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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (85586)6/9/2010 8:28:10 PM
From: Hope Praytochange1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224750
 
Chronic Joblessness Bites Deep
Long-Term Unemployment Hits New High, Cuts Across Income Levels, Demographics
Richard Moran, sitting in his garage in Ortonville, Mich., Tuesday, has been unemployed for two-and-a-half years after losing his job with Chrysler.
.The job market is improving, but one statistic presents a stark reminder of the challenges that remain: Nearly half of the unemployed—45.9%—have been out of work longer than six months, more than at any time since the Labor Department began keeping track in 1948.

Even in the worst months of the early 1980s, when the jobless rate topped 10% for months on end, only about one in four of the unemployed was out of work for more than six months.

Overall, seven million Americans have been looking for work for 27 weeks or more, and most of them—4.7 million—have been out of work for a year or more.

Long-term unemployment has reached nearly every segment of the population, but some have been particularly hard-hit. The typical long-term unemployed worker is a white man with a high-school education or less. Older unemployed workers also tend to be out of work longer. Those between ages 65 and 69 who still wish to work have typically been jobless for 49.8 weeks.
The effects of long-term unemployment are likely to linger when the overall jobless rate falls toward normal, threatening to create a pool of nearly permanently unemployed workers, a condition once more common in Europe than in the U.S.

"The consequences are worse for those who can't find a job quickly," said Till Marco von Wachter, a Columbia University economist. They extend from atrophying skills to a higher likelihood of unhappiness and anxiety. Workers out of work for a long time tend to find it more difficult to find a job, and "the longer people are unemployed the more likely they are to eventually give up searching and thereby drop out of the labor force," Mr. von Wachter said.

The typical unemployed worker, regardless of occupation, had been unemployed for a seasonally adjusted 21.6 weeks as of April. Because of the deep recession, Congress extended jobless benefits to a maximum of 99 weeks in states with high unemployment. Those extended benefits will expire if Congress doesn't act; the Labor Department estimates that 19,000 jobless workers could start losing benefits in the first week of June. The House has voted to extend the benefits; the Senate hasn't yet.

While blue-collar and construction workers have been battered by the recession, they aren't the only ones hit. Unemployed production workers, including toolmakers, woodworkers and food processors, have been out of work for a median of 38.1 weeks. Unemployed workers whose most recent job was in management, business and financial operations have typically been out of work for 32.3 weeks.

Richard Moran of Ortonville, Mich., the state with the highest U.S. unemployment rate, hasn't had a job for two-and-a-half years. The 57-year-old, who was laid off from a testing and design job for Chrysler Group LLC, suspects his age is working against him.

Mr. Moran has attended two free training programs. The first, to become a corrections officer, ended at roughly the same time that Michigan was closing prisons amid tightening budgets. He recently finished an auto-parts design course to refresh his skills. "The certificates are piling up," said Mr. Moran, who also has a four-year college degree in mass communications.

While education is helpful, college graduates have also fallen into the ranks of the long-term unemployed. They represent 15.9% of the long-term jobless, compared with 14.9% of all unemployed workers. Those with high school degrees who haven't been to college comprise 40.7% of long-term unemployed, compared with 37.8% of all unemployed workers.

Mr. Moran's wife earns a good salary at Baker College so the couple has been able to keep up on the mortgage and other bills, but they have cut back on extras. Meanwhile, their 19-year-old daughter snagged two jobs at a nearby mall. "It's very depressing when your daughter's got two jobs, your wife's got a good job, and you can't find anything," he said.

Mr. Moran said he feared the shame and anxiety of long-term unemployment would overwhelm him. He grew depressed and withdrawn before discovering free therapy sessions at a nearby college, which he now attends in addition to taking antianxiety medication. "It seems like no matter what I do, it fizzles," he said. "But there's always a hope."

Write to Sara Murray at sara.murray@wsj.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (85586)6/9/2010 8:36:37 PM
From: lorne4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
ken..."Harry Reid has $15 million to talk about her beliefs."...

So is it all about who has the most money...do you care at all about principals, morals, honesty...oh right you are democrat so money and control is what it is all about for you.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (85586)6/9/2010 8:50:21 PM
From: lorne1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224750
 
ken...this is the same thing that got hussein obama into the White House.....democratic party stupidity ... hey this guy might make a better President that hussein obama likely his record is cleaner that hussein...LOL

Mystery S.C. Dem has pending felony charge
Surprise Senate nominee won't drop out of race despite pleas from Dems

Mary Ann Chastain / AP
msnbc.msn.com

Alvin M. Greene holds a copy of his campaign flier in Manning, S.C., on Wednesday.


