://www.mydd.com/story/2004/9/7/13239/74113

  140. Surveys are fascinating. by khasim · · Score: 1

    Despite all my years in the workforce, I have NEVER been surveyed by the government to see if I was working or not.

    "Because unemployment insurance records, which many people think are the source of total unemployment data, relate only to persons who have applied for such benefits, and since it is impractical to actually count every unemployed person each month, the Government conducts a monthly sample survey called the Current Population Survey (CPS) to measure the extent of unemployment in the country. The CPS has been conducted in the United States every month since 1940 when it began as a Work Projects Administration project. It has been expanded and modified several times since then. As explained later, the CPS estimates, beginning in 1994, reflect the results of a major redesign of the survey."

    Not that I doubt The Government. But I am also not aware of any of my friends who have been surveyed to find out if they are employed or not.

  141. Panmixia and Social Decline by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    W. D. Hamilton, widely recognized as the seminal theorist in altruism theory, wrote an essay "Innate Social Aptitudes of Man: an Approach from Evolutionary Genetics in which he describes the probable source of social decline as the result of inadequate maintanence of "barbarian pastoralist" input to panmictic societies:
    The incursions of barbaric pastoralists seem to do civilizations less harm in the long run than one might expect. Indeed, two dark ages and renaissances in Europe suggest a recurring pattern in which a renaissance follows an incursion by about 800 years. It may even be suggested that certain genes or traditions of pastoralists revitalize the conquered people with an ingredient of progress which tends to die out in a large panmictic population for the reasons already discussed. I have in mind altruism itself, or the part of the altruism which is perhaps better described as self-sacrificial daring. By the time of the renaissance it may be that the mixing of genes and cultures (or of cultures alone if these are the only vehicles, which I doubt) has continued long enough to bring the old mercantile thoughtfulness and the infused daring into conjunction in a few individuals who then find courage for all kinds of inventive innovation against the resistance of established thought and practice. Often, however, the cost in fitness of such altruism and sublimated pugnacity to the individuals concerned is by no means metaphorical, and the benefits to fitness, such as they are, go to a mass of individuals whose genetic correlation with the innovator must be slight indeed. Thus civilization probably slowly reduces its altruism of all kinds, including the kinds needed for cultural creativity (see also Eshel 1972).

    The incursions of which he speaks are those of the Dorians leading to the Golden Age and of the Goths, leading to the Renaissance.

    It appears that Western Civilization is in its final stages of Empire and has imported all manner of slaves to prop up its increasingly untenable practice of paying for the costs of protection of legal rights through taxation of productivity (income, capital gains, value added, sales, etc.)

    The problem is this time around all of the barbarian pastoralists have been domesticated.

  142. Probably still hosed (on jobs) either way by smchris · · Score: 1


    The reason to get rid of Dubya and his posse is that they're crazy psychopathic MoFos and they've stolen billions from a trillions surplus. Trickle-down Voodoo Jobs? Just look at the statistics.

    That said, it is unlikely "good middle-class" jobs will spring up like dandelions in spring if Kerry is elected. Considering that Al Franken has had Kerry over to his place for potluck and strategy, I thought it was pretty telling when someone called the show and demanded details on a job strategy and got, "Hmmm, yeah. That's a tough one. Can't roll back global trade. It's a new world. Yup, a tough one." All I ever hear is eliminating tax breaks for off-shoring. All well and good, but what effect will it really have on jobs?

  143. The real problem by BCW2 · · Score: 1

    Is the cost of living versus wages. No politician can afford to let out that the real poverty level(for a family of 4, since thats the standard they use) is about $28,000/year. A family making less has little to no health coverage(but makes too much for assistance), rents housing, buy used vehicles and appliances. Today anyone making any salary in the U.S. can buy 30% of what there parents did 40 years ago with the same money.

    It's time to elect amatures to every office at every level. Look what the pros have done to us.

    Lawyer/Politician = Vermin

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
    1. Re:The real problem by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      It's time to elect amatures to every office at every level. Look what the pros have done to us.

      You mean get back to a citizen legislature - where people who are in office worked in the economy before going to office and will need to work in the economy again under the laws that they passed after they're done.

      That sounds a lot like what the framers of the Constitution had in mind.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
    2. Re:The real problem by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      Thats it. Our founding fathers envisioned a citizen legislature that went to DC, did there job and went home to real jobs. Never a permanent ruling class. Today it is close to impossible to defeat an incumbant.

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  144. Re:America is not allowed to control its immigrati by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but it's not like isolation from the world is going to help anyone.
    The point is not that it will help anyone...but that it will help EVERYONE. We must implement isolationist policies if we want our economy and nation to move forward in a positive self sustaining way.

    We have to pay Americans to build American products that Americans will buy. It's that simple.

    We need to tax the bejeezus out of foriegn products, and encourage local growth of businesses without having to offer them tax breaks just a "we won't tax you for what you build here" approach.

    This is essential for both the security of the nation, and the development of it's people into hard working highly skilled laborers.

  145. social security non financed throught taxes by meldir · · Score: 1
    How can they afford to do that? THey tax the rich and upper income earners more than we do (50% at least)


    That's not true. Unemployment benefits are not financed throught (progressive) taxes, but through a collective (that is: non-optional) insurance for which workers pay a fixed percentage of their income. The same goes for other social securities (like workers' disabilities etc.).

    Public services, welfare, 'defence', etc., are of course being financed by progressive taxes.
  146. Time for a Joe Hill song... by Roblimo · · Score: 0, Troll

    Union organizer (and convicted murderer) Joe Hill was a friend of Woody Guthrie's and a frequent inspiration to him. Of course, we're all supposed to recoil in horror from these guys today, seeing as they believed in working people banding together and trying to get welfare-type benefits like paid vacations, health care, retirement, and even a workweek shorter than 60 hours. In any case, Hill wrote a nice little song about religion being used as a political tool by the kind of plutocrats that Republicans like T. Roosevelt felt were a danger to America....

    Long haired preachers come out ev'ry night,
    Try to tell you what's wrong and what's right;
    But when asked, how 'bout something to eat, (Let us eat)
    They will answer with voices so sweet; (Oh so sweet)
    You will eat, (You will eat)
    Bye and bye, (Bye and bye) in that glorious land above the sky;
    (way up high)
    work and pray, (work and pray) live on hay, (Live on hay)
    you'll get pie in the sky when you die. (That's a lie)

    And the starvation army they play,
    And they sing and they clap and they pray.
    Till they get all your coin on the drum,
    Then they'll tell you when you're on the bum:

    -Chorus-

    Holy Rollers and Jumpers come out,
    And they holler, they jump and they shout
    "Give your money to Jesus," they say,
    "He will cure all diseases today."

    -Chorus-

    If you fight hard for children and wife-
    Try to get something good in this life-
    You're a sinner and bad man, they tell,
    When you die you will sure go to hell.

    -Chorus-

    Workingmen of all countries unite,
    Side by side we for freedom will fight!
    When the world and its wealth we have gained,
    To the grafters we'll sing this refrain:

    -Final Chorus-

    You will eat, bye and bye,
    When you've learned how to cook and to fry.
    Chop some wood, 'twill do you good,
    And you'll eat in the sweet bye and bye.

  147. Apoligists play the Race Card !!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once again, some clown who disagree with somebody play the race card!

    American Immigration is FUCKED UP. Period.

    The parent post is just playing the old "if you disagree with me, then you must be Nazi".

    +4 Inisightful ???

    How 'bout -1 Troll ???

  148. Analysis of Outsourcing, H-1Bs, and Illegal Aliens by reporter · · Score: 0
    [The following is worth repeating and is comments that I submitted in another thread of discussion.]

    Any high-tech job that can be outsourced will be outsourced. You will see a continuous shrinking of the high-tech labor force.

    Both political parties claim that free markets require the free exchange of goods and services (which includes labor) between the USA and other members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and fusing the American market with the Chinese/Indian/Mexican market maintains the free market in the USA. Unfortunately, the politicians are just playing a verbal game with economics.

    Allow me to explain. The USA, in isolation, is a relatively free market -- with relatively little government intervention (compare to, say, China). So is Japan, Canada, and the rest of the West. However, Mexico, China, and India are not free markets. Excessive government intervention has damaged the markets in those economies, and they cannot provide jobs for millions of underemployed persons.

    When the USA interacts with, say, China, we have the interaction of a free market and a non-free market. The by-product (i.e. millions of underemployed Chinese) of non-market forces now affects the market dynamics in the USA. The underemployed Chinese are a continuing stream of cheap slave labor; jobs are then transferred from the USA to China.

    The USA is no longer a free market because non-market forces (in this case, Chinese government intervention) is altering the dynamics of the labor market in the USA. The verbal game that politicians play is to simply define the USA to be a "free market", ignoring the fact that the Chinese government is now grossly affecting the labor market of the USA.

    Similar comments apply to both India and Mexico.

    Similar comments apply to H-1B workers and illegal aliens from Mexico: the American government has, in effect, actively used H-1B workers and illegal aliens to intervene in the labor markets in both high tech and low tech. Illegal aliens have destroyed the upward pressure on wages in the market for unskilled labor. H-1B have hurt salaries for engineers. Shortages are a normal part of any labor market, and they are an upward force on salaries/wages and working conditions. When the government actively works to wipe out such shortages in the low-tech market and the high-tech market, the government is damaging market forces.

    If you hate what is happening to our country, the USA, then please write the following on the November ballot.

    president: Bill O'Reilly
    vice-president: Tammy Bruce

  149. Taking Self-Employed Into Account? and my thoughts by MS_leases_my_soul · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does this take the self-employed into account? I read tha article and saw nothing about the self-employed mentioned anywhere in there.

    From what I have read from the federal government's figures, once you take the self-employed into account, Bush is creating jobs, not losing them. Since the self-employed are not being taken into account by the "left", I can not trust anything they have to say about avarage salary since they are not taking millions of workers into account.

    Now don't take this to mean that I support Bush either. The whole Homeland Security continues to rub me the wrong way. And the federalizing of the airport screeners?!?

    As far as outsourcing goes, every company I have personally been involved with that has outsourced to India (5 in the IT arena) have all seen it as a huge failure and pulled it back in-house. 2 where development and 3 were tech support.

    I do agree with their take on worker visas. If you want to work and live in America, become a citizen.

    The lowering "disposible income" figure is very misleading. This has been torn apart by the "Right" because you look at what is considered "essential" today as compared to 30 years ago. Who doesn't have a washer, a dryer, a television, and a telephone today? Today they count as essential. Decades ago they didn't. Thus, the "cost of living" goes up and the "disposible income" goes down.

    Economics is the easiest thing to understand at a systemic level and the hardest thing to actually implement at the individual level. "Economies" do not change, the earning, spending and investing of individuals changes.

    But when you get right down to it, you need the American people to keep more of their own money and for them to spend that money buying products from American companies that employ American workers. Those workers need to invest in those American companies and thus increase their personal wealth while giving the companies more capital to expand.

    Oh, and those of you blaming the President for the economy need to remember that it is CONGRESS, not the President, who rules the country's taxes and spending. While the President provides the leadership, CONGRESS is to blame. Vote accordingly.

    In my opinion (and, since I am not an economist, it is just my opinion), we need to:

    - reduce federal spending (make Congress personally responsible for any deficit?).

    - lower taxes for those who pay taxes (the lower 50% of the earners in America pay no taxes!).

    - streamline the tax system with the Fair Tax. Once you get rid of most of the IRS, you lower federal costs, you lower the costs of businesses and individuals doing their taxes, you make your tax burden directly linked to your spending, you remove ALL tax burden from those living in poverty, and you lower the cost of American goods, thus making them more competitive in the world economy.

    - as individuals, buy products from American companies (preferrably made entirely in America if you can still find one).

    - phase out social security (the third rail of politics!). This will never happen, but it should. Over 12% of every worker's paycheck goes to retired people. Imagine if half that money went into your personal IRA account that would actually be worth something when you retired! (Also, as a side note, black men have the lowest life expectancy in America. White women have the highest. Statistically, social security takes money from young black men and gives it to old white women!)

    - get the government out of the charity business. Let groups like the Red Cross, the United Way, religious charities, etc. do this work and treat people as individuals instead of numbers.

    - put the government back on focus to what it MUST do, not what people WANT it to do. The government should not be a wealth redistribution plan. Government should provide the Common Good Required For Existence.

    - Without breathable air, drinkable water, and land that can support farming and ranching,

  150. That's one of the more salient posts I've seen. by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    However, you should note that the Democrats aren't much different. No, I'm not a Libertarian, but the Dems are pretty much the flip side of the coin to the Reps these days- you almost can't tell who really is who in Washington these days. If you honestly think that the Democrats pandering to corporate interests is really any different from the current batch of Republicans in charge, well, you're fooling yourself.

    And, for myself? I've been trying to take what is mine back again for YEARS now.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  151. Re: Rich Vs. Poor by JawzX · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm No economist, and I don't pretend to know how to fix whats wrong (other than shooting the rich, then re-distributing thier estates evenly to the remaining population). But here's an example of the gap I see every day...

    I work in Stowe, Vermont, which has one the highest concentrations of "truely rich" residents in the US, with perhaps the exception of Beverly Hills.

    Stowe has about 5000 full-time residents, and housing that will support about 10,000. about 50% of the homes in Stowe are occupied by thier owners less than THREE WEEKS A YEAR (though they are often rented for a large portion of the year). The inflated property values caused by the vaction homes owned by the (super) rich make it not mearly difficult but IMPOSSIBLE for the service industry workers who keep Stowe alive to live IN the town.

    Just for laughs, how about this number: the AVERAGE cost of a new construction home in Stowe (not including land value) is now in excess of $1.6 million. Thats the SIMPLE AVERAGE mind you, so we're looking at homes that cost more than I'll probably make in my entire working life. How many of these (new homes)are owned by full time residents, read: workers? Arround 2%.

    I realize that being a "resort town" Stowe is an extreme example, but the gap isn't simply big, it's FRIGHTENINGLY HUGE. My boss is a reasonably succeful small business owner, does he live in Stowe? No, he can't afford to compete for realestate with the super-rich vaction home builders. We're talking somone who has been running a profitable business, employing 7-14 people for more than 20 years. My boss seems rich to me, but the people who are really rich are even richer than him in comparison to me. I live safely above the poverty line, but I'm definately not "upper middle class"...

    The problem as I see it that "upper middle class", though it may be "comfortable" is no where NEAR the level of the rich.

    The gap is growing, and It's not just a question of the rich paying more taxes than me, it's a question of the rich skewing property values and consumer goods prices to the point that somone who used to be "doing ok" can't afford to live or shop in the city in which he/she works.

    In this part of my state theres a dagerous trend to slums surrounding the rich towns and we aren't talking inner city here, we're talking a rural state that rates smack in the middle of the US standard of living by state.

  152. Federation for American Immigration Reform by BlueRain · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just want to put this URL out there, because I want to know more about this group, should anyone have any info on its leaders and stuff.

    I generally agree with their policies, as an american programmer and worker.

    http://www.fairus.org

  153. -1 Flamebait by Cokelee · · Score: 1

    Sadly, no intelligent discourse has come from this.

  154. enough for everyone by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Who needs the middle class? We'll all be RICH!

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  155. Save Social Security - Have More Kids! by MS_leases_my_soul · · Score: 1

    Why is social security going bankrupt? Because there will be too many people taking money out and not enough putting money in. If you want social security, have more kids who will work good jobs and pay into the system. As a side note, I know that my wife and I, and those like us, are ultimately going to "win" in the long run. Our country will grow more conservative, yet also more compassionate. Not in the "Compassionate Conservative" political speech of today, but in the true religious sense of standing for the Right to Life, standing for Social Justice, helping the poor, healing the sick, etc. Do you want to know why? Because the couples we know that are only out for their own self-intrest are either not having kids or are only having one kid. We are expecting number four. We raise our kids in a religious framework that focuses not on self, but on other. "What can I do for my brother to show God I love Him", not "What is in it for me." The "Me" kids grow up, marry each other, and only have one kid. The "Other" Kids grow up, marry each other, and have a lot of kids. Look three generations ahead and tell me what you see.

    1. Re:Save Social Security - Have More Kids! by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      Don't forget about the DINKS = Dual Income No Kids. Some couples don't even have one kid and truly believe that "he who dies with the most toys wins."

    2. Re:Save Social Security - Have More Kids! by waxmop · · Score: 1

      Good luck with all that. But the last few thousands of years of history suggests that no matter how hard parents, rulers, educators, or anyone else like you try to keep their the next generation safe from corrupting influences, a non-trivial minority always rejects all that dogma and seeks it out.

      How about creating a society that doesn't need everyone to believe the same way? Where everyone is raised with a healthy dose of skepticism toward everything? Would that be so awful? How terrified are of you of having to admit that maybe we don't know all the answers?

      Santa ain't real.

  156. So move by Roblimo · · Score: 1

    Sarasota and Manatee Counties here in Florida are begging for teachers, with or without educational certification. Basically, if you have a 4-year degree and no felony convictions or record of abusing children, they are likely to hire you.

    My wife (BS, Psych) has been thinking of working for one of the school districts either as a teacher or as a counselor, another job classification with more openings than applicants.

    The pay isn't huge, but a teacher's salary here will rent a decent apartment or buy a modest house, pay for a passable car, and still leave enough $ for entertainment, clothes, savings, etc.

    I'm sure there are other school districts that are also hiring, especially is states with growing populations.

    Oh - while you're waiting for your teaching job to come through here you can go do day-job construction work fixing hurricane damage down in Charlotte County or over toward Orlando. There is *lots* of cleanup/fixup work available in those areas!

  157. Manchurian Candidate: These are the Best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    are the best that the parties could come up with

    Real life is stranger than fiction.

    Bush and Kerry are cousins.

    Both Bush and Kerry where indoctrinated at Yale.

    Both Bush and Kerry are Skull and bones members.

    As other posts have noted, there policies very slightly but are basically similar.

    "While it is true that certain plot elements in Demme's film bear little or no connection to current events in this election year, others are disturbingly familiar. Terrorist attacks and the threat of terrorist attacks provide the backdrop for events in the movie. In the real world, the White House, Homeland Security Advisor Tom Ridge, and Attorney General John Ashcroft regularly warn us of the latest Al Qaeda threat. The most recent warning came on Sunday.

    The dominant issue in the presidential campaign that frames The Manchurian Candidate is national security. A critical issue in this year's presidential campaign is, you guessed it, national security."

    http://www.interventionmag.com/cms/modules.php?op= modload&name=News&file=article&sid=826

    You all need to see the movie "911 road to tyranny". It is freely downloadable at different locations. The author wants you to make copies and hand them out. This movie is a documentary(highly documented) that illustrates the cover-up and the strings(Death and destruction) that have been pulled.

    As presidential candidate Badnarik.org repeatedly says, Voting for the lesser of two evils is still evil.

    911 was a fraud . See WTC7.net

  158. Kerry's Plans Are Simple! Go Read Yourself! by MS_leases_my_soul · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yes, follow the link above and read Kerry's plans. They are simple and easy to understand.

    If more than 50% of America said in today's poll that they liked what Bush did, Kerry will do that too, but he will do it better than Bush. If more than 50% of America said in today's poll that they did not like what Bush did, Kerry will do the extreme opposite of what Bush did.

    Of course, you will not know what Kerry's positions will be on election day until he gets a chance to read the poll results the night before...

    (Sorry, but someone had to bring up the flip-flopping. See my next post for my tear-down of Bush's following of a vision whether it proves to be right or not!)

  159. So are the MegaCorps in charge yet? ... by MS_leases_my_soul · · Score: 1

    ... because I want to officially start calling myself a cyberpunk and start working in the shadows. As soon as I get that neural interface implanted, I am going to work for the MegaCorps so that I can use their own money against them as I try to bring them down.

  160. Re:You are a TRAITOR and should be punished as suc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sieg heil der Cryofan!

  161. Our first nomination for the SlashDot party? by MS_leases_my_soul · · Score: 1

    I see a new poll in Slashdot's future and I see Cowboy Neal winning.

  162. shut up wigga by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nT

  163. MOD PARENT UP by boomgopher · · Score: 1

    Por Favor

    --
    Your hybrid is not saving the environment. Its purpose is to make you feel good about buying something.
  164. Depends on the country by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    some are more progressive than others.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  165. equality of results vs equality of opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that's a fundamental difference in what people think is fair.

    I tend to fall on the equality-of-opportunity side (and think "wealth redistribution" is a fancy word to mean "theft"), but the trouble is that we do NOT presently have equality of opportunity. We also do not have equality of cultural drive to succeed. Until those factors are fixed, we're always going to have problems.

  166. one word...NAFTA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    need I say more. Even the economic proffessor in this article says nafta is hurting the economy. You don't think Clinton didn't have the rich in mind when he signed that. Are maybe you feel he was so dumb that he couldn't understand that shipping out of american jobs was a very bad thing.

    1. Re:one word...NAFTA by Awptimus+Prime · · Score: 1

      It is unfortunate that people say these things, then disregard the fact that GWB has done nothing to reverse it.

      My case remains, if Clinton screwed up, then why do we not see a reversal of any of his policies?

  167. 2 days to set up a profitable business by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 3, Funny
    Hey!

    I've seen you on night-time cable!

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."
  168. Race To the Top vs Race to the Bottom by Cryofan · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Corporations and Investors want a Race to the Bottom, which increases profits by decreasing wages and benefits. The end result will be a large amount of wealth concentrated in the hands of a few.

    Workers want a Race to the Top by increasing wages and benefits. THe end result here will be a large amount of wealth dispersed into the hands of many.

    As we can see here on Slashdot, the real problem we have is that the wealthy and the corporations have funded a network of think tanks and foundations that have spent the last 30 years spewing propaganda to make everyone think that a Race to the Bottom is good and that a Race to the Top is Bad. And most Americans (and most Slashdotters!) are buying into the corporate propaganda!

    It just goes to show you the power of propaganda over a long period of time--if you spend billions of dollars saying that black is white and white is black, that after 30 years, you will have a bunch of people walking around telling you black is white and that high labor costs and protective trade laws are bad....

    THe details of the this RightWing/Corporate propaganda machine are starting to be made public. You can get more info about these "Tentacles of Rage" in the lastest edition of Harpers Magazine here.

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  169. "Unemployment" is a red herring by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    Stop arguing about the definition of "unemployment" and just look at this graph of the plummeting labor force participation rate.

    Clue: This is not due to the population precipitously joining the ranks of the independently wealthy.

