LOSING HOPE, GALLUP: Approval Down

Big P

Well-Known Member
LOSING HOPE

34.5 percent of young African American men are unemployed
Blacks hit hard by economy's punch



[SIZE=-1]By V. Dion Haynes
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
[/SIZE]

These days, 24-year-old Delonta Spriggs spends much of his time cooped up in his mother's one-bedroom apartment in Southwest Washington, the TV blaring soap operas hour after hour, trying to stay out of the streets and out of trouble, held captive by the economy. As a young black man, Spriggs belongs to a group that has been hit much harder than any other by unemployment.

Joblessness for 16-to-24-year-old black men has reached Great Depression proportions -- 34.5 percent in October, more than three times the rate for the general U.S. population. And last Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that unemployment in the District, home to many young black men, rose to 11.9 percent from 11.4 percent, even as it stayed relatively stable in Virginia and Maryland.

His work history, Spriggs says, has consisted of dead-end jobs. About a year ago, he lost his job moving office furniture, and he hasn't been able to find steady work since. This summer he completed a construction apprenticeship program, he says, seeking a career so he could avoid repeating the mistake of selling drugs to support his 3-year-old daughter. So far the most the training program has yielded was a temporary flagger job that lasted a few days.
"I think we're labeled for not wanting to do nothing -- knuckleheads or hardheads," said Spriggs, whose first name is pronounced Dee-lon-tay. "But all of us ain't bad."

Construction, manufacturing and retail experienced the most severe job losses in this down economy, losses that are disproportionately affecting men and young people who populated those sectors. That is especially playing out in the District, where unemployment has risen despite the abundance of jobs in the federal government.

Traditionally the last hired and first fired, workers in Spriggs's age group have taken the brunt of the difficult economy, with cost-conscious employers wiping out the very apprenticeship, internship and on-the-job-training programs that for generations gave young people a leg up in the work world or a second chance when they made mistakes. Moreover, this generation is being elbowed out of entry-level positions by older, more experienced job seekers on the unemployment rolls who willingly trade down just to put food on the table.
The jobless rate for young black men and women is 30.5 percent. For young blacks -- who experts say are more likely to grow up in impoverished racially isolated neighborhoods, attend subpar public schools and experience discrimination -- race statistically appears to be a bigger factor in their

unemployment than age, income or even education. Lower-income white teens were more likely to find work than upper-income black teens, according to the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University, and even blacks who graduate from college suffer from joblessness at twice the rate of their white peers.

Young black women have an unemployment rate of 26.5 percent, while the rate for all 16-to-24-year-old women is 15.4 percent.

Victoria Kirby, 22, has been among that number. In the summer of 2008, a D.C. publishing company where Kirby was interning offered her a job that would start upon her graduation in May 2009 from Howard University. But the company withdrew the offer in the fall of 2008 when the economy collapsed.
Kirby said she applied for administrative jobs on Capitol Hill but was told she was overqualified. She sought a teaching position in the D.C. public schools through the Teach for America program but said she was rejected because of a flood of four times the usual number of applicants.

Finally, she went back to school, enrolling in a master's of public policy program at Howard. "I decided to stay in school two more years and wait out the recession," Kirby said.

On a tightrope

The Obama administration is on a tightrope, balancing the desire to spend billions more dollars to create jobs without adding to the $1.4 trillion national deficit. Yet some policy experts say more attention needs to be paid to the intractable problems of underemployed workers -- those who like Spriggs may lack a high school diploma, a steady work history, job-readiness skills or a squeaky-clean background.

"Increased involvement in the underground economy, criminal activity, increased poverty, homelessness and teen pregnancy are the things I worry about if we continue to see more years of high unemployment," said Algernon Austin, a sociologist and director of the race, ethnicity and economy program at the Economic Policy Institute, which studies issues involving low- and middle-income wage earners.

Earlier this month, District officials said they will use $3.9 million in federal stimulus funds to provide 19 weeks of on-the-job training to 500 18-to-24-year-olds. But even those who receive training often don't get jobs.
"I thought after I finished the [training] program, I'd be working. I only had three jobs with the union and only one of them was longer than a week," Spriggs, a tall slender man wearing a black Nationals cap, said one afternoon while sitting at the table in the living room/dining room in his mother's apartment. "It has you wanting to go out and find other ways to make money. . . . [Lack of jobs is why] people go out hustling and doing what they can to get by."

