Author Topic: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown  (Read 12538 times)

Mr.1derful

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 4943
Re: NO Jobs
« Reply #50 on: April 13, 2013, 08:50:00 AM »
“This is a punch to the gut. This is NOT a good number. And I think now you’re going to interestingly start seeing a LOT of discussion about maybe the sequester’s a bigger deal than people thought it was.” — Austan Goolsbee, Former Chairman of President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, in an interview on CNBC.

This guy's a complete idiot, or simply a shill, if he's equating the sequester with the economy's problems.  The sequester is a joke, resulting in zero cuts, only reducing the growth of spending by a fraction. 

TigerStripes

  • Getbig III
  • ***
  • Posts: 447
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #51 on: April 13, 2013, 08:58:06 AM »
The USA is definitely becoming a shit place to be for the poor. Rags to riches has become more and more impossible.

Kids who at born into poor families in the USA are gonna be doomed by their fate. The economist have engineered it to be that way to purposely create an underclass of wage slaves, and people to feed the prison industrial complex.

It's not my problem though. I am doing great. Tonight I'm gonna fuck a hot 19 year old fat chick with a huge round ass in my home with is fully paid for. I am ballin hard.

anabolichalo

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 20049
  • my love for ronnie will never die
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #52 on: April 13, 2013, 09:10:09 AM »
readin ubermans posts is depressing  :(

Mr Nobody

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 40197
  • Falcon gives us new knowledge every single day.
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #53 on: April 13, 2013, 11:13:47 AM »
Goodwill is hiring.

Trapper_Slapper

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 1364
  • Clean and Jerks pull the bitches!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #54 on: April 13, 2013, 01:19:37 PM »
The USA is definitely becoming a shit place to be for the poor. Rags to riches has become more and more impossible.

Kids who at born into poor families in the USA are gonna be doomed by their fate. The economist have engineered it to be that way to purposely create an underclass of wage slaves, and people to feed the prison industrial complex.

It's not my problem though. I am doing great. Tonight I'm gonna fuck a hot 19 year old fat chick with a huge round ass in my home with is fully paid for. I am ballin hard.
This actually made me chuckle. :D

arce1988

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 24630
  • ARCE USA USMC
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #55 on: April 13, 2013, 01:23:40 PM »
 Uber is uber smart

Teutonic Knight

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 10358
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #56 on: April 13, 2013, 10:44:55 PM »
America needs WW3 & reduction of population, damn where is another Hitler when you need him  >:(
or massive chinese/indian population will colonize other countries.

Viking11

  • Competitors
  • Getbig IV
  • *****
  • Posts: 2002
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #57 on: April 14, 2013, 05:46:52 AM »
It us not a good situation no matter how you look at it. I wonder what they intend to do with billions of worthless dollars if the whole thing collapses?  Only property, commodoties, a good aim and a vicious sense of survival will be worth much. 

Gregzs

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 17373
  • Getbig!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #58 on: October 24, 2013, 12:08:29 AM »
http://news.efinancialcareers.com/us-en/153791/25000-jobs-vanish-from-wall-street-and-theyre-not-coming-back/?utm_campaign=JS_US_EDI_WEEKLY%26utm_source=AMS_CA_ENG&utm_medium=EM_NW&om_rid=Nsp1Ii&om_mid=_BSaCn5B81-wK6c

25,000 jobs vanish from Wall Street, and they’re not coming back

Despite a sluggish third quarter, Wall Street has all but cemented its comeback from the economic crisis. Profits are up, stock prices are soaring and big banks are better capitalized than they’ve ever been. There’s really only one thing missing: the jobs.

Private sector employment in New York City has been robust during the recovery; roughly 335,000 jobs have been added, more than twice the number of jobs that were lost during the recession, according to a new report from the Office of the New York State Comptroller. Unfortunately, Wall Street has failed to get in on all the fun. The OSC estimates that the securities industry in New York City boasts 25,600 fewer jobs than it did pre-crisis, a massive 14% dip.