  170. Alternately by mcc · · Score: 1

    Some of us have this wacky belief that it is possible for the federal government to in some way influence the economy, and since the president usually has some influence over the federal government-- and the Bush administration, who holds near-complete influence over the republican-dominated congress, definitely has influence over the federal government-- it is thus possible for the Bush administration to take policies which influence the economy.

    Meanwhile the only economic action taken by the Bush administration and the Republican-dominated congress under his term that we can see has been cutting taxes to his campaign contributors under a policy formed when the economy was wholly different. It seems the Bush economic policy in response to a recession is to sit and wait for the recession to get better, then take credit for the recovery. Except there hasn't been a recovery yet, it's just that in the last six months or so the rate at which the underemployment rate has been growing has slowed. Somehow we're supposed to believe this vindicates Bush's economic policy.

    So, here's what it comes down to. We've got a president who, if re-elected, has indicated his economic policy will be to do nothing other than cheerfully and constantly insist the economy has improved despite evidence to the contrary. Then we've got a presidential candidate who, if elected, has been talking a lot about how he wants to work to improve the economy and improve the situation of the middle class. This doesn't mean he'll succeed. But he might. At least he cares. And unless you buy into the republican idea that "lasseiz-faire economics" is the only valid economic policy and "lasseiz-faire economics" is defined by whatever the republican economic policy is at the moment, the mere fact that he cares seems rather promising.

    In short, perhaps entirely blaming Bush for the current economic issues is not entirely reasonable. But blaming the underemployed makes even less sense. And I think we can at least reasonably expect Bush could have done more to improve the current economic issues.

    And in the meantime, considering the economic issues are still continuing, I would say that when faced between a presidential candidate who will generally try, in whatever small extent to improve the economy, or a presidential candidate who will simply consistently deny problems with the economy exist, I would say the former is obviously preferable.

  171. Bad immigration policy?!?! Screw you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Dear Poster,

    Your "Bad Immigration Policy" is the reason I hightailed myself and my business back to Canada.

    It's much, much easier to get skilled people here (citizen or immigrant) and we can afford pay our staff a wage which provides a significantly higher standard of living than would be possible in your imaginary land of milk-and-honey.

    I guess our tax dollars weren't 'merican enough for you. Good enough -- we'll give those dollars to another government and the jobs to another nation's citizens.

    You have an immigration problem all right: You're driving away the skilled and resourceful people which previously MADE your nation. Take a close look at your schools to see what you're getting instead.

    1. Re:Bad immigration policy?!?! Screw you! by Script0r · · Score: 1

      This sounds like Canadian propaganda to me. No real American would ever choose Canada over the great USA.

    2. Re:Bad immigration policy?!?! Screw you! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Look, the guy who wrote the article is a racist, neo-nazi type. He's behind the curve on the whole scapegoat anyway. It is currently fashionable in the IT industry to blame Indians living in India for American employment woes, not immigrants. That's what outsourcing is. It's the same with manufacturing jobs.

      People aren't slavering after cleaning jobs or fruit picking job, which is what immigrant laborers are doing now. (Sure, there are a few H1-Bs, and the flow of that type of immigrant labor could be stopped, but if Satish can't come to the US to work, maybe they just shift the project to IBM India, and fire the whole American development team.)

      Still, you are right about Americans immigration policy, but there have always been Know-Nothing xenophobes in this country and there always will be, sadly, until the very system collapses.

  172. I guess not. by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1

    My original comment got marked troll.

    I've worked in the corporate environment and I've seen the quality of some of the workers.

    Not everyone, just a few. But those few really left an impression.

    They were lazy, obese, and expected someone else to do their work. Employers have the constant fear of being sued for silly things by their employees. We also have to deal with all the political correctness crap.

    On the other hand, I never personally knew any terrible quality employees that were foreign.

    If you were an employer of a small company and had even one frivolous lawsuit from an employee you'd start thinking about outsourcing overseas too. The cost of a lawsuit is much more than the cost of hiring an army of Indians to code away at your project.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
  173. If that's the most uneducated comment... by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1

    You haven't read much on the internet.

    Here's some reading so you can catch up on the lack of education spreading across the internet:
    http://www.johnkerry.com/

    Working longer doesn't mean quality employee, in fact, maybe it's part of the reason so many Americans are lazy/grumpy workers.

    It sounds like you support corporate greed. As a human I would rather make slightly less money and have pleasant happy employees.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
  174. Solution: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's an idea: MOVE!

    If you don't like the economy of your state, get the hell out and move to someplace better. There's no walls, no Federal Bureau of Preventing People from Leaving. Pack up and go from the worst place for jobs to the best place for jobs, or some happy medium as factors determine.

    Or you could just sit around and whine about it and not do anything about it- that's also a good helpful plan that I find quite useful...

  175. Re:Taking Self-Employed Into Account? and my thoug by seppy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    blah blah blah the left is wrong bush is right... self-employed people are God. the left is bad, the right is right. We go to war so you don't have to. we loose record numbers of jobs, we have the first president to loose jobs. You're right George W. Bush is creating a ton of self -employment opportunities out there, and no doubt a bazillion of those no longer able to be considered for unemployment are firing up their awesome pc's to make an amazing living, as Dick Cheney states, off of E-Bay. As John Edwards stated "This economy would be cooking if we considered Bake Sales as part of the economy"

    The numbers "No Doubt Cooked up by the Liberal Media" are stating we're losing jobs, and the jobs that we do manage to create don't provide a livable wage. How long before the nation realizes that with a Republican President, a Republican Appointed Supreme Court, a Republican Congress that there is no other place for the blame to fall than on the republican party.

    As John Stewart wisely stated on the daily show, if I may paraphrase it poorly: The Republicans are sick and tired of being in control.

    The left isn't a group of skeptical quitters, unfortunately they have the thankless job of promoting things that are ruthlessly attacked which with the hindsight of many years become taken for granted: Unemployment Insurance, Medicare/Medicaid, Social Security, FDIC, SEC. The list goes on.

    Read something by someone other than Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh, Fox News, and the world is different. Might I suggest a book by another decorated Veteran Liberal such as George McGovern, a shameless and proud liberal -- who I happen to agree with.

    The only people quitting are the right wing nut jobs who don't think and proceed to blame the left for everything bad in the world, or proceed to say the left is distorting everything. My eyes tell me the trust of the reality. I know a lot more unemployed people now than in the 90's under a democratic president and the strongest economy in the world. How we could reach record deficits in the span of four years comes as no surprise when you start a war and reduce taxes -- BTW: A fiscal conservative probably wouldn't recommend tax breaks as you begin a war. What happened to the concept of a nation that sacrifices in a time of war for the betterment of the country. i.e. fuel conservation in fuel effecient vehicles (not SUV's and increased reliance on terrorist country's -- Saudi Arabian -- oil), increased taxation to pay for a stronger country, better care for veteran's who bear the burden of fighting,

    Neocon's suck, because they are ignorant. Neocons are ignorant, because they buy the line that the left wing controls the media. Wake up!

    --

    Brian Seppanen

    Minister of Information and Propaganda
    Area 54 The Secret Government Disco Labs Provo

  176. If you look at job ads you are not counted by t482 · · Score: 1
    persons not employed who responded that their only job search method was looking at job ads in newspapers were classified as in the labour force and unemployed in Canada while they were treated as out of the labour force in the United States.


    So if you look at job ads and there aren't any you qualify for you are considered not unemployed according to the US government.


    http://www.cabe.ca/cbe/vol4_2/42-zagorsky.pdf

  177. Black Protectionism by Baldrson · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Detroit council OKs plan that touts racial separation

    September 21, 2004

    BY MARISOL BELLO
    FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER

    A majority of the Detroit City Council wants to implement an economic development plan it commissioned for $112,000 that preaches racial isolation and rails against immigration in its bid to gain economic success for poor blacks.

    The crux of the plan is the creation of a business district -- dubbed African Town -- that would be funded in part with city money and made up of black-owned businesses catering to a black clientele.

    The report also complains that immigrants from Mexico, Asia and the Middle East are stealing resources, jobs and other opportunities from blacks and calls on city leaders to stop the economic shift.

    ...

  178. Jobs O'Plenty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you kidding? There are plenty of service industry jobs for those in the IT industry! Why, look at me... all my schooling and training as a network tech has allowed me to have a fine career in the construction/manual labor field.

    Hey, at least I'm in pretty good shape.

    Now if only me high school councilor told me that knowing Spanish and Hindi would be valuable job skills...

  179. Please... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Learn to spell "its".

    Thank you.

  180. Econ101: Deflation vs Inflation by EventHorizon · · Score: 1

    "how would you like it if your boss gave you a timely drop in salary, to keep up with the drop in the cost of living?"

    I'd actually prefer it if my personal cost of living decreased faster than my income. Anyone in an inflationary area where expenses rise faster than income would agree... +30%/year LA housing market compared to +1% salary raise etc [1]

    The point is: what matters most is your income-expense delta, not the direction of prices.
    Prices can rise or fall either in your favor, or out of it (depending on which prices change, and by how much).

    So, based on your own definition, a depression is not necessarily worse than a recession. You may argue that the 1930s depression was worse than the 1990s recession, but the general argument is false.

    [1] Housing deflation would destroy the American consumer economy which is funded largely by home equity debt--separate topic though

  181. Nice flamebait re: GWB by halr9000 · · Score: 1, Troll
    FDR tried to alleviate the suffering...by instituting SS...that provided a public benefit.

    Ok and what has SS turned into? A pyramid scheme that is looted by Congress. It's dying and needs to be replaced. Support Bush's plan for SS reform.

    He did not make lies, half-truths, and political doublespeak an Executive Branch SOP.

    Neither do the political candiates whom I trust and believe in. This is your opinion, not a factual argument. Learn to keep the two separate.

    He did not slash corporate taxes, and the tax rate of the very wealthiest Americans, and then shift the tax burdeon onto the backs of the shrinking middle class.

    Ahem. Did you not receive a tax cut? Thank you. And what's more, your argument here is predicated on the "given" that the Government owns all of everything, and that tax cuts "cost" the Government in lost revenue. I don't know about you, but I want to keep *more* of the money I make. I want to "allow" the government to take only that which is necessary to provide what the Constitution says it should--and not a penny more.

    I can't respond as intelligently to the jobs overseas issue, I'm still learning about that. But I think it could be just a phase, frankly. Evidence #1 is when Dell had to "insource" their helpdesk because of customer satisfaction issues with the outsourced provider.

    As far as the health of the economy goes, from what I can tell, the left is using historical figures and the right is using current trends. The left are in effect blaming Bush for the dotcom bubble bursting, which is pretty laughable. Bush is doing a "decent" job helping the economy to recover in a tough time, that's how I read it. The current trends are good, and that is well...good. Sorry, you can't disagree with this, it's an actual fact.

    From all reliable accounts, one of the Bush administration's top policy goals was the invasion of Iraq, from before his inauguration...

    Whoah Nelly! Now you're going a bit off the deep end. I think you have stepped from debate into the realm of fiction. When you get back to earth, let me know and we can continue.

    The rest of your rant is characterized by unsubstantiated rumors, personal gripes, incorrect conclusions, and a disconnection with reality. Sorry, they did find WMD's...hate to break it to ya.

    Do expect Bush to continue promoting religious organizations as the only source of welfare and social assistance.

    Oh I hadn't heard that was something on his platform. I think this is awesome! Let the people help themselves!

    Our welfare system is unfair to everyone: to taxpayers who must pick up the bill for failed programs; to society, whose mediating institutions of community, church and family are increasingly pushed aside; and most of all to the poor themselves, who are trapped in a system that destroys opportunity for themselves and hope for their children.

    From the LP's Poverty & Welfare platform.

    1. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by tom's+a-cold · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Do expect Bush to continue promoting religious organizations as the only source of welfare and social assistance.
      Oh I hadn't heard that was something on his platform. I think this is awesome! Let the people help themselves!
      Well, it wasn't really his idea, his lackeys figured it out by observing how Islamic fundamentalism was spread worldwide from Saudi Arabia: by state support of religious fanatics masquerading as charity.

      --
      Get your teeth into a small slice: the cake of liberty
    2. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You did fairly well on your post halr until you started talking about WMD and how they were found...which is absolute garbage. Post a link and prove it. No WMD were ever found. You revealed yourself as a mindless right wing follower...man there like droves of you idiots. Where did you all come from?

    3. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No WMD were ever found.


      They did find a few old warheads, some filled with sarin that was from their war with Iran. They also found a bunch of pesticide or herbicide, which for whatever reason was believed to be WMD related.

      Certainly not the "stockpile" or hundreds of tons worth that we were promised.
    4. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by dubl-u · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ok and what has SS turned into? A pyramid scheme that is looted by Congress. It's dying and needs to be replaced. Support Bush's plan [whitehouse.gov] for SS reform.

      As anybody with a calculator can figure out, Bush's plan has a huge hole. The cost of switching from pay-as-you-go to individual-investment plans is dumbfoundingly large (some estimate it as $1 trillion), and I've seen no coherent explanation from Bush's administration as to where the money will come from.

      I think pension plans with up-front contributions and more individual control are a great idea, and I'm glad that people have at least started to talk about reforming Social Security. But Bush, et al, have only given us fairy tales and titanic defecits, so it's hard to believe that they're serious.

    5. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No WMD were ever found. Wrong.

      True, only a few have been found, but only enough to kill 200,000 people. I don't know what your cut-off point is, but that sure sounds like WMD to me. So we didn't find "stockpiles" of them.

      Want proof? Get up off your lazy ass and google it yourself. I didn't take you to raise.

    6. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by Izago909 · · Score: 1
      As anybody with a calculator can figure out, Bush's plan has a huge hole. The cost of switching from pay-as-you-go to individual-investment plans is dumbfoundingly large (some estimate it as $1 trillion), and I've seen no coherent explanation from Bush's administration as to where the money will come from.
      It's going to come from each individual. Part of his plan to ensure the survivability of SSIt's going to come from each individual. Part of his plan to ensure the survivability of SS is allowing people to set aside a percentage of their pre-tax income in a tax free savings plan that must be used to augment private health coverage or saved for retirement. His solution guarantees that the current day elderly continue to receive benefits just as their parents did. My generation will end up paying twice; once into the existing system to support the baby boomers, and again into our personal accounts to support ourselves.

      Unfortunately, SS can not be fixed because of uneven population growth, the rapid influx of SS requests caused by the aging boomers, unstable economy, and non-linear increases of inflation. There are simply too many variables and the slightest change in one would require reworking the entire equation. We have to find a way to support the graying boomers and the currently retired. They paid into the system their whole lives, expecting it to be there when they retire. To cut them off would be just as bad as Bush suggesting that my generation pay twice.

      Unfortunately, nobody with an actual working model of a new system will ever get elected. Senior citizens vote in record numbers and anyone suggesting a new system would not have a chance. Old people, if anything, are stubbornly resistant to change.
    7. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Ok and what has SS turned into? A pyramid scheme that is looted by Congress. It's dying and needs to be replaced. Support Bush's plan for SS reform.

      And what about the people who couldn't afford to save for retirement for the past 40 or 50 years because they were forced to pay into Social Security? Bush says, "Ha ha, we were only kidding!" Sounds like Soylent Green to me. Euthanasia for boomers - beef steaks for CEOs and politicians.

    8. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by rhuntley12 · · Score: 1

      A couple warheads is enough to kill 200,000 people? Are these 200,000 going to inject the sarin into their bloodstream, not to mention doesn't sarin have a bit of a shelflife. The sarin attacks in Japan killed 150,000 right? I mean that was a pretty nice spot for a chemical attack...

    9. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by dubl-u · · Score: 1

      Part of his plan to ensure the survivability of SS [...] My generation will end up paying twice; once into the existing system to support the baby boomers, and again into our personal accounts to support ourselves.

      This is the part that, as far as I've seen, they haven't admitted yet. I've always heard it pitched as giving people control over their SSI savings. But as you say, it really means letting everybody continue to pay SSI taxes and then instituting something like a mandatory 401k. Or doubling the SSI tax. Either way, Bush is being very slippery about how he expects us to pay for all his plans.

    10. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by aggiefalcon01 · · Score: 1

      They also found a bunch of pesticide or herbicide, which for whatever reason was believed to be WMD related.

      Perhaps because it was found in ammunitions depots, in massive quantities. Perhaps because the specific chemicals found could easily be used to make chemical weapons on the spot. Perhaps because while the claim was these chemicals were meant for supporting the Iraqi agricultural industry, the facts don't mesh with that. And even if that's true, why house it in military warehouses along with munitions?

      So maybe it's not a stockpile of hundreds of tons of clearly-labeled WMD's ... but in a country that had a decade of experience in hiding things, is that a realistic expectation anyway?

      --
      Global warming is neither science, nor politics. It is a religion.
    11. Re:Nice flamebait re: GWB by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 1

      Perhaps because the specific chemicals found could easily be used to make chemical weapons on the spot.


      Easily used to make chemical weapons on the spot? How easy? references?


      So maybe it's not a stockpile of hundreds of tons of clearly-labeled WMD's ... but in a country that had a decade of experience in hiding things, is that a realistic expectation anyway?


      Well it sure was a realistic expectation before the war. I don't expect the Bush administration to perform miracles - just deliver on what they themselves said.

  182. Japan is automating like crazy. by Baldrson · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Your "prediction" about Japan ignores Japan's high investment rates in automation.

    You sound like a southern plantation slave owner arguing against a northern industrialist prior to the civil war.

    You're immoral and an idiot.

    1. Re:Japan is automating like crazy. by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      Your "prediction" about Japan ignores Japan's high investment rates in automation.

      Are you referring to the robots that Japan is building to care for the elderly in it's nursing homes since there won't be enough young people around to work and take care of the eldery?

      The Nursing Home Of The Future?
      Japan's Push Button Nursing."
      Japan Seeks Robotic Help in Caring for the Aged


      I say to you sir, that warehousing the elderly of a society in storage facilities that are manned by robots is immoral. A society should have more respect for elders and care for them better.

      I can not follow your argument between "slave holders vs. automation.", perhaps you could elaborate. I am not arguing we need more people to pick cotton or do slave labor. I am arguing that society must maintain certain proportions (percentage of young to old) in order to maintain stability over the longterm with social programs intact.

    2. Re:Japan is automating like crazy. by khallow · · Score: 1

      I couldn't help but notice that you quote CBS and NYT sources (IHT is NYT-owned). These have their own agenda when it comes to technology and immigration. Your news stories of Japanese nursing homes is going through these filters.

  183. I call bulls--- ... by ggreeneva · · Score: 1

    5.4 are the latest numbers, the lowest since Oct 2001. sorry

    Hold your horses. Unemployment rates only cover people currently in the labor force and according to government statistics, the portion of the adult population actually working or seeking work has dropped by more than two percent since its peak level in April 2000.

    Our unemployment rate only looks good thanks to people who quit looking for work. If Bush wins, he owes those poor chumps a debt of gratitude.

  184. Speaking as a Swede who's emigrated to the US... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
    ...I have to strongly disagree with your assessment of NW European labor conditions. What's behind the high minimum wage statistic is a quagmire of:
    • Extremely compressed salary distribution. Raising your yearly pay with just a few thousand dollars will take you from the lowest to the highest tenth of earners. High minimum wages also mean that a lot of service jobs never get done, or get done but not taxed. There's a reason you see so many Swedish brain surgeons paint their own fence instead of hiring someone to do it.
    • Progressive tax rates and communal service fees, severely limiting any incentive to better yourself wage-wise.
    • Extremely rigid firing rules, which leads to employers being very reluctant to hire, and workers to change jobs, since that'd put them first in the firing line.
    • Oodles of red tape and confiscatory taxation rules for small companies, thus disicentivizing anyone wanting to start their own business.
    In summary then, you have a textbook recipe for economic stagnation. If you lack all ambition, then by all means you'd thrive in this system. If not, I'd stay well away.

    I will say that one thing that still puzzles me is why US executives still need golden parachutes. In Sweden, it makes sense since they're the only ones that typically can be fired at will, but in the states, "fair" isn't the first word I'd use to describe that practise. And yes, I'm a "worker"...
  185. Do you dumba**es really ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... think the President has _THAT_ effing much control over the effing economy????? NO! Stop reading C code and start reading an economics book.

  186. Re:Posting as AC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Registering on /. is a waste of time: you're then asked to moderate for free and any reasonably interesting submissions that you make are stolen by CmdrTaco or other staff.

    And what could be more cowardly (ineffectual, powerless, inane, futile, sterile, etc.) than posting on /. to begin with? At least I'm willing to admit I've got nothing to lose.

    Aside: and why does /. bother to probe my system every time I post a comment?

    • The firewall has blocked Internet access to your computer (HTTP) from slashdot.org (66.35.250.150) (TCP Port 38472).
    • The firewall has blocked Internet access to your computer (TCP Port 3128) from slashdot.org (66.35.250.150) (TCP Port 38536).
    • The firewall has blocked Internet access to your computer (TCP Port 8000) from slashdot.org (66.35.250.150) (TCP Port 38580).
    • The firewall has blocked Internet access to your computer (TCP Port 8080) from slashdot.org (66.35.250.150) (TCP Port 38610).


  187. A hardline approach by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Immigration can be easily brought under control. Here's how.
    • Offer a bounty on illegal immigrants. Turn in one and win $1000.
    • Make H-1 visas risky for employers. If your employer hires an immigrant, then lays someone off within three years for any reason, they lose the H-1 visa and have to pay the laid off person three years of salary. No requirement to show cause; that makes enforcement too hard.
    • Any employer, individual or corporate, hiring an illegal immigrant without checking their fingerprints with Homeland Security loses all tax deductions for three years.
    • Any previously-deported illegal immigrant caught in the US will be sterilized, then deported.
    • Border Patrol guards will be ordered to shoot to kill.
    • Nobody gets a green card without passsing the TOEFL.

    America for Americans!

    1. Re:A hardline approach by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Offer a bounty on illegal immigrants. Turn in one and win $1000"

      Holy sh*t would I be rich. One stop outside of Home Depot at 6am, and $$$$ for me!

  188. not true. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Every hear of supply and demand? Demand for labor remains constant while supply increases and the price of labor goes down. Illegal immigration forces wages lower. The road to the middle class for most people starts off at a low paying job. If you can't get a job that pays so you can save money for college or starting a business then it threatens the middle class.

    Remember, some of these jobs that illegals are taking were solid lower-middle class jobs at one time: construction and public services for example.

    Illegals also send a propotionate money back home. Money that bolsters corrupt dictatorships which also threaten middle class America.

    Perhaps were are better off arming them and sending them home.

