Jobless Claims keep increasin under Obama

asur

Well-Known Member
Joined
Feb 3, 2008
Messages
1,100
Dec 03, 2009 is another bad day for job seekers in the USA, thanks to Obama.
Here's the proof:

There were 457,000 initial jobless claims filed in the week ended Nov. 28, new claims!
Keep in mind unemployment offices in all states were closed for the Holidays. Real number is therefore worse and bad!


If you are looking you might have to step up your game to land a job.

If your sitting at home on Obama welfare, keep on truckin, it's called CHANGE!
 
Werbung:
Dec 03, 2009 is another bad day for job seekers in the USA, thanks to Obama.
Here's the proof:

There were 457,000 initial jobless claims filed in the week ended Nov. 28, new claims!
Keep in mind unemployment offices in all states were closed for the Holidays. Real number is therefore worse and bad!


If you are looking you might have to step up your game to land a job.

If your sitting at home on Obama welfare, keep on truckin, it's called CHANGE!

Doom and gloom Republicants... can't live with 'em, can't shoot 'em!:D

They want the country to fail and they down talk it whenever they can. But the tide is a turning and the employment rate always goes up after signs like these... not before.

Remember how many banks already have started paying back TARP money and GM is set to start it's government bailout loan repayment? Now this good news from a HUGE player Bank of America.

GOOD TIMES AHEAD MY FRIENDS... GOOD TIMES AHEAD!!!


Bank of America Ready to Pay Back $45 Billion in Bailout Money
12/3/09
Economy, Wall Street

Bank of America announced Wednesday that it will pay back the $45 billion it received from the Troubled Assets Relief Program, or TARP. The U.S. dollar and euro both rose in response to the positive news from America's largest bank.

"We appreciate the critical role that the U.S. government played last fall in helping to stabilize financial markets, and we are pleased to be able to fully repay the investment, with interest," Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis said in a statement.

The announcement underscored the speedy recovery of U.S. banks that received bailout funds. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Wednesday that the Obama administration is planning to "wind down" the $700 billion bailout program, and that the "substantial" remaining funds would be used to pay down the national debt.

Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and a number of smaller banks have already paid back the money they received from the government, netting the U.S. a profit of $4 billion by the end of August.
 
Werbung:
Back
Top