Looking deeper into the numbers, the news is worse than it sounds. Job growth was actually rather strong during the first two years of the recovery, with the industry adding nearly 10,000 jobs between January 2010 and August 2011. Since then, banks have been doing nothing but cutting jobs as they have begun to streamline their organizations.

During previous recoveries, the securities industry accounted for 11% of job gains. This time around, less than 1% of new private sector jobs can be attributed to Wall Street. The only real bumps in employment have been in non-revenue generating roles like risk management and compliance. Take those government-mandated jobs away, and the situation is even uglier.

When compared to the balance sheets of big banks, the numbers paint a rather stark picture. Sadly, Wall Street is doing better without you. It seems the current hiring landscape has little to do with the economy. Banks — with a little help from Washington — have made a choice to be smaller, and it’s paying off. The Comptroller’s office expects New York’s securities industry to continue to contract as it streamlines itself further.

It’s not all bleak, though. Those who remain employed are still taking home a hefty paycheck. The average Wall Street salary in 2012 was $360,700 in 2012, or 5.2 times that of the average New Yorker. Not half bad.

keanu

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 2115
Re: NO Jobs
« Reply #59 on: October 24, 2013, 05:51:37 AM »
Uber just made one of the best posts ever. Very very smart person.

It doesn't take a genius to realize that printing a boatload of money to pay off debt, over a long period of time with no way to ever pay any of it back won't end up well for Americans. There is no plan B. They are just buying time, letting the rich prepare for what is to come.

Uberman reminds me a lot of a bitter guy at work. Smart in social science. Has a good understanding of people from observation but can't really fit in. Naturally cynical, tends to be very negative, bitter, moody at times, way underemployed with few friends.  Won't be given a good job, will always be in the trenches and bitter. Some guys will never get it, and Uberman is one of them. I bet Uberman is enjoying this economic crash and it is taking down others around him to his levels. Misery loves company. 

Voice of Doom

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3631
  • Everything is under control.
Re: NO Jobs
« Reply #60 on: October 24, 2013, 07:04:05 AM »
H7N9  one in three are dying from it

sounds like someone is testing something.

GRACIE JIU-JITSU

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 3476
  • HAIL SATAN. I'm a bad ass...You're just an ass.
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #61 on: October 24, 2013, 01:18:54 PM »
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/unhappy-day-reactions-to-march-jobs-report-2013-04-05

• “The modest 88,000 increase in non-farm payrolls in March is further evidence that the U.S. economy is undergoing another spring slowdown, albeit from a pretty rapid pace of growth in the first quarter.” — Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist, Capital Economics.

• “Today will be another unhappy day for a recently unhappy equity market, and a positive for bonds, as investors adjust to a slowing pace for U.S. growth.” — Avery Shenfeld, CIBC WM Economics

• “This jobs number probably isn’t the fault of the sequester. But it’s evidence that the economy can’t take the sequester right now.” — Ezra Klein, Washington Post writer, ‏@ezraklein

• “This is a punch to the gut. This is not a good number. And I think now you’re going to interestingly start seeing a lot of discussion about maybe the sequester’s a bigger deal than people thought it was.” — Austan Goolsbee, former chairman of President Barack Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers, in an interview on CNBC.

• “It is important to bear in mind that the March household and payroll surveys are the first monthly surveys to look at employment since the beginning of sequestration. While the recovery was gaining traction before sequestration took effect, these arbitrary and unnecessary cuts to government services will be a headwind in the months to come, and will cut key investments in the Nation’s future competitiveness.” — Alan Krueger, chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisers.

• “The president’s policies continue to make it harder for Americans to find work. Hundreds of thousands fled the workforce last month and unemployment remains far above what the Obama administration promised when it enacted its ‘stimulus’ spending plan.” — House Speaker John Boehner.