    1. Re:not true. by gorbachev · · Score: 1

      Again, illegal immigrants are not squeezing the middle class, because the types of work they do are the ones no middle class person in the US would ever do.

      --
      In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
  189. As a rich evil republican... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look guys, it's pretty simple. Stop with the Communist evil-rich fear mongering, save some money and become a landlord!

    It's simple! I still work, but now I don't have to.

    The world is not about NATIONS anymore.. it's about capitalism. If Bush makes things worse 20 years from now.. SO WHAT? Just sell your shit and move to an island that doesn't tax Americans.

    You guys worry about wayyyy too much.

  190. Re:Carry on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Thanks for trying to break the spell on these blockheads.

    If you like what you're getting and where things are going, you must be rich and a corporate owner.

    If you don't, and want to have a future with a decent retirement, and fight for the middle class, vote Kerry. Work to turn the tide.

  191. get used to it by jeif1k · · Score: 1

    I think the wealth the US achieved in the last century was a temporary windfall from the aftermath of WWII and the turmoil the rest of the world found itself in. Today, Europe, China, India, and Japan have recovered, and they represent modern, highly competitive nations.

    In the long run, I see no reason to expect that the US should be doing economically better than those other nations. Nor, frankly, do I see much justification.

    Immigration and free trade, on the other hand, are unlikely to have much to do with America's economic issues. The net effect of curbing immigration would be to make the US even less competitive, and the net effect of curtailing free trade would be retaliatory actions by other nations and an even larger foreign trade deficit.

    So, I think Americans better get used to the idea of decreasing standards of living because it seems pretty much inevitable at this point. And there is nobody to blame for that either.

    However, serious social problems are not a necessary consequence of that. Just like the Europeans used their period of economic boom for building up an unsustainable social welfare system, the US used its period of economic boom for building up an unsustainable elite class of fabulously wealthy individuals. Both represent excesses that one can afford only if there is plenty to go around; but when money gets tighter, people have to make hard political choices, on both sides of the Atlantic.

    1. Re:get used to it by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about is mainly relevent with respect to trade policy. However, the productive capacity of the US was developed independently of what you are talking about.

      I _do_ think the US needs to learn to deal with _much_ more expensive imports-and pass the full cost of maintaining these trade routes onto the public.

    2. Re:get used to it by jeif1k · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about is mainly relevent with respect to trade policy. However, the productive capacity of the US was developed independently of what you are talking about.

      But "productive capacity" isn't useful economically if production costs are higher in the US than elsewhere. And production costs in the US are higher.

      I _do_ think the US needs to learn to deal with _much_ more expensive imports-and pass the full cost of maintaining these trade routes onto the public.

      If the US started to make imports more expensive by imposing tariffs or taxes on imports, other nations would retaliate, and they would have every right to. The effects on the US economy would be devastating, because, while the US trade deficit is huge, it's still only a fraction of total US trade.

      The only way the US could make imports more expensive without starting a trade war would be by devaluating the dollar. The US trade deficit, in fact, demands it. Of course, rich Americans would lose a lot of money and poor Americans would still lose export jobs.

      Either way, US living standards would drop considerably. The US is living beyond its means, and there is no way of coming face to face with that fact sooner or later.

  192. What a HORRIBLE article.. by CashCarSTAR · · Score: 1

    Just "blaming immigrants" is not going to help anything. There are deeper problems in play.

    Yeah, it's true that neither party directly talks about them. But then again, nobody else really talks about it either. Because in order to talk about it, you need to start to link issues together, and once you do that, well..people's heads start to explode I think.

    Try this link: here

    Yeah I know. It's Slate. But it's still the best article I've seen on the real problem. To those who scan and don't like to clink links..here it is.

    Infrastructure inefficency. That's the long and the short of it. The US is in a terrible bind at this point, basically held hostage to a few vested interests that prevent any sort of progress. Health care is the obvious one, and it's the big one. Costs have gone up about 45% in the last 3 years (YIKES!!). But it's seen as the bottom floor for a decent job. It's almost to the point (if not there already) that health care costs are MORE than employment in some cases. As well, you have transportation and energy, which are all wrapped up together. These interests fight increased gas milage standards, as well as fight for more sensible urban design/mass transit. Which increases demand for energy which increases cost.

    401ks, where growth in the fund more and more is not reliant on dividends and profits from your investments, but on short-term trading and having some sucker buy your investment for more than what you paid for it...but it'll rarely pay out.

    An educational culture that, frankly, gets parents up in arms when their kids are actually tought to think for themselves. No thank you, we just want them indocrinated.

    All these things..and more.. are major infrastructure problems inside the US that need to be taken care of ASAP, but very few people are talking about them. Mainly because I think the biggest infrastructure problem of them all, is this negative optimism that persists, where people don't want to hear problems. They want to think that everything is just fine and peachy and nothing can ever get better. Things never get better unless you make them better.

    1. Re:What a HORRIBLE article.. by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      This isn't about blaming immigrants-it is about looking at policies that were constructed specifically to make rich folks richer.

  193. Well at least FDR made Marijuana illegal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You have to give him credit for that.Until he signed the Marijuana Tax act of 1937 people could use,posess and sell the dangerous drug without facing any Federal charges AT ALL! Much less face any well-deserved prison time.Thank God FDR nipped this dangerous drug trend "in the bud" so to speak sparing us an anarchic society with crazed Pot-Heads roaming the streets.

    1. Re:Well at least FDR made Marijuana illegal by LaminatorX · · Score: 1
      This was the pound of flesh required to get William Randolph Hearst, with his corrupt media empire and his sprawling jute plantations in SE Asia, on board with the New Deal.

      Hearst got even richer when all that paper/rope/cloth hemp was replaced by his jute grown in the third world. FDR got public opinion swayed in favor of the New Deal by the aformentioned media empire.

      ...strange bedfellows indeed.

  194. Well then ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If American programmers can compete with Indians who do not have citizenship and their visa is held by the employer, then why can't doctors, teachers, lawyers, and soldiers? Aren't they more important to our economy than code jockeys?

    The H1-B program is a problem. Most H1-Bs are Inidan. A little resentment is completely natural and, in fact, to be expected. It does not make them "Xenophobes", or "racists" or "Nazis" as you are implying

    Especially when Inidans themseleve have smug attitude and consider themselves to be superior.

    If Indians are actively going to discriminate against American workers here in America, then isn't it just self defence to fight back?

    In fact, isn't Indians like Vinod Khosla who are the racists?

    1. Re:Well then ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The H1-B program is a problem. Most H1-Bs are Inidan. A little resentment is completely natural and, in fact, to be expected.

      That explains the bigotry, but it doesn't excuse it. You sound like an apologist for bigots. Are you too a bigot ?

      Especially when Inidans themseleve have smug attitude and consider themselves to be superior.

      A baseless sweeping generalisation. I suppose you just answered my question.

      Fuck off, bigot.

      If Indians are actively going to discriminate against American workers here in America, then isn't it just self defence to fight back?

      Maybe the Indians are the ones who are "just fighting back". Or maybe not. If you have any brain cells, you can see the problem with "fighting back" against a group -- it inevitably leads to a spiral of bigotry. People who contribute to such a spiral are in my opinion worthless pond scum. Are you such a person ?

  195. Going to college while paying on a student loan? by tepples · · Score: 1

    So how, without using the uncaring phrase "not my problem", do you expect me to go to college again for another degree while I'm still making payments on my first degree's student loan on state assistance?

  196. Some thoughts.. by ChrisInSF · · Score: 1

    Around a year ago I read an excellent book by Simon Head, "The New Ruthless Economy" in which he described what is happening to us very well. I would reccomend this book highly to anyone who is interested in what is going on.

    Basically, it is a crisis caused by the success of our methods of increasing productivity and decreasing the need for many people to work. You can trace the problems and successes back to Frederick Taylor's theories of 'scientific management', which held that many workers spend more time slowing work down than working. So he devised a system to continually automate - or commoditize and compartmentalize manufacturing wark.

    This was an incredibly successful system, and Taylor, who is probably the most influential person in American business history, left a very big mark on American business practice. His technique, (some called this "Taylorism", but a better term is 'scientific management') which was later adapted and refined by Leffingwell for service/office type jobs, was the core idea around which the rest of the changes evolved. (Now we call this pervasive trend 'reengineering' and it is commonly seen in ERP, CRM and other logic-driven decision-making systems that take 99% of all decision making out of th hands of skilled staff and move them to machines, with humans only handling the increasingly rare 'exception')

    It goes without saying that this revolutionized American - and by extension, the rest of the world's business practices.

    The missing pieces of the puzzle were computers and the Internet.

    Taylorism and scientific management were slowed for a while in the postwar years but this was more of an adjustment period than a setback..

    But reengineering is back and in the competitive global business climate most companies don't see themselves as having choices not to implement it's effciencies. Working people are now increasingly expected to behave like machines or lose their jobs. Speedup is taken as a given, and there are even situations where the pace of work is speeded up at regular intervals and anyone who cannot make the newer, faster pace is let go. (this is common in phone-center type work see this excellent description at http://www.tcf.org/Publications/EconomicsInequalit y/ch6.pdf
    )

    Unfortunately, the postwar lull in this aggressive move towards automation blinded many people to the fact that this pervasive 'speedup' was occurring everywhere - because the media kept the focus on the increased skills that were becoming necessary for the new - temporarily emergent middle management class.. "white collar workers".

    the introduction of computers, however, should have made more of us realize that many of the functions of this middle manager group were destined to be automated.. it was only a matter of time..

    Basically, I think that we are headed towards a society where only scientists and artists will need to work. Any other job that can be defined as a series of rules and decisions can probably be automated in some way.

    That process will take some time, but as the pieces fall into place, the cost incentive in various fields will drive rapid, and very disruptive changes, concentrating the displaced workers in ever shrinking areas. Some big changes in the immediate future will probably be in agriculture, customer service and driving/delivery work.

    One thing we could do now is shorten the working week, like they did during the Great Depression. But that would take a decision by society to face and accept these changes. Otherwise, wages will continually be depressed as the remaining low and medium-skilled jobs migrate to low-skilled countries or workers with reduced bargaining power accept pay cuts 'to keep their jobs'.

    I don't think that this HAS to be a crisis for capitalism, but our current 'pretend there's not a problem' attitude in many ways bodes ill for the political stability and social contract on which capitalism - and our system's current stability - depends...

  197. Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I didn't know I as going to quit my job yesterday till I turned the key and went out to fill some apps. Today I have a new job doing the same thing for more money. I have worked sowhere since I was 13 and now I am 40.
    If you wish to work you will and you all know it.

  198. The data is in. Immigration doesn't work. by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    If immigration were so great for the economy, you'd expect those states in which it is most heavily employed to have subsequent increases in their long-term state bond ratings. The data shows exactly the opposite.

    You can cry "correlation doesn't imply causation" all you want but you have to measure something or you are preaching theocracy -- not economic theory.

    So what else might we measure? How about the "success" of companies that most heavily lobbied for and used guest workers like Sun Corporation?

    Again, how many coincidences like that do you need before your cries of "racism", "xenophobia", "protectionism", "loser", just sound like so much religious cant?

  199. Bush inherited a ready-to-collapse economy by tepples · · Score: 1

    President Bush isn't entirely to blame for the recession and subsequent jobless growth, as the situation is more complex than a sound bite:

    • The recession may have officially started in March of 2001, but Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan had been warning that an economy held up by irrational exuberance (everybody say Yatta!) was due to collapse for a long time before that.
    • The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, deepened the recession. What would Al Gore have done to prevent this had Florida voted for him instead of mistakenly voting for Pat Buchanan?
    • And what could any President of the United States have done to offset labor productivity gains, which some claim to contribute at least as much to the jobless growth phenomenon as buying foreign services?
    1. Re:Bush inherited a ready-to-collapse economy by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

      don't confuse people with the facts. we have myopia when it comes to economic trends. the economy, global at that, is in a long term restructuring, not unlike it did during the industrial revolution. then, people had time to adjust. new industries and new sectors didn't rise and supplant the old in a decade. people's skills and trades still had value. pure labor was still necessary, although exploited, and agriculture still dominant. blaming bush for a global transformation changing markets is a straw man argument. whether more can or should be done to ameliorate the hardships is a different debate, but at least he's not trying to stop the change and stifle economic growth. think if we tried to somehow insulate ourselves from this? what would we have. we'd have france and germany with 10% unemployment, a large and growing imported labor force, burgeoning welfare rolls, aging populations and declining productivity. better to deal with temporary pain and be prepraed to compete this century instead of trying to resurrect the last. i'm not a bush defender, just a realist.

      --
      My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
  200. What are you smoking? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

    Pure greed makes companies turn to the lowest cost of production

    What exactly are you smoking? You do understand that a company exists for any one purpose, and that is to make money, turn a profit? Its not greed, its the nature of the beast. Commercial entities owe nobody anything, especially not social consideration.

    But if you want to wave your moral flag around, try this on for size: Your competition is producing goods at half the cost you are. What do you do? You outsource or get out of the kitchen, baby. And if you pay Ameican wages to people in India or Asia, they will only be working for you for a few years before they retire to live like kings on the vast fortune they have accumulated.

    How does this stuff get modded up as insightful?

    1. Re:What are you smoking? by vandan · · Score: 1

      You're conveniently ignoring my argument.

      I agree that companies are out for one thing ... profit. My point is that society as a whole must realise this, and put limits on corporate activity when it goes against our stated objectives. For example a country can introduce a law that states that ALL goods and services must be produced according to a certain standard of labour conditions. Then anyone wanting to do business in the country - whether their product is produced insode the country or not - must meet these standards, or simply be banned from trading.

      The argument against this always goes off-track in saying that this will increase the costs of production. Yes it will increase the cost of production slightly, but THIS IS THE COST THAT WE MUST FACE TO ENSURE PEOPLE ARE EMPLOYED UNDER FAIR CONDITIONS. It is also the cost that we must fact to ensure that our own labour, which HAS ALREADY EXCEEDED THE STANDARD OF LIVING IN 3RD WORLD COUNTRIES can 'compete' with people in other countries. Otherwise what you get ( and the US is headed this way FAST ) is a working class comprising 85% of the population who can't get employment because the companies are more interested in chasing profits ( or competing in the international market, as they like to call it ) to pay their own people a decent wage.

      Summary: enforce a minimum wage policy or have your jobs exported to a place that doesn't have a minimum wage policy.

    2. Re:What are you smoking? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      and put limits on corporate activity

      Remove the profit motive, and you remove the corporations, companies, and businesses of every size. No businesses means everything is run by the government. For reference, see communism, a failed ethos espoused only by academics that have little or no real world experience.

      Yes it will increase the cost of production slightly

      Try massively. The single biggest cost in any business is its employees.

      ALREADY EXCEEDED THE STANDARD OF LIVING IN 3RD WORLD COUNTRIES

      So what? The first world is where it is today because it got itself organised faster than anyone else, and worked hard enough to ensure that they stayed that way. The third world does not deserve special consideration just because they have lower living standards. We, in short, owe them nothing. I'm not advocating looting the poor for the benefit of the rich, but its a savagely competitive world, and if you try to enforce a single wage level, within 10 years the only businesses left in the US will be mom and pop corner stores. And that is not enough to sustain any sort of economy beyond hunter gatherer.

    3. Re:What are you smoking? by vandan · · Score: 1
      Remove the profit motive, and you remove the corporations, companies, and businesses of every size. No businesses means everything is run by the government. For reference, see communism, a failed ethos espoused only by academics that have little or no real world experience.


      Ha! Don't think so.

      Firstly, I'm not advocating shutting down any businesses. I'm simply saying that they have to follow rules. You know rules, right? Well corporations should have them to ... and they do ... but not enough of them.

      Secondly, your cheap shot at socialism doesn't make it any less relevent. Why exactly has it failed? Oh ... you're talking about USSR and Chine, right? They're both examples of state-run capitalism, which is very different from socialism. For an example of socialism, have a read about Venusuala. Even Spain is heading in the right direction these days.

      The first world is where it is today because it got itself organised faster than anyone else, and worked hard enough to ensure that they stayed that way.


      Not really. The western world got where they are by invading, stealing, oppressing and deal-cutting with ruthless dictators ( remember Saddam? ). And anyway you're missing my point. It's YOUR lack of rules that is encouraging companies to ignore labour in developed countries in favour of cheaper labour in 3rd world countries.

      I'm not advocating looting the poor for the benefit of the rich, but its a savagely competitive world, and if you try to enforce a single wage level, within 10 years the only businesses left in the US will be mom and pop corner stores.


      Actually, your ARE advocating looting the poor for the benefit of the rich. That's exactly what you mean when you say "we owe them nothing". And I fail to see what the problem is with enforcing a minimum wage. The US has a record balance of payments defecit ... you surely aren't saying that you're riding on the back of your exports, are you? Closing your doors to international trade might be just what the country needs to stop the soaring debt and let people pay for things they bought 20 years ago. Yes this last bit is sarcastic and not particularly realistic. But think about it anyway.

      Back to a minimum wage ... seriously. You simply have to make a choice. Either:

      - big business continue to exploit 3rd world labour, exporting all your jobs overseas and causing massive unemployment, or
      - a minimum wage is enforced and profit margins decrease for big business. You may even get the situation where businesses can't export to some countries because they're being undercut by people who employ slave labour. The correct thing to do ( and I know Yanks are always raving on about how 'correct' they are about everything ) is to pressure other countries to also enforce a minimum wage ( and the US has an impressive arrays of 'motivational tactics' ).
    4. Re:What are you smoking? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      I'm simply saying that they have to follow rules

      No you are talking about laws, which are different to rules, in that you can and will end up in prison if you break a law. I see no point in debating the relative virtues of Communism, talk about well trodden ground...

      The western world got where they are by invading, stealing, oppressing and deal-cutting

      And in order to do so, you have to be in a position of strength, which can only be attained by organising faster and working harder in the first place.

      That's exactly what you mean when you say "we owe them nothing"

      What I mean by that is that we owe them nothing for free - no money, no favours, no anything. We can offer an exchange of goods and services, same as anyone else. Just because they are poor, the first world is under NO OBLIGATION to help them.

      Actually, your ARE advocating looting the poor for the benefit of the rich
      big business continue to exploit 3rd world labour

      What on earth makes you think anyone is being exploited? Whatever about isolated sweatshops, Indian programmers make between 80 and 100 dollars a week. That in India will set you up with a big house, two cars, and a maid. Just because they are paid less numerically does not mean they are being paid any less fiscally.

      exporting all your jobs overseas

      Oh I know all about that, I lost my job four years ago to outsourcing. After a fruitless 12 month long search, I got sick of it and started my own (now highly successful) company. That involved learning new skills, teaching myself graphic design, and going at it without aid from anyone. My point? The situation is as bad as you make it.

      pressure other countries to also enforce a minimum wage

      To go back to my point about the Indian programmers above. Who on earth is going to pay for this mystical minimum wage? Certainly not the relative governments. Because they can barely afford US minimum wage for many high ranking government officials, never mind semi skilled labourers. So do you suggest that the US pays out to foreign governments for taxable labour in their own countries? Or do only people working for foreign corporations get minimum wage? I can see that turning out well. THAT is the problem with enforcing a minimum wage of US standards... I am standing on both sides of the line here, my own girlfriend is a Filipina, and it doesn't get more wretchedly third world than the Philippines, let me tell you. The fact is, she is very happy that foreign corporations come to her country to employ people, who again do very well by local standards. So, corporations are either "exploiting the third world countries" or "casting aside the local workforce". It can't be both.

  201. All I know is...A "Fan" of fans. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But again, you are correct. The shit was going to hit the fan regardless of who won in 2000. And if the shit's going to hit the fan again, it will do so in a few months regardless of who wins."

    I recommend investing in the fan industry.

    I also recommend NOT buying any used burned out brown fans.

  202. "self-employment" doesn't mean income by Baldrson · · Score: 1, Informative
    Speaking as someone who has been self employed for nearly all of his professional life, I can state unequivocally that this is a red herring.

    "Self employment" means I am ineligible for unemployment benefits even though I may be experiencing zero income for a year or more and paying more taxes than "other employed" people when I do make money.

    "Self employment" is the second to last resort of the socially sadistic. The last resort is to actually imprison people -- and that is exactly what the article points out is happening. This takes things from being socially sadistic to being sexually sadistic.

    Don't be surprised if one day you find yourself skinned and rolled in salt.

    1. Re:"self-employment" doesn't mean income by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      If you've been self employed for most of your career, have you formed an S-Corporation? I do a little freelancing on the side and hate the self-employment taxes and understand creating an S-Corp can help lower your tax burden if you earn enough (I don't - like I said it's just an after hours kind of thing).

      I think that after $15K, it would make sense to do that.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  203. some useful data--middle class "size" is falling by objwiz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Over 1967 to 2003 period, the percentage of families making less than $35,000 (in 2003 dollars) also fell from 52.8 percent of households to just 40.9 percent. In short, the ranks of the middle class could not have fallen because they became poor, because the ranks of the poor also fell.

    The truth is that poor and middle class households alike became better off, which increased the ranks of the "rich" (those making over $49,999 in 2003 dollars in the (as some media records it)) as a share of the population. In 1967, those with such an income constituted 24.9 percent of households. By 2003 this had increased to 44.1 percent. The inescapable conclusion is that the declining ranks of the middle class result from one thing only-more of them are now "rich."

    Census Data

  204. Re:OK, stop blaming/crediting presidents for jobs. by rush22 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, but it's not like Bush has done anything to help the situation that I'm aware of. (and his "tax cuts" didn't work. All the predictions of job creation that were made by his very own economists were wrong.)

  205. To be corrected by coming India-Pakistani nuke war by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    New Delhi weather forecast: 10,000 degrees centigrade with high winds at 4000 knots. Overall a cloudy but bright and cheerful day. Perhaps take a chance to get out of the call center, enhance your tan, get a little Vitamin D and even fly like Superman, unencumbered by silly personal transportation devices. Step outside and enjoy it while it lasts.

  206. There is no such thing as free trade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As to cite Noam Chomsky: "Free Trade" is neither free nor has it something to with trade.

    "Free Trade" implies free movement of money. Which causes those losses of jobs in the US and western european countries.

    Foreigner are normally not the problem for job loss. The problem is the free floating money which seeks out to grow not to bring wellfare to the people.

    Also the lack of real labour unions in the US for all workers results in
    - low employees income
    - hire and fire practices from companies

    If you want to change something, unite.

  207. Unemployment numbers analyzed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  208. All I know is... by Marc2k · · Score: 1

    It's "you're", for the contraction of "you are". Don't even get me started on F-in.

