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Good for you for bucking the adminstrator, but I'm sorry it came at such a high cost to you.

I, too, bucked adminstrators, who were afraid of parents and when parents complained and said "jump" all they could say was "how high". They wanted Mary Poppins in the classroom who would tell parents how wonderful their children were. In other words, lie (when it wasn't the truth).

I know there are bad teachers because I worked with them, but many of them were bad for the reason I stated above. They didn't want complaints from parents. So they wouldn't tell the truth about their child.

Here are some examples:

-I first started teaching in 6th grade. A failing grade was 0%-69%. If a student made a 30% on a test, that is what I gave him. The other 6th grade teacher would never give a percent less than 69% so that student that got 30% would receive a 69% from him. Guess which teacher had tons on his honor roll and guess which teacher had just the ones who deserved it?

-when I taught second grade I quickly found out that the first grade teachers, wanting to be popular with the parents (and administrators) seldom retained students. The one first grade teacher would never put an F on a paper, even if the child deserved it, because it would be too distressing for the child, so this teacher also did grade inflation and wouldn't give below a D.

-so I would inherit students in 2nd grade who couldn't read and who obviously were struggling and should have been retained in 1st grade. So, I would be the bad guy and have to tell parents the truth and of course they would complain to the principal. But not one parent of a child I retained ever told me they regretted it, most told me it was a big help and they did much better the second time. A lot of the retentions were due to students who were the youngest in the class and just needed another year to mature (physically and intellectually).

-So, my point is that I wouldn't lie to parents about their children just to make them feel good. I told the truth about their academic progress and/or their classroom behavior (it always puzzled me as to why parents would think that I had all this time and energy to make up stuff about their kid, and them contact them if it wasn't true). And I did this in a professional way - indicating a plan that I thought would help their child be successful.

My principal, who was very afraid of parents, said his goal was to eliminate parents complaints (read: do whatever you have to do to make this happen) and he once said of a teacher who won some kind of award that the best thing she did was get along with parents. Gee, and I thought the best thing a teacher could do would be to teach the kids.

My final point is that yes, there are bad teachers, but teachers are an easy target for everyone because everyone's had one. And some criticism is fair. However, the right wing extremists hate the government, hate public schools, hate public school teachers and would never say anything supportive of them so IMO they have zero credibility.

What a great post, Cleo's. And I really think we have probably all witnessed what you've outlined. And I commend you and the other post above for bucking the system. Being a principal is political and that's really unfortunate. And a teacher who is only there to make him or herself look good to parents can certainly be counter-productive to the children's learning experience.

Remember when we were children and our parents were children, the teacher was always right and the principal was the final word on any disciplinary problem. You could see the tide turning when teachers and principals started being afraid not only of the parents but in some cases, even the students. Do you think it happened because of corporal punishment being taken out of schools?

I agreed with that because I never thought that teachers were well-educated on methods of administering punishment, especially corporal punishment. And teachers abused their ability to spank kids which is why parents eventually rebelled and demanded that corporal punishment be abandoned as a method of discipline.

I'll never forget one former Navy guy who was a history teacher in my middle school. He had a long narrow paddle with holes in it. When he whipped the boys - x number of hits for certain high crimes - he really lit into them and left bruises that looked like the paddle. When he hit girls we all thought he was enjoying it so much it made us all feel very uncomfortable.

Unfortunately like everything else in life, the bad teachers cause the good teachers to be tarnished with the same brush. Corporal punishment is something people are still debating today as to the true effectiveness. I think it may get you the immediate result you're looking for but in the long run you damage yourself and the person being punished in sometimes irreparable ways.

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Closing the hedge fund loophole

The tax extenders bill currently being cobbled together in the Senate (the House passed its bill already) would provide some much needed tax break extenders for job creation along with benefits and health care subsidies for the unemployed. This is potentially the last chance this session that Congress has a chance to do much in the way of job creation. This bill doesn't do a lot for jobs, but what it does is critical.

And to do it, it's going to take revenue--revenue in the form of closing a tax loophole for money managers, one that allows their income from money management to not actually be taxed as income, but as "carried interest" as though it were investment income rather than salary or wages. What does the resulting loss of revenue from that loophole look like? This

tax-loophole_big.jpg

This is an example of how the rich get richer at the expense of everyone else. Someone has to pay more when they pay so little.

You need to vote into office those who will DO something about this. Obama is NOT that person. He is doing NOTHING to stop this unfairness.

