Entry level jobs, education, salary & artificial intelligence. I see a big wall coming up.

As advances in ai progress it is only a matter of time until what were once good paying low skill jobs become obsolete.
Any job in driving, manufacturing, production line work, general maintenance, basic retail etc..

What are we going to do with our educational system to ensure that my grandson & kids of his age are educated for the jobs of the future & not left behind in the technological leap? Things are advancing so fast that I think we are facing a real jobs crisis in the next 10 to 20 years.
We are still teaching the same basic shit in school with a heavy focus on social nonsense and while this could prepare you or I for a future it won't work for them. Entry level jobs that you or I could grab and create a career out of are vanishing.

We need a SERIOUS revamping of our educational system. An example would be basic math, history, geography, reading & English from k thru 8th. Then a split focus on vocational skills & advanced math for 9th thru 12th.
That is just a basic off the cuff idea and not thought out to any depth but it is someplace to start the discussion.

What are we going to do with our educational system to ensure that my grandson & kids of his age are educated for the jobs of the future & not left behind in the technological leap?

You can start by not voting Republican.

Cutting deductions for student loan interest certainly didn't help.
 
As advances in ai progress it is only a matter of time until what were once good paying low skill jobs become obsolete.
Any job in driving, manufacturing, production line work, general maintenance, basic retail etc..

What are we going to do with our educational system to ensure that my grandson & kids of his age are educated for the jobs of the future & not left behind in the technological leap? Things are advancing so fast that I think we are facing a real jobs crisis in the next 10 to 20 years.
We are still teaching the same basic shit in school with a heavy focus on social nonsense and while this could prepare you or I for a future it won't work for them. Entry level jobs that you or I could grab and create a career out of are vanishing.

We need a SERIOUS revamping of our educational system. An example would be basic math, history, geography, reading & English from k thru 8th. Then a split focus on vocational skills & advanced math for 9th thru 12th.
That is just a basic off the cuff idea and not thought out to any depth but it is someplace to start the discussion.
It really depends on what political party you belong to.

The majority of Republicans say colleges are bad for America (yes, really)

Republicans have this really weird perspective on education in general.

Remember, the same people who believe that science is a faith and magical creation is real while evolution is only some nonsensical theory are the same people who criticize education. How can you be critical of education when you believe Behe is a knowledgeable scientist and an expert on "intelligent design"? Well, you can if you are a Republican.

The future winners will be the children of immigrants who enthusiastically attend school and the children of liberals who enthusiastically attend school.

Losers will be the children of Republicans who think education is bad for America. And there will be millions. Even more than there are now.

Low Education Levels and Unemployment Linked in Appalachia

Appalachia covers 13 Ruby Red states and/or counties. Millions of whites with an increasing infant mortality rate and a decreasing life expectancy. Many white poor in Appalachia don't even have electricity or running water. They are never in the news. Why? Because they all vote Republican. And what is the Republican Party doing for them?

Laughing at them. Making fun of them. Working to make sure they never have healthcare.


So true.

Pennsylvania coal miners are so convinced Trump will bring coal back that they're refusing training in other industries
 
when Obama was Prez, the libs were bragging about the 2000 new jobs a month,,many were in fast food,,,,great job barry!

When are you going to learn to STFU and get some facts straight first?

2017 had the worst job growth in the last 5 years.

1.5.18.3.png


STFU in your useless stats we are at full employment, the only other way to get lazy welfare whores to work is slash welfare payments in half .

I love the twist and turns from the mind of the Trump zealots.

On one hand Trump’s job numbers are not as good as Obama’s because we are at full employment.

Then the next post we are told Obama didn’t do shit and no jobs were created under him.

So, how the fuck did we get to full employment?


Sent from my iPhone using USMessageBoard.com
 
Last edited:
Report: 10 Percent of Amazon’s Ohio Workforce on Food Stamps
Report: Roughly 10 Percent of Amazon's Ohio Workforce on Food Stamps


So Amazon subsidise the Ohio food stamp program good to know, instead of them getting $50 bucks in food stamps they would be getting over $300 with out a job.

So Amazon subsidise the Ohio food stamp program good to know, instead of them getting $50 bucks in food stamps they would be getting over $300 with out a job.

^Turnip logic.

Perhaps it would be even better if they paid them enough to not need assistance at all.
I know! Let's give them a huge tax break.
 