    --
    --- What
  209. So when will Kerry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Get Heinz to move their factories back here. Maybe that's his plan.

    I call Bullshit on John Kerry.

    1. Re:So when will Kerry by tsaler · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Heinz company is Republican-linked, has endorsed George W. Bush, and opposes John Kerry.

      If you recall, Senator Kerry's wife was originally married to Senator John Heinz, a Republican from Pennsylvania, but then he died in a plane crash and subsequently married John Kerry.

      Neither John nor Teresa have any real control over where Heinz' factories are. But, it is not uncommon to blame the Senator for all sorts of things that are not his fault or doing.

    2. Re:So when will Kerry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe it is republican linked, I don't know. Most companies give to both parties. But you'd think that if Senator Kerry and his wife feel so strongly, that they might try to get the company to move. 4% is still a lot of stock for a single shareholder. Have they asked Heinz to move? Maybe presented something to the board?

      Right... Didn't think so.

  210. H-1B Numbers Incorrect by renimar · · Score: 2, Informative

    The authour writes that 195,000 H-1Bs are available, and this was true for three years (FY 2001-2003). The current number has dropped back to the original amount, 65,000 annually according to the DHS:CIS (what replaced the INS).

    Confused with the TLAs? Me too!

    --
    In other news, Microsoft Windows users are now covered under the Americans with Disabilties Act...
    1. Re:H-1B Numbers Incorrect by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      In my article, I was referring to 2003. Another the problem of course is that the L-1 program has been expanded to take up the slack from present curtailment of H-1b quotas.

  211. Illegal Immigrants not necessary to U.S. economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Several studies have shown that, should all illegal immigration dry up, wages would rise only slightly. Some jobs would disappear. But for the most part, legal U.S. citizens would take up the slack, albeit for slightly higher wages on average. And most of the effect would be limited to California and Texas, two states currently hit hard by unemployment.

    The idea that there are jobs that legal U.S. citizens will never accept is wrong. But the idea that there are jobs that legal U.S. citizens will not accept at an extremely low wage is correct.

    Were all illegal immigration halted, then U.S. employers who wanted (usually low-paying) jobs filled could do so by increasing wages slightly. Of course those U.S. employers who could not or would not raise wages would not be able to hire.

  212. yeah, right, whatever. by khasim · · Score: 2, Informative

    "Neither do the political candiates whom I trust and believe in. This is your opinion, not a factual argument. Learn to keep the two separate."

    Hmmm, and who are those "political candidates" that you "trust and believe in"? Why do you not just name them instead of typing all of that?

    "Ahem. Did you not receive a tax cut? Thank you."

    Yep, from the Federal government. But it wasn't much of a tax cut and I have paid MORE in total taxes because Bush is running of the deficit and dumping the problems onto the states who then have to find ways to pay.

    Sorry, I'm paying higher taxes.

    "And what's more, your argument here is predicated on the "given" that the Government owns all of everything, and that tax cuts "cost" the Government in lost revenue. I don't know about you, but I want to keep *more* of the money I make. I want to "allow" the government to take only that which is necessary to provide what the Constitution says it should--and not a penny more."

    You need to look at the deficit then. Or don't you understand that BORROWED money needs to be paid back.

    Bush is just shifting the FEDERAL tax burden.

    "As far as the health of the economy goes, from what I can tell, the left is using historical figures and the right is using current trends."

    Current trends are based upon historical figures.

    The only difference is WHEN you start the chart.

    Republicans want to start the chart when the situation was WORSE so any improvement, no matter how slight, APPEARS to be an OVERALL improvement.

    Democrats want to start the chart when things were much BETTER so any improvement APPEARS to be an OVERALL loss.

    Personally, I'll take the Democrat's approach.

    "Bush is doing a "decent" job helping the economy to recover in a tough time, that's how I read it. The current trends are good, and that is well...good. Sorry, you can't disagree with this, it's an actual fact."

    Ummm, "good" is not a term usually associated with the word "fact". The term "good" is a judgement call.

    So it is NOT "an actual fact".

    "Whoah Nelly! Now you're going a bit off the deep end. I think you have stepped from debate into the realm of fiction. When you get back to earth, let me know and we can continue."

    You seem to be more than a bit mis-informed on that. It has been on his agenda. Even his own people admit that he was asking about it.

    "Sorry, they did find WMD's...hate to break it to ya."

    No they did not. Not in the respect that Bush was talking about. All they found were the remains from before the PREVIOUS war. You seem to be a bit out of touch with current events.

  213. Yes, Then Tell John Kerry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    To bring back some of the jobs that Heinz has exported. Let's see. Almost all of their factories are located outside of the United States. Thank you John Kerry. I'm sure you'll lead by example. Asshole.

  214. The first step in any recovery is..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The first step in any recovery is admitting you have a problem.

    GWB? Talk about being in denial.

  215. Some resource URLs on the economy (to save) by ChrisInSF · · Score: 2, Informative

    Job Crunch and Economics Inequality URLs - sorry if it is a little ragged, I'm just doing cut and paste...

    Reality Check: Going Nowhere: Workers' Wages Since the Mid-1970s http://www.tcf.org/Publications/EconomicsInequalit y/wasow_nowhere.pdf

    Economic Injustice for Most http://www.tcf.org/Publications/EconomicsInequalit y/cwlmorris813.pdf

    Bush's War on the Middle Class: A Special Report http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&n ame=ViewPrint&articleId=7635

    American Families at Risk http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&n ame=ViewPrint&articleId=7625

    Middle Class and Going Broke http://www.tcf.org/Publications/EconomicsInequalit y/warren_prospect.pdf

    Schools of Hard Knocks http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&n ame=ViewPrint&articleId=7637

    Why Governors Are Seeing Red: A New Reality Check http://www.tcf.org/Publications/EconomicsInequalit y/hall_redstate.pdf

    Reality Check- The New American Economy - A Rising Tide that Lifts Only Yachts http://www.tcf.org/Publications/EconomicsInequalit y/wasow_yachtrc.pdf

    Reality Check: Life and Debt - Why American Families are Borrowing to the Hilt http://www.tcf.org/Publications/EconomicsInequalit y/baker_debt.pdf

    Hidden Agenda- The convention trumpets compassion, but the real Bush agenda is clear: Use tax policy to starve the government even more.
    http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&n ame=ViewWeb&articleId=8449

    The Great Tax Shift-The Bush administration claims that the guiding principle for its fiscal policy has been "lower income taxes for all, with the greatest help for those most in need," as the White House Web site puts it. The reality is starkly different. http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&n ame=ViewPrint&articleId=7641

    RetirementSecurity http://www.tcf.org/Publications/RetirementSecurity /wasow_secure_ret.pdf

    Diverting the Social Security Debate

    Over the 75-year period for which the Social Security system's trustees are required to plan, Social Security in its present form will fall out of balance. We can restore balance with moderate changes to the program's revenues, its benefits, or the returns on its accumulated assets. But the longer the decision to do so is postponed, the greater the required adjustments.

    http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root&n ame=ViewPrint&articleId=7642



    Setting the Record Straight: Social Security Works for Latinos-

    Some sugge

  216. You've been listening to Rush Limbaugh again... by fmaxwell · · Score: 3, Informative

    Yes, Then Tell John Kerry to bring back some of the jobs that Heinz has exported. Let's see. Almost all of their factories are located outside of the United States. Thank you John Kerry. I'm sure you'll lead by example.

    What the f*ck is John Kerry supposed to do about a company that he does not own, that his wife does not own, and that she has no control over? Teresa Heinz Kerry does not own the H.J. Heinz Company and she has no involvement whatsoever with the management or operations of it. She owns less than 4% of the company's stock, which she acquired through her inheritance of the Heinz family trust. The trust sold most of its shares of Heinz stock back in 1995.

    Asshole.

    You are the asshole -- and an ignorant one at that, as you have just proven.

    1. Re:You've been listening to Rush Limbaugh again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you.. brainwashed scum

      People bash Bush because of his connections to business. Here's someone who really should have influence, who has a checkbook 10x bigger than Bush, and you just give him a pass. So much for critical thinking.

    2. Re:You've been listening to Rush Limbaugh again... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      Fuck you.. brainwashed scum

      HAHAHAHA! You really get pissed when your idiotic beliefs (e.g., John Kerry controls the H. J. Heinz Company) are exposed, don't you?

      People bash Bush because of his connections to business.

      No, people bash Bush because of his favors to big business (e.g., no-bid contracts worth millions of dollars given to big campaign contributors).

      Here's someone who really should have influence,

      Hopefully, after the next presidential inauguration, he will.

      who has a checkbook 10x bigger than Bush, and you just give him a pass.

      What the f*ck is John Kerry supposed to do about a company that he doesn't own, doesn't control, and isn't a corporate officer of? You're claiming that he should do something about H.J. Heinz employing overseas workers, so what is it that you want him to do?

      So much for critical thinking.

      Yep, you haven't employed any thus far. If you had, you would have done some research and found that 60% of H.J. Heinz sales come from foreign markets and it therefore operates overseas facilities to serve those markets. That allows Heinz to use fresh ingredients, adjust its recipes to local tastes, and deliver the products to market quickly and at a competitive price. Can you imagine what it would cost to ship ketchup from the U.S. to China? LOL! By the way, for the United States market, Heinz makes its ketchup in factories in Fremont, Ohio; Muscatine, Iowa; and Stockton, California.

      At this point, you either feel like an idiot or you are an even bigger one than I guessed.

    3. Re:You've been listening to Rush Limbaugh again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      major holders of HNZ

      4% is actually can be quite a large 'block' of voting power in that company. Much like the HP thing a few years ago. Founding 'family' members have QUITE a bit of sway. While in HP's case it did not work out well for them they made their case...

    4. Re:You've been listening to Rush Limbaugh again... by fmaxwell · · Score: 1

      4% is actually can be quite a large 'block' of voting power in that company.

      It's 4% of the vote. Not that useful.

      Besides, what is she supposed to do in this case? Demand that Heinz close down its plants overseas, bottle the ketchup in the U.S., and then ship it all over the world, practically guaranteeing that it will be prohibitively expensive and not fresh? Can you imagine the 65% of the mutual fund and institutional investors going along with such a nutty scheme?

      Bottom line:

      1. John Kerry doesn't control Heinz
      2. Theresa Kerry doesn't control Heinz
      3. Heinz is behaving ethically and responsibly by producing food products using fresh ingredients in the countries where they are sold
      4. It would harm consumers, shareholders, and Heinz employees were Heinz to move all of its production to the U.S. It would probably go bankrupt.
      5. No one has shown where the Kerrys have done anything wrong in relation to this

  217. This is funny by Shulai · · Score: 1

    "...Bad immigration policy-and bad trade deals are combining to decimate the middle class in America."

    Here (Argentina) most commies/lefties complaint against any chance of getting into FTAA (a larger version of NAFTA) claiming it is harmful to us, and exclusively beneficial to greedy, nasty Yankees.

    Of course, I'm talking about people with no objectiveness when trying to impose their ideas.

  218. a recession is a mini depression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    according to the The National Bureau of Economic Research; do some basic googling.

  219. Where have you been for the last 30 years? by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    Japan has been kicking the West's ass for 30 years in automation and they realize its a superior way to deal with aging populations. Deming's total quality management techniques. Destroying economies with immigration is not a good way to deal with an aging population.

    Blithering about how horrible it is for old people to be cared for by robots is so shallow as to be silly. There will still be children around even without immigration. The old people should be socially interacting with their descendants -- not with some imported grunt workers.

    The south lost the war between the states because of their reliance on low productivity human labor as compared to the northern states which were vigorously industrializing. The southern states were opposed to trade tariffs for all the same reasons modern slave holders are.

    1. Re:Where have you been for the last 30 years? by Proudrooster · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree, Japan makes good stuff. They are a hardworking bunch. In fact in Japan it is said that...

      Men live at the office and commute to home.

      However, efficienty has it's price and, that price is that the younger generation doesn't want to play the same game that their parents played. This group is known as "freeters." Women don't want to be trapped at home with kids and never see their husbands who work, drink, and sleep around.

      How would you like this as the typical workday?

      The people of Japan have given their all to the corporation and now Japan is quickly becoming an empty shell. When Work = Life seven days a week, the society suffers as evidenced in the suicide rate, teen prostitution rate (no one home watching the kids), and young people working part time instead of becoming corporate slave.

      If the Japenese are so smart, why don't they automate their jobs so can have a life and not have to work 76 hrs. a week? The Japanese have turned themselves into a race of human slaves which serve the mega-corporation. Ironically, this sounds a lot like the pre-civil war South. Only now, the corporation has replaced the slave owner and the Japanese people are literally slaves to the corporations for life! (In Japan you are hired for life and start on April 1).

      I do not envy the Japanese worker and do not want to adopt their lifestyle or culture. However, I do like sushi and wasabi.

    2. Re:Where have you been for the last 30 years? by Baldrson · · Score: 1
      First, you're presuming that there is some sort of inseparable link between the Japanese strategy of automation as replacement for importation of grunt workers, and the deficits of Japanese society as a whole.

      That said, I'll help you with your argument:

      If the Japenese are so smart, why don't they automate their jobs so can have a life and not have to work 76 hrs. a week?

      Perhaps it is because it is the only way they know how to automate their society. It's called "sweat equity". Now this isn't the only way to automate their society but its the only way they know how.

      The proper way to do it is to replace the tax system (taxing productivity such as income, capital gains, sales, value added) with a property rights reinsurance system which amounts to net asset taxation (perhaps adjusted for risk behaviors of owners). Since you can't do much to mitigate risk of being screwed over by single points of failure in international specialization, make sure you have tariffs set so you can mitigate those risks domestically. The revenues thereby raised are then disbursed as citizen dividends to drive the demand side in the correct direction for society. They'll start having more children very rapidly and they'll be paying a lot more attention to their rearing.

      Now, I'm not saying the fat cats will do anything this rational -- but thinking you can solve things by importing a slave class to replace your children is just crazy. If you are going to pursue some sort of insurrectionist agenda why not just kill the rich and reform the tax system to remove taxation on productivity?

  220. You've left out Litigation by NReitzel · · Score: 2, Interesting
    As a technical consultant that spends a lot of time doing business in Mexico, I thought I'd mention another reason for the loss of high paying manufacturing jobs in the United States, to wit, litigation.

    Self-serving lawyers are having a field day inventing class action suits against manufacturers, and it isn't just about the things that they manufacture. Distributors are on the list, also. Any company that makes or sells or promotes a product is in the line of fire for class action suits based upon the flimsiest of data. The litigators don't even have a need to make a good case; the majority of these cases are settled out of court because of the incredible costs of any possible defense.

    In the absense of statutory protection, no manufacturer in their right mind would establish a new plant in the United States. Doing so is just posting a target at which überrich law firms can take aim. Most of my consulting work in the last decade has been with companies from Mexico and Brazil, because their principals - U.S. Citizens - told me they could not take a chance on building soda machines in the US, because they might well be involved in a class action suit claiming that their machines facilitated obesity among their many clients.

    --

    Don't take life too seriously; it isn't permanent.

    1. Re:You've left out Litigation by randall_burns · · Score: 1
      I would check out the facts about the Mexican judiciary.

      1. In Mexico the federal judiciary employs 29,800 employees; in the much larger and richer United States the same number is 34,000.


      2. Mexico employs about 900 federal judges; in the United States it is 1700.


      3. The Mexican Supreme Court employs 3400 individuals; in the United States the corresponding number is 430.


      4. The Mexican federal judiciary employs more chauffeurs than judges.

    2. Re:You've left out Litigation by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      And the Mexican legal system is for sale!

      We've got a farmer around here with a Brazilian wife. In talking to them, it sounds like official bribery is cost of doing business in South America. Probably cheaper than litigation.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  221. Kerry's Official Policy ..... by King_TJ · · Score: 1

    Bleah.... I started reading that PDF file with his policy plans, and quite frankly, I stopped after page 2, because at least half of it is "pie in the sky" generalities that I'd expect anyone running for president to claim as their "goals".

    EG. His plan of "giving our nation independence from foreign oil". Umm, just how and in what timeframe does he plan to succeed in this goal? Just because you're the leader of a nation doesn't mean you can wave some type of magic wand and change the country's requirements for energy. This strikes me more as a "jab" at Bush, since Kerry knows he has business relationships with foreign oil interests. (If I were making these types of claims, I'd start listing line-item changes I wanted to implement to help achieve them, like incentives for construction of more nuclear power plants. But being a Democrat, his interests in pleasing the ecologists probably prevent him from going that far.)

    As far as the issue of job loss in America goes, I think we need to eliminate the H1B work visas completely, except in individual cases where documentation is provided showing that all reasonable attempts to hire within the country for the position were made. If the only "qualified applicants" are foreigners, then fine. But it shouldn't just be leveraged as a tool to underpay skilled workers.

    On the flip-side, I'd be all for opening up the borders to immigration, WITH the provision that under no circumstance do they receive any government benefits/welfare. If they come here, they're on their own, period. They weren't a U.S. citizen paying taxes into the system, so they shouldn't be able to collect any benefits back out of the system. If this were done, I think much of our immigration from Mexico problem would sort itself out on its own - and save us a lot of $'s on border patrols too.

    1. Re:Kerry's Official Policy ..... by randall_burns · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think what you are missing here is quite how massive a population shift this would mean. We'd be looking at 20-30% of the population of Mexico in the US(something similar to what we saw from Puerto Rico before social programs were expanded to allow folks to stay in PR).

      Part of the problem is that there are all kinds of "invisible" transfer programs. That large a movement of population would involve need to substantially expand US infrastructure-and it isn't obvious the businesses that employ these people really pay enough taxes to create that infrastructure.

      Even if you could adjust the tax rates accordingly, there would _still_ be the effect of using immigration rights as partial compensation of private employees.

    2. Re:Kerry's Official Policy ..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aha... and once all these people from Mexico get here... what do you think they are gonna do?

    3. Re:Kerry's Official Policy ..... by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      As another poster already said, what would 20% to 30% of Mexico's population do in the U.S. once they got here? If they aren't beneficiaries of any free hand-outs, that means they're going to have to find jobs. And if the jobs/infrastructure isn't here for them, then they're not going to be any better off than they were before they moved.

      If I was one of them, seeing this, I'd probably go right back to Mexico, where everyone around me still spoke my native language at least.

      At worst, a change in policy to "open borders but no welfare" would cause a temporary "glut" of immigrants -- but I wouldn't forsee drastic, permanent changes.

  222. Nice flamebait, period. My semi-rational response: by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
    FDR tried to alleviate the suffering caused by the depression's very high unemployment rate by instituting SS, and work programs like CCC and WPA that provided a public benefit.
    He also attempted to "solve" the problem of business failures by mandating higher prices, in the grossly mistaken idea that higher prices in isolation meant greater profits and thus more money to hire and pay employees. He completely forgot that higher prices meant that people had to have more money to buy the products, and a nation with 50% underemployment just did not have the prerequisites.

    It's now claimed that FDR's "helping" prevented the Depression from ending in 1937 instead of 1943. I've read that Britain came out of it sooner than the US because of less interventionist policy. For this reason as well as many others, I consider FDR a self-serving nincompoop and his "New Deal" to be a huge and on-going problem.

    If this country should be cursed with yet another George W. Bush term of office, do not expect that there will be any improvements in job growth, health care, international relations, or the war in Iraq.
    I've grown to expect idiotarian feel-goodism from both parties pandering to the nitwits who constitute their respective bases. I don't expect less from either; only the character changes a bit. If I could vote so that none of the current candidates won in November and they all had to go back and start over, I would consider it a good election. Instead, I am stuck with voting the rascal out as a lesson to the next rascal to try to be less idiotarian.
    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
  223. Grammar-Police Police by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

    While we are nit-picking...

    An apostrophe is also used when you contract the trailing G in a gerund. So it's "F-in'". :-D

    Muahahaha... e.g. I enjoy nit-pickin'.

    --
    Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
    1. Re:Grammar-Police Police by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Muahahaha... e.g. I enjoy nit-pickin'.

      In that position, "e.g." should have been followed by a comma. Enjoy.

    2. Re:Grammar-Police Police by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

      In that position, "e.g." should have been followed by a comma. Enjoy.

      Ouch! I should have known better. Touché! :-)

      --
      Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
  224. Flat tax with progressive rates by spitzak · · Score: 1

    Interesting that you proposed a flat tax with progressive rates. That is the first time I have seen that.

    I cannot figure out why so many people seem to think "getting rid of deductions" and "same percentage for everybody" are equivalent and cannot be seperated. It sure seems to me that you could eliminate all deductions and then still tax the money people make at different percentages depending on how much there is. Conversely you could keep all the complicated deductions you have right now and tax everybody the same percentage of what is left. It just seems to me the concepts are unrelated.

    Without arguing for or against any style of tax, can anybody explain why so many on both sides of the argument seem to think that "no deductions" and "same percentage for everybody" are equivalent and you cannot get one without the other?

  225. Immigration DOES work - I.T. does too..... by ChrisInSF · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It does work. It keeps wage costs down. But the real culprit is automation and I.T. It's enabled companies to dramatically cut their costs by automating an increasing number of jobs. In 20 or 30 years, only a very few people will be needed to sustain the same size economic output we have now. And those jobs will probably be in low wage countries. So we will have achieved a major goal of technology.

    Freeing people from drudge work!

    Note that I don't think that mass unemployment is a good thing. But corporations are in the business to make money, not spend it unnecessarily.

    They are not welfare programs...

    1. Re:Immigration DOES work - I.T. does too..... by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      The question is what kind of playing field should be presented here to companies. Should the US borrowing $0.5 Trillion/year to avoid restructuring the tax system? Should immigration be promoted as a corporate right instead of giving tax breaks to American families?

      I don't think automation is the problem per see-but when you have a bad tax system, you can create a situation in which it is _VERY_ difficult for folks to get into productive career track employment. Nader's tax proposal is IMHO quite interesting-but it hasn't been seriously enough examined.

  226. Lower wages != success by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    Don't be silly.

    You can reduce your wage costs to zero by hiring no one.

    Alternatively, you can just hire those who are willing to work for nothing.

    1. Re:Lower wages != success by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got that right.

      Plus I'm getting @(*#@! sick of seeing everything in both English and Spanish.

  227. profitable in 2 days.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    you'd be surprised how little time it takes to manufacture amphetamines....

    And of course, once you've got a load made, you're going to have to employ a few people to help you shift it..