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[quote} However, the right wing extremists hate the government, hate public schools, hate public school teachers and would never say anything supportive of them so IMO they have zero credibility.

This kind of talk is sooooo like you, Cleo's. The fact is WE don't HATE anybody. We just don't like their actions sometimes. Two different things. You must be the kind of person who literally hates people when they don't act or abide by your standards, cause you often say that others are hateful when they don't like the actions of people. Maybe you hate people for how they are, but most people don't. I don't anyway.

Now, I don't hate public schools or teachers. I sent 2 of my oldest boys all through the public school system, and the other 5 children went up to middle school grades in the public school. I thought most of the teachers were good teachers and they treated my kids respectfully and kindly. I have much to say in support of my kids public school teachers. I was talking generally when I said teachers suck. I was mostly angry with the teachers in CT who refused to forgo their raise when they are making more money than any teachers in this whole Nation!

Also, I don't hate the government. I hate the tremendous growth of it! I have always stated that every country is in need of governing, and ours is no different. I just don't think that the government should be soooo BIG. When it gets to a point where the government jobs far exceed the number of private sector jobs to pay for them, then there is a BIG problem. When the government is spending more money than it has and the interest alone has become unsustainable, then we have BIG problems. I would like to see our government CUT, yes CUT, most of it's wasteful spending and give aways as well as reduce it's size of employment drastically. I would like to see the corruptness disapear, like when Obama had Clinton offer that guy a job to get out of the race. That kind of Chicago crap. Government is a necessity and I am thankful for it, just not lately now that it is getting too into everything with regulations and laws and interference in business and the lives of people, like Health Care and education, etc. November will be a wake up call for all those democrats who think this is how Americans want to live and have things run. We don't. Obama's progressive, socialistic, welfare, style is gonna go!

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You need to vote into office those who will DO something about this. Obama is NOT that person. He is doing NOTHING to stop this unfairness.

The democrats in congress are doing something about this. If the republicans don't obstruct it, and it passes, Obama will sign it so, again, you know not of what you speak.

When people elected republicans in the last adminstration they sure didn't do anything about it.

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[quote} However, the right wing extremists hate the government, hate public schools, hate public school teachers and would never say anything supportive of them so IMO they have zero credibility.

This kind of talk is sooooo like you, Cleo's. The fact is WE don't HATE anybody. We just don't like their actions sometimes. Two different things. You must be the kind of person who literally hates people when they don't act or abide by your standards, cause you often say that others are hateful when they don't like the actions of people. Maybe you hate people for how they are, but most people don't. I don't anyway.

Now, I don't hate public schools or teachers.Really? Here's what you said: Parents who complained about homework couldn't stand that the government forced them to hand thier kids over to the public school system or be subject to arrest. Look at the language -government forcing parents to "hand over" their children or be subject to arrest. This is how people who distrust (do you prefer that to "hate"?) the public schools talk. I sent 2 of my oldest boys all through the public school system, and the other 5 children went up to middle school grades in the public school. I thought most of the teachers were good teachers and they treated my kids respectfully and kindly. I have much to say in support of my kids public school teachers. I was talking generally when I said teachers suck. I was mostly angry with the teachers in CT who refused to forgo their raise when they are making more money than any teachers in this whole Nation!

Also, most christian right distrust (or hate) public schools which is why most homeschoolers are christian right. It's as much a political decision as it is a religious decision.

Also, I don't hate the government. I hate the tremendous growth of it! I have always stated that every country is in need of governing, and ours is no different. I just don't think that the government should be soooo BIG. When it gets to a point where the government jobs far exceed the number of private sector jobs to pay for them, then there is a BIG problem. When the government is spending more money than it has and the interest alone has become unsustainable, then we have BIG problems. I would like to see our government CUT, yes CUT, most of it's wasteful spending and give aways as well as reduce it's size of employment drastically. I would like to see the corruptness disapear, like when Obama had Clinton offer that guy a job to get out of the race. That kind of Chicago crap. Government is a necessity and I am thankful for it, just not lately now that it is getting too into everything with regulations and laws and interference in business and the lives of people, like Health Care and education, etc. November will be a wake up call for all those democrats who think this is how Americans want to live and have things run. We don't. Obama's progressive, socialistic, welfare, style is gonna go!

Other than the healthcare reform, which people elected Pres. Obama to enact, Pres. Obama has not expanded any program from the bush regime. He had to add money to the economy to stimulate it. It has worked. We have had 4 months of job growth whearas we were losing 700,000 jobs per month when he took office. Could the economy be better. Absolutely.