Report: 10 Percent of Amazon’s Ohio Workforce on Food Stamps
Report: Roughly 10 Percent of Amazon's Ohio Workforce on Food Stamps


So Amazon subsidise the Ohio food stamp program good to know, instead of them getting $50 bucks in food stamps they would be getting over $300 with out a job.
Amazon would have to raise wages if the government wasn't there propping up their employees.

Amazon would have to raise wages if the government wasn't there propping up their employees.

^More turnip logic.

Let's give Amazon a huge tax cut! That'll do it.
 
Report: 10 Percent of Amazon’s Ohio Workforce on Food Stamps
Report: Roughly 10 Percent of Amazon's Ohio Workforce on Food Stamps


So Amazon subsidise the Ohio food stamp program good to know, instead of them getting $50 bucks in food stamps they would be getting over $300 with out a job.
Amazon would have to raise wages if the government wasn't there propping up their employees.


Glad you agree, Trump must slash welfare benefits and companies like Amazon will raise wages

A win win for US taxpayers.
Is that your economic policy from the "Land of Milk and Cookies"?


I'm sorry Trump is crushing Obama's numbers...try again....

I'm sorry Trump is crushing Obama's numbers...try again....


President Trump's First Year Of Job Growth Was Below President Obama's Last Six Years
 
STFU in your useless stats we are at full employment, the only other way to get lazy welfare whores to work is slash welfare payments in half .

Did you read what that moron I was responding to posted before you threw in your 2 dumb cents?

Yes slowdown in job growth is expected at full employment ...but someone forgot to tell that to idiot Trump who promised to create more jobs by bringing them back from China :alcoholic: , and notify his idiot followers of what job growth looked like under Obama.

https://www.usnews.com/news/busines...ker-picks-north-carolina-site-for-major-plant


Chinese Tiremaker Picks North Carolina Site for Major Plant
Chinese tiremaker Triangle makes bigger move into US market with plans for a North Carolina factory to produce six million tires a year.
Dec. 20, 2017, at 12:06 a.m.


Chinese manufacturer Lynk & Co. wants to build cars in America




The Future of Arkansas Manufacturing Is in Foreign Hands










Because the future of manufacturing can be globalist too.

PART OF A SPECIAL SERIES FROM OZY
STATES OF THE NATION
small.svg

By Nick Fouriezos



THE DAILY DOSEJAN 03 2018


The signs are all faded, the parking lot empty in the middle of a Monday, except for the weeds that seem to have their own permanent parking space. The old Sanyo TV factory that closed a decade ago is the most obvious manifestation of manufacturing’s decline here in Forrest City, where unemployment and poverty far outstrip the average across Arkansas. But that very plant now promises to serve as a harbinger of a much more optimistic future.


The decline in the Arkansas Delta began in earnest in the ’90s, with homegrown manufacturing’s post-NAFTA decline, and bottomed out with the nearly 600 jobs lost when the Sanyo plant closed in 2007 after three decades. The Great Recession only compounded the region’s misery, and although unemployment in this county has fallen to 4.4 percent, it still lags behind the rest of the state by nearly a point. Nearly a third of folks in St. Francis County live in poverty today. “We really don’t have a lot of industry. If you aren’t willing to work at McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s or the hospital, we’re limited,” says Ardelia Echols, a Forrest City native and city councilor.


That may now be changing. This spring, a major Chinese textile company announced a plan to convert the former television and microwave factory into a massive yarn mill, with plans to hire as many as 800 employees and consume 200,000 tons of cotton annually — enough to swallow up the state’s entire crop. The Shandong Ruyi Technology Group has held job fairs for what will be its first American outpost, with lines that “were more than they can handle,” Echols says. “Everyone is really excited.”
The $410 million investment is one of a handful of foreign cash influxes that have made Arkansas the top state for foreign direct investment by employment growth, according to the nonprofit Organization for International Investment. More than 60 percent of that has come in the manufacturing sector, after many economists had effectively nailed the coffin on the industry. Arkansas is proactively courting these investments. In addition to the Shanghai office it’s had for a decade, the state has added offices in Berlin and Tokyo since Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson took over in 2015. In that same time period, Hutchinson has led three trade trips to China.