"Give me a chance to show that I can work. Just give me a chance," added Spriggs, who is on probation for drug possession. "I don't want to think negative. I know the economy is slow. You got to crawl before you walk. I got to be patient. My biggest problem [which prompted the effort to sell drugs] is not being patient."

The economy's seismic shift has been an equal-opportunity offender, hurting various racial and ethnic groups, economic classes, ages, and white- and blue-collar job categories. Nevertheless, 16-to-24-year-olds face heavier losses, with a 19.1 percent unemployment rate, about nine points higher than the national average for the general population.

Their rate of employment in October was 44.9 percent, the lowest level in 61 years of record keeping, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Employment for men in their 20s and early 30s is at its lowest level since the Great Depression, according to the Center for Labor Market Studies.

Troubling consequences

Unemployment among young people is particularly troubling, economists say, because the consequences can be long-lasting. This might be the first generation that does not keep up with its parents' standard of living. Jobless teens are more likely to be jobless twenty-somethings. Once forced onto the sidelines, they likely will not catch up financially for many years. That is the case even for young people of all ethnic groups who graduate from college.

Lisa B. Kahn, an economics professor at Yale University who studied graduates during recessions in the 1980s, determined that the young workers hired during a down economy generally start off with lower wages than they otherwise would have and don't recover for at least a decade.

"In your first job, you're accumulating skills on how to do the job, learning by doing and getting training. If you graduate in a recession, you're in a [lesser] job, wasting your time," she said. "Once you switch into the job you should be in, you don't have the skills for that job."

Some studies examining how employers review black and white job applicants suggest that discrimination may be at play.

"Black men were less likely to receive a call back or job offer than equally qualified white men," said Devah Pager, a sociology professor at Princeton University, referring to her studies a few years ago of white and black male job applicants in their 20s in Milwaukee and New York. "Black men with a clean record fare no better than white men just released from prison."
 
Oblabla is just another tool for the One Worlders. He is nothing but a empty suit. He does not work for we, the people. No. Global Corporations- yes. The Banks- Yes.

He is the worst half white person ever to be elected. And the worst example of a black man most have ever seen. He will go down in History as the worst president America has ever had. So to this Democraticly controlled Congress.

We need to stpo electing those who work for the globalists. Period! But as long as the globalists keep putting their puppets up on stage- who are we to vote for? Just another one of their puppets?
We've got to stop this cycle now!
No more Oblababushing !
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
Are Democrats exiting the sinking ship?

By: Michael Barone
Senior Political Analyst
11/23/09 11:39 AM EST


Comes the news that Democratic Congressman Dennis Moore of the 3rd district of Kansas is not running for reelection. Interesting. Congressman Moore was reelected by a 56%-40% margin in 2008, and Barack Obama carried his district 51%-48%, while losing the other three congressional districts in Kansas.

There could be many plausible reasons for Moore to retire from Congress. He turns 65 in 2010 and at the end of his term will have served 12 years in Congress. He served 12 years as Johnson County District Attorney in 1976-88, and so he’s devoted more than half his working lifetime to public service. Serving in Congress means having to go back and forth between your district and Washington all the time (and a quick look at a travel website shows only two flights per day between Reagan National and Kansas City International), constantly being reachable by your constituents, etc., etc.

All that said, this still seems an ominous sign for congressional Democrats. Moore was first elected in 1998 when he beat one-term incumbent Vince Snowbarger. Moore profited from a bitter split in the Republican party between hard-line opponents of abortion (including Snowbarger) and moderates based in Johnson County. That split persisted for a decade; the current governor of Kansas, Mark Parkinson, is a longtime moderate Republican and sometime state legislator who was chosen as a ticket-mate by Democratic Governor Kathleen Sebelius and who succeeded her when she resigned to become Health and Human Services Secretary; Parkinson has said he will not run for a full term in 2010.

