Re: UNEMPLOYMENT rate in US tops Great Depression in new report ...

From: Moses Gibson (moses_gibson_at_hotmail.com)
Date: 06/08/04


Date: 7 Jun 2004 18:02:00 -0700

There is not much integrity in our labor statistics, even under the
Democrats when they control the White House, but this current
Administration has taken spin control and guano-slimey polls and
doctored registration and payroll numbers to astronomical heights of
corruption.

The communal *** that is blowin out of so many U.S. bureau asses is
so collectively behemoth, that you will be able to see it transit the
sun Tuesday morning about 6AM, in the shape of a diahhrea droplet.
Many people think that this transit is the rare transit of Venus.
Nope. Just the large blot of slime guano coming from rectal Bushes.

============================================

"Household Survey" Data, i.e. a temp company working for
 the US government called 5000 homes randomly and asked if they are
 sitting around their house without job and just screwing off like
 wastrels. Nearly everyone replies to such a poll, "I've got more
work than i can manage" -- from outsourced commercial small agencies
used
by the DOL instead of doing their own work, VERSUS "Establishment
Survey" DOL employment data, i.e., from real paycheck stubs has always
been a quagmire of falsehoods and deceits, but now in the ideological
freeze out of the Dubya-Rummie-Condoooooooooooollllleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeezza
Rice spelling bee, the figures are manipulated to unbelievable
proportions, making even Siamese cats in Mongolia roll their eyes in
contempt for such skullduggery.

The DOL Report, as stated below, is a very refreshing summary that
most accurately reflects the truth. Thank you sir.

Yukio

angry_unemployed_mob@yahoo.com (Angry Unemployed Mob) wrote in message news:<ded4ee38.0406041246.50a67147@posting.google.com>...

