maxiep
RIP Dr. Jack
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Yawn. Sad. Boring.
barfo
I'm glad we agree on your opinions in the OT forum.
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Yawn. Sad. Boring.
barfo
What the hell just happened here?

barfo got carried away and a troll infiltrated to be a troll. But, these things happen on a message board some time.
Soooooooooooooooooooo, whaddya think of the stimulus jobs?![]()
Says the guy who took the thread off-subject in the first place...
barfo
]I beg to differ! [here we go again............]
Go ahead and beg. But my post, while a joke, was addressing the topic of stimulus jobs. Your post in response had nothing whatsoever to do with jobs.
barfo
[sigh] Why me?
Et tu, barfo?
Why you? Because you derailed the thread and then complained about the thread being derailed. That's why you.
Just to be clear, I don't mind that you derailed the thread. I'm not concerned at all about thread derailment, because usually (although not this time) they end up more interesting that way.
barfo


WASHINGTON – About 650,000 jobs have been saved or created under President Barack Obama's economic stimulus plan, the White House said Friday, saying it is on track to reach the president's goal of 3.5 million jobs by the end of next year.
New job numbers from businesses, contractors, state and local governments, nonprofit groups and universities were scheduled to be released publicly later Friday. White House economic adviser Jared Bernstein said the figures will show that, when adding in jobs linked to $288 billion in tax cuts, the stimulus plan has created or saved more than 1 million jobs.
The data will be posted on recovery.gov, the web site of the independent panel overseeing stimulus spending.
"It's a great example of the unprecedented transparency, where the American taxpayer can point and click and see their taxes creating jobs," Bernstein said.
Government recovery plans — everything from the $787 billion stimulus to tax credits for buying new homes to government deals on new cars — are credited with helping the economy grow again after a record four straight losing quarters.
But the job market has yet to show signs of recovery, putting pressure on the White House to show that the stimulus was worth its hefty price tag.
When it is released Friday, the new data will be the largest and most complete look at how the stimulus money has been spent so far. The White House promised the data would be far more reliable than the first batch of numbers on federal contracts, which the administration initially embraced, then branded a "test run" after thousands of errors were discovered.
Teachers are expected to represent the largest number of jobs in the report. With state budgets in crisis, federal aid helped governors avoid major cuts in education, which officials said spared hundreds of thousands of teachers from the unemployment line.
IDK if this was mentioned in this thread already. I'm not going one way or another on this, I just saw this was on the Yahoo! front page and thought it was relevant.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_stimulus_jobs
Gov't says stimulus saved or created 650,000 jobs
It's how you framed it- and I think you know it. All I was asking was for a bit of decency. Is that too much?

Why don't they just say they saved or created 2,000,000 jobs? 20,000,000? The basic issue is that "saved" jobs isn't a metric that can be measured, which has been acknowledged by economists across the political spectrum.
Today's stimulus jobs are tomorrow's lay-offs.
You cannot artificially stimulate the economy, sooner or later it is going to correct itself.
Why don't they just say they saved or created 2,000,000 jobs? 20,000,000? The basic issue is that "saved" jobs isn't a metric that can be measured, which has been acknowledged by economists across the political spectrum.
I think you are missing the point. The idea here is not to make permanent improvements, the idea is to make the bottom of the recession trough not quite as deep as it would have been otherwise.
barfo
by extending the problem further into the future by borrowing money the US doesn't have to create non-essential jobs for the sake of creating them?
This is true. The "saved" business is just politics.
Not that this is the first administration to play games with numbers. If I remember correctly Reagan actually redefined unemployment, so that fewer people were counted as unemployed.
barfo
No, to flatten out the bottom of the recession trough, as I mentioned.
barfo
No, to flatten out the bottom of the recession trough, as I mentioned.
barfo
Two wrongs don't make a right. When you see something that's bullshit, you shouldn't make an excuse for it. You should call bullshit. And this saved jobs idea is bullshit.
who's to say that it actually did anything to "flatten" this mythical trough you are referring to that time wouldn't have fixed on its own?
Is that why we've only spent 14% of the "stimulus" money?
who's to say that it actually did anything to "flatten" this mythical trough you are referring to that time wouldn't have fixed on its own? This stimulus program was used to fund special pet project programs that the democrats wanted to implement. It was so rushed that it was just throwing cash.
If it was so rushed then why is so little of it spent?
This "mythical" trough seems to have been identified and discovered by many economists. So I guess they're all "mythical" too, eh?
The problem is that sometime people think only of the here and now. On the Democrat side, they don't foresee (or at least I'd say those in Congress) the effects of huge deficits in later years. On the Republican side, they refuse to see that things could very easily have/will/could have spiraled out of control. If you don't start patching up the bottom of the boat while you're taking on water, you sink.