 The first shot was fired on Monday. Teradata, which sells analytics tools for Big Data, warned that quarterly revenues plunged 21% in Asia and 19% in the Middle East and Africa. Wednesday evening, it was IBM’s turn to confess that its hardware sales in China had simply collapsed. Every word was colored by Edward Snowden’s revelations about the NSA’s hand-in-glove collaboration with American tech companies, from startups to mastodons like IBM.

But the fiasco was tucked away under the lesser debacle of IBM’s overall revenues, which fell 4.1% from prior year, the sixth straight quarter of declines in a row. Software revenue inched up 1%, service revenue skidded 3%. At the hardware unit, Systems and Technology, revenue plunged 17%. Within that, sales of UNIX and Linux Power System servers plummeted a dizzying 38%. Governmental and corporate IT departments had just about stopped buying these machines.

IBM quickly pointed out that there were some pockets of growth in its lineup: business analytics sales rose 8%, Smarter Planet 20%, and Cloud, that new Nirvana for tech, jumped 70%. But in the overall scheme of things, they didn’t amount to enough to make a big difference.

All regions were crummy. Revenues in Europe/Middle East/Africa ticked up 1%. In the Americas, they ticked down 1% – “The improvement came equally from the US and Canada and once again, we had strong performance in Latin America,” is how CFO Mark Loughridge spun the situation during the earnings call because it was less bad than last quarter.

But there was nothing to spin in Asia-Pacific, where revenues plunged 15%. Revenues in IBM’s “growth markets” dropped 9%. They include the BRIC countries – Brazil, Russia, India, and China – where revenues sagged 15%. In China, which accounts for 5% of IBM’s total revenues, sales dropped 22%, with hardware sales, nearly half of IBM’s business there, falling off a cliff: down 40%.

Mr. Loughridge, in his prepared statement, tried to come up with a logical-sounding panic-free explanation:

    We were impacted by the process surrounding China’s development of a broad based economic reform plan, which will be available mid-November. In the meantime, demand from state-owned enterprises and the public sector has slowed significantly as decision-making and procurement cycles lengthened.

So, would that unprecedented collapse of demand for hardware in China end after mid-November? Nope. These “changes will take time to implement,” he warned. In fact, he did not expect demand to pick up “until after the first quarter of next year.” Not anytime soon.

No one believed that rigmarole.

When an analyst needled him, Mr. Loughridge began to deviate from the scrip: “The hardware business across those elements of the product line accepting zSeries performance (IBM mainframe computers), it was down substantially. We were talking 40%, 50%. Enormous reductions on a year-to-year basis in a geography where we intended to see growth rates.” 

They’d intended to see double digit growth rates. He referred to last year, when sales in China were up 19%, “driven heavily by really strong performance in hardware base,” he said. But suddenly, hardware sales collapsed “40%, 50%” from last year. IBM didn’t even have time to come up with a credible excuse. He was struggling to make sense of it, grasping at flimsy straws and the same economic reform plan theory that no had believed earlier, but this time, it got all tangled up:

    And you got to look at that and say, what significantly accounts for that. And I would say, quite honestly, if you look at the elements in China and we have worked with the team in China that simply has been a substantial impact as the process surrounding China’s development of broad based economic reform plan takes shape. And that is going to be announced and available, we think in November and probably it will take some time to implement. So I think we are looking at a couple of quarters, but once that economic plan is announced, it adds clarity to market, we should see, I think and fairly within our team, a recovery in the demand pattern for state-owned enterprise public sector.

The explanation is more obvious. In mid-August, an anonymous source told the Shanghai Securities News, a branch of the state-owned Xinhua News Agency, which reports directly to the Propaganda and Public Information Departments of the Communist Party, that IBM, along with Oracle and EMC, have become targets of the Ministry of Public Security and the cabinet-level Development Research Centre due to the Snowden revelations.