COLUMBIA, S.C. - A day after an unemployed veteran charged with a felony shocked South Carolina's Democratic establishment by winning the U.S. Senate primary, party officials were still scratching their heads: What happened?

Alvin Greene, 32, didn't raise any money. He didn't have a website. And his opponent was a relatively better-known former legislator, Vic Rawl, who was already preparing for the general election.

Greene was considered such a long shot that his opponent and media didn't even bother to check his background. If they had, they would have discovered he faces a felony obscenity charge after an alleged encounter with a college student last fall.
After The Associated Press reported Greene's charge Wednesday, the leader of the state Democratic party said she asked Greene to withdraw from the race.

"I did not do this lightly, as I believe strongly that the Democratic voters of this state have the right to select our nominee," Fowler said. "But this new information about Mr. Greene ... would certainly have affected the decisions of many of those voters."

But Greene said he will not step aside.

"The Democratic Party has chosen their nominee, and we have to stand behind their choice," Greene told the AP at his home in Manning. "The people have spoken. We need to be pro-South Carolina, not anti-Greene."

Court records show Greene was arrested in November and charged with showing obscene Internet photos to a University of South Carolina student, then talking about going to her room at a university dorm.

Charged with disseminating, procuring or promoting obscenity, Greene could face up to five years in prison. He has yet to enter a plea or be indicted.

South Carolina state law prohibits convicted felons from serving in state office. Felons can serve in federal office, although the U.S. House or Senate could vote to expel any member deemed unfit to serve.

Rawl said he didn't know about Greene's arrest until reading media reports about it.

"It's an absolute surprise," Rawl said. "I can't really make any comments, because I don't know what's going on."
Greene welcomed a reporter into his childhood home he shares with his father Wednesday afternoon along the backroads to Myrtle Beach. Wearing warmup pants and a green family reunion shirt from 1993, he had to be repeatedly cajoled to get his picture taken.

He seemed overwhelmed by his new fame and admitted he has no campaign signs, staff, buttons or even a slogan. He hoped the state and national party leaders might call him back, this time to offer some help.

"I need my state and national party to help me," Greene said. "See, I don't have any signs. Those take campaign contributions."

He declined to comment about his pending felony charge, but the college student he was accused of approaching described the incident to the AP. It's not clear what Greene was doing on the campus.
Camille McCoy, a 19-year-old rising sophomore at the University of South Carolina, said she called campus police after Greene sat down next to her in a computer lab and asked her to look at his screen, which showed a pornographic website.

"I said, 'That's offensive,' and he sat there laughing," said McCoy, who was 18 at the time. "It was very disgusting. He said, 'Let's go to your room now.' It was kind of scary."

McCoy, who is from Charleston, said she was stunned to learn that the same man she later identified from a photo lineup was running for office, much less had won a party's nomination.
"You're kidding?" said McCoy, who is a Republican. "Oh my gosh, that's ridiculous!"

Meanwhile, questions abounded in the day-after deconstruction of Greene's win.

Had Rawl been a victim of the anti-incumbent sentiment that swept the state's primaries? He only carried four counties, but one was Charleston, where he currently serves on county council.

Did Greene capitalize on some sort of a movement among either black voters or the unemployed? A subset of the Machinists' union ran cable ads in South Carolina encouraging the state's jobless to vote, but the group says it never promoted Greene or mentioned his name. The director of the state's NAACP chapter says he knew nothing about Greene, who is black, before the win.
It might come down to the simple fact that his name was listed before Rawl's on the alphabetized ballot, a possibility Fowler said she pondered Tuesday night.

Even if Rawl had been successful, one analyst was skeptical it would have made a difference against DeMint, a tea party darling who has marshaled a $3.5 million war chest to win his second term.

"A lot of it speaks to the lack of depth of the bench for the Democratic Party in South Carolina right now," said Scott Huffmon, a political scientist at Winthrop University. "Their best shot in November, really, is the Governor's Mansion."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (85586)6/10/2010 9:05:08 AM
From: jlallen4 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224750
 
No links of course. Obviously BS, as are most of your postings..



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (85586)6/10/2010 11:27:00 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 224750
 
Election 2010: Nevada Senate

Nevada Senate: Angle 50%, Reid 39%


Thursday, June 10, 2010 Email to a Friend ShareThis.Advertisement

Sharron Angle, following her come-from-behind Republican Primary win Tuesday, has bounced to an 11-point lead over Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in Nevada’s closely-watched U.S. Senate race.

A new Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of Likely Voters in Nevada, taken Wednesday night, shows Angle earning 50% support while Reid picks up 39% of the vote. Five percent (5%) like some other candidate, and six percent (6%) are undecided.

rasmussenreports.com