  228. yep, you guys are intellectually bankrupt by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    If all you can do is call me Hitler, I guess that means you are intellectually bankrupt.

    What's the matter? Rush Limbaugh didn't give you a script for my arguments?

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:yep, you guys are intellectually bankrupt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well when someone goes and says that by advocating an opinion (and therefore, they are committing treason (something that is blatantly unconsitutional), what is a more appropriate response than "Sieg Heil"?

  229. And most businesses fail in the first 2 years. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you start a business, more often than not, it means working very hard for a year or so for less than nothing.

    People who start businesses that succeed do so because they see a good reason to start a business, not just because they can't get a job.

    1. Re:And most businesses fail in the first 2 years. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The failure rate totally depends on the type of business, who your mentors are, who your partners are, how much previous experience you have in business, etc.... People are willing to spend 16 years in school to learn how to become a good employee (and they think this is a success) and they are unwilling to take risks and learn business by doing it (and, yes, failing in it often). Wouldn't you consider spending 16 years in school to end up in JOBS that you hate a bigger failure than starting a business and losing say $1000-$10000?

    2. Re:And most businesses fail in the first 2 years. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why are you using logic? Networking? Free market? Sounds like fascism to me.

      Wouldn't you consider working hard, burdening your own decisions and life's continual challenges a bigger failure than being birthed and taken care of by the government with no effort necessary on your part?

      Such a small minded thinker you are.

      </sarcasm>

      These commercials about living in CrazyWorld would be better directed towards those folks that think the above is a great idea.

    3. Re:And most businesses fail in the first 2 years. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>Wouldn't you consider working hard, burdening your own decisions and life's continual challenges a bigger failure than being birthed and taken care of by the government with no effort necessary on your part?

      You're missing the 3rd option: Work smart
      not hard, effortlessly, in your business,
      and determine your financial future that way.

      That is my choice!

  230. College costs again by tepples · · Score: 1

    you have to consider another occupation

    The "IT audit" occupation appears to be related to accounting. How can I afford to take accounting courses and make payments on my existing student loans? And how can I be sure that the profession won't become full between when training begins and when training ends?

    1. Re:College costs again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you should not your poor career choices on others. You chose IT as a profession. Did you think about how many IT jobs there are in the area where you live?

      Also, have you tried non-standard IT positions? Many companies have IT staff that you would not normally think of like retail establishments. Many more would be willing to hire someone part time or to do consulting.

      I found myself out of a job in October of 2001 after the bubble collapsed. I found companies that need IT work done but could not afford a full-time person. Five of these companies found within a month allowed me to keep paying my mortgage. Several more and I was soon subcontracting work to other unemployed friends.

      I have since started a different company with a friend of mine and handed thos e clients over to 2 other friends who now make a decent living from them. You just have to be willing to do what it takes and keep oin looking.

    2. Re:College costs again by mjh · · Score: 1

      No. Financial audit is related to accounting. Audit in general is the process of identifying the effectiveness of controls as applied to risks. There are risks with IT. IT audit is the process of identifying how well those risks are controlled. You don't need to know accounting to be an IT auditor. You need to know IT and how to control the risks.

      Right now there's a huge demand for IT auditors. A new law (Sarbanes-Oxley) came about as a result of Enron, Tyco, etc. And it's placed a huge premium on IT auditors. In the month or so since I've been out of audit, I've received 10 phone calls for IT audit positions. So, there's clearly demand. And if you've got IT skills they're certainly translatable to IT audit. Checkout monster or hotjobs.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    3. Re:College costs again by TykeClone · · Score: 1
      The "IT audit" occupation appears to be related to accounting. How can I afford to take accounting courses and make payments on my existing student loans? And how can I be sure that the profession won't become full between when training begins and when training ends?

      You're kind of right. "Audit" is a synonym for "rectal exam." In this case, he's talking about an "IT rectal exam."

      Sarbanes-Oxley (and Gramm-Leach-Bliley for banks) has created a regulatory framework forcing companies to pay for outside and independent auditors to look over their IT infrastructure, policies, and procedures.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  231. OK it is an election year... by Bobzibub · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But that doesn't make it OK to blame foreingers for all your country's problems.

    The Labour force participation is dropping because baby boomers are retiring. This means that the generation younger will be paying a hefty bill for their retirement. Social Security will not withstand this problem--people do not have as many kids and the only way to "pay" for it is to have immigration. Grampa is not going to have the retirement he hopes for.

    Much of Europe has the same issue. Many of those countries have declining populations. How will the old be able to have a secure retirement? They won't without immigration.

    If you want to blame something for the unemployment rate, it is not sufficient to assume that every immigrant entering the US == one job lost to an American. It is simply a too simplistic view.

    To blame trade agreements for lost jobs is unfair. Every time a government negotiates a trade agreement they claim that they will train people with new skills for those who have lost their jobs. They should do it. This is the right policy, but how many governments have actually followed through with the promise? Not many.

    With free trade, those that have 3rd world skills will be offered 3rd world wages. Ask what your government has done to lower tuition lately?

    There is a classic economic discussion about economies: "Guns and butter" Essentially, the argument is that some societies place more emphasis on the Guns than Butter (or vice versa). These are just two products, but they have symbolic value: You folks spend more than the rest of the world combined on the military. Could it be better spent? Do you really want to be an empire, knowing the costs to your own society? One stealth bomber can pay for an awful lot of teachers. North Korea has made it's choices. They blame the evil south and the evil US oppresssors--bla bla bla. They have a militaristic outlook. Their people must eat bark and roots and possibly each other. Don't walk down their shoes, alright?

    To single out some arbitrary group, and then blame them for your ills, is a classic approach seen many times throughout history. It has never solved anything before, so why do they think it'll work this time? Sure it'll get one politician over another elected, but that doesn't really solve anything does it?

    For those that agree with the page's ideas: Instead of thinking about how to worsen someone else's situation, at least try to think about improving your own first.

    -b

    1. Re:OK it is an election year... by randall_burns · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First off, there are alternatives to immigration for handling workforce development:
      automation/robotics
      life extension technologies
      changing tax policies so folks can afford to
      have kids

      Not to mention significantly expanding the resource base through stuff like developing of the oceans(which is more immediate) and space development(Which is an interesting long term bet).

      Secondly, if you read my article, I don't blame immigrants for the problems. Most of them are just hard working folks trying to get ahead. I blame the politicians that made policy here because they made a very, very bad set of policies that don't encourage wealth creation and don't appropriately set a level playing field. Trade predicated on a half trillion dollar deficit is just plain not a good idea. Letting companies use immigration rights as corporate perks is just plain pork.

  232. Re:You are a TRAITOR and should be punished as suc by Russ+Nelson · · Score: 1

    You are a MORON and should be punished as such.

    Look, what you suggest makes no sense ... unless you're an idiot. Companies and countries are completely different things. See the minor difference in spelling? It makes all the difference in the world.

    It doesn't really matter which country a company is located in, just as it doesn't matter which state, county, town, village, street, or address a company is located at.
    -russ

    --
    Don't piss off The Angry Economist
  233. Re:Kerry's Plans Are Simple! Go Read Yourself! by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 3, Insightful
    someone had to bring up the flip-flopping

    You're talking about Bush, right? I've never seen somebody who could so completely change their position & pretend like they've always thought that way. I'm not sure what you mean about his "vision" - about the only thing I think he's been consistent on is the "us" vs "them" mentality - all of his other messages seem to change depending on whatever his political handlers are telling him to say at any given moment.

    Kerry's not a simple person (maybe unlike Bush). Based on what I've read about him, he seems like the type of guy who analyzes all sides of an issue before making a decision about what to do - and what he decides to do may not be the obvious thing that someone else who hasn't thought about the problem as much would have picked.

    You can probably guess who I think is better suited to be a world leader. :-) I have no idea why so many people in the American public think Bush is a good leader. I keep having flashbacks to the popularity-contests called student government in high school. Bush is portrayed on TV as a personable-if-somewhat-slow guy, while Kerry seems to be portrayed as some kind of unlikable ivory-tower "Lurch" character. It depresses me to know that many of my fellow Americans don't pick their leaders based on demonstrated merit (or reject them based on demonstrated incompetence).

  234. I will say this... by Hethcox · · Score: 1

    In my neck of the woods I've been recruiting software engineers for several months and found slim pickings. Good recent grads are around, but senior people have become much more difficult to find. The way I see it, my good news anecdote is just as good as other people's bad news ancedotes.

    1. Re:I will say this... by TykeClone · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Just out of curiosity, where are you at? I'm not in the market but have a few friends who might be.

      --
      A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  235. So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article is factual and well written. What's your problem? That you *disagree* with him? Look, current immigration policy is broken. It doesn't work. Bottom line is it needs to be fixed.

    In fact, we *were* better off with lower immigration quotas. We had higher growth rates and higher relative wages. Just because somebody is white doesn't mean they are wrong. Furthermore, what's wrong with cultural pride. I hate to break it to you, but America is still 83% or so European descent. We are a "white country".

    What's wrong with that? Do you hate whites? Are you a racist?

    I mean, C'mon, when every other ethnic group in this country takes pride in their community, can't white people do it to? Sure nuts like the Klan are stupid but how is VaDare different that say the American Israeli Political Action Committee or the United Negro College Fund?

    Immigration Reform is a legitmate issue and their article comes less from a "race perspective" than a "class perspective".

    The middle class, regardless or race and despite the fact that it is overwhelmingly white, needs to stand up for itself.

  236. name calling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, everyone that thinks differently than you is not "the KKK".

    also ... Sorry, I'm a "liberal" and I agree with the article.

  237. what about it? by jeif1k · · Score: 1

    If US corporations don't outsource, those people in those nations will be doing the same jobs for foreign corporations. If US corporations outsource to them, at least some of the money comes back to the US.

  238. Re:some useful data--middle class "size" is fallin by militiaMan · · Score: 1

    You need to subtract inflation idiot. www.bls.gov Incomes have gone down for the last 35 of 36 years when adjusted for inflation. 1984 is the odd year.

  239. Man, don't you just HATE this economy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While The Poodle continues to bark about the sagging economy, the net loss of jobs and accuse President Bush of the excuse presidency, the economy in the United States continues to boom. First up, let's look at the unemployment rate, currently at a very low 5.4%. That's lower than the average rate of the 1970's, 1980's and 1990's. That's also lower than it was when Bill Clinton was re-elected over Bob Dole in 1996. Funny...the media never found unemployment high then, yet they're talking about 5.4% not being very low. Media bias at its finest.

    Another telling statistic is New York's unemployment. It is now back at it's pre-9/11 levels, at 6.7%. That's down from July's 7.5% and 8.4% last year. In the state hardest hit by the terrorist attacks, the economy is booming. Home ownership is at record levels too, by the way. What else is it going to take for the media and the Democrats to admit the economy is booming? The answer is that they'll never admit the economy is improving. It just ain't in them.

    Let's review:

    * Unemployment is lower than the average of the last 30 years
    * Unemployment in New York is back to pre-9/11 levels
    * Home ownership is at record levels
    * U.S. household wealth is at record levels

    So what's the problem? Only a dishonest partisan hack determined to defeat the president for re-election could argue that the economy is anything less than robust.

    1. Re:Man, don't you just HATE this economy? by MikeySquid · · Score: 1

      Easy to say if you're working. After all, we all know that statistics tell the whole story, right? If qualified people, who were replace by H!B visa workers can't find a job it MUST be their own fault, right? And there's no such thing as chronic, and therefor unreported, unemployment, right?

      Conservatives suck.

    2. Re:Man, don't you just HATE this economy? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Please address the points in the article.

      Unemployment isn't a good measure of joblessness anymore. Home ownership doesn't mean much-you need to look at equity levels. Wealth? Look at median levels of wealth-and ask how is wealth increasing relative to population.

  240. Flat tax will be 45-60% - its a BIG MISTAKE by Christ0ph · · Score: 1

    There is an analysis of the so-called "flat tax" at Citizens for Tax justice (www.ctj.org)

    http://www.itepnet.org/sale0904.pdf

    The Economic Policy Instuitute (http://www.epinet.org) has also analyzed the consumption tax.

    Basically, in order to preserve the current level of government spending, it would need to be 45-60% It would represent a huge tax cut for the rich, since they consume a much smaller percentage of their income. It would shift most of the tax burden to the middle class.

    Its a huge mistake..

    The Republicans hidden agenda is to decimate the middle class..

    See this article:
    Hidden Agenda- The convention trumpets compassion, but the real Bush agenda is clear: Use tax policy to starve the government even more.

    http://www.prospect.org/web/page.ww?section=root &n ame=ViewWeb&articleId=8449

  241. Re:Illegal Immigrants not necessary to U.S. econom by gorbachev · · Score: 1

    So you're saying the us middle class would pick grapes at winerys? Or clean tables at McDonalds? Or clean toilets in bus stops?

    If so, I think someone's definition of middle class is way off.

    --
    In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
  242. Have we really lost jobs under Bush? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    John Kerry is responding to a slide in his poll numbers by stepping up the rhetoric against George Bush on issues economic. Kerry is saying that Bush has created "more excuses than jobs." Very clever. Kerry is now calling the last four years the "Excuse presidency."

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics produces two separate jobs reports. One is called the Establishment Survey, the other is the Household Survey [pdf]. These two surveys use different methodologies in measuring the number of people working and the rate of job growth or job loss. The Establishment Survey questions a set list of established businesses every month on their employment numbers. The Household Survey questions thousands of American households to see if household members are working, not working, looking for jobs, retired, etc.

    There is a fairly big problem with the Establishment Survey. Since the list of businesses canvassed every month for this survey is fairly static, any new businesses out there that have started in the last year or so won't be included. Let's say you have a mythical town with three employers. One large manufacturing plant that employs 1000 people, and two small businesses that have a combined employment of 60. The large manufacturing facility has been in operation for 20 years and is a part of the government's monthly Establishment Survey. The two small businesses were only formed late last year and are not on the Establishment Survey. So ... let's say that in August the plant dismisses 5 people, but the small businesses hire those five people and about five more. Additionally, four other residents have started businesses from their homes. The Establishment Survey would show a net job loss in this town of five jobs in the September report. The Household Survey, on the other hand, would show a net job increase of nine jobs.

    Remember now, politicians generally like to use government statistics to prove the need for more government or to prove that their political foes are doing a bad job. This means, of course, that the Democrats and the Kerry campaign will eagerly point to the Establishment Survey to prove that George Bush is losing jobs, not creating them.

    By now I would bet that you're just screaming for me to get to the point. What figures do we get from the latest Household Survey?

    Hold on ... let's go back to Kerry for a moment. Kerry says that Bush is the first president in 72 years to record a net loss of jobs during his term. Kerry puts that number at 900,000 jobs. NOW is the time to compare the two survey totals.

    On September 3rd the Bureau of Labor Statistics published it's numbers. The Establishment Survey showed that 131.5 million people were employed in non-farm jobs during August. The Household Survey showed a total employment figure of 138.7 million. That's a difference of 8.2 million jobs ... 8.2 million more Americans actually working than the numbers Kerry cites. That sort of wipes out Kerry's 900,000 job loss, don't you think?

    Come on, folks. How in the world can you ignore small businesses when you report job numbers? Most of the jobs in this country are in small businesses, the very businesses that can take up to two years to register on the government's Establishment Survey. Job growth numbers in the small business private sector lag for a year or more behind than job numbers in large employers. In other words ... the numbers Kerry is relying on are meaningless in the short term.

    One more thing ... Bush inherited an economic recession that began under Bill Clinton --- then you had the dot-com bust and the terrorist attacks of 9/11. By any measure that's a tough hand to play. I wonder how The Soufflé would have performed?

    1. Re:Have we really lost jobs under Bush? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Read the article please. Much of what you talk about is explicity covered there.

  243. Strawman Alert! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    You wrote:

    Even by usual Slashdot standards, it's stunning that the above crap actually got modded up.


    Nice tone!



    His argument, explicitly spelled out, is that he buys foreign goods because they are cheaper than American goods and that if he bought American goods he would have less money for the rent and therefore, he argues, the government should FORCE him (and you and me and everyone else) to pay higher prices for all goods, bringing the foreign ones at least up to the price of the American ones he's unwilling to pay for, and thus to have less money to pay the rent. And someone somewhere bought into this?



    As Joe EveryAmerican, my real wages have been dropping for decades, in large part because of globalization, immigration, paltry minimum wage raises and anti-union laws. I need to buy carefully to survive and to give my childrn the best chance to survive. If I buy American product A at cost $N, I have $K-N left over to survive and leave to my children, and everyone else buys foreign product B at cost $N/2, they have $K-N/2 left over. They are their children will outcompete me for living space (they get the good neighborhood, while me and my children get the bad neighborhood).

    What my govt should do is not place me in such a harsh competitive environment. That is what I pay them to do--to provide for my General Welfare, and provide my and my children with the best possible quality of life.



    Leaving asside the morality of forcing foreigners


    They and their fellow citizens pay their govt to look out for them, and I and my fellow citizens pay our govt to look out for us. All of us, not just the rich and the corporations. When my govt places the welfare of foreigners ahead of my own, they commit treason.


    you actually want the government to FORCE you to pay higher prices because it's not a choice you'd make on your own? This is insanity.


    No, I pay my govt to place me in the best position. Making me compete against low wages foreigners is treason.
    What if I owned a business and hired a manager who put the interests of competing businesses ahead of my own business?

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:Strawman Alert! by big+tex · · Score: 1

      Take this statement:
      If I buy American product A at cost $N, I have $K-N left over to survive and leave to my children, ...[whining cut]... bad neighborhood).
      Combine with this statement:
      I and my fellow citizens pay our govt to look out for us
      and this:
      No, I pay my govt to place me in the best position. Making me compete against low wages foreigners is treason.

      And you get a false sense of entitlement.
      The government owes you nothing. Your taxes are not paid to help you, individually or specifically, they are paid to help us.

      Really, do you actually believe that just by being American you have the right to succeed?
      Malc responded to another of your posts with an idea that I'm going to expound on, and then I will come to a fundamental truth of capitalism. (hold on kids! keep your hands and feet inside the cluetrain!)
      Malc reminded us about one of the many dangers of import tariffs - retaliatory import tariffs by other countries, and the rebounding ramifications that trade policy can have.

      Now, you seem to think of this whole globalization business as some kind of war, what with the shouts for treason, protection, mommy, and so on. Funny thing about war is that the ones who get hurt aren't the ones raising holy hell on either side, it's the poor sons of bitches in the trenches. With this in mind, back to my example with the cranes. (I like cranes, so we're going to keep talking about it.)

      One one side, we have a team of machinists, weldors, and engineers from Wisconsin. Good guys, no doubt, even if they drink watery beer and say 'pop' instead of soda or coke.
      On the other side, we have a team of machinists, weldors, and engineers from Duseldorf. Good guys, no doubt, even if they eat too much sausage and live near France.
      I'm only buying one crane. This unit costs several million dollars, so there's quite a few manhours involved, and therefore a few jobs.
      You would have me buy the Manitowoc, since they are your fellow Oppressed American Workers, and our government, in it's infinite wisdom and compasion, tariffs the Liebherr so badly that it is uneconomical to do so.
      Left to my own devices, I would buy the Liebherr since it is a better piece of equipment for my money.

      One way or the other, some poor bastard is not getting the job, and the only difference is whether he's an American bastard or a German bastard.
      Now, all this said- Why should I give the jobs to the guys in Wisconsin? Because they are nice folks and speak English?

      Here's that fundamental truth that I was getting at:
      You have an equal right to fail or succeed.
      Here's a fun corollary:
      Propping up your sorry ass hurts someone else.

      --
      I think I need a new sig here.
  244. history repeating itself by jeif1k · · Score: 1

    That's just history repeating itself. Look at Germany in the 1930's. Who got the extreme right wing into power? Two groups. On the one hand were corporations, who believed they could profit handsomely, on the other hand were the out-of-work, who were lured in by notions of "national pride", history, family values, Christian heritage, tariffs, promises of jobs, etc. The US isn't quite as extreme (yet?), but the psychology and social dynamics are analogous.

  245. 527 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So where is Slashdot's 527 paperwork?

    1. Re:527 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it's getting to the point that /. is a 24/7 advertisement for the Democrats. Only about one in a hundred who read /. know shit about economics. Hell, what do you expect a techno-geek to know about economics? Most were educated in government schools, so I'll forgive them a little bit.

  246. Give Bush a break by dbIII · · Score: 1

    He makes Nixon look good - and people are looking back at the golden years of Reagan, where the way to deal with terrorists was to give them billions in cold hard cash (US hostages in Iran, Iran-Contra arms deal, US taxpayer funding for Osama bin Laden etc.)

  247. Japan has had no depression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    "Japan was depressed economy just a few years ago."

    The people who say this are always those who know nothing about Japan. Sure, the stock market bubble collapsed, and the Keynesian indicators American economists look at pointed to trouble.

    The thing is, none of the normal Japanese people noticed. I have plenty of Japanese friends, and their standard of living remained higher than ours the entire time. There's never been significant unemployment; there are always 11 jobs for every 10 applicants.

    A Japanese friend of mine came to Canada for a few years to study music. When she decided to move back and get a job, we asked her how long she thought it would take. She looked surprised. "I'll get one the same day I look, of course!" And she did, too.

    Talk of a Japanese recession is just FUD from American economists who don't want you know how bad things actually are in the US.

    1. Re:Japan has had no depression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The hell!? How on fucking Earth did this get modded informative?

      My mother is Japanese, and I have personally talked with at least a dozen family members over there in Japan. The fact is many parks are flooded with homeless people in record numbers, salaries are being slashed faster than the falling prices and jobs beyond McDonalds are very hard to find. Japanese people will rarely admit any of this to foreigners, but every day they discuss on television about the massive corruption between the government and corporations (yes, it is worse than USA).

  248. What *other* political parties think by Randym · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Libertarians: Start your own business. *Create* your own job, instead of waiting for someone else to do it.

    Greens: Organize your neighbors and start sustainable cooperatives, especially around "life necessities" (food, shelter, health care, education). Undercut the corporate monopolies.

    These are both viable alternatives. However, they both require determination, optimism, personal responsibility and hard work; therefore, they won't be popular with people who were brought up in an educational system that encouraged them to be passive workers, rather than active owners.

    --
    DNA is a Turing machine. You, however, being dynamic and emergent, are not.
  249. RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The whole point is that the Democrats are also in denial.

  250. Profit margin by dbcad7 · · Score: 1
    I watched the employee orientaion video for a retail chain (un-named).. .. In this video, it made clear that this was a buisness, and that the profit margin of "gndkjgn" corporation (our supplier for this chain) was 20 percent.