The fruits have been plentiful. The Tianyuan Garment Factory is investing $20 million and 400 jobs into a new plant making Adidas apparel in Little Rock, while Sun Paper has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $1 billion in a bioproducts mill in Arkadelphia. In the past 18 months, Arkansas went from zero major investments from Chinese companies to five, ushering in 1,500 jobs and $1.5 billion in spending. Over the past five years, Arkansas has seen 41.5 percent of its total job growth attributable to foreign direct investment.

“The message we got from China is that relationships matter,” says Mike Preston, the Hutchinson-appointed executive director of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission

My man, time to get real - it is drops-in-the-bucket bullshit.

Trump lied about jobs market and he lied about bringing the conveyor belt jobs back from China - big picture is that there is no population here that wants them and most of those jobs will probably be automated anyway sooner or later.





No he didn't you silly twit. It takes time to undo 8 years of job killing. Give it some time and the jobs will come back. obummer was chasing manufacturing away as fast as he could.


We're at full employment, fool.
 
when Obama was Prez, the libs were bragging about the 2000 new jobs a month,,many were in fast food,,,,great job barry!

When are you going to learn to STFU and get some facts straight first?

2017 had the worst job growth in the last 5 years.

1.5.18.3.png


STFU in your useless stats we are at full employment, the only other way to get lazy welfare whores to work is slash welfare payments in half .

I love the twist and turns from the mind of the Trump zealots.

On one hand Trump’s job numbers are not as good as Obama’s because we are at full employment.

Then the next post we are told Obama didn’t do shot and no jobs were created under him.

So, how the fuck did we get to full employment?


Sent from my iPhone using USMessageBoard.com

It requires the suspension of disbelief with a heaping portion of turnip logic
 
Good paying low skill jobs? The economy is booming and jobs are coming back to the U.S. You don't learn what you need in the job market in the freaking 9th grade. It would be nice if kids learned more than putting a condom on a banana but you have to apply yourself after High School.
 
and Trump didnt have to print up a trillion dollars to create these two million jobs like Obama did

Get real chump, Trump did JACK SHIT to improve job numbers in 2017. Like from the day he was born he has been coasting on good inheritance.


oh see the tune change.......Obama inflated the economy to get his mcjobs......Trump just cut regulation....and now taxes.......I know you hate growth but 4% here we come!
 
and Trump didnt have to print up a trillion dollars to create these two million jobs like Obama did

Get real chump, Trump did JACK SHIT to improve job numbers in 2017. Like from the day he was born he has been coasting on good inheritance.

What's your excuse going to be in 2019 after the tax cuts propel the economy forward even faster?

I don't need excuses for your fantasies.

It may happen that the economy is still growing in 2019, but it's unlikely from historic business cycle perspective. We are now coming due for another recession. I'll even predict it will happen within a year - that cryptocurrency bubble seems like it will pop spectacularly.

But be that as it may - WHO is this fantastical Trump economy going to be hiring in 2019 if the job growth keeps up? By then we will be at 2% unemployment!


Wow a lefty saying economies have cycles....that's a start and true

we'll see......I think his policies can keep the economy going
 
https://www.usnews.com/news/busines...ker-picks-north-carolina-site-for-major-plant


Chinese Tiremaker Picks North Carolina Site for Major Plant
Chinese tiremaker Triangle makes bigger move into US market with plans for a North Carolina factory to produce six million tires a year.
Dec. 20, 2017, at 12:06 a.m.


Chinese manufacturer Lynk & Co. wants to build cars in America




The Future of Arkansas Manufacturing Is in Foreign Hands










Because the future of manufacturing can be globalist too.

PART OF A SPECIAL SERIES FROM OZY
STATES OF THE NATION
small.svg

By Nick Fouriezos



THE DAILY DOSEJAN 03 2018


The signs are all faded, the parking lot empty in the middle of a Monday, except for the weeds that seem to have their own permanent parking space. The old Sanyo TV factory that closed a decade ago is the most obvious manifestation of manufacturing’s decline here in Forrest City, where unemployment and poverty far outstrip the average across Arkansas. But that very plant now promises to serve as a harbinger of a much more optimistic future.


The decline in the Arkansas Delta began in earnest in the ’90s, with homegrown manufacturing’s post-NAFTA decline, and bottomed out with the nearly 600 jobs lost when the Sanyo plant closed in 2007 after three decades. The Great Recession only compounded the region’s misery, and although unemployment in this county has fallen to 4.4 percent, it still lags behind the rest of the state by nearly a point. Nearly a third of folks in St. Francis County live in poverty today. “We really don’t have a lot of industry. If you aren’t willing to work at McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s or the hospital, we’re limited,” says Ardelia Echols, a Forrest City native and city councilor.


