Thursday, September 29, 2011

Part-Timing It With the Boston Globe

Or worse. I get about 6-7 pages in and want to put it down these days. At that point the inane garbage and agenda-pushing propaganda has usually exhausted me. I'm sorry, readers. I'm simply sick of the shit.

"Part-time workers on rise in Mass.; Many forced to settle for lower-pay jobs" September 26, 2011|By Megan Woolhouse, Globe Staff

The number of people who took part-time jobs because they were unable to find full-time work has grown nearly fourfold in Massachusetts since 2000 and has been accelerating at an alarming pace for much of this year, according to an analysis by Northeastern University.

It's the new economy, and the same devised by the globalist advocates in charge of the policies. This was on purpose, as was pushing poor indigenous people into cities and emigration. 

I saw this coming decades ago, folks. I heard temporary workforce and knew what it meant. 

In the first eight months of 2011, the number of so-called underemployed workers in the Bay State surged 18 percent to 200,500, a sign the economic recovery has been so weak - and companies so reluctant to hire - that many workers have little choice other than to take lower-paying jobs.  

And CUI BONO?  

And what recovery are they talking about?  That only occurred at the top. 

Oh, right, rich man's paper.

The rise of the underemployed in Massachusetts and across the country also might help explain why consumer spending, a key driver of the US economy, has been anemic and why the country could potentially fall back into a recession.

After we were told by all the genius experts, managers, and media mouthpieces that wouldn't happen, and after people who did suggest such years ago were insulted as idiots. You got two years of an Obama sugar high, folks. That was your manufactured recovery (borrowed at interest) so the government and media could claim recovery, blah, blah, blah. 

“The problem has been very bad, and the size of it is something we haven’t seen before,’’ said Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University, who prepared the analysis for the Globe. “The magnitude of this is really hurting the economy badly.’’  

But banks and corporations are clearing record profits if you skip through the business pages.

--more--"  

Also see: Welcome to My World

But the Globe don't stay too long.  I'm just returning the favor.