    I, as a person, would love to have such a clear cut standard for my wage !

    Formula..... (Rent + Utils + Food + gasoline)*1.337 = wage

    regards

    dbcad7

    --
    waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
  251. Progressive view of Milton Friedman is uneducated by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 4, Informative

    I love how in TFA, they say (under " Professional "Guest Workers.""):

    "Since the employer pays a token fee for a guest worker visa, the employer is essentially using the public resource of immigration rights as a partial compensation--a practice even pro-business economists like Milton Friedman admit is a de facto corporate "subsidy"."

    Friedman is *not* a "pro-business" economist. He is a pro-free-market economist -- and there is a difference. Pro-business economists prefer policy that explicitly favors businesses. Pro-free-market economists favor policy (or more-often, a deliberate lack of policy) that favors a freer, more-open marketplace, or the elimination of policies which oppose the goal of a free-market -- even if that more-open marketplace comes at the expense of the desires of some businesses.

    Friedman would support fewer regulations on the financial industry, for instance. Yet, having worked in a big financial firm myself (which shall remain nameless), some of these companies actually support increased regulation -- because they know it benefits their cause of making a profit. In this way, Friedman could be alternately described as anti-business -- or, more-correctly, a neutral onlooker who prefers a free-market to outright pro-business policies.

    Not that I would expect the illiterates of free-market economics (i.e. "progressives" or "socialists" or "Greens" or whatever they're calling themselves this week) to actually understand the difference between "markets" and "business"...

  252. DON'T MOD PARENT UP by hasdikarlsam · · Score: 1

    For crying out loud. :P

  253. http://www.pbs.org/now/printable/transcript248_ful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.pbs.org/now/printable/transcript248_ful l_print.html

    Transcript, December 26, 2003

    ANNOUNCER: Tonight on NOW WITH BILL MOYERS...

    Its soaring belfry is a New York landmark. Its twenty-ton bells a resounding summons. And its leader is a man with a mission.

    FORBES: And I thought Eugene Ormandy and Tchaikovsky had somehow conspired because I thought I heard, "Jim Forbes, don't you know I have called you? Jim Forbes, don't you know I have called you? Yes, oh yes, I have called you..."

    ANNOUNCER: From historic Riverside Church, James Forbes, Jr. calls for all faiths to hear each other across the divide of intolerance.

    FORBES: It does not matter which of the traditions you come from. In those traditions there is a spiritual reserve, made especially for times like these.

    ANNOUNCER: And challenges America and America's leaders to get with it.

    FORBES: Poverty is a weapon of mass destruction.

    ANNOUNCER: Tonight, a special edition of NOW. James Forbes, Jr., Speaking to Power.

    All that tonight on NOW WITH BILL MOYERS, the weekly newsmagazine from PBS.

    ANNOUNCER: From our studios in New York, Bill Moyers.

    MOYERS: Welcome to NOW. This, for Christians, is the season to celebrate the birth of Jesus with "Peace on earth, goodwill to all." Elusive goals, even among Christians themselves. Almost daily we're reminded that people who pray to the same God and read the same scripture come to very different conclusions about what to value and how to vote.

    Right now American Christians are sharply divided over a critical social, political, and theological challenge -- how to live with religious diversity in an increasingly pluralistic and polarized world. On his recent visit to London, President Bush -- sho is an evangelical Christian -- said he believes Christians and Muslims 'worship the same God.' That brought immediate rebuke from some of his strongest supporters.

    One leader of the largest American protestant denomination said, "The President is wrong," and reminded him that he is commander-in-chief, not theologian-in-chief. Get used to this. Eighty percent of Americans -- four out of five -- say they are Christians. So how they come down on the big issues affects us all.

    Over the past twenty years, conservative and fundamentalist Christians have been front and center in politics and the media; I have myself done more than a score of documentaries and reports on the Religious Right. But faith, like democracy, wears many faces. And in this broadcast, you're about to meet a man who uses the same language of faith as the Religious Right, but sees democracy differently. You will be hearing a lot from him in the years ahead. This special edition of NOW was produced by Kathleen Hughes.

    MOYERS: Within days of the terrorist attack of 9/11, the American religious right took to the airwaves. The Reverend Jerry Fallwell said it could have been God's judgment on America.

    JERRY FALWELL: I really believe that the pagans, and the abortionists, and the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians, the ACLU, People for the American Way -- all of them who have tried to secularize America -- I point the finger in their face and say, "You helped this happen."

    MOYERS: In the months ahead one conservative Christian preacher after another denounced Islam as an impostor faith.

    JERRY VINES: Ladies and gentleman, all religions are not equally true. All religions are not the same.

    MOYERS: The founder of the Christian Coalition warned President Bush not to be duped.

    PAT ROBERTSON: I've taken issue with our esteemed President in regard to his stand in saying that Islam is a peaceful religion...it's just not.

    MOYERS: A prominent right wing pundit called for a holy war on Muslims. She wrote, "We should invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity."

    MOYERS: Despite their powerful megaphone in the press, those angry voices on the right di

  254. Re:some useful data--middle class "size" is fallin by TykeClone · · Score: 1

    Make $50K as a household and you're rich?

    --
    A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  255. Yes it does. by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    Of course government pays out settlements when things go wrong. The guys who go off to die around the world aren't the guys who owned the World Trade Center for example, but the government did step in and act as reinsurer of last resort not only in response to that event but for the reinsurance industry itself.

    The government steps in and bails out the big boys all the time.

  256. Unfortunately... by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

    I'm afraid that you'd get plenty of press over how "confusing" the ballot would be, given what happened in Florida. I mean, some people can't even figure out which candidate they like best, let alone which they'd prefer over which other candidates.

    1. Re:Unfortunately... by blackcoot · · Score: 1

      hrm... something occurred to me. instead of having people vote for candidates, they vote on issues (this should be fairly simple to do) and then based on which positions they've taken on these issues (and the degree to which they're important to said voters) and then rank the candidates. of course, this could get to be very sticky, but it's an improvement...

  257. http://www.pbs.org/now/printable/transcript239_ful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.pbs.org/now/printable/transcript239_ful l_print.html
    Transcript, October 24, 2003

    ANNOUNCER: Tonight on NOW WITH BILL MOYERS: middle class workers in America losing their way of life.

    Corporations push wages that used to support a family below the poverty line. In Wisconsin, a town fights back.

    BUBOLZ: To go and work 40 hours and feel productive, but yet not be able to give yourself what you need, that's insane.

    ANNOUNCER: And a clarion call for religious faiths to unite in one prophetic voice.

    HOUGH: All of us in the Abrahamic traditions who share this conviction about care for the least fortunate should simply make some kind of public declaration that enough is enough.

    ANNOUNCER: Theologian Joseph Hough. A Bill Moyers interview.

    And in Afghanistan, the Taliban is gone, but are things any better for women?

    CHAYES: Only 50% of families even now allow their girls to go to school.

    ANNOUNCER: All that tonight on NOW WITH BILL MOYERS, the weekly newsmagazine from PBS.

    ANNOUNCER: From our studios in New York, Bill Moyers.

    MOYERS: Welcome to NOW. We return tonight to one of the most important beats on this program: what's happening to the American workplace.

    It's astonishing, but there are tens of millions of fully employed people working even longer hours than ever, who, when inflation is taken into account, earn less money than they received 30 years ago.

    Take a look at these figures: in 1973, workers in the private sector were paid an average $9.08 an hour. Today in real wages, they are paid $8.33 per hour. The liberal Economic Policy Institute says one in four workers makes under $19,000 a year. So many people who get up and go to work every day still cannot meet a family's basic needs.

    Across the country big corporations are trying to push wages even lower, but in Jefferson, Wisconsin, some workers and their neighbors are fighting back. Here's our report from correspondent Sylvia Chase and producer Peter Meryash.

    CHASE: American workers ... who believe they are fighting for their way of life.

    For generations, their parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles, sisters and brothers have earned their living on the other side of that fence at a plant that hasn't known a strike in all its 124 years of operation...until now.

    RICE: You folks have done something other people in this country have failed to do, and that's stand up and fight for the rights of working men and women. I'm so proud of you.

    CHASE: It's a fight to hang onto the kinds of jobs that have sustained middle class communities across America, with good health benefits, pension plans and even profit-sharing.

    RICE: There truly is a war going on. That war is not in Iraq. That war is right here in Jefferson, Wisconsin. That war is right here in America. That war is a war on working people.

    CHASE: These working people make a product most everybody knows...the pepperoni found on some of America's most popular pizzas. And that sausage is at the center of their struggle against another familiar name: Tyson Foods, a FORTUNE 500 company that bought the Jefferson plant in 2001.

    SHULMAN: Here in Jefferson, the question is whether we're gonna let Tyson take jobs that take care of families, and make them jobs that are really poverty jobs.

    CHASE: Beth Shulman. Her book, THE BETRAYAL OF WORK, makes the case that middle-income American workers are losing ground.

    SHULMAN: That issue is the issue I think facing America in the 21st century. Whether or not we're gonna have an economy in which we have middle incomes, middle class, where we have healthy communities, where we have healthy families.

    BUBOLZ: I grew up in Jefferson. I lived here all my life.

    CHASE: Striker Kurt Bubolz, father of three.

    BUBOLZ: And it was always a good community, you know? Middle-class. Safe. Good schools. A good place to raise your fami

  258. Damn, whatever happened to just being humane? by javabandit · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The underlying issue here is that a country should care for its people who are indigent, poverty-stricken, ill, weak, and downtrodden. Its a matter of humanity. Period. Forget everything else.

    I can't believe I'm reading posts about flat taxes and people saying that they are fair. Does $6,000 mean more to a person making $30,000 a year versus $60,000 for someone making $300,000? OF COURSE. There's nothing "FAIR" (whatever that means) about a rich guy paying the same percentage as a poor guy. Whoever said that FAIR means that everything is equal all the time? That is totally moronic. Being humane and caring for the downtrodden isn't some magic EQUATION. It is a state of mind. An attitude. A principle.

    I simply can't believe that people in the USA, my own country, are still fighting to see how we can take care of these issues without sacrificing anything out of our own lives.

    I don't care how it gets done. Taxes. Charity. Donations. Faith-based organizations.

    Get over your pocketbook and your ego and take care of your country for once.

    1. Re:Damn, whatever happened to just being humane? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Part of what I was trying to develop here: first the government should endeavor to do no harm to its citizens. I honestly feel that trade and immigration policy (And for that matter tax policy) have done a lot of harm to a lot of people in the US. I hope that harm can be undone without hurting immigrants or their countrymen.

    2. Re:Damn, whatever happened to just being humane? by javabandit · · Score: 1

      I see what you are getting at, Randall, but I don't think you hit at the heart of the issue. The whole problem isn't any policy. The problem is greed and selfishness. This country is simply not willing to take the initiative to do right by its lower class citizens.

      Policies are driven by *principles*. And policies always benefit someone at the sacrifice of another. The questions are... who benefits? Who sacrifices? Whose best interest was the policy serving?

      Again, I understand what you are saying, but getting at the MOTIVE of a policy is probably a much more compelling argument than arguing interpretation of numbers. Especially when dealing with issues of humanity and of the heart.

    3. Re:Damn, whatever happened to just being humane? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Well, the piece was basically a piece of policy analysis. Now, I would agree that American has developed a certain "mean spirited" tendency towards those on the low end of the economic scale. That is actually something that I talk about with some of the other vdare contributors-and something that we tend to have a difference of opinion on(the main thing that we agree on is that US immigration policy has some serious problems).

      Now I disagree that the problem can be "solved" religiously or politically-at best I would expect that to give us some time to deal with te problem. I think that a real solution is going to have to involve the creation of real frontiers. When the world is full, there _will_ be a tendency to devalue more people. There is a need to develop consciousness that there are a _lot_ of resources available to humans.

  259. Don't be so negative! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "All right! Really? So by Tuesday I'll have a nice profitable business?"

    Don't be so negative... and so ambitious all at once.

    You can do it. I can show you how. Now you might not like the size of the profits at first, but profits you can have.

    A Nony Mouse

  260. My Story - A Navy Veteran by rm3friskerFTN · · Score: 1
    As a nine-year navy veteran (college physics dropout later finishing a BS Physics), after six-years at the same international semiconductor company in San Diego, having survived six layoffs in six years (3 Clinton, 3 Bush) I recently moved onward and upward to a different international semiconductor company in Silicon Valley. Also accumulated three (?) formal HR letters saying I'm a bad boy for not tolerating idiots ;-);-);-)

    Pay Raise, Promotion, Relocation Package, Sign-on Bonus, etc ... Furthermore, I claim the cost-of-living in Silicon Valley is LESS-EXPENSIVE than San Diego ... rent, gas, electricity, burritos, coffee, etc.

    So far so good, I have survived every RIF, layoff, down-turn, etc thus far. If I do get 'whacked' then I am prepared for at least one-year of unemployment, psuedo-vacation, Pacific Crest Trail, renewal, etc

    Having watched my father loose his job during the Carter Years, never regaining employment due to his age, being the first child in the family to receive college financial aid, I learned early on that if you want a job then YOU have to "hustle" ... YOU have to "work for it" ... YOU have to "prepare for it" ... YOU have to be ready financially/emotionally/physically to be unemployed also ... in otherwords YOU have to take charge of your own destiny.

    Advice ... always be learning something new ... always save money (coins and dollar bills add up very very quickly) ... avoid debt ... avoid buying beer/wine/booze/tobacco/drugs (the money thing again although an occaisional high-end craft beer is OK ;-) ... be willing to relocate ... have reasonable salary/wage expectations - a high school diploma and reading "HTML 4 Dummies" does not entitle you to a six-figure salary ;-);-);-)

    Overall, stop your whining and start learning.
    --
    "Seared in My Memory - Reclaiming stolen honor this election year."

    --

    I believe Juanita

    1. Re:My Story - A Navy Veteran by Cernst77 · · Score: 1

      RE: not indulging in beer/wine/booze/tobacco/drugs In your opinion it going to be necessary to completely forgo any chemical enjoyment to get out of the "Ive been out of IT for so long my skills are rusty and now I can only land a pizza delivery job" rut? a good smoke and some beer go along way to making you forget how much tougher the world is - at least temporarily.

  261. Re:Progressive view of Milton Friedman is uneducat by randall_burns · · Score: 1

    Milton Friedman is pro-business in that he would like to see a much larger portion of economic activity carried out in the private sector instead of the public sector. He would like the market to sort out how that is divided between large and small businesses-and tend to feel that can be done with minimal regulation or tweaking of tax policy(something that I tend to disagree with him on- I think his estimates of monopoly impact on the economy are way too low).

  262. Oops, typo there by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1

    hehe:

    s/their are not enough/there are not enough/

    --
    Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
  263. With zero experience by tepples · · Score: 1

    You chose IT as a profession. Did you think about how many IT jobs there are in the area where you live?

    I chose a career and enrolled in a four-year college program in August 1999, before there was any concept of a bubble bursting. And with my disability, I don't know what else I could do well.

    Also, have you tried non-standard IT positions?

    Yes, I have cold-called the HR departments of quite a few local firms in many industries. Should I wait until I get seven times seven "thank you for your resume/interview but we regret to inform you that the position was filled with somebody else because somebody else has experience and you don't" letters before complaining again?

    I found companies that need IT work done but could not afford a full-time person.

    How does one learn to run a consulting business if one has zero experience straight out of college? Or am I screwed because I neglected to take summer jobs?

  264. Re:Taking Self-Employed Into Account? and my thoug by akp · · Score: 1

    lower taxes for those who pay taxes (the lower 50% of the earners in America pay no taxes!).

    Really? Wow!

    Does that mean that people in the lower 50% of earners don't have to pay FICA, sales tax, gas tax, property tax, or cigarette and alcohol taxes? Dude! I have some good news for some of my underemployed friends. Do they need to get special 'lower 50% of earners' cards to exempt them from these taxes or something? Where do you get those?

    Because, you know, if you want to lower taxes for people who pay taxes, why don't you start with the taxes that everybody actually pays? Maybe graduate FICA so that the first $20,000 is exempt, the next $50,000 is at the current rate, and everything above it is at a higher rate? That'll save a lot more money for a lot more people than cutting things like the income tax and the estate tax.

    If most Americans want to reduce their personal tax burdens, then they're a lot better off keeping (or raising) things like the estate tax, many capital gains taxes, and the upper rates of the income tax, and lowering things like FICA and state sales and property taxes. Unless, or coure, they're misled into thinking that income taxes are the only real taxes that people pay. But nobody would be dumb enough to fall for that.

    Right?

    -allen

  265. Fair and Balanced by TheProcrastinatorTM · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Am I the only one disturbed by the fact that slashdot is now posting articles that appear on vdare.com? What's next?

    1. Re:Fair and Balanced by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Posting something from one of the Nader sites. Sincerely, the only places you will get anything that resembles sincere opinion today is on the far right(i.e. Buchanan/vdare) and the far left(i.e. Nader). I happen to be a Nader supporter and feel that for the progressives to do anything meaningful, they _will_ have to address trade and immigration-as well as a major reform of the tax system(just FYI I like Nader's proposal better than what Bush is pushing at www.fairtax.org)

    2. Re:Fair and Balanced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't really understand what the fairtax plan is, do you? Please explain how Nader's plan is better. I just don't see it the way you apparently see it.

    3. Re:Fair and Balanced by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mr. Nader says that dividends, interest, & capital gains are "unearned" income. That is just plain wrong. It's income I make because I was willing to take a RISK (investments can go BOTH ways).

      You're clearly anti-capitalism, so there's no use trying to change your mind. Your best bet would be to move where your ideas are more appreciated. Have fun!

    4. Re:Fair and Balanced by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      First off, I said Nader's plan was _better_ not perfect. The key aspects of Nader's plan IMHO are:
      1) removal of the majority of the middle class
      from tax roles(exemption of income under
      $100K)

      2) Substituting revenue from
      pollution taxes
      a tax on concentrated wealth(over
      $5 Million net worth)
      land taxes
      increasing of corporate taxes

      The reaso I think those taxes with work is for the most part Nader is aiming to tax either negative extrenalities or economic rent(monopoly rent or land rent). Even Milton Friedman admits
      that taxes on rent tend to be among the "least bad" taxes. If I were advising nader, I would tend to advise me to go easy on increasing income taxes, capital gains and estate taxes. I think he'll get more income from a land tax than he's expecting--particularly if that tax were focused on increases in real estate values that occur because of the changes in tax law.

      The tax proposal at www.fairtax.org is economically fairly similar to what we have now-with the big exceptions that
      1) it tends to ecourage savings
      2) the overall cost of collection is much lower
      than the federal income tax(i.e. tax lawyers
      don't get as much pork).

      Basically I _can_ believe that fairtax.org's proposal is somewhat better than what we have now-though i think it will result in more concentration of wealth than the folks at Cato are predicting. The Nader proposal would I think have even a more dramatic effect-and could be improved even more if it lowered the administrative overhead for major corporations a bit.

  266. Got a job in 4 weeks after getting laid-off by atlantis_tin · · Score: 1

    I have been waiting for this topic to come up on Slashdot for quite some time. I am an H1 B computer programmer and was laid off some time ago.

    - Found a bigger, better job at a better company in 4 weeks.
    - Had multiple offers to chose from.

    Here's more from my recent experience:
    - I started getting calls from recruiters within *3-4 hours* of posting my resume.
    - I had job offers within a couple of weeks from getting laid-off, but I did not like the work and actually had to dodge those recruiters.
    - I am not an extraordinary wiz kid programmer of something. My credentials and career are pretty common. No Ivy League, nothing spectacular in my resume. Of course, this is not how presented myself during the job hunt - I was much more positive in my approach.
    - At present I know several companies that are pretty desperately looking for people. Some of them have doubled the referral fee they give to current employees.
    - I know many other people who have in the recent months found work in 1-2 months timeframe.

    What I hear on this site and in other media and what I actually saw in the job market is very different - I am actually confused. If you have any explanation for this phenomenon, I am very interested to hear it.

    --
    I copied this sig.
    1. Re:Got a job in 4 weeks after getting laid-off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of the workers that will have the most problems are :

      1) Older workers(over 40). It is illegal
      in the US for companies to choose
      younger workers that are less likely to draw
      on their health care plans-but many do.

      2) In places like the Pacific Northwest than
      have been particularly hard hit.

      3) There are companies now in which there is
      an active preference for H-1b workers over
      US citizens. Sometimes the management are the
      same nationality as H-1b workers. Sometimes
      they just think the H-1b workers tow the line
      better.

    2. Re:Got a job in 4 weeks after getting laid-off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is pure BS. I am a potential H1B in his mid 30s and not having any trouble finding multiple jobs even though I am OUTSIDE the US.

      I say potential because not one, not two, three employers are trying to outbid each other in thier attempts to hire me and these are not your foreigner owned operations, I am talking about publically traded companies in two of these case and one of them is a small consulting firm run by church going practicing catholic guy who is a mean C++ programmer to boot - this is the firm I am leaning towards because I find it amazing that despite all the bigotted crap going on over there, this guy has no problem with my faith (hint: its the least favourite one these days), ofcourse the fact that they are willing to ay 25% over the other two bigger firms is only sweetener on top (that would be 150K USD for you folk who claim H1Bs are cheaper).

      Love you all, west coast rules.

    3. Re:Got a job in 4 weeks after getting laid-off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are probably going to be hired by a co-national. Even if the company isn't owned by foreigners, that doesn't mean that foreign management haven't taken over entire departments.

  267. on unemployment beneficit, and of social wealth. by chro57 · · Score: 0

    On unemployment beneficit, and of social wealth.

    Like you, it seem, I am european. I disagree with you.

    Unemployment benefits give more freedom to people. You can have these people employed to be free of searching what they want, building human "social network", or employed to go to war, build useless polluting crap, sold with awfull agressive marketing or do posturing in academic, doing pseudo science under orders.

    We have already too much highway, too much fabrics, too much obedient people. We need real *innovation*, and lucidity, which can only be done by totally free thinkers.

    The other day, an unemployed ex student of sociologie, came to my door, just to chat, to know my opinion, and give me the opinion he heared from others. Isn't it interesting ?

    What are "lazy radicals the way of the middle east" ? Religious Zelot with an extrem right Agenda ??? For your informatin, the middle east is doing it's best, using it's poor geographical ressources. (oil is *not* a richess. Try eating it. Easy agriculture in a good climat is fondamentally what made us rich, and allowed industrial and cultural developpment. Historically, Irak, Egypte, Greece, were in the old time, with the same favorable climat.