> THE HANDS OF FOREIGNERS [AND THE GLOBALIZED
> AMERICAN ELITE) IS WHAT IS BEING PUMPED BY
> MR. GREENSPAN.
>
> What I am saying, without shouting, is that the boost in Fed Reserve
> M3 is to replace credit buying and to troll the bottom for
> deals after the credit collapse forces the middle class to
> liquidate all land, capital, and other marketable valuables
> they have lying around etc.
>
> It may be argued that the the FED may be seeking to make
> voters feel better by money illusion -- but again the voters
> by and large are not getting any of this liquidity (although the
> donors are! is this a payoff , a quid pro quo?
>
> SEE TODAY'S CRITICAL DOL REPORT --- SCROLL DOWN PLS ...
>
> Also, the Fed may be giving corporations (remember the
> money supply is increased when the Fed buys securities
> paying with deposits (new reserves) upon which investment
> bankers who float loans to corporations), as I was saying,
> the Fed may be giving corporations extra liquidity under
> the necessity of corporations needing extra bidding power
> to bid productive capacity away from domestic uses
> (food, clothing, medical, education, transportation,
> infrastructure, public services, small business investment
> to replace what has worn out etc. -- to bid productive
> inputs away from these uses and devote them to killing
> Arabs and Americans and running the warfare police state.)
>
> They are foreclosing us -- probably because they always intended to,
> but also because too many of us now know too much to allow us
> to continue with the threatening power of middle-class incomes
> and holdings."
>
> *** Eastman
> Yakima, Washington
>
> ==================
>
> DOL
>
> Employment Situation Summary
>
> Technical information:
>
> Household data: (202) 691-6378 USDL 04-996
>
> http://www.bls.gov/cps/
>
> Establishment data: 691-6555 Transmission of material in this
> release is embargoed until 8:30 A.M. Friday, June 4, 2004.
>
> (EDT),
>
> http://www.bls.gov/ces/
> Media contact: 691-5902
>
> THE EMPLOYMENT SITUATION: MAY 2004
>
>
> Unemployment ("Household Survey" Data, i.e. a temp company working for
> the US government called 5000 homes randomly and asked if they are
> sitting around their house without job and just screwing off like
> wastrels. Nearly everyone replies to such a poll, "I've got more work
> than i can manage").
>
> The number of unemployed persons was essentially unchanged at 8.2
> million in May.
>
> Total Employment and the Labor Force (Household Survey Data)
>
> Total employment was 138.8 million in May, and the
> employment-population ratio--the proportion of the population age 16
> and over with jobs--remained at 52.2 percent.
>
> Persons Not in the Labor Force (Household Survey Data)
>
> The number of persons who were marginally attached to the labor
> force was 1.5 million in May, about the same as a year earlier. (Data
> are not season-ally adjusted.) These individuals wanted and were
> available to work and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12
> months. They were not counted as unemployed, however, because they
> did not actively search for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey.
> There were 476,000 "discouraged workers" in May, also about the same
> as a year earlier. "Discouraged workers," a subset of the
> marginally attached, were not currently looking for work specifically
> because they believed no jobs were available for them. The other 1.1
> million marginally attached [COMATOSE] had not searched for work for
> reasons such as school or family responsibilities.
>
> Industry Payroll Employment ("Establishment Survey" Data, i.e., from
> real paycheck stubs)
>
> In May, construction employment increased by 37,000, with most of
> the gain occurring in specialty trade contracting using illegal
> immigrant, especially Mexican labor, and the construction of
> buildings.
>
> Manufacturing employment grew by 32,000 in May, from its previous
> all time low.
>
> In the service-providing sector, professional and business services
> added 64,000 jobs in May. Employment in temporary help services
> continued to rise (31,000) and has grown by 299,000 (or 14 percent)
> since April 2003.
>
> Disposable part time and temp workers are on the rise.
>
> Employment increases in health care and unlicensed rest home
> assistance continued in May with a gain of 36,000. Over the year,
> this industry has added 274,000 jobs. Hospitals and ambulatory health
> care services, such as outpatient carecenters, accounted for
> two-thirds of May's employment gain.
>
> Grossly underpaid Filipina nurses make up the gain, replacing U.S.
> trained nurses.
>
> Within the leisure and hospitality industry, food services added
> 33,000 jobs over the month, most of it part time and is by far the
> fastest growing and strongest sector of our economy. McDonald's is
> still hiring young
> teens and illiterate immigrants at minimum wage.
>
> Since the beginning of the year, employment in food services has
> increased by an average of 32,000 a month, more than double the
> average monthly increase in 2003.
>
> Employment in financial activities rose by 15,000 in May,
> reflecting continued increases in bankruptcy filings.
>
> In the information sector, telecommunications employment was down
> by 5,000 in May. Since its peak in March 2001, the telecommunications
> industry has shed 283,000 jobs, a fifth of its total. U.S. industry
> and electronics has died belly up in the water and even John Kerry is
> just windbagging. Bush pulled the trigger on us long ago.
>
> Hourly and Weekly Earnings (Establishment Survey Data)
>
> Average hourly earnings of production or nonsupervisory workers on
> private nonfarm payrolls rose by 5 cents in May to $5.64, seasonally
> adjusted.
> ______________________________
>
> The Employment Situation for June 2004 is scheduled to be released
> on Friday, July 2, at 8:30 A.M. (EDT).

negloid@hotmail.com (Mark Neglay) wrote in message news:<d36d7e45.0406071011.60cbdc31@posting.google.com>...
> "Robert J. Kolker" <robert_kolker@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:<rUZwc.64223$Ly.51350@attbi_s01>...
> > Mark Neglay wrote:
> >
> >
> > >
> > > Current population survey.
> >
> > Done by whom and what questions were asked?
> >
> > Bob Kolker
>
> The Bureau of Labor Statistics and the US Census conduct a monthly
> survey of households. They ask people whether or not they are
> working, if they are looking for work, how often they look for work,
> why they have stopped looking for work (if so), etc... The BLS
> webpage isn't up right now for some reason, but as I recall, the
> survey contacts 50,000 households per month. It is from these data
> that the government assesses the unemployment rate as well as a few
> other metrics, such as the size of the labor pool.


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