Son_of_Perdition
Senior Member
I feel confident
The latest US employment data shows that 292,000 new jobs were created in December, while the unemployment rate held steady at just 5.0%. Sounds great, doesn’t it? Then again, those who were willing to dig into the dirty details came to a vastly different conclusion. David Stockman notes that, after taking into account the usual government statistical hocus pocus, only 11,000 new jobs were actually created. Even worse, there were just 8000 new manufacturing jobs created in America last month. Yes, just 8000 — with the hocus pocus — in a country with a population of 325 million people.
As financial analyst Dave Kranzler more aptly observes, unless you’re living in a fantasy world, “The (total jobs) number reported is not even remotely credible when put in the context of what’s happening to the U.S. economy.” Of course, a lack of well-paying jobs that can actually support a family is no doubt the reason why, despite being seven years into a so-called “recovery,” 93% of American counties still haven’t recovered from the last recession.
Obamacare is so expensive, fully one in three Americans are cutting spending on food, rent and other essentials just to afford the healthcare premiums. On the bright side, our broken healthcare system would be so much worse if the $2500 in annual healthcare savings promised to average American families by all those Obamacare advocates before it became the law of the land was actually a bald-faced lie. Oh wait …
Meanwhile, the US stock market had another rough week, capped off with big losses on Friday. The Dow is now back to levels not seen last August. For the week, the Dow was down another 2.4%, the S&P fell another 2.2%, and Nasdaq lost 2.7%. For the year, the stock markets are even worse: the Dow is down 8.2%, the S&P is off 8%, Dow Transports have plunged 10.9%, the Nasdaq has lost 10.4%, and the Russell 2000 has disappeared into the abyss, losing 11.3%.
In his State of the Union speech this week, President Obama insisted that, “Anyone claiming that America’s economy is in decline is peddling fiction.” But seriously, folks — if the American economy isn’t declining, then how do you explain WalMart’s decision to shutter 154 stores in the US? I’m sure Puerto Rico doesn’t think any talk of economic decline is fear mongering and lies. According to none other than US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew, the American territory and so-called 51st state “is in the midst of an economic collapse.” Not a recession — economic collapse. --- Len Penzo