Showing posts with label 99ers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 99ers. Show all posts

Friday, December 23, 2011

The End of 99 Weeks for UI Benefits

UPDATE: January 4, 2012 - As far as I can tell, the UI cuts are coming from EB (State extended benefits), which come after federal extended benefits expire (EUC). In Nevada I think it's going down from 20 weeks of State benefits to 13 weeks. SEE THE GRAY BOX AT THE END OF THIS ARTICLE FOR MORE DETAILS.

Someone I know in Nevada was on EUC and was just approved for only 13 weeks of EB, even though Nevada has a 13% unemployment rate. We were trying to find out why she didn't get all 20 weeks even though she got the max in regular State benefits (26 weeks) and four tiers of EUC (53 weeks) - - - 20 more weeks of EB would have given her all 99 weeks, but for some odd reason she'll only get 92.

CURRENTLY -  WE HAVE NATIONALLY:
Regular State    3,611,966
EUC                 2,926,135
EB                      571,848

SOURCE (scroll down) The Bureau of Labor Statistics claims they get no information from State unemployment offices when determining the unemployment rate, yet they have these numbers.

POLITICO: "Congress passed a two-month extension of the payroll tax break on Friday, sending the compromise bill to President Barack Obama, who will sign it into law. The bill cleared on a quick voice vote in both chambers of Congress with no objections. The deal only came after House Republicans relented Thursday afternoon and agreed to pass the two-month extension as long as Senate Democrats appointed conference committee negotiators. The legislation also includes an extension of unemployment benefits [the funding of the federal program for those who might normally qualify] a fix to Medicare reimbursement, and a tweak to the payroll tax system to help small businesses."

But the bill also marks the beginning of the end for a maximum limit of 99 weeks of unemployment insurance. Although the deal reauthorizes federal unemployment programs, it does not make a change needed to prevent the loss of 20 weeks of benefits in most states over the course of 2012. The reduction in benefits represents Democrats' quiet embrace of part of the GOP's proposed reforms to the unemployment insurance system.

"We couldn't get it done otherwise," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said on the matter during a press conference.

On top of that, the House plan is loaded with riders that have nothing to do with unemployment, payroll taxes, or jobs.

Shortly after the House vote, the White House announced that Obama would give a statement at 12:15 p.m. and then, less than an hour later, leave for Hawaii, where his family awaits to celebrate the holidays. I heard his statement: It was brief and he didn't take questions...and he never mentioned cutting 20 weeks of UI benefits for the unemployed. Merry Christmas Mister President.

Seemingly everyone but Arthur Delaney at the Huffington Post had overlooked the fact that this short-term stopgap allows extended unemployment benefits to expire in several states:

A top ranking Democrat in the House of Representatives on Tuesday defended his party’s support for cutting 20 weeks of unemployment benefits, a position that has escaped much notice in the payroll tax cut debate consuming Washington.

Democrats want the House to pass a Senate bill that would postpone the January expiration of federal unemployment programs for two months. But even if it is reauthorized, one of those programs will automatically phase out next year, unless Congress changes federal law to allow states to keep it, a provision not included in the Senate bill [...]

The Extended Benefits program is the last stop on the unemployment insurance train for the very long-term jobless. It provides up to 20 weeks of assistance to workers who exhaust 53 weeks of federal Emergency Unemployment Compensation and 26 weeks of state benefits. But the Extended Benefits program is only available in states where the unemployment rate has risen significantly over the past three years. Unemployment has remained stubbornly high since 2008, but it hasn’t risen, which will make most states ineligible for Extended Benefits early in 2012.

It stuns me that the mainstream media or all the congressional politicians never mentioned this in any if their talking points.

It was re-affirmed again by Arthur Delaney when he writes how the Democrats defended the 20-week cut: A top-ranking Democrat in the House of Representatives on Tuesday defended his party's support for cutting 20 weeks of unemployment benefits, a position that has escaped much notice in the payroll tax cut debate that has consumed Washington for the past few weeks.

"There are things in this bill as we pointed out that we had to make concessions on," House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) said Thursday in response to a question from the Daily Delaney Downer. "That's the process. We understand that. Unfortunately there are an awful lot of tea party activists who were elected to the Congress who don't understand compromise. That provision is one of the provisions that Rep. Sander Levin (D-Mich.) had concerns about."

As the only member of Congress who seemed previously to be irked by this, House Ways and Means ranking member Sander Levin has been appointed as a conferee in the House-Senate conference on the long-term bill. Hopefully he will make this a priority. He recently called the provisions in the Senate bill “wholly inadequate.”

And because the “look-back” on the Extended Benefits provision is three years, unemployment hasn’t increased in most of those states under the time requirements, which means that the 99ers will fall back to the 79ers -- but could gradually be reduced to the 59ers by the end of 2012. Here's how it is now until December 31, 2011.

26 weeks regular state-funded benefits
 +
Tier I - up to 20 weeks Federal benefits
Tier II - up to 14 weeks Federal benefits
Tier III - up to 13 weeks Federal benefits
Tier VI - up to 6 weeks Federal benefits
__________
     =  79 weeks sub-total
      +
up to 20 weeks State Extended Benefits ( SEB )
_________
= 99 weeks total MAX combined benefits

Originally, the Senate bill changed this to a four-year look-back, which would have preserved Extended Benefits in the high-unemployment states. As it is, it’s probably going to phase out, unless it gets changed in the one-year version before the end of February next year.

But 11 states will lose access to Extended Benefits in just the next two months – Minnesota, Michigan, Massachusetts, Maine, Oregon and Indiana in January, and Wisconsin, Tennessee, South Carolina, Rhode Island, and Ohio in February.

Important: Your State Unemployment Office website will have details on who qualifies for extended benefits and when and how benefits will be paid.

Just like the Republicans refer to ObamaCare as "socialized medicine", they think anything the government does collectively for the good of all is Socialism. To them, Medicare and Social Security is also Socialism. They think unemployment benefits is robbing from the very wealthy (or from those who have jobs) to give to the very lazy (those without jobs). And for those who rely on TANF (the very poor), this is the worst form of Socialism.

But yet, at the same time, the GOP also thinks that subsidies for the very wealthy, Michelle Bachmann, big tobacco, or big oil is perfectly OK. They believe that making the corporations in the defense industry fatter than they already are is perfectly reasonable in this post cold war era. They also believe that by not supporting these subsidies is somehow "un-American". Just as the CEO of ConocoPhillips.

And why are the Republicans so adamant about defending and protecting the very banks that caused this recession?

In January 2009 a Republican sponsored bill called for a complete payroll tax holiday, meaning the tax rate would be reduced to ZERO. The current version, meanwhile, would keep the rate at 4.2 percent, rather than allow it to return to the pre-2010 level of 6.2 percent. (Presently it would cut the employer's contributions even more, by half to 3.1 percent). So why had the Republicans been against it now?

The GOP's current "jobs bill" is just more of the same: blaming the poor and unemployed for our economic problems, and included goodies to benefit big oil and corporations. Here is H.R.1745 (the Jobs, Opportunity, Benefits, and Services Act of 2011) that was proposed by Republican Dave Camp (Midland, MI) PDF. If you're a lawyer, you might understand it. Example:

(a) IN GENERAL.—Section 1202(b)(2) of the Social
4 Security Act is amended—
5 (1) in subparagraph (A), by inserting ‘‘and’’ at
6 the end;
7 (2) in subparagraph (B), by striking ‘‘, and’’
8 and inserting a period; and
9 (3) by striking subparagraph (C).
10 (b) EFFECTIVE DATE.—The amendments made by
11 subsection (a) shall take effect as of the date of enactment
12 of this Act.

The GOP's bill includes spending cuts in government programs – not tax increases on "job creators" – to fully pay for extending the current payroll Social Security tax relief and unemployment insurance benefits...by "reforming" entitlement programs....such as cutting the total number of weeks for unemployment benefits. (See the bill at Speaker.Gov)

The bill permanently "reforms" the federal unemployment insurance program. The bill uses a two-step process to gradually reduce current maximum weeks of benefits, first from 99 to 79 weeks, then to 59 weeks. The GOP says that unemployment services should "focus on helping Americans get back to work". Even the Wall Street Journal, admits in its headline that jobs are scarce.