That may now be changing. This spring, a major Chinese textile company announced a plan to convert the former television and microwave factory into a massive yarn mill, with plans to hire as many as 800 employees and consume 200,000 tons of cotton annually — enough to swallow up the state’s entire crop. The Shandong Ruyi Technology Group has held job fairs for what will be its first American outpost, with lines that “were more than they can handle,” Echols says. “Everyone is really excited.”
The $410 million investment is one of a handful of foreign cash influxes that have made Arkansas the top state for foreign direct investment by employment growth, according to the nonprofit Organization for International Investment. More than 60 percent of that has come in the manufacturing sector, after many economists had effectively nailed the coffin on the industry. Arkansas is proactively courting these investments. In addition to the Shanghai office it’s had for a decade, the state has added offices in Berlin and Tokyo since Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson took over in 2015. In that same time period, Hutchinson has led three trade trips to China.

The fruits have been plentiful. The Tianyuan Garment Factory is investing $20 million and 400 jobs into a new plant making Adidas apparel in Little Rock, while Sun Paper has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $1 billion in a bioproducts mill in Arkadelphia. In the past 18 months, Arkansas went from zero major investments from Chinese companies to five, ushering in 1,500 jobs and $1.5 billion in spending. Over the past five years, Arkansas has seen 41.5 percent of its total job growth attributable to foreign direct investment.

“The message we got from China is that relationships matter,” says Mike Preston, the Hutchinson-appointed executive director of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission

My man, time to get real - it is drops-in-the-bucket bullshit.

Trump lied about jobs market and he lied about bringing the conveyor belt jobs back from China - big picture is that there is no population here that wants them and most of those jobs will probably be automated anyway sooner or later.





No he didn't you silly twit. It takes time to undo 8 years of job killing. Give it some time and the jobs will come back. obummer was chasing manufacturing away as fast as he could.


giphy.gif


Undoing job killing?

Is that what you call the slowest job growth rate in 5 years?






Yeah obummer traded full time manufacturing jobs that provided benefits for part time jobs with none. What a great trade. You really are a idiot.


I've already proved this to him, he didn't listen. I even used CNN figures....because they love Trump so much
 
when Obama was Prez, the libs were bragging about the 2000 new jobs a month,,many were in fast food,,,,great job barry!

When are you going to learn to STFU and get some facts straight first?

2017 had the worst job growth in the last 5 years.

1.5.18.3.png


STFU in your useless stats we are at full employment, the only other way to get lazy welfare whores to work is slash welfare payments in half .

I love the twist and turns from the mind of the Trump zealots.

On one hand Trump’s job numbers are not as good as Obama’s because we are at full employment.

Then the next post we are told Obama didn’t do shit and no jobs were created under him.

So, how the fuck did we get to full employment?


Sent from my iPhone using USMessageBoard.com
if everyone worked at mcdonalds that full employment......that doesn't mean it's a good job......those are good jobs for teens.....if you're an adult working at mcdonalds......you have no ambition
 
Did you read what that moron I was responding to posted before you threw in your 2 dumb cents?

Yes slowdown in job growth is expected at full employment ...but someone forgot to tell that to idiot Trump who promised to create more jobs by bringing them back from China :alcoholic: , and notify his idiot followers of what job growth looked like under Obama.

https://www.usnews.com/news/busines...ker-picks-north-carolina-site-for-major-plant


Chinese Tiremaker Picks North Carolina Site for Major Plant
Chinese tiremaker Triangle makes bigger move into US market with plans for a North Carolina factory to produce six million tires a year.
Dec. 20, 2017, at 12:06 a.m.


Chinese manufacturer Lynk & Co. wants to build cars in America




The Future of Arkansas Manufacturing Is in Foreign Hands










Because the future of manufacturing can be globalist too.

PART OF A SPECIAL SERIES FROM OZY
STATES OF THE NATION
small.svg

By Nick Fouriezos



THE DAILY DOSEJAN 03 2018


The signs are all faded, the parking lot empty in the middle of a Monday, except for the weeds that seem to have their own permanent parking space. The old Sanyo TV factory that closed a decade ago is the most obvious manifestation of manufacturing’s decline here in Forrest City, where unemployment and poverty far outstrip the average across Arkansas. But that very plant now promises to serve as a harbinger of a much more optimistic future.


