US employers tired of winning? U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months

Yeah, weak, with over 7 million job openings. Lol

Where do you come up with this stuff??
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...

Of course job growth is slow, we have far more open jobs than people to fill them.

Why create jobs that cannot be filled?

You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.
 
You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.

I did not say a damn thing about it being dire, just provided some context.
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...
Moron! Unemployment hust hit a 30 year low. Now pack your lying ass outta here, asshole.

You have mistaken me for Donald Trump.
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...

Of course job growth is slow, we have far more open jobs than people to fill them.

Why create jobs that cannot be filled?

You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.
Bullcrap. There are still 65,000 H1B visas as there were in 2015.
 
You do not know how to respond because are ignorant of the facts.

No, I could type until my fingers fell off...but your mind is made up & I'm tired of feeding trolls!

I have actually read it and studied the effect it would have as it deals with my industry.

You have clearly not read it and are just parroting your party talking points
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...

Of course job growth is slow, we have far more open jobs than people to fill them.

Why create jobs that cannot be filled?

You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.
Bullcrap. There are still 65,000 H1B visas as there were in 2015.

Do you think the need for them has gone up with the growing economy and job market?
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...

Uhm where at full employment, who ever wants a job has a job.
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...

Of course job growth is slow, we have far more open jobs than people to fill them.

Why create jobs that cannot be filled?

You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.
Bullcrap. There are still 65,000 H1B visas as there were in 2015.

Do you think the need for them has gone up with the growing economy and job market?
upload_2019-10-4_18-57-38.jpeg
 
You do not know how to respond because are ignorant of the facts.

No, I could type until my fingers fell off...but your mind is made up & I'm tired of feeding trolls!

I have actually read it and studied the effect it would have as it deals with my industry.

You have clearly not read it and are just parroting your party talking points

Your industry? Golf? You are spending too much time in the shrubbery looking for the unfindable.

The Decline of Golf in 2018 - The Perfect Storm Continues For Most Golf Clubs


4-241x300.png
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...

Of course job growth is slow, we have far more open jobs than people to fill them.

Why create jobs that cannot be filled?

You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.
Bullcrap. There are still 65,000 H1B visas as there were in 2015.

Does that mean Donald Trump will stop hiring undocumented illegals?
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

U.S. Jobs Outlook Is So Weak It Echoes Disaster-Hit Months
By Katia Dmitrieva
October 3, 2019, 4:00 PM GMT+7 Updated on October 3, 2019, 7:57 PM GMT+7

Private payrolls gain seen at 130,000 as trade hampers growth
‘It’s starting to roll into one big ball of negativity’

We Are Primed for a Third Fed Rate Cut, Economist Rupkey Says

The last time U.S. payroll forecasts were this low, hurricanes had slammed the country in 2017, temporarily closing businesses. Or go back to 2013 when there was a federal government shutdown.
But for the September jobs report due Friday, Wall Street economists see a more persistent storm at play: The trade war and manufacturing recession. Those factors are starting to permeate the economy at a time when companies are already struggling with a shrinking pool of qualified workers.
The combination of forces has pushed down the median estimate for private payrolls to a gain of just 130,000 last month. That’s the weakest projection heading into a jobs report in seven years, outside of months affected by events such as major storms or the shutdown. Estimates for total nonfarm payrolls are higher, at 148,000, because of an expected boost from temporary census hiring.

A reading that’s even weaker than predicted would probably boost investor expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates Oct. 30 for a third straight meeting and potentially again in December, completing a reversal of all four hikes from 2018. It may also force Fed officials to rein in their assessment of the labor market, which they’ve labeled as “strong” in policy statements as recently as September.
For President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly pinned any economic weakness on the central bank, a sluggish labor market could pose a threat to his reelection in 2020. Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018.
U.S. stocks slumped 3% in the last two days amid dour economic data. On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management said its factory index fell deeper into contraction in September with the worst reading in a decade, while the employment gauge hit a three-year low. Meanwhile, companies’ hiring was the slowest in three months, according to a report from private data provider ADP. ...

Of course job growth is slow, we have far more open jobs than people to fill them.

Why create jobs that cannot be filled?

You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.
Bullcrap. There are still 65,000 H1B visas as there were in 2015.

Does that mean Donald Trump will stop hiring undocumented illegals?
He personally never has.
 