Currently Nevada (Democratic Senator Harry Reid's state) has the highest jobless rate of 13%.

But Republicans seem to think that the unemployed are just lazy...even unemployed Republican voters. Republican Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah says: “I don’t see why you have to go more than 59 weeks...they just stay home and watch television.”

Republican Senator Jim DeMint (South Carolina Tea Party) said we should not extend unemployment benefits because "people are gaming the system and refusing to take jobs because they get unemployment benefits and food stamps."

There are dozens of examples of this attitude coming from the GOP, even though there are currently only 3 million jobs available for 27 million unemployed Americans if you count all the "discouraged workers. And in a country this large, how do you match 3 million people with skills with the jobs being advertised...especially if they're bound to their location by a rental agree, lease, or mortgage? Or they no longer have the funds to re-locate to another city or another state?

But regardless, extended compensation DOES NOT discourage the jobless from seeking out new work. A new report that finds workers who are eligible for benefits search for work more vigorously than workers who are not eligible.

"Since Congress enacted federal unemployment benefits, time spent looking for a job has tripled among the long-term unemployed who are out of work as a result of job loss," the report says. (PDF) (Article)

The amount of time the long-term jobless who are eligible for benefits spend looking for work increased 203% compared with previous years. For unemployed workers who are likely ineligible for benefits (because their unemployment was not caused by job loss) the amount of time they spent searching for work increased only 120%.

The GOP's jobs bill also requires all state and federal UI recipients to be in a GED program if they have not finished high school (with exceptions for older workers), and participate in reemployment services to help them get back to work. (Like working two months for free under the Georgia Plan).

That should be both discriminatory and illegal, as people who have already paid into the unemployment insurance system should still be eligible, as those restrictions weren't in place before they were laid off from their jobs.

The GOP's jobs bill also allows states, if they desire, to perform drug screening and testing as a condition of providing UI benefits. Without probable cause, this should also be discriminatory and illegal as it doesn't apply to others who also receive federal dollars, such as those receiving government contracts, grants, and salaries, such as government workers.

Why don't we drug test members of congress and CEOs? Will everyone receiving Social Security also be subjected to mandatory drug resting? Why would the states want the burden of this added cost?

As part of the GOP’s Plan for America’s Job Creators, the measure also includes several other key provisions. One is that it accelerates a decision from Obama on the Keystone XL energy pipeline, requiring, within 60 days, for the permit to be granted unless the president determines the project is not in the national interest. (The Republicans, always concerned about big oil.)

The GOP claims that the measure "will create thousands of American jobs and increase America's energy security." The proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline would carry the dirtiest oil on the planet from the Canadian tar sands across our country to ports and refineries along the Texas Gulf coast...from there it could be exported anywhere in the world.

The oil will most likely will be speculated on by investment banks like Goldman Sachs on the commodities market, driving up the price, and then sold to China. It won't be sold to us for "dirt cheap" and stored in our reserves.

The Keystone XL project would provide, at most, 6,000 temporary construction jobs, very few of which would be local hires, according to an analysis performed by the U.S. State Department.

Cornell University's Global Labor Institute did its own evaluation, concluding that the project would employ between 2,500 and 4,650 construction workers. "Most jobs created will be temporary and non-local," the institute says.

Even TransCanada, the Canadian pipeline company that wants to build the pipeline, has said it would create "hundreds" of permanent jobs. That's what TransCanada's vice president for pipelines, Robert Jones, told CNN a few weeks ago.

Other goodies in the GOP's "jobs bill", provisions that they dangle as "jobs" for their reason for this bill:

  • The measure extends 100 percent business expensing through 2012 [continue corporate loopholes]
  • Adds the EPA Regulatory Relief Act (H.R. 2250) which lowers the tax on businesses from 35% to 25% and allows them to bring back their overseas profits without being subjected to taxation (or lower taxation at 5.25%)
  • Ratify trade agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea [outsourcing more jobs for cheaper labor]
  • Making it easier to obtain visas [for the importation for those with degrees for cheaper labor]
  • Less FDA restrictions for the medical device approval process and fees for prescription drugs [more profits for unsafe products]
  • American Energy Initiative by passing legislation to expand energy exploration and production [more oil profits]
  • Adopting a budget that reduces government spending by almost $6 trillion over the next ten years [by cutting Social Security and Medicare but not defense spending]
  • Repeals $8 billion in ObamaCare {who cares about poor sick people?]
  • "Reforms" the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Program by closing the current “strip club loophole” to ensure that welfare funds cannot be accessed in strip clubs, liquor stores, and casinos by blocking welfare electronic benefit transfer (EBT) cards from working in ATMs there. (I live in Las Vegas and cheap meals can be found in some casinos.)
  • Changes the co-pay structure for civilian federal retirees ["structure" must mean "cuts"...like "reform".]
  • Prohibits millionaires from receiving unemployment insurance and food stamp benefits (This one, I like.)
  • And of course they want the tax breaks for the rich made permanent.

SOURCE: http://www.speaker.gov/blog/?postid=271892

Other quick facts about extended unemployment benefits (as of December 2011):

  • According to a new report by the Obama administration, 17.9 million Americans have received federal EUC and state EB benefits since the inception of the programs in 2008. Currently 3 million are receiving EUC and 600,000 are receiving EB. SOURCE
  • If you include other household members, more than 50 million people have benefited from EUC and EB, including almost 13 million children. About 1.3 million of these people might have lost their benefits by the end of January 2012. By the end of 2012, an additional 5 million people could exhaust their benefits. The White House Report - PDF
  • Robert Redford writes: "Should we extend middle class tax relief and unemployment benefits at a time when our workers are struggling with hard times?"
  • 7.4 million Americans are currently receiving either regular state or federal extended unemployment benefits. SOURCE
  • 27 million unemployed Americans will not benefit at all from any amount of a Social Security tax cut. SOURCE
The article in the Huffington Post: "Due to the timing of increased joblessness, in January, the program will expire in Minnesota, Michigan, Massachusetts, Maine, Oregon and Indiana. In February, Extended Benefits will drop off in Wisconsin, Tennessee, South Carolina, Rhode Island, and Ohio, according to an analysis by worker advocacy group the National Employment Law Project."

In the HuffPo Hill Newsletter yesterday - "NIGHT DOWNER! Extended unemployment benefits for the very long-term jobless are expiring this month in Minnesota, Michigan, Massachusetts, Maine, Oregon and Indiana, per agreement between congressional Republicans, Democrats and the Obama administration."

Besides Minnesota and Tennessee (which I find no mention of the two month extension), it appears the other states will still have benefits for another 2 months. I went to all their state's UI websites and provided the links below. 

The websites, as expected, were obtuse with their information and difficult to navigate. I had to use their search engines in two instances to find information. I believe all 50 states make filing for benefits as difficult and as confusing as possible to discourage filing for unemployment claims.

People who file UI claims in the states listed below are probably much more familiar with the websites and know their situation better that me.

Minnesota - There are two extended benefits programs in Minnesota. Federal Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) – Congress has moved the phase out to the end of February 2012. Federal-State Extended Benefits (EB) – will "trigger off" at the end of the week of January 8th through 14th. You cannot be paid for weeks after the program "triggers off". If you are receiving benefits from the EB program, you will not be paid for weeks after January 8th through 14th.

Michigan - Congress has passed and the President has signed an extension of the expiration dates for the Extended Benefits (EB) and Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) Programs through February 2012.

Massachusetts - The Temporary Payroll Tax Cut Continuation Act of 2011 extends the expiration dates of the Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) and federal-state Extended Benefits (EB) unemployment insurance (UI) programs. The legislation extends the deadlines by which claimants can apply for EUC and EB benefits through March 6, 2012 but does not add any new weeks of benefits.

Maine - Congress and the White House have come to agreement on a two-month extension for federal unemployment programs. Without this extension, the Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) program would have begun to phase out and the Extended Benefit (EB) program would have ended in early January. This extension means that the these programs will stay in effect for the next two months. The legislation did not add more weeks of benefits; it only extends the amount of time available to file a claim for benefits from these two programs. 