The decline in the Arkansas Delta began in earnest in the ’90s, with homegrown manufacturing’s post-NAFTA decline, and bottomed out with the nearly 600 jobs lost when the Sanyo plant closed in 2007 after three decades. The Great Recession only compounded the region’s misery, and although unemployment in this county has fallen to 4.4 percent, it still lags behind the rest of the state by nearly a point. Nearly a third of folks in St. Francis County live in poverty today. “We really don’t have a lot of industry. If you aren’t willing to work at McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s or the hospital, we’re limited,” says Ardelia Echols, a Forrest City native and city councilor.


That may now be changing. This spring, a major Chinese textile company announced a plan to convert the former television and microwave factory into a massive yarn mill, with plans to hire as many as 800 employees and consume 200,000 tons of cotton annually — enough to swallow up the state’s entire crop. The Shandong Ruyi Technology Group has held job fairs for what will be its first American outpost, with lines that “were more than they can handle,” Echols says. “Everyone is really excited.”
The $410 million investment is one of a handful of foreign cash influxes that have made Arkansas the top state for foreign direct investment by employment growth, according to the nonprofit Organization for International Investment. More than 60 percent of that has come in the manufacturing sector, after many economists had effectively nailed the coffin on the industry. Arkansas is proactively courting these investments. In addition to the Shanghai office it’s had for a decade, the state has added offices in Berlin and Tokyo since Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson took over in 2015. In that same time period, Hutchinson has led three trade trips to China.

The fruits have been plentiful. The Tianyuan Garment Factory is investing $20 million and 400 jobs into a new plant making Adidas apparel in Little Rock, while Sun Paper has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $1 billion in a bioproducts mill in Arkadelphia. In the past 18 months, Arkansas went from zero major investments from Chinese companies to five, ushering in 1,500 jobs and $1.5 billion in spending. Over the past five years, Arkansas has seen 41.5 percent of its total job growth attributable to foreign direct investment.

“The message we got from China is that relationships matter,” says Mike Preston, the Hutchinson-appointed executive director of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission

My man, time to get real - it is drops-in-the-bucket bullshit.

Trump lied about jobs market and he lied about bringing the conveyor belt jobs back from China - big picture is that there is no population here that wants them and most of those jobs will probably be automated anyway sooner or later.





No he didn't you silly twit. It takes time to undo 8 years of job killing. Give it some time and the jobs will come back. obummer was chasing manufacturing away as fast as he could.


We're at full employment, fool.


that would be 0% unemployment and everyone in the job market.......
 
https://www.usnews.com/news/busines...ker-picks-north-carolina-site-for-major-plant


Chinese Tiremaker Picks North Carolina Site for Major Plant
Chinese tiremaker Triangle makes bigger move into US market with plans for a North Carolina factory to produce six million tires a year.
Dec. 20, 2017, at 12:06 a.m.


Chinese manufacturer Lynk & Co. wants to build cars in America




The Future of Arkansas Manufacturing Is in Foreign Hands










Because the future of manufacturing can be globalist too.

PART OF A SPECIAL SERIES FROM OZY
STATES OF THE NATION
small.svg

By Nick Fouriezos



THE DAILY DOSEJAN 03 2018


The signs are all faded, the parking lot empty in the middle of a Monday, except for the weeds that seem to have their own permanent parking space. The old Sanyo TV factory that closed a decade ago is the most obvious manifestation of manufacturing’s decline here in Forrest City, where unemployment and poverty far outstrip the average across Arkansas. But that very plant now promises to serve as a harbinger of a much more optimistic future.


The decline in the Arkansas Delta began in earnest in the ’90s, with homegrown manufacturing’s post-NAFTA decline, and bottomed out with the nearly 600 jobs lost when the Sanyo plant closed in 2007 after three decades. The Great Recession only compounded the region’s misery, and although unemployment in this county has fallen to 4.4 percent, it still lags behind the rest of the state by nearly a point. Nearly a third of folks in St. Francis County live in poverty today. “We really don’t have a lot of industry. If you aren’t willing to work at McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s or the hospital, we’re limited,” says Ardelia Echols, a Forrest City native and city councilor.