    Some time you should disconnect your computer and look at what you eat. And think about it.

  268. Not Bush's fault! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is not the fault of Bush or even Kerry. It is the fault of two outdated political parties that have become nothing more than subsidiaries of multinational corporations. The elections/debates/conventions are sponsered by these same corporations that have only one interest: drive down wages, import cheap labor, pass the tax burden onto the lower classes and rid themselves of any and all forms of pentions/benefits.

    Whomever wins the election will have no effect on this. Face it, we're nothing more than partisan cheerleaders duped into supporting Brand A or Brand B when in fact they're both the same slightly repackeged shit. The large corporate masters view us as nothing than a renewable resource to be exploited and tossed aside when exploited to the last drop of sweat has been exponged.

    1. Re:Not Bush's fault! by randall_burns · · Score: 1
      Here's the thing: Bush has chosen to buy into the whole system. He didn't have to-he had enough money to buy something else. Quite frankly, I think he would have done the world less harm staying a drunken coke-head than becoming the particular type of intellectual prostitute he has become.


      Anyone who occupies the presidency right now without using some imagination and vision is IMHO a problem. The country has some serious problems and they need to be addressed-not ignored.

  269. You guys are seriously reaching! by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    This is all ya got?

    I guess the Limbaugh/Rockwell/Friedman/Rand/AEI script just plays out after awhile, huh?

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
  270. Book: What's the Matter with Kansas? by David+Rolfe · · Score: 1
    I think what you are referring to here is:

    What's the Matter with Kansas?: How Conservatives Won the Heart of America

    The blurb is thus:
    In asking "what 's the matter with Kansas?"--how a place famous for its radicalism became one of the most conservative states in the union--Frank, a native Kansan and onetime Republican, seeks to answer some broader American riddles: Why do so many of us vote against our economic interests? Where's the outrage at corporate manipulators? And whatever happened to middle-American progressivism? The questions are urgent as well as provocative. Frank answers them by examining pop conservatism--the bestsellers, the radio talk shows, the vicious political combat--and showing how our long culture wars have left us with an electorate far more concerned with their leaders' "values" and down-home qualities than with their stands on hard questions of policy.
    --
    Read Heinlein's 1953 Revolt in 2100, now more than ever.
  271. Any substantial comments? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or only whining?

    Is everyone you disagree with a "fascist"?

    How about refuting his arguments?

    Or will only emotionalism do?

    Sorry, but you are the one who is sounding sad.

  272. Re:Taking Self-Employed Into Account? and my thoug by MS_leases_my_soul · · Score: 1

    So I assume you are calling me a Neocon and saying that I suck. Sorry you feel that way. I don't think anyone sucks ... I think they just have different opinions. Some are right, some are wrong, and some of just ill-informed.

    As for the labor figures, go to the labor website yourself, look at both sets of figures, realize that the media is quoting the "worse" figures that do not take into account a sizable and growing part of our economy. I have personally done this and think that the media is only telling me half the story. You can't have it both ways ... you can't say that the Dept. of Labor numbers are real and then dismiss the more inclusive numbers of the Dept. of Labor.

    Unemployment Insurance - I can buy that from an insurance agent. Why do I need the government involved?

    Social Security - I pay over 12% of my income each year to old people. When I am 65, 12% of the income of the workforce divided by the number of people 65 or older will come no where near the poverty level. When I retire, Social Security will be either meaningless or go. You want to try to save it? So what do we do? Give it to less people? Give the people less money? Take a larger percentage from each worker's paycheck? A combination of the three? How is this a good idea again?

    SEC/FDIC/FCC/DOL/Treasury/EPA - we need 'em and I support 'em as long as they serve the people and don't do things just to perpetuate themselves. I mentioned this in my post. Did you read my post?

    Sean Hannity - never read his books, have listened to his radio show a few times and do not like his "in your face" style combined with his mind closed to anything not Republican.

    Rush Limbaugh - is he still around? Whatever happened to that drug thing? Do people still listen to him?

    Fox News - I don't get my news from television. I prefer to read it online from several different sources and form my own opinion.

    I lost my job last year ... and then I got a new one. It took a month, but I was prepared, used savings, and moved on. I don't know anyone here in Atlanta right now that wants to be working and isn't.

    Is it that are taxes are too low or that government spending is too high? I think taxes are still too high and that spending is totally out of control. Let's try reducing spending this time.

    As for a strong economy under a Democrat President, I said in my post that it is not the President, it is Congress when it comes to taxes and spending. The '90s was about new innovation and a Congress working to help businesses, particularly small business. It is as fair to give Clinton credit for that as to blame the recession on him since the decline started at the end of his time in office.

    What happened to the concept of a nation that sacrifices in a time of war for the betterment of the country? I sold my SUV and have sacrificed. The "nation" you speak of is each individual American making the sacrifice. I think that most of us have become so selfish that this very concept is beyond us. We are not the America of WWII.

    As for better care for veteran's who bear the burden of fighting, you are exchanging words with a Gulf War veteran. One thing I do have to say is that I have always been impressed and amazed by the kindness and pride show to our men and women in uniform in our generation. This is one area where we have gotten it right.

    So, now that I have answered your objections, let me say that it saddens me that you lump me under a clever little title and deemed me ignorant. I spent 15 years reading, thinking, discussing, and putting into action my beliefs in my daily life. I don't know if you being so far off the mark is a sad commentary on you, me, both of us, or the whole country.

    Whatever the case, I respect any person who puts forth time, though and effort in determining a position that the belief because they have made an intelligent decision that it is right. If the try to put their beliefs into action in their daily life, my respect grows to admiriation. That's all I really have to say.

  273. Sort of like the Hindu Nationlists in India? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shouldn't we worry more about the previous fascist government in India that builds atomic weapons and ICBMs aimed at the US than about policy discussion websites?

    1. Re:Sort of like the Hindu Nationlists in India? by Sivaram_Velauthapill · · Score: 1

      I'm not Indian but those guys would be religious fundamentalists. They may end up being fascists but so far they are not there...

      BTW, India never pointed nukes at USA; they don't have any nukes that can reach USA...

      --
      Sivaram Velauthapillai
      Seeking the meaning of life... @slashdot of all places ;)
  274. Management is Employees also by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1

    I'm not talking about only the entry level working man. I'm talking about the ownership, the management, everyone. Show me a company with over 25 people that doesn't have a lazy leech sucking the life blood out of the company.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
    1. Re:Management is Employees also by Kpau · · Score: 1

      Ah well.. you've just defined Humankind. I spent six months at Intel on a project. From what I saw they could have randomly fired every third person and never missed a deadline. A few people did a lot of the work, the rest were in meetings where Dilbert's laws ruled supreme.

  275. Re:Posting as AC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1: you can opt out of moderation, of course.

    2: you can submit stories anonymously, so that's really not relevant

    3: your firewall is setup wrong.

    Thanks.

  276. California drywall hangers must not want jobs. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While I was living there, the construction industry shifted from using $15/hr citizen drywallers to $7/hr illegal immigrants. I'm sure there are many other examples.

    Maybe you think construction workers shouldn't be middle class?

    This "we need immigrants to pick oranges" stuff is all crap, anyway, there are machines to pick most of the crops.

  277. LFPR is Percent of Workforce by Baldrson · · Score: 1
    The Labour force participation is dropping because baby boomers are retiring.

    The labor force participation rate is as a percentage of workforce, not of total population.

  278. 1 million by potnoodle · · Score: 0

    1 million Goldoraks take up a shitload of space, you know :)

  279. umm you're wrong by CiXeL · · Score: 1

    I and my girlfriend were middle class. We are definitely being shoved into the poor class.

    1. Re:umm you're wrong by mjh · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry to hear that it's not working out for you. I didn't mean to suggest that it will work out for absolutely everyone, just for most people. The alternatives - wealth redistribution - will help a small number of people, but will hurt most people. I prefer the one that helps most people, even if that means not all of them are helped.

      That being said, I would also suggest that your current situation is probably too short term to be counted has being harmed by the system. I suspect that in the slightly longer term, you'll be better off.

      But of course, I don't know. What I know is that overall, more people are helped by our economy over the long term than not. Overall the group with elevated incomes over time is MUCH larger than the group with stagnant or lowered incomes. I truly do hope that you find your way into the former group and out of the latter.

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    2. Re:umm you're wrong by CiXeL · · Score: 1

      no, the problem comes when the standard amount your career of choice used to make is severely decreased.

      I have wasted many years of my life on tech. My girlfriend wasted many years of her life on telivision and film which are mostly outsourced now as well.

      She has a four year degree she can't use plus student loan debt. I don't have a degree but many years of experience.

      The problem is when you are carrying a reasonable amount of debt for your income level and then your income is forced down sharply where you cannot afford to pay it.

      If it wasn't for the 99 cents store we would go hungry.

      I think this country is going to learn the value of buying nothing on credit EVER AGAIN because there is no safe level of credit. You never know how far the economy can cut your income down to or when.

    3. Re:umm you're wrong by mjh · · Score: 1
      no, the problem comes when the standard amount your career of choice used to make is severely decreased.

      Except throughout the 200 year history of the industrial revolution TONS of people have had that exact thing happen to them. And yet, the vast majority of people have had their standard of living increased over time.

      This is, of course, why saving is so important. Everyone should prepare for the time when (not if) their job is going to become obsolete, so that they can educate themselves to learn a new trade.

      The problem is when you are carrying a reasonable amount of debt for your income level and then your income is forced down sharply where you cannot afford to pay it.

      Again, another reason why savings is so important. There's several types of savings, and the most critical is an emergency savings plan. Figure out your total expenses for the year, then divide by 12 and save at least 6 months worth. That way you can live for 6 mos w/out a job, and your debt load won't matter because you've got enough saved to cover it.

      That being said, you should be very careful with debt. There's good and bad debt. IMHO, the only acceptable debt meets the following:

      1. it's repayable if absolutely necessary (e.g. a mortgage where you can sell the house to repay the debt)
      2. it's invested in something in which you have a fairly high expectation of making the investment back (e.g. mortgage or educational loans).
      Mortgage has an additional benefit as mechanism for lowering your taxes. Here is a good primer on controlling debt.
      I think this country is going to learn the value of buying nothing on credit EVER AGAIN because there is no safe level of credit.

      I couldn't agree more. If you don't pay off your credit cards at the end of each month, throw them away and use your debit card instead. This will force you to spend no more than you earn. See my sig.

      Still if you're in credit card trouble, I would strongly recommend debt counseling. There are folks who can help you figure out how to get out of debt. Techniques include calling creditors, loan consolidation, etc. There is some really good advice here and here. If the religous tones don't appeal to you, ignore those parts; the advice is sound whether or not you believe the religious aspect.

      And finally, I don't mean to be all "in your face" about your personal finances. I only hope to offer some tips. If they're not useful, ignore them.

      Good luck!

      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
    4. Re:umm you're wrong by CiXeL · · Score: 1

      "Again, another reason why savings is so important. There's several types of savings, and the most critical is an emergency savings plan. Figure out your total expenses for the year, then divide by 12 and save at least 6 months worth. That way you can live for 6 mos w/out a job, and your debt load won't matter because you've got enough saved to cover it."

      I did save a few grand and when i saw the axe falling i went to costco and spent a few hundred on top ramen and various canned goods and supplies, some of which I am still using up. The problem is though, the economy continues to get worse and I spent all that saved money. I am now pulling money out of the mutual funds given to me by my grandparents in a last ditch effort to move with my girlfriend to florida or another part of the country with IT jobs. California is dead in my opinion.

      "it's invested in something in which you have a fairly high expectation of making the investment back (e.g. mortgage or educational loans)."

      my three friends in various parts of the medical profession and my girlfriend with the degree she cant use due to outsourcing have shown me educational loans are not worth it. all of them are finding it impossible to find work. two of my medical friends are burdening their parents by going on to grad school because they realize how impossible it is to find work and the third friend is working at an asian koi pond place cleaning koi pools. my girlfriend with her four year tv and film degree is doing telephone customer service.

      Mortgage is out of the question, the realestate rates here are ridiculous (Another reason im going to move to florida if the hurricanes stop beating the $hit out of it)

      "Still if you're in credit card trouble, I would strongly recommend debt counseling. There are folks who can help you figure out how to get out of debt."

      I'm very afraid it will screw up my credit rating so i'm hanging on by a thread to my finances. My goal is to move with my girlfriend, get married and raise a family in a house. If my credit gets screwed up that might not happen for another decade.

      "If you don't pay off your credit cards at the end of each month, throw them away and use your debit card instead. This will force you to spend no more than you earn."

      I do that, I also pay all my bills as soon as i receive them to make sure i'm not late.

      "If the religous tones don't appeal to you, ignore those parts; the advice is sound whether or not you believe the religious aspect."

      I feel like Job, the religious tones are fine. If this has done anything it's at least strengthened my faith. I'll look into it. Thanks again for the advice.

    5. Re:umm you're wrong by mjh · · Score: 1
      I'm very afraid it will screw up my credit rating so i'm hanging on by a thread to my finances.

      Debt counseling should not impact your credit rating at all. Generally, what a debt counselor will do is recommend that you build a budget (if you don't already have one), then they help you modify your budget to get the debt paid off, then they recommend a strategy for sticking to the plan. Your creditors will not even know that you've been through counseling.

      the religious tones are fine
      In that case, I strongly recommend looking into Crown Financial. You can find information on budget counseling here or on debt counseling here. If those don't appeal to you, I would also recommend that you go to your local library and check out some books on debt. There are tons of them. You might cross reference with Amazon to see which ones get the best ratings.
      --
      Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
  280. In other news... by potnoodle · · Score: 0

    Uncle Scrooge is f

  281. Crunch? by Thunderstruck · · Score: 1

    Both my wife & I were hired before we graduated, and we don't even have technical or hard science degrees. Seems pretty good to me.

    --
    Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    1. Re:Crunch? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem cases are largely older folks likely to put a strain on corporate health care plans.

  282. Flat taxes by DrCode · · Score: 1

    They are rigged against the poor and middle class, because wage earners have no control over what is considered income: It's their wages.

    A rich CEO, on the other hand, can jet around the world, stay in the best hotels, eat in the finest restaurants, and not consider those expenses, paid by the company, as income.

    1. Re:Flat taxes by Twirlip+of+the+Mists · · Score: 1

      And your solution to that is what, exactly? To tax business activity? Brakes on the economy. Let's hear solutions, not problems.

      --

      I write in my journal
  283. Re:Grow up by Bendebecker · · Score: 1

    What if we took the same approach when a natural disaster happens? I'm sorry but its your fault for living in a house that got the shit kicked out of it by the latest tornado. Have a nice day? Show some compassion for your fellow human beings. Afterall, we're all in this together.

    --
    There's a growing sense that even if The Future comes,
    most of us won't be able to afford it.
    -- Lemmy
  284. Illegal Immigrants unnecessary to U.S. economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So you're saying the us middle class would pick grapes at winerys? Or clean tables at McDonalds? Or clean toilets in bus stops?


    No. I am saying that non-illegals would do those jobs. Indeed many non-illegals do those jobs today. But that's not all I'm saying.

    Most jobs held by illegal immigrants are not "middle-class" jobs. They are better described as "lower-class" jobs, were class a factor, which it isn't in this discussion. So let's state the situation clearly:

    Most jobs held by illegal immigrants are "lower-wage" jobs and, were illegal immigrants absent, other "lower-wage" non-illegals would move into many of those slots. There is a spectrum of incomes in the population. Removing workers from the bottom end of the spectrum opens up slots, slots that may not be filled until the wages associated with those slots are increased. As that is done, workers will shift to the highest wage they can achieve. As I stated in my earlier post, slightly increased wages would often be required to attract these workers into those jobs.

    The "middle-class" or, better said, "middle-wage" income earners would feel a slight wage push upward as the increase of wages at the lower end of the wage spectrum affects them.

    But to reiterate, studies show that the illegal population could be deported tomorrow without significantly affecting the economy.

    1. Re:Illegal Immigrants unnecessary to U.S. economy by gorbachev · · Score: 1

      "Most jobs held by illegal immigrants are not "middle-class" jobs."

      Then we agree, that there is no middle-class squeeze, as indicated by the original poster, from illegal immigrants?

      --
      In Soviet Russia, I ruled you
  285. So this is the competition! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Years ago I had an Indian roommate who told me how rampant cheating was at his 4-year university. Of his entire class, only 2 people did homework: all others copied theirs from those 2. The class cheated so blatantly that in one instance the dean called the class into a room and threatened to toss them all out of school. But one of the students uncle was the prime minister, and with a single phone call ended both discussions about cheating and the dean's career.

    Above we have another example of the excellence of the Indian educational system: teachers who can't teach and students who cannot learn.

    Once again, you get what you pay for.

  286. Enough with Flat Tax ideas already! by oblom · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Please don't drink that Kool-Aid. Fair Tax is just a Consumption Tax (aka Flat Tax) under another name. Calling it "Fair" doesn't make it so. Why? Because it taxes poor and middle classes while allowing rich to get richer at a much faster rate. Yes, this is why this topic is so dear to Republicans.

    A poor person may need to spend 100% of salary on consumption just to cover basic needs. A middle class person -- 80%. As you get richer, your propensity to save increases and consumption expenses do not grow as fast (in percentage of income terms), so you may spend 50%. After all, there is so much shit you really *need*.

    Enable consumption tax of 10%. The poor pays 10% of salary on taxes. Middle class guy -- 8%. Rich -- 5%. This is worse that flat tax, this is *regressive* taxation.

    Repeat after me -- keeping progressive income tax and taxing capital gains is the only way to give poor a chance, middle-class protection from getting squeezed, rich from "take over the world" schemes all while turning budget surplus. And yes, a strong middle class is the #1 reason why US enjoyed economic prosperity and democratic society in 20th century.

    The models works. Please stop f*cking it up, please! Wish I could make Economics 101 a mandatory course in high school. Maybe then people would vote with their heads instead of emotions.

  287. Re:Simple: make your own job. UNLIKELY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Now I nolonger equate MBAs as idiots who can't do like Gym Teachers teach Gym.

    Really? I would have figured that would re-enforce the perception that MBAs are idiots. These are the nuts who built the Bubble and transformed up all these moderately successful companies into collossal failures. How could this experience have possibly increased your respect for MBAs. (speaking as someone who had a moderatelly successful dotcom until the VCs put in a couple MBAs for CEO and CFO that killed the company within 6 months)

  288. Re:OK, stop blaming/crediting presidents for jobs. by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 1

    That would be true if we were just looking at the last two sitting presidents. Look back further and ask about job creation. Hell, ask about correlations between market growth and which party held the white house. Its easy to say that no one can see an obvious mechanism. Pointing to obvious differences in philosophy and goals between the parties only indicates what they would *want* to do, anyway. Still its hard to disregard a strong correlation spanning my lifetime.

  289. Re:Grow up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you're not smart enough to have insurance, it's your fault that you'd lose everything. Compassion comes from within, not at the point of a gun in the hands of government. That's what it boils down to - government can tax you into the poor house and if you resist, you CAN be shot.

    A government big enough to give you all that you need is big enough to take all that you have.

  290. Re:Progressive view of Milton Friedman is uneducat by civilizedINTENSITY · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ever read Wealth of Nations? Do you think that we have a ballance of power today between supplysiders and consumers? We no longer have villages of skilled craftsman competing, who weren't able to service more than a county. In order to have a free-market today it is necessary to ballance the power wielded by the large multi-nationals, or reduce them to the small businesses from whence they came. Government intervention is one way. View it as the power of the people of a country taken together as a whole. Regulation is necessary as elimination of corporations just isn't politically feasible.

  291. bug in slash? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm having a weird bug here... My user peferences are set to collapse sections, yet I cannot view this story by checking this issue of slashdot. Is it me or slashcode causing this?

  292. Oh, For Fuck's Sake!! by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

    I had some sympathy for you until I read THIS bullshit line:

    Wrapping up my sob-story, moving to a new state is out of the question due to personal reasons involving my daughter, so we're stuck here.

    Well, then, you're just going to end up dead soon. I hope you enjoy the next 2 years of your life, since that's probably all you have left. Chances are you will get sick during that period and just die.

    I hear this whining all the fucking time, and I have to call bullshit on all of it. You don't owe anyone anything if doing so places you in serious jeopardy. What, is the daughter in school? Fuck her preferences; she'll have to make new friends. Is she at some institution? Fuck her needs; you can send video email. Does she need special care? Fuck her; let some underpaid orderly wipe her mouth. (Note: What, don't other states offer care for this kind of thing? Stop making excuses.)

    No one is chained to a place which threatens to destroy them. You have to stop being an idiot and recover your pride. You have to remember that you have a will to survive and a desire for self-defense.

    I am living one of America's deepest economic hellpits (Toledo OH), and right on schedule the scumbag Capitalists here are making moves to throw me into poverty as they did from 1998 to 2002. Since I stopped pretending that this is not class warfare, I've saved money like a fiend for the last 2.5 years and will use my capital and mobility to fight back, by moving to where the fucking jobs are, leaving Toledo to rot down to the Detroit-humus level of compost.

    I know all about mailing, faxing and handing out hundreds of resumes, and not getting 1 response. That's Toledo's economic picture in a nutshell. But Toledo's not going to change, since people are so numbed by various complacent or vicious philosophies. I can only surmise from your testimony that your area is similar.

    So get the fuck out before it kills you, you goddamn numbskull. You and your American brethren have worshipped "private property" for a long time, so here you are crucified on it. If you refuse to engage in active Socialism and confiscate the shit of the Capitalists who have impoverished you, and also refuse to leave your local wasteland and go to where the jobs are ... then you truly deserve to end up dead under a bridge. This is a war, and you've been fired on; so ... SHOOT BACK, YOU STUPID BASTARD!

    --
    [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    1. Re:Oh, For Fuck's Sake!! by MMMDI · · Score: 1

      That's a great plan, if you don't take into consideration that my daughter is four years old and requires frequent trips to a hospital due to her medical requirements. While it's true that other states have hospitals, there's very few that have doctors on hand that have the knowledge to treat her medical concerns. A.I. duPont Hospital For Children, located in Wilmington, DE is one of the few.

      What, did you think I would still be here if it was something silly such as friends or school? For point #3, allowing "some underpaid orderly (to) wipe her mouth" would be a great way to go, but I'm sure you wouldn't go that route if you had a child of your own.