Oregon - On Friday, December 23, 2011, the President signed a bill extending the Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) extension program. The bill does not add additional funds, or tiers, to the EUC program; it extends the filing dates in which an individual can apply for EUC, or move on to the next tier. The extension allows individuals to file a new EUC claim, or to establish a new tier of benefits, through the week ending March 3rd, 2012.

Indiana - Congress has approved a two-month extension of the federally-funded extended unemployment insurance benefits. If you are currently receiving unemployment insurance benefits, you may continue to file your weekly voucher as normal.

Wisconsin - Under federal law, Unemployment Insurance (UI) benefit extensions were set to expire on March 3, 2012.

Tennessee - Unclear, no info found.

South Carolina - State Extended Benefits prolong benefits up to 13 additional weeks. State Extended Benefits are available if you have exhausted all regular unemployment insurance and all Emergency Unemployment Compensation, First, Second, Third, and Fourth Tier on or after February 15, 2009. 

Rhode Island - In January 2012, the Federal Emergency Unemployment Compensation (EUC) program will begin to phase out. EUC is built on four tiers of benefits, with claimants completing one tier before advancing to another. Under the phase-out plan claimants will be allowed to continue to collect on their current tier of benefits, but will no longer be able to advance to the next benefit tier.

Ohio - The legislation extends deadlines for the EUC program from December 31, 2011 to March 10, 2012. Eligible individuals may continue to collect benefits until August 15, 2012. This program continues to offer a maximum of 53 weeks of extended unemployment benefits. The new legislation did not add any more weeks of benefits.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

21 Million Lazy Americans Refused 3 Million Jobs

The Republicans like to say that we should take just any job, and work 3 jobs if we need to --- but where are the jobs?

Most are already taken. The economy is so bad that already there are a large number of people working multiple jobs to pay their bills - - - and after the last 3 years, are still struggling. I personally know a Nevada State legislature who is doing just that (and his wife as well) ---- and HE has much better job connections than most other people do.

There just aren't enough part-time low-paying jobs for 21 million unemployment Americans - - - the 14 million that the government admits to, and  the other 7 million UI "exhaustees" and "99ers" that the government ignored and swept under the carpet.

Now the Republicans have another lame excuse for not extending unemployment benefits for the 7 million jobless Americans who are still currently receiving benefits, because there are a reported 3 million unfilled job openings. They also cite that two-thirds of business executives say they routinely have difficulty filling certain positions.
The Republicans say the reason for this is because the jobless are lazy, are refusing jobs, and just prefer collecting unemployment benefits -- and that's why there are unfilled jobs, because they only want to game the system.

Of course, most informed and intelligent people know that's just pure nonsense...that's why only Republicans are making that claim.

For 3 years the Republicans have called unemployed Americans hobos, alcoholics, drug addicts, lazy, ignorant, and freeloaders. But what about the 7 million who have already exhausted all their unemployed benefits over 1 and 2 years ago? Are they also refusing those 3 million jobs because they're lazy?

But CEOs tell a different story. The top reason they cite is a lack of specific qualifications or experience.

But add to that, a study also found other reasons why we have unfilled jobs (although 3 million jobs for 21 million unemployed people is only a dent in the jobless problem).

  1. The collapse of the real estate market makes it harder for many homeowners to even consider relocation.
  2. Mobility is also limited by the rise of dual-income families, so now you actually require two jobs for every move.
  3. Too few students will earn college degrees, and many of those who do will get them in low-demand fields.
  4. Too many workers have no more than a high school diploma.
  5. The use of temp workers is also changing, and with each successive jobless recovery, the structural factors that hinder job creation become more apparent.

Nowhere in the study did they site laziness or drug addiction. The Republicans like to pick and choose which facts to use when making arguments to let the jobless die. That's why I hate Republicans.

Please sign the Official White House Petition to extend unemployment benefits for those whose jobless benefits have already expired, or soon will. Thank you.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Another 7 Million Will Soon Lose Jobless Benefits

- WARNING! -
To all the unemployed!

October 10, 2011 - According to the Department of Labor, currently there are still 7 million Americans who are receiving either State or Federal unemployment benefits, and have as yet exhausted all their benefits, burned through their life's savings, had their cars repossessed, or had their homes foreclosed on.

But very soon they will....by January 2012.

Over the next 3 months there will NOT be 7 million new jobs created to save them...even if they were young and healthy with a PhD in Business Administration.

That's why YOU need to sign the 99ers White House petition at the top right column of this page.

FULL STORY HERE > 20 Million - No Job & No Benefits

It's time to OCCUPY!

The 99% and the 99ers are doomed!

First of all, tax revenues are way down.

Individual Federal Income Tax Revenues for:

2007 - $1,883,540,000
2008 - $1,812,530,000 < layoffs, housing collapse, stocks crash
2009 - $1,369,130,000
2010 - $1,392,990,000

SOURCE: http://www.usgovernmentrevenue.com/

America has lost $500 billion a year in federal income tax revenues paid into the U.S. Treasury since the mass layoffs began during the Great Recession in 2008.

Now by January 2012, with 20 million unemployed Americans without any income at all, more jobs still going overseas, and more cuts in government workers, how can this go on? How can the economy sustain itself?

And the Republicans want to cut SS disability, food stamps, unemployment benefits, and food stamps too. But banks and big corporations continued to earn record profits and give themselves HUGE bonuses.

New York Times: "Banks are due to begin reporting earnings this week, and the numbers are likely to leave investors as frustrated as ever, making the banks even more desperate to impose new charges on consumers’ accounts and rack up bigger trading profits. Wall Street types have dumped their bank shares en masse. The government-mandated cuts in once-lucrative debit-card swipe fees, have prompted banks to try to recoup billions of dollars in lost revenue with increases like Bank of America’s controversial new $5 monthly debit card fee. Stocks for Bank of America, the nation’s biggest bank, are down more than 50 percent since the start of the year, while Citigroup is down more than 40 percent."

Meanwhile, Bank of America's CEO got a $9 million bonus.

As thousands of people across the nation are "occupying" to protest corporate greed, some economists already think the party might soon be over for the big bankers and other Wall Street fat-cats.

As an aside: One commentator on Fox News tonight said "the left" had Tea Party envy, and that's why we have the "Occupy" protests. Why do the Republicans and Fox News always call the people protesting "those on the left" and think they align themselves with Democrats? Just because, unlike "the right", they care more about real people as opposed to corporations?

In 1929 the Harvard Economic Society declared that a depression was “outside the range of probability.” Whoops!

The Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke recently testified to Congress that the recovery is "close to faltering." Goldman Sachs said Europe could fall into a recession by the end of the year and push the U.S. "to the edge" of one itself.

Companies have already laid off so much staff, and are now running so lean, that it won't be as easy to cut as many jobs like they did during the last recession. But even so, that doesn't give much consolation to the 20 million unemployed Americans who have already been suffering greatly. And with low tax revenues and more budget cuts and more government jobs lost, couldn't that number swell to double? Maybe 40 million by the end of 2012?

With 45 million Americans dependent on food stamps and no light at the end of the tunnel, how will they fair when the Republican's plan is to cut taxes more, bringing in less revenues, and making up the difference in lost tax revenues by cutting assistance to those who lost their jobs -- and cutting more jobs in government. It's almost ironic in that that is the Republican's strategy for "fixing" the economy...tax the rich less and withhold more from the poor.

Which also begs the question: Why wouldn't a wealthy "job creator", who hasn't suffered during the recession, be willing to pay a little more in taxes to help fund food stamps for a jobless person who was laid off, especially if that "job creator" wasn't willing to hire them?

From the New York Times: The Economic Cycle Research Institute has correctly predicted the beginning and the end of the last recession. Over the last 15 years, it has gotten all of its recession calls right, while issuing no false alarms. That’s why it’s worth paying attention to its current forecast. It’s chilling. As bad as the economy has been, it’s about to get worse. The institute’s CEO also says the timing will be brutal, and not just for portfolio managers and incumbent politicians. Millions of people who lost their jobs in the 2008-9 recession are still out of work. And the unemployment rate in the United States remained at 9.1 percent in September. More pain is coming. The CEO thinks the unemployment rate will certainly go higher.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if it goes back up into double digits,” he says. Taken as a whole, he says, these and other indicators are quite clear. “We’ve entered a vicious cycle, and it’s too late: Another recession can’t be averted.”