Moore’s moderate mien and voting record, his history of winning votes in Johnson County and internecine Republican fighting enabled him to win reelection five times. He won 65%-34% in 2006, his best showing, and against challenger Nick Jordan, a moderate touted by national Republicans, he won by the very solid margin of 56%-40%. Moore was undoubtedly helped by the Obama candidacy in 2008 in the three distinct parts of the district.
●In Wyandotte County, which includes Kansas City, Kansas, with its black community; turnout was up 7% (despite zero population growth) between 2004 and 2008 and Obama carried the county 70%-29%, with a 23,000-vote margin.

●Historically Republican Johnson County, containing many of the affluent suburbs of metro Kansas City, is now the largest and highest-voting county in Kansas. Turnout in 2008 was up 10% from 2004. In that year Johnson County voted 61%-38% for George W. Bush; in 2008 it voted only 54%-45% for John McCain. The Republican margin was cut from 60,000 to 25,000—barely enough to offset the Obama margin in much smaller Wyandotte County. Johnson County has had robust population growth (8% in 2004-08) and turnout seems likely to be robust in this affluent area in 2010.

●The 3rd district also includes part of Douglas County, including most of the old New England Yankee-established town of Lawrence, home of the University of Kansas. Historically Douglas County was Republican and in presidential elections from 1920 to 1988 voted Democratic only once, in 1964. But starting in 1992 it has voted Democratic in every presidential election. Kansas was not a target state, so we can assume that the Obama campaign did not spend lavishly on organization here; even so, turnout was up 7% countywide in 2008 over 2004, and the Democratic margin increased from 57%-41% to 64%-34%. In popular votes the margin doubled from 8,000 votes to 16,000 votes.

That’s how the three parts of the district voted in 2008. Now look at the prospects for each of them in 2010 from Dennis Moore’s point of view, keeping in mind current public opinion polling and the results in the actual elections held in 2009. In Wyandotte County, black turnout is likely to be sharply down from 2008, when Americans elected our first African-American president. Moore’s vote for House Democrats’ cap-and-trade bill could be a liability if Republicans can convince lower-income voters that it means higher utility rates for them. In Johnson County, opposition to the big government programs of the Obama administration and congressional Democratic leaders is likely to produce sharply increased Republican percentages and could produce robust offyear turnout. Moore’s vote for the House Democrats’ health care bill is likely to be a political liability here. In Douglas County, turnout among students and college town denizens is likely to be off, particularly among those voters who hoped that Obama’s installation would produce a speedy end to American involvement in Iraq. Meanwhile, it seems unlikely that Kansas Republicans will be riven by the abortion war that raged between 1998 and 2006, as economic issues have overwhelmed cultural issues in voters’ minds.

In other words, 2010 undoubtedly looks like an uphill race for Dennis Moore. By announcing his retirement, he is free to vote for House Democratic leaders’ unpopular legislation without political repercussion and is spared the trouble of extensive campaigning. That’s fine for him. But if other Democratic incumbents in marginal districts—and, remember, the 3rd district voted for Obama—choose to follow Moore’s course, that could make it much harder to Democrats to maintain a big majority in the House and could make it easier for Republicans to gain most or all of the 41 seats they need to win a majority there.
 

MMJB1

Member
U all lost hinsight, who fucked all this shit up in the first place (Bush) and who had to walk into a fucked up mess (Obama) who get accused of the fucked up shit (Obama), who got away clean handed(Bush). Get It so who are you blameing the man in office or the fagot that fucked it all up and still smiles! :wall:
 

MMJB1

Member
Get over it the president is black and you all want him to fuck up and bow down to stupid levels. Don't take the man apart because of your personal experiences with black people, cause one black guy did some bad shit there all bad people. WAKE UP ! don't go bandwagon riding !
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
Get over it the president is black and you all want him to fuck up and bow down to stupid levels. Don't take the man apart because of your personal experiences with black people, cause one black guy did some bad shit there all bad people. WAKE UP ! don't go bandwagon riding !

its funny your post shows you are clearly the racist one and very uninformed at that,

do you even know what obama has been doing? or do you just watch sit coms all day and then post in a thread like this with no knowledge what you are talking about and call everyone a racist?

you shouldnt look at everything through you racist viewfinder as it reveals much more about you than anyone else.


your racist viewfinder is defending a man who is destroying your country

 

MMJB1

Member
its funny your post shows you are clearly the racist one and very uninformed at that,

do you even know what obama has been doing? or do you just watch sit coms all day and then post in a thread like this with no knowledge what you are talking about and call everyone a racist?

you shouldnt look at everything through you racist viewfinder as it reveals much more about you than anyone else.


your racist viewfinder is defending a man who is destroying your country

No never called anybody a racist lets clarify that!
 