That may now be changing. This spring, a major Chinese textile company announced a plan to convert the former television and microwave factory into a massive yarn mill, with plans to hire as many as 800 employees and consume 200,000 tons of cotton annually — enough to swallow up the state’s entire crop. The Shandong Ruyi Technology Group has held job fairs for what will be its first American outpost, with lines that “were more than they can handle,” Echols says. “Everyone is really excited.”
The $410 million investment is one of a handful of foreign cash influxes that have made Arkansas the top state for foreign direct investment by employment growth, according to the nonprofit Organization for International Investment. More than 60 percent of that has come in the manufacturing sector, after many economists had effectively nailed the coffin on the industry. Arkansas is proactively courting these investments. In addition to the Shanghai office it’s had for a decade, the state has added offices in Berlin and Tokyo since Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson took over in 2015. In that same time period, Hutchinson has led three trade trips to China.

The fruits have been plentiful. The Tianyuan Garment Factory is investing $20 million and 400 jobs into a new plant making Adidas apparel in Little Rock, while Sun Paper has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $1 billion in a bioproducts mill in Arkadelphia. In the past 18 months, Arkansas went from zero major investments from Chinese companies to five, ushering in 1,500 jobs and $1.5 billion in spending. Over the past five years, Arkansas has seen 41.5 percent of its total job growth attributable to foreign direct investment.

“The message we got from China is that relationships matter,” says Mike Preston, the Hutchinson-appointed executive director of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission

My man, time to get real - it is drops-in-the-bucket bullshit.

Trump lied about jobs market and he lied about bringing the conveyor belt jobs back from China - big picture is that there is no population here that wants them and most of those jobs will probably be automated anyway sooner or later.





No he didn't you silly twit. It takes time to undo 8 years of job killing. Give it some time and the jobs will come back. obummer was chasing manufacturing away as fast as he could.


We're at full employment, fool.


that would be 0% unemployment and everyone in the job market.......

No, it would not. There is always a certain number of people in between jobs or not working for a specific reason.

4% has long been considered full employment, which is why we have only been below it for 8% of the months since 1980


Sent from my iPhone using USMessageBoard.com
 
when Obama was Prez, the libs were bragging about the 2000 new jobs a month,,many were in fast food,,,,great job barry!

When are you going to learn to STFU and get some facts straight first?

2017 had the worst job growth in the last 5 years.

1.5.18.3.png


STFU in your useless stats we are at full employment, the only other way to get lazy welfare whores to work is slash welfare payments in half .

I love the twist and turns from the mind of the Trump zealots.

On one hand Trump’s job numbers are not as good as Obama’s because we are at full employment.

Then the next post we are told Obama didn’t do shit and no jobs were created under him.

So, how the fuck did we get to full employment?


Sent from my iPhone using USMessageBoard.com
if everyone worked at mcdonalds that full employment......that doesn't mean it's a good job......those are good jobs for teens.....if you're an adult working at mcdonalds......you have no ambition
we are killing it on this argument, i just scroll down these lies coming from the room goats. they just cannot acknowledge what hell we went thru for at least the first two years of Obama when millions and millions had to file for unemployment,,while Obama kept borrowing trillions to make it look like he was creating a lousy 50-100K jobs a month! if the Obama Job Creation was so so successfull,,,then why DIDNT THE DEFICIT AND DEBT GO DOWN???
 
when Obama was Prez, the libs were bragging about the 2000 new jobs a month,,many were in fast food,,,,great job barry!

When are you going to learn to STFU and get some facts straight first?

2017 had the worst job growth in the last 5 years.

1.5.18.3.png


STFU in your useless stats we are at full employment, the only other way to get lazy welfare whores to work is slash welfare payments in half .

I love the twist and turns from the mind of the Trump zealots.

On one hand Trump’s job numbers are not as good as Obama’s because we are at full employment.

Then the next post we are told Obama didn’t do shit and no jobs were created under him.

So, how the fuck did we get to full employment?