      Finally, did I ever say, in any of my posts, that I was staying in this town permanently? In 6-12 months, all of her medical concerns will be taken care of, and off I go. My original post was a reply to the topic at hand, and pointing out how the economy was in the town I reside in. No sympathy asked for, no woe is me, just adding the facts from this side of life to the conversation.

      I'd hate to see the outcome if I'd replied to a sensitive subject, sheesh.

    2. Re:Oh, For Fuck's Sake!! by LaCosaNostradamus · · Score: 1

      That's a great plan, if you don't take into consideration that my daughter is [blah blah blah].

      Tough fuck. My "great plan" still applies. You only imagine that you're stuck there for however long. Pack up and go. You are just making excuses with your daughter ... and I say that since you are in deep economic trouble and are risking death (as I said quite clearly before). Do you think your death is going to serve your daughter any more than your living can? What, is your life insurance policy still active?

      What, did you think I would still be here if it was something silly such as friends or school?

      No, I thought it quite likely that it was some whiny little medical thing with your daughter. You've proven my suspicions correct. And "family medical" is the same fucking excuse-making of the man who is not willing to make a survival choice. I've grown completely tired of hearing these excuses, and boy oh boy, do I hear them all the goddamn time. You can find adequate or average medical care elsewhere in America for her ... PERIOD. It can only be your depraved desire for "my little baby's gotta get the best care" that's led you to this foul end.

      I'm sure you wouldn't go that route if you had a child of your own

      Oh yes I would. I'm my own doctor, and my own vet for my cats. The American system of health care is really starting to suck fucking ass, and I'm willing to die myself -- as well as blatantly risk the lives of others -- in the attempt to kill it off. The American health care system should have been the world's best, but has been completely suborned to "money money money". Things like real health care are going to way that pensions, expensing, sick days and vacations are going: for corporate executives ONLY.

      This work-sponsored health-care system is fatally ill. America used to survive without it, and I'd like to see a return to those times (since I assume that it's impossible to enact socialized medicine instead in the American Empire). But to return to the non-corporate health-care system, we'd have to kill off the medical administration class. You know: go back to family doctors who live down your street. The AMA must be killed off at least, and things like homeopathy brought back. I say all this, knowing it may well be equally impossible to enact. The American death rate may well have to rise to 250K+ more deaths per year before a new equilibrium is found for the then-diminished expectations of the American people. As I say this, I'm struck by how likely that really is, since people went from single- to double-income family units and barely complained about that terrible fate.

      In 6-12 months, all of her medical concerns will be taken care of, and off I go.

      You're just delaying. I have no confidence whatsoever that you'll actually pack up and move away from American Economic Dead Zone #34. Prove me wrong.

      No sympathy asked for

      Your points about economic sinkholes were still salient. A man who tries to find a suitable job for himself is doing the exactly right thing. But my follow-on point is that after 6 months of no success, you have to take responsibility for the failure even though the system around you is manifestly unfair. Either that, or take up arms and kill the people responsible. I told you before that this is class war, and it's gotten a lot hotter on the elite's end. Recognize that they are trying to just kill you off as some kind of excess "useless eater".

      I'd hate to see the outcome if I'd replied to a sensitive subject, sheesh.

      Try me.

      --
      [You have a stable society when some nut guns down a schoolyard and the law doesn't change.]
    3. Re:Oh, For Fuck's Sake!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Due to excessive bad posting from this IP or Subnet, comment posting has temporarily been disabled. If it's you, consider this a chance to sit in the timeout corner . If it's someone else, this is a chance to hunt them down. If you think this is unfair, please email moderation@slashdot.org with your MD5'd IPID and SubnetID, which are "e7d986cc3763d0372d52919f28006db3" and "4967cedef3c158bd36bf54b0ff3a1218" and (optionally, but preferably) your IP number "XXXXXX" and your username "MMMDI".


      I realize that I failed to mention this in my posts, but I'm not exactly poor to the point of dying underneath a bridge or going postal against "the man". While I wouldn't be able to afford going out and dropping $200 on the newest tech gadget, I have more than enough in savings to pay for food / housing / necessities for the time being.

      I'm not going to reply to each of your points there, as frankly, you come off as being a militant whacko. I'm not in the mood to get involved in a pissing contest here, so to each his own.

  293. Re:some useful data--middle class "size" is fallin by objwiz · · Score: 1

    one of the things I noticed in the media reporting is what they call "rich". The numbers are really low. Sometimes its those earning 100K or more. But most of the time, its 75K or more. I've seen (and unfornately lost my link) an article that stated income on weekly basis that amounted to no more than 50K. Some of this comes from how the census records "rich". I dont agree with it---hence the scare quotes around "rich".

    One thing to keep in mind, income doesnt really denote wealth or riches. There are many "rich" dont have a 50K in income as income in defined according to census data. According to the how the numbers are collected, someone earning $0 working but is earning interest on $1 million will not be classified as rich. Likewise, if they dont own a home but rent, they may actually end up in the "poor" category.

    BTW, I did include for inflation--hence the (in 2003 dollars) notation. That means adjust for inflation. Idiot.

  294. Re:some useful data--middle class "size" is fallin by TykeClone · · Score: 1

    Watch it! I said nothing about adjusting for inflation - I was asking about equating a $50K income to being rich. I make a hair more than that and don't consider myself anywhere near wealthy!

    --
    A fine is a tax you pay for doing wrong and a tax is a fine you pay for doing all right.
  295. Invisible Tea Party Tax by superpulpsicle · · Score: 1

    The problem with this country is not the wages. It's the fact that we are being taxed thru the roof and it's going to this invisible tea tax. No one knows where the fuck money is going. We are just paying. As far as I am concerned, they are going straight to terrorists, and we won't even know.

    1. Re:Invisible Tea Party Tax by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Taxed through the roof? In the US? I really don't think so, unless you live in a high-tax state (California, Washington, Illinois, several other states).

  296. Obsolete the Middle Class by tommywho70x · · Score: 0

    Consider this scenario: Rep. Party and Dem. Party actually Front Org(s)for National Socialist Party of Multi-National Industrialist-Banker Crime Families. With the advances in automation and cheap offshore labor, the American middle-class is no longer needed; there are now robots to perform those types of tasks. The American middle-class people are designated useless eaters and wasters of oxygen and given two options: accept demotion to lower class or be exterminated.

    Soft (unarmed)Civilian Targets = Easy Kill
    (e.g., Twin Skyscrapers, Okie City Federal Bldg.)

    Soft Soap Couch Potatoes and Mainstream Media Junkies = Easy Kill
    (xml*rss feed #01.800.MYYAHOO! to SWBT1-99x MY SLASHDOT COMEDIAN CHANNEL Bill Gates ram-issue#1.0000Voice 0 Fax 0 Data 0 BookIE3.02CD\...)

    Campaign 2004 "Bill Gates" declared President-for-Life of HumorUS.COM+IBM Mailbox1 sheldon explorer exploring Billboard Playbill Billing Cycler HA.ORG/HD.COM(Hell's Angels Sponsors Harley-Davidson - Scooter Trash Friendly Networks #414MILW.WI.US.ASPX ????)
    Accountability = MSN Butterfly Test1 Cool Bug
    NO LIE ABILITY ACCEPTED: I AM A FAKE.NET/billg(1)
    [Speech/Sample.Wav/IBM/VoiceCen ter/Pardon Me?]
    MMX-explosiv.com+click[1]INTEL_32 P-IV,III,II,I,0?

    Current Miltary Tech euphemisms:
    Sheeple = Civilian human resources
    Perception Management = Spin Doctoring, Propaganda Tools
    Buzz Index = Electronic Surveillance Trends/Results
    For more info, inquire by mailto: nic@mil.net
    Tell them you were referred by tommywho70x#nnn-nn-2498. They'll be thrilled in triplicate.

    SIG#11/22/1963 To old to forget, too crazy not to still be pranking the M-I-C-Key Mouse CLUB CAR TELL (Kiss Me, Kick Me, Kill Me or Cut me some SLACKWAREZ - Malaprop the Eldest PISSONIT.COM)

    Tom Lehrer oldies "MLF - Multi-Lateral Force"
    "MLF will scare Breshnev. I hope that he is half as scared as I!"

    "Who's Next?"
    "and I hope the world stays serene and calm when Alabama gets the bomb!"

    "So Long, Mom"
    "so long mommy, I'm off to kill a commie, so send me a salami and don't wait up for me. I'll see you when the war is over,,,an hour and a half from now-ow!" (A complete Tom Lehrer Discography is probably easily found in the Harvard DB Archives)

  297. Craft Beer [Re:My Story - A Navy Veteran] by rm3friskerFTN · · Score: 1

    an occaisional high-end craft beer is OK ;-) ... Stone Brewing Beers

    --

    I believe Juanita

  298. Darwin Award - You Win [Re:My Story ... ] by rm3friskerFTN · · Score: 1
    You wrote "I've been out of IT for so long my skills are rusty and now I can only land a pizza delivery job" to which I reply
    it is your fault and your fault entirely for winning a "Career Related Darwin Award" ;-);-);-)

    As I wrote earlier:

    always be learning something new

    be willing to relocate ... have reasonable salary/wage expectations - a high school diploma and reading "HTML 4 Dummies" does not entitle you to a six-figure salary ;-);-);-)

    --

    I believe Juanita

  299. Funny... by vwjeff · · Score: 1

    ...and a recovery is when George Bush is out of work.

    I know you are not serious when you say this. The president has virtually no control over the economy. The Federal Reserve has the greatest control. After the Feds comes the Legislative branch. The Executive branch does not create the budget and spend money.

  300. AFAIAC... by nycdewd · · Score: 1

    Anyone that votes for Bush is a dupe and a fascistic fuckhead. There is NOTHING conservative about this rightwing nutcase.

    My opinion can of course be debated, but I see little point in debating what is obvious.

    Example: supposedly 95% of the installed user base is using Windows. They are demonstrably ignorant given the overwhelming evidence that Windows is nothing but garbage.

    Case closed. Good night. Have a wonderfully hellish life, all of you in the USA! Yes, the rest of the world hates you, sleep well!

  301. a fellow fascist... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Godwin was calling you, he mumbled something about a Law.

    and good luck with your personal fight for liberty against tax-Nazis.

  302. but you do by gomel · · Score: 1
    sorry to dispel your illusions:
    in the same thread someone wrote:

    IIRC, the unemployment rates in France include measurement of discouraged workers. The number that gets flashed on TV in the US does not include such persons. If you compare fairly, our current unemployment rate is 9.4%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics .
    --
    Fight Frist Psoting!
    Browse Slashdot with 'Newest First'!
    1. Re:but you do by dspfreak · · Score: 1
      I don't mind having my illusions dispelled. I'd rather learn something that be proven right. However, somebody's assertion that the government of France must be using the same methods of calculating unemployment as the highest number he can find on the BLS web site is not going to immediately dispell them. But, I figured it was worth looking in to how different countries calculate unemployment.

      I started looking for French statistics, and the documentation describing their methods is in French (which I don't speak), but one of the numbers reference an ILO definition of unemployment. The ILO is a UN organization, so I went to the ILO labor statistics web site to find more, hoping that they would provide unemployment statistics for multiple countries using the same methodology.

      It appears that by the ILO standard, someone must have taken a specific action to find employment within the last four weeks to be considered unemployed. While this doesn't include "discouraged workers" and it could be argued that this doesn't accurately represent the true unemployment rate of a country, it is useful for comparing one country to another (which is what we're doing in this discussion).

      Looking at the 2002 numbers (the last year they had complete data for the countries listed), we have:

      5.1% United Kingdom
      5.8% United States
      8.7% Germany
      8.9% France

      Germany and France appear to have gone up significantly (to around 10%) in 2003, but the United States apparently did not supply data to the ILO for that year.

      At any rate, if I have illusions about the comparative unemployment rate between the United States and western European countries, apparently the United Nations suffers from the same illusions.

      --
      "Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions." -- G. K. Chesterton
  303. Re:some useful data--middle class "size" is fallin by objwiz · · Score: 1

    My "Idiot" was not to you specifically. I aplogize.

    My reply was a reply to all including another poster who didnt catch my comment about "adjusted for inflation" and called me an idiot.

    BTW, I tend to agree with you. In fact, I don't think anyone earning 100K is rich either. I dont think our (as in the government's) classification of middle class is correct.

    Regardless, as the government statistics state, the middle class is shrinking, but its not do to increases in poverty.

  304. Jobs are not the answer. by panda · · Score: 1

    It's far too complicated an issue to really discuss fairly in this venue.

    However, jobs are not the answer for a sustainable economy.

    What is needed is a broadly spread pattern of ownership for the economy to thrive. In other words, the world needs more capitalists and less concentrated capitalism.

    Let me just ask you this one question. Which do you think is better for the economy as a whole: 1 person earning $40 billion, or 10,000 people each earning $4 million?

    There are policies in all areas of gov't both national and transnational that can lead to a broader participation and growth of the "ownership class" without stripping present capitalist owners of currently accumulated wealth.

    We need leaders both in the U.S. and abroad who have the vision and the foresight to enact such policies. You will not find many such leaders among the current crop of Democrats and Republicans. They are conspicuously absent among the two top contenders for the office of President of the United States and their advisors.

    --
    Just be sure to wear the gold uniform when you beam down -- you know what happens when you wear the red one.
    1. Re:Jobs are not the answer. by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      I think that there is a serious point here. The concentration of assets in recent years has become pretty extreme. Theoretically that could be handled by tax policy. Nader's tax policy is an attempt at that direct. I have some issues with it-but I think it is far better than what the democrats-or republicans have some up with so far.

  305. why blame immigrants? by juan2074 · · Score: 1
    During this period, at least 2.25 million jobs were filled by new immigrants.

    Of those jobs, what was the average wage? How many of those jobs would no native-born people accept?

    Some jobs are even created by immigrants, and would not exist if those immigrants did not come here.

    The United States has had immigrants coming in throughout its history, and the economy has had ups and downs anyway.

    Again, why blame immigrants for this problem?

    1. Re:why blame immigrants? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      The simple fact is that job growth in the US is not happening as fast as immigration.

      It isn't an issue of blaming immigrants-but a question of the policy involved(and the folks that created athat policy) _and_ the real economic effects of that policy. During most of its history, the US economy was a vehicle for job growth that outstripped the rate of immigration. That has changed--and any likely mechanisms to reverse that (i.e. opening a new frontier or a major change in tax policy) are going to take time to have their effects felt.

    2. Re:why blame immigrants? by juan2074 · · Score: 1
      I still don't see many people born here clamouring to wash dishes at restaurants, or work in the custodial arts. Most of the places that cut hair and give manicures are run by Vietnamese and other Asians. Most of the girls that perform 'full massages' are Chinese and/or Thai (since many Thai people are ethnically Chinese). The staff in the back of most restaurants is predominantly Mexican (or other Central Americans).

      If native-born job seekers really wanted these jobs, don't you think employers would hire them? While it may cost less per hour to hire immigrants, there are other costs imposed by cultural differences and language barriers. If employers could hire natives, wouldn't they?

    3. Re:why blame immigrants? by juan2074 · · Score: 1
      Are you ignoring jobs and businesses that immigrants create? If that did not happen, we would have even fewer jobs to claim were created.

      And if our immigration policies were more like those of Australia and Canada, we could ensure that immigrants brought needed skills (like nursing experience or expertise in biotechnology, say) or opened businesses (restaurants, auto body shops, retail stores, light manufacturing, flower shops, etc.) that employed others. Immigrants can and do contribute to the economy.

      Without immigrants coming to the US, some of those jobs would not be created, and other jobs would not be filled -- whether for lack of skills or because no one wanted to do the grueling menial work.

      Maybe we both agree that immigration policies need to be tweaked to help improve the economy, no?

    4. Re:why blame immigrants? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      I suggest you check out this piece. States with large levels of immigration in the US generally have deteriorating economic stability(as measured by their bond ratings).

      The US needs to create an economy that works for its citizens _and_ to cease borrowing much needed capital in the world markets that should instead by used for global economic development.

    5. Re:why blame immigrants? by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      First off, most of what you talk about aren't strict necessities. A country should learn to live within its means-borrowing in international markets to finance luxuries doesn't help global economic development or the American people.

      Since many of these businesses involve either illegal activities(i.e. "full body" massage) or cash payments--illegal immigrants really are preferred for these jobs. With different incentive structures, the US performed the same work without massive immigration or massive debt.

  306. quantity vs. quality by juan2074 · · Score: 1
    Let's continue to focus on the raw number of jobs that has been created (or lost) compared to how many economists expected to be created.

    While we're at it, let's keep ignoring average wages relative to hours worked, and somehow not notice whether the quality of jobs being created is anywhere nearly as good as those we have lost in the past few years.

    1. Re:quantity vs. quality by randall_burns · · Score: 1

      Getting good measures of quality is hard to come by. What is clear is that skilled jobs are being lost and less skilled service sector jobs created--and the whole process is debt driven.

  307. Re:some useful data--middle class "size" is fallin by randall_burns · · Score: 1

    Inflation isn't a very good measure here. You really need to look at _disposable_ income(one measure if after housing, insurance, taxes and transportation). You can make folks "rich" by this measure by simply moving them from Wyoming to Los Angeles and keeping income constant (in real dollars).

    $49,999 doesn't go very far in Silicon Valley-but goes a quite a bit further in Wyoming.

    Another major factor here: you need to look at the value of certain goods/services that are made at home. If you look at my article, there is a link to a review of "The Two Income Trap". In 1967, there was a larger portion of women staying at home with kids.

    If members of couple both go to work and don't have-and move to a high rent district their economic well being may be worse-even if their income is greater. Their income is greater,but so are their expenses(i.e. higher rent, more meals out) plus they may be exposed to more crime, stress and lack of opportunity to raise a family.

    RJB

  308. Protectionism's far older than that by billstewart · · Score: 1
    Protectionism is far older than that - one reason that the US Constitution gives the Feds power to control Interstate Commerce was to prevent the US states from doing their own protectionism on trade between states, and many people argue that that is one reason that the US became an economic power (besides having a lot of nice land and mineral resources to steal from the Indians, of course.)

    But Bush is a Republican whose party loudly advocates free trade (in between doing favors for their friends), so he deserves to be bashed for blatant protectist moves.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  309. rent vs risk by randall_burns · · Score: 1

    In a truly high risk environment, you'll expect to see a distribution of "winners" that is different than what we are seeing. That is why taxes on concentration of wealth can work-they can be taxes on economic rent rather than on simple returns that reflect risk.

    Now, I would agree there is a chance of throwing the baby out with the bath water. However, with Nader's proposal by eliminating taxes on income under $100K/year he has the potential to heavily reward small entrepreneurs-who tend to be serious risk takers.

    Nader's statement simply calls for taxing both capital gains _and_ other income the same--but he's also moving significantly away from the idea that income should be taxed towards taxation of concentration of wealth, pollution, negative externalities and land/real estate.

    I'd personally like to see the limit for income taxation raised well beyond the $100K figure-and I think that if properly structured land taxes, taxes on monopoly power and pollution taxes could do that. In the end, very few people would even need to file tax returns _and_ social programs could be maintained or even expanded a bit.

    I don't think what you are identifying with is capitalism-it sounds more like welfare for the rich.

  310. Re:Posting as AC by khallow · · Score: 1
    And what could be more cowardly (ineffectual, powerless, inane, futile, sterile, etc.) than posting on /. to begin with? At least I'm willing to admit I've got nothing to lose.

    I guess we're seeing the bitter dregs of the Internet now. Well, why don't you wait until you have a point to make before you post? Then you won't feel so powerless and inane.

  311. Forced Retirement by SeanDuggan · · Score: 1
    The business owner has the right to make a decision about his business. The 60-year-old was involved in a relationship with that business for a number of years. It worked: he delivered value, he got compensated back for it. Why is it wrong to terminate such a relationship if it doesn't make sense for the employer any more? It would be wrong to keep it artificially, wouldn't it? If I am a business owner and I am forced to loose an opportunity to contribute extra into the domestic product by employing (and paying) someone with whom my business is not extracting the value it is interested in, isn't that bad for the economy?
    There is some truth to what you say. Outside of the idea of corporate loyalty, I think there's an issue going on here with the definition of profits here. The average person thinks about profit-making moves as being a situation where, overall, the company winds up making more money. However, in today's CEO-driven world, it's also an option to profit by making moves that in the short-term show reduced costs and therefore produce bonuses and raised stock prices. Yes, in a couple of years, your company may be hurt from having retired the older, more experienced workers and replacing them with younger people, but for a few years, you don't have to pay the higher wages due for seniority and, well, experience. And so the CEO leaves for another job, resume glowing with another situation where he was shown to reduce costs and thereby raise prices. Never mind that the company may have trouble later and that people are out jobs...

    Please debunk to me what is "wrong" with situations like your example: people over 60 getting fired just because the company doesn't need them any more?
    Is it the fact that the company doesn't need him but the poor fellow still needs them because he is scared of potential difficulties of finding a different job?

    *wry grin* Nothing technically "wrong" with it, at least under current job philosophy. People take it as a given that most companies don't hold much loyalty to their employees anymore. And, honestly, the younger generation is thereby showing less loyalty to the companies, taking jobs for shorter terms and moving on, taking skill sets with them. It can make for a very agile and versatile skill set. The problem, I think, comes when you have people who started on the old system, and who have spent 20+ years of their life doing one thing, becoming very good at it. *shrug* And honestly, they probably are "scared of the potential difficulties" because they have spent their lives learning to be perfect employees for the one company and now they're adrift again in a job market flooded with new college graduates willing to work for subsistence wages. Complicating the matter, someone who has been working that long for one company may not even be able to use half of their skillset because it involves proprietary information.

    Why isn't it realized by people that the job market is nothing more than a big match-making service where people or businesses go and try to find out who fits whose needs at the moment?
    You know, I honestly think you've hit the nail on the head here. The job market highly resembles the state of marriage these days. There was a time when people settled down with a spouse, loved and lived with them until the end of their days. There was a loyalty, a sense that they were together for better or for worse. Now, well, how many people do you know who are on their second or third marriage? Or, for that matter, aren't even bothering getting married because they're not interested in permanence? Similarly, companies no longer feel loyalty to their workers to support them. And therefore, the current generation is tending more towards contracting, part time jobs.

    Please shed some light on this "moral" issue for me, as I truly am frustrated with the kind of vagueness that people here often use to hide the reality that they simply can't justify something because it "feels right/wrong".
    ^_^ Honestly, I pull

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  312. Why is this a troll by beakburke · · Score: 1

    It's true, look at the textbook definition of socialism. Hell, that's a statement straight out of econ 101.

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    ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.