This whole socialist, welfare, etc.. accusations are tiresome and untrue. :tongue2:

I have shown statistics, graphs, articles, and so much more that shows where the federal money comes from and where it is spent. The stimulus is a drop in the bucket. The majority is defense, social security, medicare and medicaid and a few other mandated programs.

I have asked what tea party candidate has the nerve to say which of these mandated programs, or even the defense, they plan on cutting. That is the only way to cut spending.

Picking on the poor and welfare is easy. It's an emotional topic. But cutting waste and fraud is a good idea, but again won't make a huge dent in the spending.

Pres. Obama has ordered agencies to trim budgets by 5%. Now I know that will never satisfy the Obama haters, but it's a start.

This is what I mean when I say that I best you with my posts. You speak in emotional terms and just throw things out, and it makes your posts seem irrational.

I post legitimate data and try to explain how things are but when someone is so anti- this president and the federal government, it is an exercise in futility.

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Other than the healthcare reform, which people elected Pres. Obama to enact, Pres. Obama has not expanded any program from the bush regime. He had to add money to the economy to stimulate it. It has worked. We have had 4 months of job growth whearas we were losing 700,000 jobs per month when he took office. Could the economy be better. Absolutely.

It has NOT worked. The only job growth we have had was TEMPORARY census employees. (another government job that pays 2-3X more than is necessary to the them by the tax payers) The unemployment rate is still at 9.7%.

Temporary help services

added 31,000 jobs over the month; employment in the industry has risen by

362,000 since September 2009.

Edited by pattygreen

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The real unemployment rate? 16.6%

The Labor Department's statistics don't include the underemployed and those who have stopped looking for work. This alternative measure creates a much higher number.

[Related content: jobs, construction, manufacturing, economy, financial crisis]

By Mary Engel MSN Money

It's bad enough that the nation's jobless rate is 9.7%. But the real national employment rate is even higher than the U.S. Department of Labor's2_bing_11pxw.gif May figure shows.

The official unemployment index, based on a monthly survey of sample households, counts only people who reported looking for work in the past four weeks. It doesn't account for part-time workers who want to work more hours but can't, given the tight job market2_bing_11pxw.gif. And it doesn't include those who have given up trying to find work.

When the underemployed and the discouraged are added to the numbers, the unemployment rate2_bing_11pxw.gif rises to 16.6%. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, a unit of the Labor Department, began tracking this alternative measure -- known as the U-6 for its department classification -- in 1995 after economists lobbied for a method comparable to the way Japan, Canada and Western Europe count their unemployed.

unemployment.GIF

The truth is that even the broader measure of unemployment doesn't fully capture how difficult the job market is for U.S. workers. It doesn't include self-employed workers whose incomes have shriveled. It doesn't look at former full-time employees who have accepted short-term contracts, without benefits, and at a fraction of their former salaries. And it doesn't count the many would-be workers who are going back to school, taking on more debt, in hopes that advanced degrees will improve their chances of landing jobs.

That broader unemployment rate, or U-6, is up from 16.4% a year ago and from 9.7% in May 2008. It was 7.1% in May 2000.

"It has gone up a lot because a lot of people have been put on short hours," said economist Gary Burtless, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit public policy organization. "And there are a lot of discouraged workers."

Jobs data analysis

Shortened work hours are, in fact, one of the ways this recession is different from the ones in the early 1980s and early 1990s, Burtless said. Another difference is the huge number of people who have been permanently laid off.

"Some people have lost their income altogether, and others have seen a drop in hours even if they remain employed," Burtless said. "It was a double whammy for labor income."

The two trends are especially apparent in California, where the official unemployment rate is 12.6%. Severe layoffs in early 2009 wiped out 100,000 jobs a month, according to Michael S. Bernick, a research fellow at the Milken Institute and a former head of California's labor department. And the number of people working less than 35 hours a week has exploded. The recession has left 1.5 million Californians involuntarily working part time, though they are classified as employed.

Factor in these involuntarily underemployed workers plus the burgeoning number of discouraged job seekers, and California's real unemployment rate is 20%.

Another difference in this recession -- and a likely reason for the high number of discouraged job seekers -- is the number of people who have been unemployed for more than 27 weeks. The Wall Street Journal2_bing_11pxw.gif reports that 7 million Americans have been looking for work for 27 weeks or more, and the majority of them -- 4.7 million -- have been out of work for a year or more. (See "Chronic joblessness cuts deep.") In California, the number out of work more than 27 weeks is almost 900,000, more than the population of San Francis.