Sent from my iPhone using USMessageBoard.com
if everyone worked at mcdonalds that full employment......that doesn't mean it's a good job......those are good jobs for teens.....if you're an adult working at mcdonalds......you have no ambition
we are killing it on this argument, i just scroll down these lies coming from the room goats. they just cannot acknowledge what hell we went thru for at least the first two years of Obama when millions and millions had to file for unemployment,,while Obama kept borrowing trillions to make it look like he was creating a lousy 50-100K jobs a month! if the Obama Job Creation was so so successfull,,,then why DIDNT THE DEFICIT AND DEBT GO DOWN???


because they are retarded........and are easily manipulated......it's sad really
 
The Future of Arkansas Manufacturing Is in Foreign Hands










Because the future of manufacturing can be globalist too.

PART OF A SPECIAL SERIES FROM OZY
STATES OF THE NATION
small.svg

By Nick Fouriezos



THE DAILY DOSEJAN 03 2018


The signs are all faded, the parking lot empty in the middle of a Monday, except for the weeds that seem to have their own permanent parking space. The old Sanyo TV factory that closed a decade ago is the most obvious manifestation of manufacturing’s decline here in Forrest City, where unemployment and poverty far outstrip the average across Arkansas. But that very plant now promises to serve as a harbinger of a much more optimistic future.


The decline in the Arkansas Delta began in earnest in the ’90s, with homegrown manufacturing’s post-NAFTA decline, and bottomed out with the nearly 600 jobs lost when the Sanyo plant closed in 2007 after three decades. The Great Recession only compounded the region’s misery, and although unemployment in this county has fallen to 4.4 percent, it still lags behind the rest of the state by nearly a point. Nearly a third of folks in St. Francis County live in poverty today. “We really don’t have a lot of industry. If you aren’t willing to work at McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s or the hospital, we’re limited,” says Ardelia Echols, a Forrest City native and city councilor.


That may now be changing. This spring, a major Chinese textile company announced a plan to convert the former television and microwave factory into a massive yarn mill, with plans to hire as many as 800 employees and consume 200,000 tons of cotton annually — enough to swallow up the state’s entire crop. The Shandong Ruyi Technology Group has held job fairs for what will be its first American outpost, with lines that “were more than they can handle,” Echols says. “Everyone is really excited.”
The $410 million investment is one of a handful of foreign cash influxes that have made Arkansas the top state for foreign direct investment by employment growth, according to the nonprofit Organization for International Investment. More than 60 percent of that has come in the manufacturing sector, after many economists had effectively nailed the coffin on the industry. Arkansas is proactively courting these investments. In addition to the Shanghai office it’s had for a decade, the state has added offices in Berlin and Tokyo since Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson took over in 2015. In that same time period, Hutchinson has led three trade trips to China.

The fruits have been plentiful. The Tianyuan Garment Factory is investing $20 million and 400 jobs into a new plant making Adidas apparel in Little Rock, while Sun Paper has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $1 billion in a bioproducts mill in Arkadelphia. In the past 18 months, Arkansas went from zero major investments from Chinese companies to five, ushering in 1,500 jobs and $1.5 billion in spending. Over the past five years, Arkansas has seen 41.5 percent of its total job growth attributable to foreign direct investment.

“The message we got from China is that relationships matter,” says Mike Preston, the Hutchinson-appointed executive director of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission

My man, time to get real - it is drops-in-the-bucket bullshit.

Trump lied about jobs market and he lied about bringing the conveyor belt jobs back from China - big picture is that there is no population here that wants them and most of those jobs will probably be automated anyway sooner or later.





No he didn't you silly twit. It takes time to undo 8 years of job killing. Give it some time and the jobs will come back. obummer was chasing manufacturing away as fast as he could.


We're at full employment, fool.


that would be 0% unemployment and everyone in the job market.......

No, it would not. There is always a certain number of people in between jobs or not working for a specific reason.

4% has long been considered full employment, which is why we have only been below it for 8% of the months since 1980


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yeah but it doesn't take into account people who quit looking...which there were millions under Obama........we need to find them jobs........
 
When are you going to learn to STFU and get some facts straight first?

2017 had the worst job growth in the last 5 years.

1.5.18.3.png


STFU in your useless stats we are at full employment, the only other way to get lazy welfare whores to work is slash welfare payments in half .

I love the twist and turns from the mind of the Trump zealots.

On one hand Trump’s job numbers are not as good as Obama’s because we are at full employment.

Then the next post we are told Obama didn’t do shit and no jobs were created under him.

So, how the fuck did we get to full employment?