MMJB1

Member
You live in the Netherlands right! so why is it such a big issue to you what goes on here anyway!:finger:
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
Get over it the president is black and you all want him to fuck up and bow down to stupid levels. Don't take the man apart because of your personal experiences with black people, cause one black guy did some bad shit there all bad people. WAKE UP ! don't go bandwagon riding !

dude how you gonna lie stright up when you posted the above just a second ago


if you take apart a man because of your past expiriances with thier race doesnt that make somone a racist?



i wanna know why obama lied and did an $800 billion stimules with our money saying he would save the economy with it , then he takes all that money paying off all the senators and districts that helped him get elected!!!

then 9 months later enemployment have ballooned to 17% actual un emplyment rate,

35% of blacks are out of work!!!

and all the while this fucker aint doin shit but trying to pass the most expensive bill every created to insure people that is really just a secret back door for them to control you with the health care that you are now forced to pay for or you will have to pay a yearly $1000 fine!!!!!!!

dont be ignorent man you should read up.
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
You live in the Netherlands right! so why is it such a big issue to you what goes on here anyway!:finger:

im not in the netherlands thats just to throw the cops off :bigjoint:


sorry dont mean to be an asshole if i came off that way.

i get a little excited somtimes:bigjoint:
 

SmokeyMcChokey

Well-Known Member
I actually hope you extreme right wingers run that idiot Palin, hey why not pair her up with Beck or Limbaugh. That will cement your loss next cycle and assure Obama 4 More years, Nuts indeed.
Are you serious? Thats not going to happen. she is not even on my radar as a candidate and in my opinion is just as unfit for the candidacy as obama was. he is just now starting to show us his true colors. At least she didnt play herself up to be superman, or wonder woman.
 
I

Illegal Smile

Guest
im not in the netherlands thats just to throw the cops off :bigjoint:


sorry dont mean to be an asshole if i came off that way.

i get a little excited somtimes:bigjoint:
Thanks for clearing that up,

the cops
 

MMJB1

Member
WOW once agian and the racism remark is that all u got far from racist buddy you can keep that shit up if you want too! I think you threw your self off a long time ago! and not the cops! LOL
 

SmokeyMcChokey

Well-Known Member
WOW once agian and the racism remark is that all u got far from racist buddy you can keep that shit up if you want too! I think you threw your self off a long time ago! and not the cops! LOL
What the hell are you talking about... You are the only one bringing race up jusus christ man you just need to take a back seat to conversation. Its not working out for you. just because i dont agree with the president doesnt mean that its because he is black. I think that YOUR the racist. You seem to be the only one who cares about race and your just following along with the rest of your sheeple at NBC who think all republicans are fat old racist white people. Sounds about as racist as it could be.
 

Big P

Well-Known Member
WOW once agian and the racism remark is that all u got far from racist buddy you can keep that shit up if you want too! I think you threw your self off a long time ago! and not the cops! LOL

your calling us racist, telling us not to judge obama by other blacks we met before.


if i did that it would make me racist, last time i checked every black person i have met has been differnet from the other some were cool some were not
some went to school some smoked pot

and you are even implying that all the black people we met in that past all sucked or somthing correct???? thats why your telling us not to compare them to obama? whom we think sucks?

so now why do you just assume that every black person we have met in the past was undesirable to us or we did not like?


i like the black people i meet about as much as I like the white people i meet.


:bigjoint:
 

MMJB1

Member
What the hell are you talking about... You are the only one bringing race up jusus christ man you just need to take a back seat to conversation. Its not working out for you. just because i dont agree with the president doesnt mean that its because he is black. I think that YOUR the racist. You seem to be the only one who cares about race and your just following along with the rest of your sheeple at NBC who think all republicans are fat old racist white people. Sounds about as racist as it could be.


Not a racist, i deal with racism but not a racist, just cuz i said he is a black man isn't he, and so am I ? Wake up you no what I'm was saying ! Peace ........wake up !
 
Top