"That largely reflects how more severe this recession has been than of 1982 and of the 1990s," said Bernick, who has worked in the job-training field since the late 1970s.

Now, although severe layoffs are no longer occurring, hiring has not picked up significantly.

"The labor market is still very, very slow," Bernick said. "Each job (opening) brings tens, usually hundreds, of applicants."

Mary Engel is a freelance writer from Portland, Ore., who has written for the Los Angeles Times, Anchorage Daily News and Albuquerque Journal. More from MSN

Edited by pattygreen

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pattyg: This kind of talk is sooooo like you, Cleo's. The fact is WE don't HATE anybody. We just don't like their actions sometimes. Two different things. You must be the kind of person who literally hates people when they don't act or abide by your standards, cause you often say that others are hateful when they don't like the actions of people. Maybe you hate people for how they are, but most people don't. I don't anyway.

Now, I don't hate public schools or teachers. I sent 2 of my oldest boys all through the public school system, and the other 5 children went up to middle school grades in the public school. I thought most of the teachers were good teachers and they treated my kids respectfully and kindly. I have much to say in support of my kids public school teachers. I was talking generally when I said teachers suck. I was mostly angry with the teachers in CT who refused to forgo their raise when they are making more money than any teachers in this whole Nation!

Also, I don't hate the government. I hate the tremendous growth of it! I have always stated that every country is in need of governing, and ours is no different. I just don't think that the government should be soooo BIG. When it gets to a point where the government jobs far exceed the number of private sector jobs to pay for them, then there is a BIG problem. When the government is spending more money than it has and the interest alone has become unsustainable, then we have BIG problems. I would like to see our government CUT, yes CUT, most of it's wasteful spending and give aways as well as reduce it's size of employment drastically. I would like to see the corruptness disapear, like when Obama had Clinton offer that guy a job to get out of the race. That kind of Chicago crap. Government is a necessity and I am thankful for it, just not lately now that it is getting too into everything with regulations and laws and interference in business and the lives of people, like Health Care and education, etc. November will be a wake up call for all those democrats who think this is how Americans want to live and have things run. We don't. Obama's progressive, socialistic, welfare, style is gonna go!

This kind of talk about hate when somebody else uses it? YOU're the one who has been so quick to accuse the progressives of hate! You even started a thread using that word. So you have no right to call somebody else on it. Maybe you've reformed and don't accuse everybody of hate now but you sure used to, ad nauseum.

We DO want Obama's progressive style and way of doing things. We DO. And our only complaint is that he isn't progressing fast enough. Your mavericks didn't get elected. Our candidates did. So stand back and wait your turn.

We want major cuts in needless spending just like you do. And who in the world doesn't? Well the actual Republican legislators are who doesn't. They only talk about cutting spending. In fact they don't do it once they're elected. They still talk about it after elections but when they vote and draft legislation it's making the government bigger, not smaller. So be careful whom you vote for. If you think you're getting what they're promising when you vote for them, you'd better think again.

As for offering a job to someone they don't want to run against someone they do want elected, get real. That's not just Chicago politics, it's the way politics works everywhere! That's what happens when people in politics become elected and powerful. They get to control things. For you to act like this president invented politics is just plain disengenuous and you're not fooling anyone with that talk.

Edited by BJean

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Other than the healthcare reform, which people elected Pres. Obama to enact, Pres. Obama has not expanded any program from the bush regime. He had to add money to the economy to stimulate it. It has worked. We have had 4 months of job growth whearas we were losing 700,000 jobs per month when he took office. Could the economy be better. Absolutely.

It has NOT worked. The only job growth we have had was TEMPORARY census employees. (another government job that pays 2-3X more than is necessary to the them by the tax payers) The unemployment rate is still at 9.7%.

Temporary help services

added 31,000 jobs over the month; employment in the industry has risen by

362,000 since September 2009.

The unemployment fell from 9.9% to 9.7%. You are referring to only the month of May job statistics when you talk about temporary census workers. In April there were thousands of private sector jobs added. And regardless of whether some of the jobs were census workers or not, we have had FOUR months of positive job growth, as opposed to loss of jobs. Of course the Obama haters would never focus on THAT.

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The real unemployment rate? 16.6%

The Labor Department's statistics don't include the underemployed and those who have stopped looking for work. This alternative measure creates a much higher number.