The economy is spiraling down and Trump is clueless. Correction, his decision-making gut is clueless.

Job creation is spiraling down and manufacturing is in recession.

"Currently the U.S. is on track to add about 1.9 million jobs this year, which would be the smallest gain since 2010 and down from 2.7 million in 2018."

The stock market is wobbling with a big Trump slump likely. Mnuchin is better suited to trimming garden hedges than managing the US economy.

Barack Obama we really miss you. The evil clown Trump is crashing the economy and the ship of state.

Bloomberg - Are you a robot?

Of course job growth is slow, we have far more open jobs than people to fill them.

Why create jobs that cannot be filled?

You are evidently unaware of the concept of capitalism and competition between economic entities for resources.

If the situation is as dire as you claim wage inflation would be exploding.

The issue of unfilled jobs is a consequence of Trump's blocking of work visas for foreigners.
Bullcrap. There are still 65,000 H1B visas as there were in 2015.

Do you think the need for them has gone up with the growing economy and job market?
View attachment 282879

seems you did not understand the question
 
You do not know how to respond because are ignorant of the facts.

No, I could type until my fingers fell off...but your mind is made up & I'm tired of feeding trolls!

I have actually read it and studied the effect it would have as it deals with my industry.

You have clearly not read it and are just parroting your party talking points

Your industry? Golf? You are spending too much time in the shrubbery looking for the unfindable.

The Decline of Golf in 2018 - The Perfect Storm Continues For Most Golf Clubs


4-241x300.png

That is just my hobby
 
You do not know how to respond because are ignorant of the facts.

No, I could type until my fingers fell off...but your mind is made up & I'm tired of feeding trolls!

I have actually read it and studied the effect it would have as it deals with my industry.

You have clearly not read it and are just parroting your party talking points

Your industry? Golf? You are spending too much time in the shrubbery looking for the unfindable.

The Decline of Golf in 2018 - The Perfect Storm Continues For Most Golf Clubs


4-241x300.png

That is just my hobby

Your industry is a hobby? You probably are not able enough to work full time.
 
You do not know how to respond because are ignorant of the facts.

No, I could type until my fingers fell off...but your mind is made up & I'm tired of feeding trolls!

I have actually read it and studied the effect it would have as it deals with my industry.

You have clearly not read it and are just parroting your party talking points

Your industry? Golf? You are spending too much time in the shrubbery looking for the unfindable.

The Decline of Golf in 2018 - The Perfect Storm Continues For Most Golf Clubs


4-241x300.png

That is just my hobby

Your industry is a hobby? You probably are not able enough to work full time.

golf is my hobby, not my industry.

Agricultural is my industry.
 
No, I could type until my fingers fell off...but your mind is made up & I'm tired of feeding trolls!

I have actually read it and studied the effect it would have as it deals with my industry.

You have clearly not read it and are just parroting your party talking points

Your industry? Golf? You are spending too much time in the shrubbery looking for the unfindable.

The Decline of Golf in 2018 - The Perfect Storm Continues For Most Golf Clubs


4-241x300.png

That is just my hobby

Your industry is a hobby? You probably are not able enough to work full time.

golf is my hobby, not my industry.

Agricultural is my industry.

What are you smoking?

You grow dope at golf courses by discarding your marijuana butts?
 
I have a pool of 10 million workers.

In the first year, I put 3 million of them to work.

During that year, 1 million retire from the workforce and 700k kids outside of the 10 million go to work for the first time.

In the second year, I have 7 million workers.

I put 1.5 million of them to work, another 1 million retire and 700k new employees go to work for the first time.

In the third year, I have 5.5 million workers.

I put 3 million of them to work, another 1 million retire, and another 700k enter the workforce for the first time.

As the pool of available workers shrinks, so do the number of job opportunities so unemployment starts to look like an issue.

Yet, the economy is statistically at full employment.

Question: Will it now becomes harder to get more people employed given the current circumstances;

A. Public policy is set to send people to higher education for training and education in disciplines that provide no value to the economy.
B. Given the leniency of education of the citizens and the unwillingness to get educational standards up, the country is importing over 1 million people to do jobs that Americans are unable to do for lack of training and education.
C. Public policy is to allow untrained and unvetted people into the country without any knowledge of the threat they impose on our workforce requirements. As such, this importation of very cheap labor undermines American's ability to find a job or hold a job at the current rate of exchange or wage.
 

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