A DAILY INNOCULATION AGAINST POLITICAL AND CULTURAL BULLSHIT

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"Plus ça change, cher, n'est-ce pas?" - Mémé Aureole Petite


"I'm desperate, Johnny. There's nowhere left to turn."
--- Watching Obama abandon the middle class

"I can't look at his face anymore. I can't listen to him speak. If I saw him in person, I'd throw my shoe."
--- Tweet takes the bold step of expressing his own opinion.

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Mr. Petite has been an adviser to both the Bush and Obama administrations (neither of which ever asked for his advice - and they certainly never took it, so don't blame Tweet) and is a Senior Fellow at (and is supported entirely by) the ETHICS AND THEORY INSTITUTE OF TERMINOLOGY (EATIT), a foundation underwritten by the parents of a United States Senator in return for Mr. Petite's silence on certain important matters. Which explains why he doesn't do TV.

Mr. Petite is a native of virtual New Orleans, and therefore a legal immigrant to his actual residence, so he has never had to do migrant farm work or landscaping. (He did do some shrimping in the virtual bayous on some of the days he played hookey from school.) The use of the word "onions" is metaphoric, or something. His sole contact with actual onions is in some of the better gumbos.

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Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Krugman: U.S. Headed for 'Jobless' Recovery - ABC News

Krugman: U.S. Headed for 'Jobless' Recovery - ABC News

How long have I been saying this?

But I don't agree with Krugman that another stimulus package is necessary. The only answer to unemployment is the mass deportation of MBAs who don't understand, or don't believe in, social policy and certainly don't believe that it is important for the corporations they work for to make a contribution to the national health by keeping workers working - even, if necessary and for the short term, at a loss. The beans the beancounters count are human heads. They know the easiest way to cut costs is to cut employees. And, as I've said, once costs are down they will not bring the workers back unless they can't increase corporate productivity some other way.

It will take a minimum of ten years to create new private sector jobs to take up some of this slack, and most of the laid-off employees will not be competent to do the new work. As things now stand, in ten years we going to need a massive infusion of Indian technocrats who will be living here like we used to live there - with ten servants to the house, all American workers who can no longer find other jobs. This concept of America is foreign to me. I don't want a corporate state.

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