[Related content: jobs, construction, manufacturing, economy, financial crisis]

By Mary Engel MSN Money

It's bad enough that the nation's jobless rate is 9.7%. But the real national employment rate is even higher than the U.S. Department of Labor's2_bing_11pxw.gif May figure shows.

The official unemployment index, based on a monthly survey of sample households, counts only people who reported looking for work in the past four weeks. It doesn't account for part-time workers who want to work more hours but can't, given the tight job market2_bing_11pxw.gif. And it doesn't include those who have given up trying to find work.

When the underemployed and the discouraged are added to the numbers, the unemployment rate2_bing_11pxw.gif rises to 16.6%. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, a unit of the Labor Department, began tracking this alternative measure -- known as the U-6 for its department classification -- in 1995 after economists lobbied for a method comparable to the way Japan, Canada and Western Europe count their unemployed.

unemployment.GIF

The truth is that even the broader measure of unemployment doesn't fully capture how difficult the job market is for U.S. workers. It doesn't include self-employed workers whose incomes have shriveled. It doesn't look at former full-time employees who have accepted short-term contracts, without benefits, and at a fraction of their former salaries. And it doesn't count the many would-be workers who are going back to school, taking on more debt, in hopes that advanced degrees will improve their chances of landing jobs.

That broader unemployment rate, or U-6, is up from 16.4% a year ago and from 9.7% in May 2008. It was 7.1% in May 2000.

"It has gone up a lot because a lot of people have been put on short hours," said economist Gary Burtless, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit public policy organization. "And there are a lot of discouraged workers."

Jobs data analysis

Shortened work hours are, in fact, one of the ways this recession is different from the ones in the early 1980s and early 1990s, Burtless said. Another difference is the huge number of people who have been permanently laid off.

"Some people have lost their income altogether, and others have seen a drop in hours even if they remain employed," Burtless said. "It was a double whammy for labor income."

The two trends are especially apparent in California, where the official unemployment rate is 12.6%. Severe layoffs in early 2009 wiped out 100,000 jobs a month, according to Michael S. Bernick, a research fellow at the Milken Institute and a former head of California's labor department. And the number of people working less than 35 hours a week has exploded. The recession has left 1.5 million Californians involuntarily working part time, though they are classified as employed.

Factor in these involuntarily underemployed workers plus the burgeoning number of discouraged job seekers, and California's real unemployment rate is 20%.

Another difference in this recession -- and a likely reason for the high number of discouraged job seekers -- is the number of people who have been unemployed for more than 27 weeks. The Wall Street Journal2_bing_11pxw.gif reports that 7 million Americans have been looking for work for 27 weeks or more, and the majority of them -- 4.7 million -- have been out of work for a year or more. (See "Chronic joblessness cuts deep.") In California, the number out of work more than 27 weeks is almost 900,000, more than the population of San Francis.

"That largely reflects how more severe this recession has been than of 1982 and of the 1990s," said Bernick, who has worked in the job-training field since the late 1970s.

Now, although severe layoffs are no longer occurring, hiring has not picked up significantly.

"The labor market is still very, very slow," Bernick said. "Each job (opening) brings tens, usually hundreds, of applicants."

Mary Engel is a freelance writer from Portland, Ore., who has written for the Los Angeles Times, Anchorage Daily News and Albuquerque Journal. More from MSN

We didn't use these figures about the unemployment rate when bush was in office. The official unemployment rate is 9.7% - down from 9.9% in April. It is going to take awhile for the economy to rebound from 8 disasterous years of bush. Employment will be the last to improve. The GNP is about 4% a year, a good indicator. But everyone wants Pres. Obama to perform miracles. Clean up all bush's messes, get the economy on track, deal with (and pay for) bush's two wars, etc, etc,.

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This kind of talk about hate when somebody else uses it? YOU're the one who has been so quick to accuse the progressives of hate! You even started a thread using that word. So you have no right to call somebody else on it. Maybe you've reformed and don't accuse everybody of hate now but you sure used to, ad nauseum.

We DO want Obama's progressive style and way of doing things. We DO. And our only complaint is that he isn't progressing fast enough. Your mavericks didn't get elected. Our candidates did. So stand back and wait your turn.

We want major cuts in needless spending just like you do. And who in the world doesn't? Well the actual Republican legislators are who doesn't. They only talk about cutting spending. In fact they don't do it once they're elected. They still talk about it after elections but when they vote and draft legislation it's making the government bigger, not smaller. So be careful whom you vote for. If you think you're getting what they're promising when you vote for them, you'd better think again.