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if everyone worked at mcdonalds that full employment......that doesn't mean it's a good job......those are good jobs for teens.....if you're an adult working at mcdonalds......you have no ambition
we are killing it on this argument, i just scroll down these lies coming from the room goats. they just cannot acknowledge what hell we went thru for at least the first two years of Obama when millions and millions had to file for unemployment,,while Obama kept borrowing trillions to make it look like he was creating a lousy 50-100K jobs a month! if the Obama Job Creation was so so successfull,,,then why DIDNT THE DEFICIT AND DEBT GO DOWN???


because they are retarded........and are easily manipulated......it's sad really
yes they are so retarded...they even believe that Trump has a 30% approval,,,just like when they all believed that Hillary was 14 points ahead a few weeks before the election
 
https://www.usnews.com/news/busines...ker-picks-north-carolina-site-for-major-plant


Chinese Tiremaker Picks North Carolina Site for Major Plant
Chinese tiremaker Triangle makes bigger move into US market with plans for a North Carolina factory to produce six million tires a year.
Dec. 20, 2017, at 12:06 a.m.


Chinese manufacturer Lynk & Co. wants to build cars in America




The Future of Arkansas Manufacturing Is in Foreign Hands










Because the future of manufacturing can be globalist too.

PART OF A SPECIAL SERIES FROM OZY
STATES OF THE NATION
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By Nick Fouriezos



THE DAILY DOSEJAN 03 2018


The signs are all faded, the parking lot empty in the middle of a Monday, except for the weeds that seem to have their own permanent parking space. The old Sanyo TV factory that closed a decade ago is the most obvious manifestation of manufacturing’s decline here in Forrest City, where unemployment and poverty far outstrip the average across Arkansas. But that very plant now promises to serve as a harbinger of a much more optimistic future.


The decline in the Arkansas Delta began in earnest in the ’90s, with homegrown manufacturing’s post-NAFTA decline, and bottomed out with the nearly 600 jobs lost when the Sanyo plant closed in 2007 after three decades. The Great Recession only compounded the region’s misery, and although unemployment in this county has fallen to 4.4 percent, it still lags behind the rest of the state by nearly a point. Nearly a third of folks in St. Francis County live in poverty today. “We really don’t have a lot of industry. If you aren’t willing to work at McDonald’s, Burger King, Wendy’s or the hospital, we’re limited,” says Ardelia Echols, a Forrest City native and city councilor.


That may now be changing. This spring, a major Chinese textile company announced a plan to convert the former television and microwave factory into a massive yarn mill, with plans to hire as many as 800 employees and consume 200,000 tons of cotton annually — enough to swallow up the state’s entire crop. The Shandong Ruyi Technology Group has held job fairs for what will be its first American outpost, with lines that “were more than they can handle,” Echols says. “Everyone is really excited.”
The $410 million investment is one of a handful of foreign cash influxes that have made Arkansas the top state for foreign direct investment by employment growth, according to the nonprofit Organization for International Investment. More than 60 percent of that has come in the manufacturing sector, after many economists had effectively nailed the coffin on the industry. Arkansas is proactively courting these investments. In addition to the Shanghai office it’s had for a decade, the state has added offices in Berlin and Tokyo since Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson took over in 2015. In that same time period, Hutchinson has led three trade trips to China.

The fruits have been plentiful. The Tianyuan Garment Factory is investing $20 million and 400 jobs into a new plant making Adidas apparel in Little Rock, while Sun Paper has signed a memorandum of understanding to invest $1 billion in a bioproducts mill in Arkadelphia. In the past 18 months, Arkansas went from zero major investments from Chinese companies to five, ushering in 1,500 jobs and $1.5 billion in spending. Over the past five years, Arkansas has seen 41.5 percent of its total job growth attributable to foreign direct investment.

“The message we got from China is that relationships matter,” says Mike Preston, the Hutchinson-appointed executive director of the Arkansas Economic Development Commission

My man, time to get real - it is drops-in-the-bucket bullshit.

Trump lied about jobs market and he lied about bringing the conveyor belt jobs back from China - big picture is that there is no population here that wants them and most of those jobs will probably be automated anyway sooner or later.





No he didn't you silly twit. It takes time to undo 8 years of job killing. Give it some time and the jobs will come back. obummer was chasing manufacturing away as fast as he could.


We're at full employment, fool.


that would be 0% unemployment and everyone in the job market.......

that would be 0% unemployment and everyone in the job market.......


Dope.
 

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