And as for the original 99ers, those who were first laid off in 2008 and have already been unemployed for over 3 years, their futures looks very bleak. They have already maxed out all their jobless benefits well over a year ago, and ABSOLUTELY NOTHING in Obama's new jobs bill will help them at all. If there is a "double dip" recession, then those poor bastards are toast...they are doomed!!!

Friday, October 7, 2011

Unemployment Rate is 20% in October 2011

It's not 9.1% - - - it's more like 20%

Reminder: We only have 31% of the needed signatures on White House 99er Petition. Everyone should re-post this in their Facebook groups. (5,000 - 1,552 = 3,448 needed within the next 3 weeks.) THE LINK: http://wh.gov/gK1  

Thursday, October 06, 2011 - Americans continue to have mixed feelings about how the government should respond to the long-term unemployed. A new Rasmussen Poll reports national telephone survey of American adults finds that:

  • 32% say government should do nothing at all.
  • 25% say government should pay for their retraining.
  • 21% say government should hire those long out of work.
  • 10% say government should extend unemployment benefits indefinitely.< bless them ;)

    32% say do nothing but 56% say do something (the other 12% doesn't say, maybe they no longer have phones?)

USA Today reported that less than half of those who were out of work and were actively trying to find a new job were receiving unemployment benefits. Year-to-date the Department of Labor reported that 9 million people were collecting either state or federal extended benefits. In May of 2010 the New York Times reported almost 10 million.

So if the unemployment rate is still just over 9% (for almost 3 years straight) as people exhaust their unemployment benefits, then far more than just 8.5 million jobs were lost during the recession - so double the number of 10 million who were (and still are) unemployed. And that doesn't even count the "under-employed".

Today Dylan Ratigan MSNBC reports that the REAL unemployment rate is 20% - or 1 out of 5 people - as high as it was during some points of the Great Depression.

And by the end of the year, almost all of them will still be jobless with no income at all.

The New York Times reports today "...there is little indication that American employers will hire enough to put the millions of unemployed people back to work any time soon." (How many years have we've been hearing that?) And they say "...the total unemployment rate rose to 16.5 percent last month."

The president of the American Federation of Teachers, said that about 277,000 education jobs had been lost since 2008 and projected as many as 280,000 more job losses in the next year from state and local budget cuts.

So, are we only half-way through the layoffs?

Allen L. Sinai (the chief global economist at Decision Economics, a consulting firm) said, “C.E.O.’s are paid to grow shareholder value,” he said. “They are not paid to hire people if demand isn’t there and if they can substitute machines for people. That’s a no-brainer for the people who run companies.”

The economy is much worse off than we're being told or led to believe. That's why we have Occupy Wall Street and locally where I live, Occupy Las Vegas, and why it's spreading all across the country.

The Republicans keep telling us there are no jobs, but keep saying the unemployed are refusing jobs (and just prefer collecting unemployment benefits). But million have already exhausted all their benefits, and by January 2012, millions more will as well.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Why I Hate Republicans: And the Fox News Channel (Media Release)

Why I Hate Republicans: And the Fox News Channel (by Bud Meyers*)

http://www.amazon.com/dp/1466220554/

https://www.createspace.com/3670197

To the best of my knowledge I know of no one else who has dedicated an entire 800 page book on the subject. I feature the "99ers" (those who are the long-term unemployed), those who the GOP and Fox News has deliberately misled the public about...turning public sentiment against them. They depicted the jobless as lazy and "gaming the system", except when it was politically expedient for them to use the jobless numbers to discredit the Obama administration.

I monitored everything they said about the unemployed (many times with names, times, and dates), and read the articles posted on their websites; and read what others like Media Matters and Newshounds were saying.I wrote counter-arguments to the GOP's and Fox News' false claims...as it was the only thing I could do, besides just screaming at my TV set. (they never once replied to over 100 emails I sent them, and I tried using various email addresses too.)

As one of those unemployed that the Republicans and Fox "News" falsely and maliciously misrepresented, I took it very personally, because after exhausting all my unemployment benefits, I almost took my own life earlier this year.Ali Velshi on CNN acknowledged me on his show one day just 3 weeks away from my last day on earth. (Someone alerted his producer of a blog post I wrote) A stranger saw Ali's show, and a newspaper article about me, and emailed me through my Facebook page, and offered me a place to stay.

No thanks to the GOP and Fox News, I'm alive today to have written this book and my blog.

* I authored, edited, proof-read, formatted, and self-published the entire book, as well as designed the book cover and added a few photos inside. I take full credit (or full blame) for everything contained therein; all the information is based on my own personal experience. I also wrote for the Fox News Wall of Shame which is not maintained nor updated...an orphaned project.

Why I Hate Republicans

Monday, July 18, 2011

A 99er Pays Tribute to CNN's Ali Velishi

Thanks Ali.

We couldn't count on the likes of David and Charles Koch, Rupert Murdoch, B. Wayne Hughes, Harold Simmons, Jerry Perenchio or Robert Rowling to care one iota for unemployed working Americans.

Nor could the 99ers depend on greedy boot-lickers such as Karl Rove, Glenn Beck, Newt Gingrich, or Grover Norquist to give a damn. Airheads like MIchele Bachmann and Sarah Palin are just as guilty, as are the young punks such as Rick Santorum and Paul Ryan. They don't give a damn about real people.

But patriots like yourself and Ed Schultz should be commended for sticking up for the middle-class and down trodden, for you are not only TRUE Americans, but you're both decent human beings as well.

The aforementioned will all rot in hell for kicking us while we're down.

First they want to eliminate all the jobs, then they want to eliminate unemployment benefits, food stamps, disability, Medicare and Social Security so that we can't survive at all. Do they want us all to just crawl into a hole and die?

Who will shine their damn shoes after they've destroyed us all? Are they going to outsource their $500 shoes too?

What I can't understand is why old American billionaires (i.e. Rupert Murdoch, the Koch brothers, etc.) are so politically active in destroying America's middle-class. They have all the money in the world and will die soon. So why is it so important to them to make everybody else suffer? Why can't they just peacefully enjoy their wealth and leave us alone? Are these people truly that greedy and evil?

"Wealth is like seawater; the more we drink, the thirstier we become." - Arthur Schopenhauer

Thanks again Ali!

Sunday, February 13, 2011

They Got Theirs, The Working-Class Got Jacked

Recently Deborah L Purdom on an unemployed Facebook page had took note and made mention - "It is so sad to notice that, as time goes on, we have lost more and more of the original members of this page, and unfortunately, have gained more new ones. I sometimes wonder what happened to the 'first' members and how they are faring. I hope they are managing to survive somehow! Bless them all!"

I would tell her: It's probably all part of the government's plan to eliminate a huge chunk of the middle-aged working-class. Gradually reducing the numbers, incrementally shoving them into poverty (or worse), until they all just fade into obscurity (or die). A leaner and meaner economy, but with a reduced workforce and less tax revenue going in to the treasury (and because of tax cuts extended for the rich). Most programs for the poor will be eliminated first before any goodies for the rich will ever have to suffer.

The politicians cater to American corporations, and they in turn cater to their "emerging markets" overseas. 15 million Americans were sacrificed to further enrich the very few. All the complaining in the world will do nothing for the unemployed. No meaningful laws will ever be enacted to protect American workers and consumers. If anything, just window dressing will be applied to assuage and assure the other 80% of the population who's still gainfully employed - and they will be told that everything that can be done for the jobless, is being done.

It takes 50% of the population to be disenfranchised enough before true revolution breaks out, but the government and America corporations carefully maintain a well-planned balance in this ratio to prevent this "tipping point" from ever occurring. American consumers and workers aren't high on the list for corporate profiteers - American corporations don't feel any sense of honor, patriotism, or responsibility to this country. They are strictly profit-driven with no "human" connection at all.

