Evans Liberal Politics
June 5, 2010
Only 20,000 New Non-Census Jobs In May!
Jobs Bills NEEDED!
Only 20,000 New Non-Census Jobs In May! Jobs Bills NEEDED!, Campaign for America’s Future, June 4, 2010, by Dave Johnson, quoted verbatim:
Even as Washington ignores jobs bills and slashes help for long-term unemployed workers the economy may be starting to fall back. The economy added 431,000 jobs in May, but 411,000 of those were temporary Census workers. Compare this to last month when businesses added 218,000 jobs.
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The unemployment rate remains very high at 9.7%, dropping only because 322,000 more people gave up looking. And long-term unemployment — the “lazy” ones whose COBRA benefits Congress killed last week — grew. “The number of people out of work six months or longer reached 6.76 million in May, a new high. They made up 46 percent of all unemployed people, also a record high.”
Dean Baker, Unemployment Falls to 9.7 Percent, But Private Sector Job Growth Slows: “Excluding Census workers, job growth has just kept pace with the growth in the labor force over the last 3 months.”
Construction lost 35,000 jobs. Retail lost 6,600 jobs.
Areas not losing jobs showed slowing jobs growth. Employment services gained 34,000 after having added 75,000 a month from October through January. Health care added 13,011 after adding an average 20,000 a month through the prior 12 months. Restaurants added 5,500 jobs in May down from an average of 19,000 jobs over the last four months.
A big one: state and local governments lost 22,000 jobs, and this loss is expected to grow in coming months.
Manufacturing, fortunately, was up.
Dean concludes:
This report is a clear warning that the recovery is very weak. The weakness is in spite of the temporary stimulus provided by the hiring of 550,000 Census workers. With house prices falling again, severe state and local budget cutbacks looming, and troubles in Europe dampening exports, the future is not bright.
Except for the President, who said, “This report is a sign that our economy is getting stronger by the day,” reaction was mostly negative.
Wall Street Journal: Reaction to Jobs Report: Disappointing.
Washington Post, Bad Jobs Report.
NPR, Disappointing.
Some good news, the President and Labor Secretary called on Congress to extend unemployment benefits and COBRA,
President Obama called for an extension of unemployment benefits, and Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis called on Congress to also extend health coverage.
“We continue to push for programs to help unemployed workers make it through this difficult time,” Ms. Solis said in a statement. “I call on Congress to extend the unemployment insurance and COBRA subsidy provisions in the Recovery Act through the end of the year.”
But will Congress listen to reality, or to the Wall Street deficit cutters.
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This chart shows the long-term unemployed — the “lazy” ones Congress doesn’t think should get any assistance.

See Job Data Casts Pall Over Economic Recovery, The New York Times, June 4, 2010, by Michael Powell.
See Is Long-Term Unemployment America’s Future?, AlterNet, June 4, 2010, by Terrance Heath.


















The Battle’s Lost. The War’s Begun.
Evans Liberal Politics
May 25, 2010
The Battle’s Lost. The War’s Begun.
The Battle’s Lost. The War’s Begun., Daily Kos, May 25, 2010, by Louie L aka Crashing Vor. Visit Lou’s website LouLost.com for some great and relevant tunes. Quoted verbatim:
As oil continues to pour from the wreckage of the Macondo lease, a new source of pollution has opened up. Politicians seeking electoral advantage, pundits seeking recognition and worried citizens seeking some answer to this growing hell-sea have been popping up with greater frequency, spewing blame and toxic rhetoric on the media beaches.
Bobby Jindal wants more booms. David Vitter thinks Thad Allen’s stalling on building berms. Chris Matthews wants Barack Obama to wave a wand. Mike Papantionio wants supertankers with skimmers. Salazar wants to pose with his boot on somebody’s neck.
All of them want camera time. And none of them want to tell the truth. Me, neither, but it’s time someone does. If you’re a big fan of hope, you may want to skip this diary.
The Louisiana marshes, hatchery for the nation’s premiere fishery, are gone. The American Gulf is likely gone. The amount of oil and dispersants already in the water will adversely affect marine species for the rest of our lives.
All the booms and all the berms and all the hair and hay and cardboard will not stop the sea of poison that has already entered Breton Sound, Barataria Bay, Vermillion Bay and will soon be coming to an ecological niche near you.
Go ahead and boom, go on and dredge up some islands. And for god’s sake get some cement or golf balls or a pony nuke or something into that hole. Maybe it will keep the millionth gallon out of the marsh. But do not deceive yourselves. This is done.
Determining fault will not stop that, though it must be done. Suing the responsible parties into the poor house, though needed to compensate the legions of people robbed by this gooey monster, will not save one fish. Pandora can’t close that box.
There is only one possible redemption in this horror, and even that is a slim chance. If the enormity of what has happened in the Gulf can hold the country’s atrophied attention long enough, and if we can mobilize fast enough, we might, just might, be able to bring about a positive change from this:
Real and comprehensive energy and climate legislation.
We must act now to force our legislators to write law with teeth and real effect, law that requires consumers pay the true price of the carbon they burn, law that requires business to pay the true price of the carbon they spew, law that includes the costs of things “no one could have anticipated” into the price of doing business.
We are going to have to fight harder for this than for health care or finance reform or DADT repeal. We are going to have to find Republicans to turn. (You really don’t think Mary Landrieu is going to oppose her owners on this, do you?) And we are going to have to do it now, this summer.
Because, despite their never getting another decent shrimp, despite their condo in Destin halving in value, despite all the pictures of ugly, oily critters, America is going to forget this, the largest kill-off the environment will likely see in our lifetimes.
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A new crisis will erupt, a new tragedy will befall an innocent, a celebrity will fuck someone they shouldn’t. Americans will drool by their TVs, remark, “Ain’t that somethin’?” and then hop in their vehicles to work and shop and play. More holes will be dug.
And all of this will have meant nothing.
Unless we use this moment, use the deaths of species and the suffering of people who depend on them, in the most cynical, calculated way, as bad as a Republican after 9/11, to make real, lasting change in how we address the costs of our way of life.
You cannot save the Gulf. But you can make its death mean something.
See Obama to Inspect Gulf Oil Spill, The New York Times, May 25, 2010, by Helene Cooper.
Comment by Evans Liberal Politics owner Paul Evans: Lou’s article reaches us and connects to us and as people who follow politics, we have to ask, why? I think the main reason is that it reaches us where we live, and hits us in our values, cutting through all the references to who said what and what political games are being played about this entirely man-made catastrophe. Thanks for permission to republish your essay, Lou.
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