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Jim Hightower | Real Recovery Is Easy to Spell: J-O-B-S

by: Jim Hightower, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

    The recession is over! The economy is growing! The Dow Jones is above 10,000! Bankers are pocketing profits and fat bonuses! Happy days are here again!

    Unless, of course, you're just a regular working stiff struggling with falling income and rising unemployment -- and sensing that your family's grip on middle-class life is steadily slipping away. Welcome to America's tinkle-down economy.

    The latest job numbers mock the smiley-faced claims of economists and polticos that the Great Recession is over:

  • 10.2 percent of America's workforce is officially unemployed -- nearly 16 million people.

       
  • Another 15 million people are either so discouraged by their fruitless job search that they've quit looking, or they've had to settle for part-time jobs when they want and need full-time employment. Add the discouraged and underemployed to the number of the officially unemployed, and the percentage of our people who can't find the work they need rises to 17.5 percent -- one out of every six workers.

       
  • More than a third of the officially unemployed have been jobless for more than half a year -- a new record for long-term joblessness.

       
  • Nearly 15 percent of the unemployed have college degrees, and many more of the college-educated are underemployed.

       
  • October was the 22nd straight month that the U.S. economy lost jobs -- the longest streak since 1939. About 7.3 million jobs have been eliminated since December 2007, when the recession began. In this same time span, 2.8 million new workers have come into the job market, meaning our economy is now 10.1 million jobs short of the number needed just to get back to even.

       
  • While average wages have risen slightly in the past year, average weekly pay has stagnated because workers have had their hours cut.

    So please excuse our country's workaday majority for not cheering the news that prosperity has returned to those at the tippy top of America's economic pyramid. And -- please -- do not continue to insult workers with the dismissive declaration that the economy is experiencing a "jobless recovery." Not only is that an oxymoron, it is moronic.

    If most American's have not recovered, then neither has our economy. (Imagine a situation in which working families were prospering, but corporate profits were down for 22 straight months -- do you think economists and politicos could get away with labeling it a "profitless recovery"?)

    Especially galling is the fact that the talk of recovery is mostly based on the resurrection of Wall Street profits. Conveniently ignored by exultant bankers is the reality that they would have no profits (and no banks) except that Washington has propped them up with some $13 trillion in public bailout money.

    The rationale for this unprecedented rescue of failed bankers was that they would reciprocate with a vigorous lending effort to businesses, which then could start hiring and rebuilding the grassroots economy that Wall Street greed crushed. But astonishingly, the giveaway to bankers came with no strings attached! So, instead of pouring capital into the American countryside, they've gone right back to casino-style speculation -- while pocketing more than $100 billion in bonuses for themselves.

    These people are thieves. They've stolen our public funds, our jobs and our middle-class aspirations. It's time to grab them by the short hairs, forcing them to make the loans that our real economy needs -- or have their banks shut down and their capital turned over to community banks, credit unions and others who will invest in America's productive businesses and workers.

    After the latest jobless numbers came out, President Obama said, "I will not rest until all Americans who want work can find work." Excuse me, but that's like a lawyer saying to his client, "I'll get you out of jail if it takes me the rest of your life."

    America's workers and communities don't need presidential assurances, they need action, bold and immediate. As Obama said in last year's campaign, "We need to pass an economic rescue plan for the middle class, and we need to do it not five years from now, not next year, we need to do it right now."

    Where did that guy go?
   
Copyright 2009 Creators.com
   
 

 

  

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Columnist, national radio commentator, public speaker and author of the forthcoming book, "Swim Against The Current: Even a Dead Fish Can Go With the Flow," Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses and just-plain-folks.

Comments

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Hightower's HINDSIGHT is

Hightower's HINDSIGHT is 20-20 - just like the GOP, it is easy to criticize; and, difficult to accomplish ...

Excellent article. We

Excellent article. We should all be pushing for a permanent reduction in the payroll tax and a simplified tax system, because: 1) not taking what people earn is the only way for them to have it! 2) A simple tax system doesn't have loopholes! If the system is simple enough for everyone to understand, it's hard to scam and politicians can't keep giving reductions to large donaters without people finding out. Jobless recovery = oxymoron is a beautiful definition.

Obama talks the talk, but he

Obama talks the talk, but he doesn't walk the walk!! Just another politician with good oratory skills. He doesn't know whats really going on because he is another elitist! Hes living high like Wall Street while the rest of us drown in debt while losing our homes and jobs. Wheres our bailout? Oh, yeah thats right a few tax deductions for a car or home. The inequity of it all is no different than a 3rd world country. Thats what we are now. Thanks for the change Obama! He's no different than Bush except he can speak properly! The only way out of this is if we have a third party candidate that everyone votes for! Someone who has the guts to really make change for the people!

I think I can safely say I

I think I can safely say I share the sentiment of many fellow Americans when I say that I just plain want this over. I am sick of hearing about it. At this point, I am worn out enough from this issue that I actually say without hesitation that if President Obama is the socialist he is accused of being, he should sick the secret police on these bankers and executives and throw them all into a gulag style prison for the rest of their lives. Not even because I want to see them punished, but because I am tired of hearing about it. Get them out of sight, out of mind, so that as a nation we can perhaps start to psychologically recover from this trauma.

It is my opinion this

It is my opinion this country would recover a hell of a lot faster if they gave all these pay-outs to the working class of this country to pay off our debts. If they don't trust us to pay our bills find out what we owe and pay it to those we owe. First thing I would do is close out every stinking credit card account that we have or had. I have already closed most of them and the idiots still send me offers for their cards because my credit is so good.