The politicians are the same way...I can hear them now, "I got mine!" America has been a ME society for a very long time, and everyone who can, will, step over a corpse to make an extra dollar in revenue. Greed prevails, and all their talk about "family values" and "moral principals" is nothing more than the usual BS.

It's not just the federal government that's going broke, the States are too. Nobody has any money except for the rich people (and those in China) and they're not paying any more into the State and federal kitty, nor are they creating jobs for Americans. We can't outsource teacher's, firefighter's, and policemen's jobs overseas; but if WE aren't working, then we can't pay their salaries either. When State and federal jobs are all eliminated, who's left paying taxes - what's left in the treasury to pay THEM unemployment benefits? The downward spiral. We can't even afford to pay the salaries to the people working in the unemployment offices!

Home foreclosures haven't even peaked yet and most home prices are still underwater. If you're rich, it's a great buyer's market, sweeping up all those nice homes for pennies on the dollar from the banks (who wouldn't refinance). I can see a vast number of private homes being permanently rented. We might see many of them turning into multi-family housing units like the old mansions of yesteryear.

"Uncertainty" has been the GOP's and the wealthiest excuse for not hiring before they got their tax cuts extended late last year, but they still aren't hiring. Most of the jobs that were permanently lost were all lost while they had those very tax cuts since 2001. Yet the GOP complains about the deficit, and that's why we're going broke. House leader John Boehner on Meet the Press today was blaming the "federal government" going back 40 years for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, but aren't people like he and the GOP part of this federal government?

The politicians and the corporate profiteers want to blame everybody else but themselves for destroying middle America, and instead of working on solutions, they just continue to allow what collapsed the economy in the first place...while playing the useless blame game. The Vice President tells the unemployed in "hang in there" as they lost their life's savings, their homes, and their cars. What's left to hang on to when everything else is gone, including hope Mister VP?

How does someone who lost their car and now barely subsists on food stamps get back into the job market when jobs are finally (if ever) created? I can't even buy a new shirt or pair of shoes for work if I needed to. I buy items like shaving cream with money I get from my DONATE button on this blog. And I'm one of the lucky ones!

Recently the fed chief Ben Bernanke said it could take up to 4 to 5 [more] years before we ever see a "normal" unemployment rate of 6% again (NOTE: It USED to be 5%, so the bar has been lowered by the feds). But how can even 5% be considered "normal" when ours was only 4% not too long ago (just like China's is today). And the way the government has been manipulating the unemployment numbers for the past two years, a "normal" unemployment rate of 6% in 2016 could very well be a REAL unemployment rate of 10% (it's most likely about 13% today, not 9% as the government boasts).

Smoke and mirrors, lies, and more BS is all we've been getting from the politicians, bankers, and CEOs. They got theirs, and to them, that's all that matters. American citizens, to them, are just a necessary nuisance for them. They would prefer not to have to deal with all our complaining, and to just keep socking away more cash in the bank...because if the dollar loses any more value, and if prices go up much more, those rich pigs might need a wheel-barrel full of cash just to buy a damn loaf of bread. And the unemployed (who got NADA) will be fighting each other just to feed off their crumbs.

This time last year I said it was going to get a lot worse before it got any better. And today I'll say it again. This slaughter of the middle-class isn't near over, not when we still have millions of people who are still dependent of unemployment benefits - their only source of income that will expire in 12 short months. Even if another 14 weeks were ever added, it only delays the inevitable.

And I agree with Deborah - I hope "the lost ones" are managing to survive somehow too.

Friday, February 11, 2011

"Being Cool in an Era of Age Discrimination"

"I'm bad. I'm cool. I'm a happening fool!"

I could simply say that getting old is as natural as being born and dying; and that unlike in America, other cultures respect and care for their elderly people...but my words would only be falling on deaf ears.

Boring!

I started this free blog because the website I once created and maintained for the last 7 years (http://www.tobuds.com/) went down when I no longer had the money to renew my hosting plan. After losing my job two years ago I began blogging about the economy and unemployment. This blog that I'm currently using was meant to be a continuation of another website I created (http://www.acompanyofone.org/) which focused primarily on the 99ers, the economy, corporate out-sourcing, labor statistics, government and corporate corruption, and the plight of the long-term unemployed.

And since age discrimination in job hiring has always been a problem for older people in America (such as the "99ers"), and has recently been more pronounced and much more open since the recession began, I thought I would write about being "cool" this morning (instead of my usual rants against the evil corporations and banks).

First off, let me start by saying that being truly "cool" is much more than a passing trend, the latest fashion, or the newest gizmo. True coolness is as timeless as a work of art, an idea, a philosophy, or a state of mind. A restored vintage Harley-Davidson motorcycle and the Great Pyramids of Egypt are both very cool. The latest cell phone has a very limited "cool factor" because in 6 months something newer comes along with more pixels for the camera and/or more megabytes of storage space (or whatever else happens to be more cool at the time).

When people are cool, they either are or they're not. Many people might say Bill Gates was a nerd when he started Microsoft - - - and even as a multi-billionaire, he might still be considered a nerd. Who would call him cool? Maybe when Windows 98 first came out everybody thought that THAT was REAL cool. But how cool was his Windows ME (Millennium Edition)?

Chances are, if you were cool in school 30 years ago, even if you're a grandpa today, you're probably still cool now. If you were a slovenly jock, you most likely still are today. The same goes for nerds, idiots, psychopaths, narcs, and do-gooders. It's a personality trait that's inherent in people, it doesn't necessarily go away with age, although it can. Just as nerds can grow up to become cool, and cool people in school can become dickheads when they become adults. It's all relative.

Age doesn't have to factor in to the "coolness aspect" of the individual; it's their inner karma, their relationship with the immediate environment, and what they have, or will, or can, exude in skill, grace, style, pizzazz, and innovation. Sometimes age itself is needed to have experienced all those cool things from the past, so that those experiences and ideas can be passed on to newer generations.

I know of lots of celebrities, actors, and musicians who are past 50 years old who I think are just as cool today as I thought they were 30 years ago. While some may have slid into obscurity, and others have fallen in disgrace, many others went on to maintain their coolness all through-out the years. Just because they're older doesn't necessarily make them less cool. Some may even think that Bill Gates (without his money and fame) is cool...I'm guessing his wife might think so. Is Mick Jagger nothing more than an un-cool old man today?

In a recent article featuring me in my local newspaper a couple people had made comments referencing my age in the profession of casino bartending - as though I were too old, not cool enough, and had overstayed my welcome in Las Vegas. This really pissed me off. I just turned 53 when I was laid off and those bozos thought it was time to put me out to pasture? Would the casinos turn down Mick Jagger for a bartending gig?

The people who say I'm too old to be a casino bartender also probably believe in the concept of Soylent Green too.

Lots of 21 year-olds think Jon Stewart is very cool and Jon will be half a century old next year. Should Jon be considered obsolete? Why don't all these young "cool" kids barf all over their TV sets whenever they see him? Not all young adults relate to "older" people as an extension of their own parents.

When I was 21 I owned cool things and did cool things and went to cool concerts and wore cool clothes and hung out with cool people and listened to cool music and went to cool clubs and visited cool beaches and dated cool girls who had cool friends who went to cool places...

...so I began to wonder, at what exact point in my life did I suddenly become "un-cool" and why? Was it when I first bought a house? Or when I stopped smoking pot? When I ran a small business? When my ex-girlfriend dumped me? I still like the Rolling Stones, so did THEY become un-cool when I wasn't paying attention? I'd still like to own a restored 57' Chevy one day, but is that considered un-cool, like an old man's car? I never wore "high-water" pants either, so are they now in fashion?

What makes me so old-fashioned, un-cool, and old that some people don't think it's appropriate that I bartend in a casino any longer? I still have all my hair, I don't smell like rotten leather, and the last time I bartended I could run circles around the younger barbacks. So why is being 55 years old considered to be taboo and un-hip in Las Vegas now? I always got along with younger people, and much older people as well.