As for offering a job to someone they don't want to run against someone they do want elected, get real. That's not just Chicago politics, it's the way politics works everywhere! That's what happens when people in politics become elected and powerful. They get to control things. For you to act like this president invented politics is just plain disengenuous and you're not fooling anyone with that talk.

You're right on, BJean. When someone talks about the legitimate collection of federal taxes as stealing, or playing Robin Hood, this is from someone who distrusts the government now, because we have a democrat in the White House. I guess the collection of taxes under republican presidents was okay. And I might add, middle class, working americans are paying LESS in taxes under Pres. Obama than under bush.

Also, she posts about pork barrel spending or waste as if that didn't happen under bush. Or wasteful spending, like it just started on Jan. 21, 2009. Or she'll go on and on about all this spending, but when asked to list one NEW entitlement program under Pres. Obama that isn't paid for, she doesn't have any.

She ignores and believes that most of what we spend federal tax dollars on is somehow frivilous spending - which is defense, medicare, medicaid and social security. This spending happened under bush, too, and is mandated. She offers no solution for this mandated spending (neither do any of the tea party candidates - to ask for elimination of these programs is political suicide and they know it - so they are vague, as she is, about cutting spending)

Sure there is waste and cutting it is a start but the real spending is for what I have discussed above.

Also, she ignores that much of the spending Pres. Obama is doing is on bush's programs - the two wars, medicare part D and the lost revenue from the 2 tax cuts for the rich.

She's all about - "you just wait and see" whether it's the "real" cost of healthcare or how marriage will be defined if we allow gays to marry. Let's just deal with the here and now and not some neocon's opinion about what might happen.

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I had an appt. with my oncologist today and while in the waiting room was reading an old (April) Newsweek. Imagine my surprise when I turned the page and saw this huge headline: Regulate, baby, Regulate. That's MY second mantra and someone stole it!! :smile: It was about the EPA. I'm sorry but if those who get paid to write articles keep stealing my ideas, I going to have to ask for royalties. :thumbup:

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So, are we saying we had NO job growth at all? This month we got the report that we added 400K of census jobs and 41K of private jobs, but what about the previous months of jobs? Those are census jobs as well? So from here on out, the jobs report will be recording census jobs? I am trying to understand the point of making a big deal out of census jobs, when they are jobs? If next month they come out with less than 41k in private jobs then we have something to talk about. As of now, everybody who understand the job report understands that census jobs would be in this report and is not a pattern or trend to a downward spiral. What is needed is another stimulus to get us through another dip.

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So, are we saying we had NO job growth at all? This month we got the report that we added 400K of census jobs and 41K of private jobs, but what about the previous months of jobs? Those are census jobs as well? So from here on out, the jobs report will be recording census jobs? I am trying to understand the point of making a big deal out of census jobs, when they are jobs? If next month they come out with less than 41k in private jobs then we have something to talk about. As of now, everybody who understand the job report understands that census jobs would be in this report and is not a pattern or trend to a downward spiral. What is needed is another stimulus to get us through another dip.

That's right. Those who are smart can see that we've had four months of positive job growth, regardless of how few jobs were added this past month. They were on the plus side, which contrasts sharply with the 700,000 jobs being lost each month under the bush regime.

Those who are anti-Obama will just focus on how many jobs created were census jobs. Just another deflection from the fact that Obama's economic stimulus and agenda are working and the republicans have zip to offer.

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      Menschliches Wachstumshormon (HGH) ist ein kleines Protein, das in einem Teil des Gehirns, der Hypophyse, produziert wird. Es wandert in Ihrem Blutkreislauf durch Ihren ganzen Körper, um Ihren Körper wachsen zu lassen.
      · 0 replies
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    • juliie

      good morning all ,my np sent all my cleared requirements to my insurance for approval yesterday, so now just waiting for an approval and surgery date  
      · 0 replies
      1. This update has no replies.
    • BeanitoDiego

      Lost my Pup last month and struggled really hard for that first month. Stopped tracking intake and slid into old habits here and there. Also quit working out. Can't walk in the neighborhood because of all of the memories we shared. Losing my Pup is the most heartbreaking thing I've ever been through. My Pup was my world 💔
      Talked to my doc during my one year followup and they were not worried about my current status. They know, and I know, that I will get back on track.
      · 0 replies
      1. This update has no replies.
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