The Ivies whack credit

The Ivies whack credit unions for insurance payments, forcing them broke. Meanwhile, the shake-down kings profit from arrangements with subsidized big-engineering and big-concrete to force cities into second liens for unfunded-mandates that degrade environments. Some lawyers/Erin Brockaviches with 20-hour work ethics have to nail big-conglomerates for damages to reach the limousine infrastructure and to clear out their portfolios of private prisons, etc. We can repurpose those prisons once we get the profit out of stuffing them with less-advantaged people who have committed technical violations laws designed to protect big-ag and the other bigs.

Outsourcing isn't being

Outsourcing isn't being mentioned when the loss of jobs is discussed. How many of those lost jobs have gone overseas? If low-prices are the only goal then we've been on the right track. If a healthy economy is the goal then U.S. companies and share-holders need to accept a reasonable return on investments instead of obnoxious profits and gilded bonus awards.

Yeah yeah yeah... But tell

Yeah yeah yeah... But tell me... What do the needs and benefits of ''Working Stiffs'' have to do with CORPORATE NEEDS..??.... Haven't you noticed..? Congress is not in the WE THE PEOPLE Mindset these days... Its in the Global Corporate Mindset and the WE THE CONSUMERS Mindset.... In Fact, Its in the mindset of trying to stand on Speaker Podiums so as to try and see above the Flood of Corporate Money Flowing Their Way.... Face it--- 'Too Big To Fail' Is a Corporate-Congress Sponsored Description... Who will Sponsor REALITY and openly Describe American Workers and American Shoppers as TOO BIG TO FAIL..?.. Its the TRUTH.., YET.., It seems no one will. At least not from within Global Corporate Owned Media or Global Corporate Owned Congress... Where's the Corporate Profit and Power and the Get-Re-elected Money in that..?

I have always wondered why

I have always wondered why the people in this country feel so powerless when they have all the power. They can change banks - go with small local community banks - stop shopping - barter - have a vegetable garden - stop buying products and every advertised thing that pollute or cause excess garbage - create a strike and refuse to pay income tax until the corruption is cleaned out of the US political system. It is best to stop complaining - and start doing things on a personal level for your self and for your neighbor - think about turning off lights - driving your car less - buy less corporate products support local business -

The Bailout is and was a

The Bailout is and was a farce. No company or corporation should ever be too big to let fail. The unstated premise of that statement is that all of the smaller companies are too small to save. Most of the entities receiving bailout funds should have been allowed to crash and burn. If this were truly a Free-Market economy, that is exactly what should have happened. The phrase "jobless recovery" is patently ridiculous. Isn't there a product sold on TV called "Motionless Exercise"? As Jim Hightower pointed out, they are both oxymoron's. And can someone tell me when greed became a cherished American value? I think it was during the Reagan administration but I could be wrong. As long as the rich keep getting richer, the economists will say that we are recovering. What they never acknowledge is that the poor are getting poorer. How these two disparate realities could ever equal recovery is beyond me. Great article Mr. Hightower!

Jim, you have hit the nail

Jim, you have hit the nail on the head!

09:25 β€” Wonder Wonder---

09:25 β€” Wonder Wonder--- such wonderful ideas I whole heartedly support and will right up until the day CONservative driven deregulation in the name of less and less and less government of the people by the people for the people in all our lives allows some Global Corporation to move in and put all those enterprises right out of business... in our brave new corporate run world... Gee Gosh Golly..!,,, those busy bee CONservative Republicans and those Smiley Face Spineless Democrats are working away the days trying to turn the dirty old earth and all that rubbish left by plants and tress and shrubs everywhere, not to mention the animal droppings..., into a Corporate Paradise for Consumers everywhere who want stuff... lots and lots of stuff... Its their job. If you don't believe me, just look at the paved over, unnatural, polluted, uptight, fat body world around you... brought to you by GLOBAL CORPORATIONS who want you to experience the comfort of walking and driving on flat paved surfaces from your home to everywhere so shopping will be easier anytime, everywhere...

Once again Reaganomics has

Once again Reaganomics has failed to materialize. The trickle down theory didn't work when Reagan was president and it isn't working now. One percent of the population still enjoys ninety five percent of the wealth, and they're not about to give it up, ever, ever, ever. Last week a headline read, "Recession Over", uh, what? Maybe for wall street bankers and CEO's but not for me. I'm still standing under the rain spout waiting for a job to trickle down so I can get off unemployment compensation. Reagan and his crowd were and are such a bunch of fools. To think that drooling, greedy corporate types are going to create more jobs when they've found out they can get 2 to do the job of 5, and 1 to do the job of 2 or 3. They are not about to kill that golden calf.

02:48 β€” mysterioso----

02:48 β€” mysterioso---- Dear Mysterioso, ''Reaganomics'' was and has always been nothing 'LESS' than THE GREATEST HOODWINKING IN AMERICAN HISTORY... foisted upon once Democratic Republic America by CONservaitve Ideologue Traitors and Global Corporate Interests to transfer the Greatest amount of Wealth and Power from the Have Nots and WE THE PEOPLE to the HAVES-ALWAYS-WANTING-MORE... All done through Corporate Usurpation with Lots and Lots of Money.., pen strokes in the Hall of Government.., and the Media Driven Acquiescence of too many Americans too easily Hoodwinked by the Global Corporate Media which now owns almost all Media in America without Regulation requiring truth, honesty or even fair assessment... Its now largely used for Selling Stuff and Declaring 'THE OTHER HALF' to be Evil... Welcome to Our Brave New Corporatacracy where every 2,4,6 years, WE the CONSUMERS get to vote for our favorite Corporate Sponsor from one of two Corporate Parties...