Liz Benston, the reporter who wrote that Las Vegas Sun article about me, also wrote a couple of other interesting articles that touches on age discrimination in the casino industry:

Not hip enough?
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2007/mar/23/not-hip-enough/

$25,000 check cuts no ice with bartender
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2008/aug/27/25000-check-cuts-no-ice-bartender/

Youth, good looks a gold mine on LV Strip
http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2006/may/19/youth-good-looks-a-gold-mine-on-lv-strip/

Do people like Greg Abate of the ABC Bartending School in Las Vegas think 21-year-olds should fill all the upper-management level positions as well? Should they rule the world? Or does he think it's OK to be an elderly CEO (or an old fuddy-duddy manager like himself), but it's not OK to be an older bartender? How about an old president? (Oops! I'm older than Obama too! OMG!!!)

It's ludicrous to think I'm too old to bartend behind a casino bar simply because I passed the 50 yard line.

Since losing my job two years ago I've lost almost everything I've owned. I still have my TV, stereo, computer, and guitar. While most people might say my best years are behind me, and I'm not as fast or as handsome as I once was, maybe some folks might think that the best is yet to come.  (You can tell that this has really hit a nerve with me.)

I never thought of myself as ever being "ultra-cool", those were the people that set the standards and led the pack in coolness. They started all the cool trends, they were the "trend-setters". Me, I always thought of myself as being only "semi-cool", just a regular guy with my own quirks who sometimes drove cool motorcycles and cool cars and listened to cool music and dated cool girls and hung out with cool friends...

...but sometimes I also said and did some really dumb, stupid, and very un-cool things too.

Oh, and I almost forgot, I once had this really cool 8-track tape deck installed in my bitchingly very cool 1969 Triumph TR-6, but I'm sure it wasn't nearly as cool as the CD players are today.

And I'm also very sure that in a very short 30 years from now most of the very cool 21-year-olds today will be told they're old and obsolete "has-beens" too, just like me. The difference being, they may very well be, but I'm still cool. And I'll still be cool when I'm 80 years old too (you just won't notice as much, but on inside, I'll know).

Nobody likes the aches and pains that naturally comes with getting older, or the receding hairlines, wrinkles, or bags either. But I especially hate being disrespected, called names, and insulted as though just the act of aging alone were some kind of an affront on a decent and civilized society. To those critics I would say, you are very UN-COOL, and so therefore, you can go "F" yourself.

True coolness isn't based on how old someone is, it's a state of mind. Take by dad for instance. He was one of the most coolest guys I've ever known. It's just that when I was much younger, I hadn't realize it at the time. Sometimes you have to grow up first to know what truely cool really is.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Americans Will Soon Need Egypt's Support

The citizens of Egypt have been asking for something they think we have here in America...

From Gigi Ibrahim and Mahmoud Salem
The January 25 Movement
Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt

"We are demanding things which everyone can agree on: An end to corruption, dictatorship and oppression; the ability to vote in free, fair and democratic elections; freedom, dignity and social justice to all citizens."

All I can say to the people of Egypt is, be careful what you wish for.

In America we supposedly have "fair and democratic elections" - that is, if you don't consider the financial backing of the political machinery at work for both parties; and the corporate campaign contributions that the Supreme Court has allowed to make this all possible.

The citizens of Egypt are demanding that President Mubarak step down. They aren't being anti-government, just as I myself am not anti-government, I'm just anti THIS government (both the Republicans and the Democrats). Both parties have failed this country miserably for the past 35 years, allowing the disparity of wealth between the rich and poor to widen into an infinite chasm.

The millions of lost jobs and the decline of the middle-class has been clear evidence of this, as well as the recent devastating recession and the amassing of wealth by the richest 2% that has only escalated with the "Obama Compromise".

There is no light at the end of the tunnel for the "have-nots" in this country (as in, "have not" a job earning a living wage). Corporate America stubbornly persists with the onslaught of the working-class as our government leaders continue to kowtow to BIG BUSINESS. I would suggest that we impose a 100% excise tax on all imports manufactured in foreign countries for sell in the United States by American corporations.

Do we really need the latest version of a HP computer? Do American teenagers really need the latest version of ANY new cell phone? My eMachine with Windows 98 has lasted me almost 12 years, and my Nokia cell phone is over 5 years old (and still takes great pictures). These companies already have the technology and just market these "new" products to us piece-meal, by deliberately attempting to make older versions antiquated, just to force us to buy their newer products when our older ones had been working just fine.

But I only use the industry of electonics as only but ONE of many, many examples (see: solar panels, cars, etc). But some people see this as good old fashion American corporate greed, as American as apple pie and "Leave it to Beaver".

Capitalism is broken if average Americans can't benefit from the obscene profits that the banks and corporations have been earning, all while mom and dad have been suffering, not even being able to afford to pay the electric and heating bills every month - even with both of them working full-time jobs.

Cheap labor is only needed by big American companies to compete with other big American and Western European companies. I would even ban all imports entirely if need be; there would be no more expensive French champagne for the rich (just like Cuban cigars). Even our U.S. flags are made in China; this is despicable.

But the citizens of Egypt may be just like the citizens in America - casting off one dictator for another - being forced to choose between the lesser of two evils. Have no misperceptions about American politicians...they are ALL merely puppets for the financial dictators of our own country (bought and paid for). Truth hurts, reality hurts more. The banks and corporations run this country, and they have for decades. These days they don't even bother hiding that fact; and our own Supreme Court is in bed with them as well. We are no longer a true Republic or a Democracy, America has become some warped version of a "Democratic Dictatorship" - we elect people to "rule", not to govern, for the financially wealthiest in America.

It is most likely well beyond the point of no return in our life-times to correct this injustice, and it won't be until several more unborn generations later from now can it ever be fixed...but only once our future great-great-great-grandchildren stand up and say they've had enough. Those of us today have been carefully managed to just under our own "tipping point".

But long before that time ever comes (when America will ever see another true middle-class again), it will be us, the ordinary citizens of America, who will be begging for Egypt's support.

Monday, February 7, 2011

ABC Bartending School in Las Vegas: "What a joke!"

This is Bud Meyers when he last worked at the Riviera Hotel and Casino. If you were 21 years old and sat down at a casino bar in Las Vegas, and this man approached you and asked, "How are you doing today? May I get you something to drink?" - Would you get sick to your stomach and barf all over the bar? Would you laugh in his face and say, "Get away from me old man, I want a much younger bartender to serve me!"


I made the news again today in an article in my local newspaper, the Las Vegas Sun.

As usual, the idiotic reader comments that people made are too numerous and too ignorant to address. I would tell most of them: "Sometimes it's better to remain silent and be thought a fool, rather than to speak and remove all doubt."

But I will respond to one person who was named in this story.

In this article an idiot named Greg Abate, who supposedly runs Las Vegas's oldest and largest bartending school (ABC Bartending) says, "The days of getting jobs through the buddy system are gone. This is new Vegas, which is pool parties and nightclubs. You think a casino wants to hire someone who’s 50 years old serving drinks to 21-year-olds?"

UPDATED: Let's talk about Greg and this school for a moment: In the photo below of the ABC Bartending School (click to enlarge) it shows bar towels on the bar, which is a clear violation of the Clark County health code, and they should be sited for this (bar mops are supposed to be in defined buckets with a solution of water and bleach). Also, I saw no hand sink, liquid soap, and disposable paper towels behind the bar, which is also a health code violation.



Greg Abate claims he has over "40 years of experience in the hospitality industry, which includes managing a restaurant for 4 years, managing a night club for 13 years, and bartending for 3 years in Ft. Lauderdale Beach." So I'm guessing he's at least 5 years older than me - - - an OLD MAN! And he's teaching 21-year-olds how to be "cool" and "hip" bartenders? Give me a frigging break!

And he's bartended for only 3 years? Is this supposed to be Mister Abate's "considerable knowledge of the industry that is passed on to their students to keep their nationwide reputation of training the most efficient bartenders in the country?" This is too funny!

And what type of knowledge did I pass on to the young barbacks who workerd under me over the years Mister Abate? Was my knowledge deemed worthless by you because I didn't charge tuition, but your school does?

And I'd like to know what type of "job placement" Danyelle Bowman (Admissions and Job Placement Director at the ABC Bartending School, and who bartended for only 2 years) does in the Las Vegas casinos - who are mostly union houses and whose bartenders belong to the Bartender's Local 165 in Las Vegas. This is total BS!

