http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=389x7096991Oh my.
The things the primitives shouldn't worry about; Bo took care of all this at 11:01 a.m. January 20, 2009, just like the primitives promised us Bo would.
truedelphi (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 03:53 AM
Original message
Unemployment - the Pictorial Graph -- very scary and impressive
Someone on another blog ("Susan") posted the link to this.
Notice how the blackness overtakes the map year by year. In just a short time, we've been blacked out!
http://cohort11.americanobserver.net/latoyaegwuekwe/mul...
Be sure and hit PLAY for the full effect...
Can someone illuminate franksolich what the graph's like?
Antique computer in use, here.
OffWithTheirHeads (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 04:28 AM
Response to Original message
1. Wow
franksolich's favorite primitive:
Selatius (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 05:21 AM
Response to Original message
2. California is one of the largest victims of the Great Recession.
It was a microcosm of the US economy in the years of deregulation and securities fraud.
doodadem (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 05:36 AM
Response to Reply #2
16. My husband's new job has fizzled
We're in Calif. The husband was laid off a year and a half ago from his job as a network engineer. Last month, he started with a friend's little co. (4 people) installing purification systems for large municipal water supplies down south. Now, it looks like he's out of work again because even though the company has tons of business, they are just not getting paid. No cash flow. Exactly the kind of situation the stimulus was supposed to help.
There has got to be some kind of moratorium on foreclosures. I'd like to see a graph done like this showing the foreclosure and suicide correlation.
truedelphi (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 08:11 PM
Response to Reply #16
17. Sorry to hear about this.
I know the pain and the stress when this happens. And for many of us, we lived (or thought we did) within our means, and thought that our scrupulous paying into retirement funds etc would tide us over until a new job was found. (Should they ever be needed.)
Since even the Biggest Players say they never knew this could happen, how can we be blamed?
But like you say, those who face foreclosure are at great risk for deliberate and inadvertent suoicide (one caused by deliberate action, the other by the factors of stroke and heart attacks.)
I blame our state legislators as well as Congress and the President. In the thirties, a total of 34 states forbid foreclosing on homes! Thirty four states!
If they are not foreclosing on the heads of AIG, Goldman Sachs and the others that we bailed out, we shouldn't be forecolsed upon either.
doodadem (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 09:51 PM
Response to Reply #17
18. 34 states?!
That's amazing. Do you have an article or other reference on this info?
truedelphi (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 10:34 PM
Response to Reply #18
20. Like much of what I know abt 20th Century American history,
It comes either from Howard Zinn's History of America, or another equally impressive "Radical history" of the USA. (Don't remember the title, but could check out my bookcase if you desire it.)
Oh and I saw the statistic mentioned on a recent film history of Union Organizers and their lives in New York City, 1928 to 1935, aired on PBS.
The above primitive's read only two books about American history?
The
la pasionara primitive, who promised to leave the United States if George Bush was re-elected in 2004, but alas who's still here:
Sarah Ibarruri (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 03:31 PM
Response to Original message
3. Terrifying! Decades of Repugnicans have destroyed our country.
We must stop those sick a-holes from being in office for the next century!
knightinwhitesatin (69 posts) Fri Nov-27-09 03:33 PM
Response to Original message
4. What are they doing in Nebraska and can we copy it nationally?
truedelphi (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 03:56 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. What I think is that most in the Great Plains states are used to a farming based employment scenario - and therefore many people are off the grid. They cannot file for unemployment to begin with - so now that times are even tighter, they are not counted.
Of course, the Bush era disdain for environmental sanctions also heated up the Big Mining interests - so maybe the mining for things like coal, oil shale etc. are helping that economy (At a huge expense to the environment.) I know that the state of Colorado is heavily impacted by the search for Natural Gas as well as the fore mentioned items.
One of the cable channels had an "indie" documentary on "Dual Estates" - in places like Colorado, people bought homes in lovely and gorgeous natural environs. Only to realize a decade later what it meant on their house title that they owned the buildings but not the land beneath the buildings. So the Natural Gas Corporation comes in from the early 1990's on, and causes explosions deep beneath the foundation of your home. The occupants end up sick with environemntal illnesses - early Parkinson's, Multiple Sclerosis, and Multiple Chemical Illness. But hey - it helps meet our nation's energy needs, and it helps the local economy.
maxpower (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 04:01 PM
Response to Original message
6. Stunning
The mountain man primitive who, like all men, nightly pitches his tent one day's march nearer the mausoleum:
ThomWV (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 04:15 PM
Response to Original message
7. Someone please explain why in the central east the state lines are defined by unemployment?
Look at the map once its run its course. From the border with canada west of the great lakes all the way down the Florida's northern border you can clearly see each state's boundaries defined by the black of unemployment. Its almost like someone drew in the state lines with a black magic marker county-block by block. Why is it that counties on the fringe of state lines have what appears to be notable higher unemployment than the state's interior.
This really jumped out at me - I'm surprised someone hasn't asked the question already. Does anyone know the answer?
FirstLight (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 04:37 PM
Response to Original message
8. ****ing Frightening
EVERY econ/civics student, history or econ major, poli-sci or sociology student, congres critter or executive CEO/CFO, unemployed waif and small business owner, welfare worker or college instructor...
Because everyone has a stake in this, and the ones who hold the cards may not get it - but the up & coming generations DO... the only way out of this mess is through 'cooperative competition and sustainability.' Bubble & bust and cretit debit living is DONE.
geez, it makes you wonder if we really CAN 'recover'...yikes
The nemesis of the maudlin waif primitive, perhaps referenced above:
omega minimo (1000+ posts) Fri Nov-27-09 05:26 PM
Response to Original message
9. yikes
snot (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 12:04 AM
Response to Original message
14. is N.D. doing so well (relatively) cuz there's no one there to be unemployed?
CatholicEdHead (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 10:40 PM
Response to Reply #14
21. Only 400K people and they have oil in the west of the state along with a pretty reliable agriculture economy in the east.
Uh, I think North Dakota something more than just 400,000 people.
Odin's left hand:
Odin2005 (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 09:55 PM
Response to Original message
19. It looks like creeping necrosis of an infected body part.
David Zephyr (1000+ posts) Sat Nov-28-09 10:45 PM
Response to Original message
22. Yeah, and the President is going to talk to the nation about "Afghanistan".
Yeah, that's what Americans are really going to tune in to hear.
Thanks for the powerful graphic presentation, truedelphi.
It's what I'm harping about now on a daily basis.
It's the number one issue with our citizens and it seems to be not even on the radar of the White House.
We are going to be massacred in 2010 at the polls over the unemployment issue.