Their web site:
Bartenders Beverage and Dispensers Union Local 165, Las Vegas
http://www.herelocal165.org/

One who aspires to bartender becomes a barback first, and then take classes at UNLV, then takes a union bartender's exam, then after working for one full year as a barback (apprentice bartender) they wait for any possible bartender opening before getting promoted to a bartender (usually starting out working part-time at the bottom of the extra board). No one needs to spend $300 for this crappy school, and they CAN NOT LEGALLY BYPASS the union process and hire a non-union member for a bartender's job in a union house casino. Unless Mister Abate would like to rescind his comment about not using networks and contacts ("juice") in the "New Vegas". He's a joke!

This guy is an @ss-wipe. He couldn't get a REAL bartender's job because he's an OLD has-been himself (and was probably a lousy bartender too), working at this cheesy school for probably half of what I could earn as a casino bartender (and he most likely doesn't have the good health and pension benefits that union bartenders have either).

And I'd also like to point out to him that I didn't apply for pool bars or nightclubs for the reason he stated. I applied for casino, service, restaurant, sports, showroom, and lounge bars. So why did he even make that comparison?

Hey jerk! It's almost common knowledge that most of these nightclubs aren't even run by the casinos, but are completely separate venues, managed by outside companies. So where the hell have YOU been these last few years mister know-it-all? Are YOU supposed to be "hip"?

And how many 50-year-olds (who usually have more money, do more discretionary spending, and gamble more in the casinos) necessarily wants to converse with a 21-year-old behind the bar who has an iPod glued to his ear while he's ignoring me to text-message his little girlfriend?

Unless of course the bartender is blonde with huge boobs, in which case she would most likely just ignore me too. But I think I'd prefer an "old man" behind the bar that will serve me a quick and cold Heineken, rather than wait for some dumb bimbo to figure out how to make the previous customer a gin-and-tonic.

The days of getting jobs through the buddy system are NOT gone. If someone has "juice", there's always an advantage to getting a job over others. My juice retired and now much younger people in management run these places today.

A bartending school in Las Vegas doesn't get you a job in Las Vegas, "juice" in the local bars does...or after a one year union apprenticeship in a casino - and after taking the required courses at UNLV. Many bartending schools like his are a scam (like many nursing schools who promise job placement). Why the author of this article even quoted him as some kind of "expert" on the subject is beyond me.

And I DO have other skills as well, besides JUST mixing drinks - such as playing the guitar, computer repair, website design (his website is cheap and cheesy), and writing. And even as an "old man" I'm probably much more handsome than he is too (even being "pale with bags under my eyes").

And I've seen a lot of "fugly" 21-year-old cocktail waitresses too. I know a lot of other older and friendlier and more efficient cocktail servers that I think I would much rather have serve me in a busy casino. If I just wanted to see some "T and A", I could go to a local strip club.

Greg Abate is a frigging joke, him and his school. He would criticize me, someone he knows nothing about, just to promote his own business (I'd love to see HIS books!). I've been behind the bar for 20 years in this town serving 21-year-olds, how many years has he?

When I first moved to Vegas, there were plenty of 50-year-old bartenders and cocktail servers...and there still are, nothing has changed. People still get these union jobs, stay there for years getting union seniority, and bid on the better shifts. It's a life-long career, unless you find yourself between jobs at my age in this economy.

Age discrimination isn't just happening in Las Vegas or in the casino industry, it's happening all over the country. Read other newspapers and education yourself Mister Abate, instead on pontificating like a moronic fool.

I realize that everybody has a right to be ignorant, but some people (like Greg Abate) abuse that privilege. His crappy web site (with a picture of Tom Cruise in "Cocktail") was registered in March of 1998, ten years after I started working behind a bar in Vegas.

Is this what 21-year-olds think is cool these days? Tom Cruise as a bartender? What a joke!


*** If he had been nicer to me, I might have offered to redesign his whole web site for free (and I don't mean like this FREE blog I'm currently using either).


At the bottom of each article I post, there is a little envelope that you can click on to e-mail me.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Tax Cuts and Outsourcing: The Double Whammy

How a combination of tax cuts for the rich and the elimination of American jobs ruined the economy and brought this nation to near collapse. A brief look at how the past decade under George W. Bush has brought us to where were are today in 2011.

In 2000 at the end of President Clinton's term in office there was still a $230 billion budget surplus. The unemployment rate at that time was 4% - the same as is in China today in 2011.

Immediately after first taking office, in George W. Bush's address to the joint session of Congress in February 2001, he asked for his tax cuts.

Before this, we already had a budget surplus and low unemployment; and the DOW Jones Index was healthy and humming along at well over the 10,000 mark at the time. And the housing market was really starting to take off too. So what was Bush's reason for cutting taxes then? (See Halliburton and Hunt)

Senator Tom Daschle (D-South Dakota) had said at the time, "If you're a millionaire, you'll get a $46,000 tax cut, more than enough to pay for a Lexus. But if you're a typical working person, you'll only get $227 - about just enough to buy the muffler."

On Memorial Day in 2001 the Senate passed Bush's $1.3 trillion tax-cut plan: lowering tax rates 3 to 5 percent in all income brackets, phasing out the estate tax, reducing the marriage penalty and doubling the per-child credit to $1,000.

And then two years later on May 23, 2003 George W. Bush got his wish again in reducing taxes on capital gains and dividends as well (think of hedge fund managers, investment banks, stock options for corporate salaries, AIG, Goldman Sachs, Lehman Brothers, etc). Vice President Dick Cheney had cast the deciding vote - breaking a 50-50 tie, pushing forward a second round of cuts with the provision that they too expire at the end of 2010.

Now let's look at the layoffs during this same period of time (the Bush Tax Cut Era), from January 2001 to January 2009:

Almost a year later after the bansksters and CEOs got their tax windfall, in February 2004 Forrester Research issued a report that said: "Some 3 million private-sector jobs have been lost since the U.S. economy peaked in 2000, most of them in manufacturing. In the longer term, the latest wave of outsourcing will lead to a significant shift in the kinds of U.S. jobs, even as the total number of jobs continues to increase. Just as the loss of U.S. manufacturing jobs to overseas markets has caused layoffs and difficulties for millions of American workers, so will this latest round of offshoring cause thousands of white-collar service employees. By 2015, Forrester predicts, roughly 3.3 million service jobs will also have been moved offshore, including 1.7 million "back office" jobs such as payroll processing and accounting, and 473,000 jobs in the information technology industry."

On February 9, 2004 when President George W. Bush's chief economic adviser, N. Gregory Mankiw, released the annual White House Economic Report, he praised offshoring of U.S. service jobs as a "good thing."

"Outsourcing is just a new way of doing international trade," he told reporters.

Senator John F. Kerry of Massachusetts differed: "They [the Bush administration] have delivered a double blow to America's workers, 3 million jobs destroyed on their watch, and now they want to export more of our jobs overseas."

House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (a fellow Republican of Bush at the time) also differed: "I understand that Mr. Mankiw is a brilliant economic theorist, but his theory fails a basic test of real economics. We can't have a healthy economy unless we have more jobs here in America."

(* For more detailed information, go to the Labor Department's Mass Layoff Statistics)

And THOSE reports came out 7 years ago in 2004! Long before the mass layoffs we saw in 2008, 2009, and 2010. Can you comprehend the ramifications of this today in 2011 when home foreclosures haven't yet peaked? (They are expected to peak this year.)

Late last year the GOP had said those very same tax cuts had been needed to create more jobs, but in 2001 (before the tax cuts and massive layouts and much of the outsourcing) we already had jobs. So what happened? Why were so many more jobs lost AFTER all the tax cuts were put in place?

The day that Obama had been elected as president in 2008 the national debt had already soared to $10,556,177,748,045.21 - now in 2011 America is over $14 trillion in debt while the Bush's tax cuts were just recently extended.

It's only because of outsourcing (less people working and spending), that we have much less revenue coming into the treasury, and with tax cuts being extended for the wealthy, that revenue further declines...and the spiral down continues. The double whammy. Outsourcing to further enrich corporate CEOs and less taxes paid by corporate CEOs...they have the best of both worlds. (And our deficit suffers another trillion dollars in lost revenue...further advancing the GOP's claim that it is "a debt that your children and their children will be burdened with.")

Re: Extending the the Bush tax cuts: "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me." But it really wasn't we who were fooled at all, it was just our congress who were (and have always been) beholden to the wealthiest of this country - corporate interests and the big banks.

After all, with an annual salary of $174,000 a year, members of congress aren't living on peanuts either! (They empathize and relate more to these big businesses and banksters than they do to "Joe Average" you.)

And all the while the "99ers" (those who are at the very bottom of this "socio-eco" system) have only been living on a prayer, because even people who receive government welfare earn more than the "99ers".

It's a shame our government leaders will allow the continued corporate outsourcing of more American jobs for dirt-cheap labor overseas, and to keep giving the very rich more tax breaks that they don't need; but yet at the same time cut unemployment benefits and other programs for the very poor and/or very desperate.

Is this still the once great America I was born in?

And here we sit stupidly in front of our TV sets and wonder why they protest in the streets of Iran, Britain, Greece, and now Egypt today. Is this what Glenn beck fears may happen in America? Now why would he think that? Hmmmmmmmmmmmm?

As for Egypt, I heard this morning on CNN that it also had something to do with the majority of the wealth being accumulated by the very few...or as Beck would say, "a redistribution of wealth."



Monday, January 24, 2011

Vote Bernie Sanders TIME Person of the Year 2015

Who should be TIME’s 2015 Person of the Year? The current poll results shows Bernie Sanders leading the 2nd place nominee by DOUBLE.
http://time.com/4110428/person-of-the-year-readers-poll-results-2015/ 

You can vote "YES" for Bernie Sanders here. NOTE: You will need a Twitter or Facebook account to log in and vote. 
http://time.com/4108617/person-of-the-year-poll-2015/vote/47/ 

To Tweet: Vote for #BernieSanders as TIME's Person of the Year at http://ti.me/1Oe2pzC  #TIMEPOY

There's also several "face-off" polls — this link is for Bernie Sanders vs. Hillary Clinton (Bernie is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaay ahead!) Just click on your preference and log in with Twitter or Facebook to register your vote.
http://time.com/4109448/face-off-person-of-the-year-2015/vote/13/ 

To Tweet: I think Bernie Sanders should be #TIMEPOY. Vote now http://ti.me/1N9KoVT  via @TIME 

NOTE: Voting closes at 11:59 p.m. on Dec. 4th, and the combined winner of TIME's reader polls will be announced on Dec. 7th — and TIME’s "official" Person of the Year will be announced Dec. 9th. (You can also go here to vote "NO" for Kim Kardashian). 

To Tweet: Vote for #BernieSanders as TIME's Person of the Year at http://ti.me/1Oe2pzC  #TIMEPOY

* You can also go here to vote "NO" for Kim Kardashian.
http://time.com/4108617/person-of-the-year-poll-2015/vote/18/ 

On the TIME list [so far] Bernie Sanders garnered more than 12 percent of the vote, putting him well ahead of runner-up ... The next U.S. presidential candidate is way down the list, the bombastic Donald Trump, with 1.9 percent of the vote ... The Donald isn't giving up hope, though. He's using reverse psychology on Time's editors:

"I say there's no way they give it to me," he said last week. "They can't. Because, mentally, they can't. They just can't. They can't do it. Even if I deserve it, they can't do it." 

* Kardashian, in case you're interested, is in 51st place at the moment, earning less than 1 percent of the vote.

More here...
http://www.oregonlive.com/today/index.ssf/2015/11/bernie_sanders_leads_times_per.html

Friday, January 14, 2011

I'm So Tired of Being Tired

(Reported on CNN by Ali Velshi today)

I'm tired of the waiting. As I see my life winding down in about three more weeks I have pondered the absence of relevance in my past life, and the lack of significance my passing will be to the world. I am nobody, just another ant on the ant hill. I am just one of over 6 billion humans on earth. An easy sacrifice for those who profit.

I'm tired of ranting and railing against the media, the politicians, the bankers, the CEOs, and all the rest who contributed to the abbreviation my life. Why bother wasting what little time I have left after wasting so much already? That's insane. I was defeated, I surrender. I lose.

I'm tired of the struggle, the meaningless attempts to find gainful employment - to sell myself to others who aren't interested. I feel foolish for even trying now. When does one finally realize that nobody wants you? Just like all my complaints, my job applications were falling on deaf ears. What a terrible waste of precious time. I wish I had the last two years of my life again - I would have done things so much differently.

I'm tired of hoping when after all I've had for over two long years has been isolation, loneliness, disappointment, anger, frustration, and depression while engaging in useless efforts to find work and survive. But no matter how difficult that has been, now I must face the stark reality of the last three weeks of my life.

I'm tired of busting my ass so that others can benefit from my labor when all I could ever afford in life was just a constant and daily struggle to survive. Looking back, I ask myself, "For what?" Just to eat and breathe - something that the taxpayers, employers, and government leaders don't feel is important enough to maintain. Maybe it's time for a long rest. Maybe they're right, I'm not worth the financial investment any more. A waste of resources.

I'm tired of living in fear and the dreams I have at night. I'm tired of always peeking through the living room blinds, waiting for the car to be repossessed. I'm tires of wondering when I'll lose my electricity, heat, and cable service. I'm tired of the holes in my socks. I'm tired of asking for help or understanding. I'm tired of those who feel no empathy - those who still have jobs and go about their lives as though people like me don't exist. Apathy is all I see.

I'm tired of being made to feel like dirt because I lost my job, used up all my funds, and can no longer pay my bills - as though I never worked a day in my life and have been on the government dole like a blood-sucking leech to the taxpayers all these years. I'm tired of being talked to and treated and looked down upon as a big loser because I lost my means of supporting myself at the age of 55.

I'm tired of waiting for a family reconciliation. Strangers have come to feel more sympathy than anyone who used to be a family member. A bitter pill to swallow to know that someone you loved since birth allowed you to perish. It's been that way since Kane and Abel I suppose, no one can be trusted or depended upon. People lie, cheat, steal, and kill for earthly goods as though hell doesn't exist - death is just nothingness to those who don't believe in a superior entity.

I'm tired of being so alone. Although there have been other jobless people I've come to know and admire through the internet, they've mostly been jobless strangers who have banded together from across the country who feel this connection to one another. Our commonality may be our desperation - a pitiful thing to share with others when that is the glue to a friendship. But I am most appreciative to those who have reached out to me and have showed me support and offered their kindness and help to me. But like everyone else, I can never repay them back either.

I'm tired of things breaking or getting old because I can't afford to replace, fix, or repair anything. Like my own life, all my possessions are coming unraveled as well. It's been a downward spiral that's been quickly escalating lately. I've been frantic while watching things like my previous web sites go down, and by the end of the month I will also lose my cable TV and internet connection (I begged them to allow me this much added time with a promise to pay them with a non-existent tax return next month.)

I'm tired of waiting for a miracle to happen or someone to save me because I wasn't capable of saving myself any longer. I'm seven years away from Social Security benefits and a union pension, so that is not enough to hope for. Seven years living as a homeless man at my age and with my health is impossible. After being refused a job for over two years I have atrophy and back pain - and shortness of breath from too much stress-related smoking.

I'm tired of being tired - I'm so depressed that I can barely leave my home to buy food, but I must - just one more time while I still have $157 cash and a car that the bank hasn't taken yet. I MUST force myself to stop procrastinating and get dressed and shaved and face the world one more time. Put on my happy face, and act polite and "normal" until I can return to the "safe" confines of my dwelling.

Only three more weeks, and I won't be tired any longer. I will finally be able to relax and not worry anymore about my worth, what people think of me, how I feel, or how I will survive. I will have solved all those problems and more...I will never have to file another federal income tax return or ever worry again about how I will buy food or pay my rent again.

I'm so damn tired of being a "99er". Had there been a "Tier Five", I might have survived to be tired a while longer.


(* My website http://www.acompanyofone.org/ is presently down. It may, or may not be, resolved.)