“At present, thanks to their technological superiority, many of our core information technology systems are basically dominated by foreign hardware and software firms, but the Prism scandal implies security problems,” the source said, according to Reuters. So the government would launch an investigation into these security problems, the source said.

Absolute stonewalling ensued. IBM told Reuters that it was unable to comment. Oracle and EMC weren’t available for comment. The Ministry of Public Security refused to comment. The Development Research Centre knew nothing of any such investigation. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology “could not confirm anything because of the matter’s sensitivity.”

I’d warned about its impact at the time [read.... US Tech Companies Raked Over The Coals In China]. Snowden’s revelations started hitting in May. Not much later, the Chinese security apparatus must have alerted IT buyers in government agencies, state-owned enterprises, and major independent corporations to turn off the order pipeline for sensitive products until this is sorted out. As Mr. Loughridge’s efforts have shown, it’s hard to explain any other way that hardware sales suddenly collapsed by “40%, 50%” in China, where they’d boomed until then.

This is the first quantitative indication of the price Corporate America has to pay for gorging at the big trough of the US Intelligence Community, and particularly the NSA with its endlessly ballooning budget. For once, there is a price to be paid, if only temporarily, for helping build a perfect, seamless, borderless surveillance society. The companies will deny it. At the same time, they’ll be looking for solutions. China, Russia, and Brazil are too important to just get kicked out of – and other countries might follow suit.



 Bailout for tech companies  coming out soon.
Gracie Rules

Gregzs

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 17373
  • Getbig!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #62 on: October 24, 2013, 10:46:35 PM »
http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2013/10/americas-jobs-report


Still sluggish
Oct 22nd 2013, 15:58 by G.I. | WASHINGTON, D.C.

WHEN the Federal Reserve began open-ended bond buying with newly printed money last fall, it hoped to generate forward momentum in the labour market. And as recently as August it seemed to have succeeded. But the recent data suggest a frustrating reversal of that momentum, with no clear explanation. Non-farm payroll employment rose just 148,000 in September from August, well below Wall Street's consensus expectation of 180,000. This was the second weak reading in a row, and vindicates the Fed's decision not to dial back its $85 billion of bond-buyding, dubbed quantitative easing or QE, last month.

Revisions to prior months' payroll gains were roughly offsetting. A big chunk of September's gains were in state and local employment. This would normally be a source of celebration since state and local austerity has been such a powerful headwind for the economy. But the pickup in government hiring has been more than offset by a slowdown in private job creation, to a monthly average of 129,000 in the last three months from 232,000 last December. Weak job gains were matched by equally tepid wage gains of just 0.1%.

The only positive, if it could be called that, is the decline in the unemployment rate to 7.2%, a near-five year low, from 7.3%. Before rounding, the drop was barely noticeable. Meanwhile, the labour force participation rate held at a multi-decade low of 63.2%. Unrounded, it actually slipped further. All of the drop in unmployment from 7.8% last December has been due to lower participation, which means fewer unemployed are recorded as looking for work, rather than higher employment. The "non-employment" rate, which is simply everyone not working as a share of the civilian, non-institutional population, has remained at 41.4%, as the nearby chart shows.

This is not primarily due to a weak economy; the number of people not in the labour force who want a job has actually fallen 9% since December, to 6.2m. The people leaving the labour force don't want to work.

Exactly why the labour market has rolled over is something of a mystery. Other, less comprehensive information is more upbeat: unemployment insurance claims through September had fallen steadily, though they have been heavily distorted since by technical problems. Surveys of hiring and confidence were also generally positive, although they took a hit during the government shutdown. The rise in mortgage rates since the spring has taken a bite out of housing. But construction employment actually rose a relatively healthy 20,000 in September. Finance did, however, lose 2,000 jobs, which was probably related to layoffs of mortgage bankers. Federal spending cuts related to the sequster may be to blame.

Even before today's report the Fed was not inclined to dial back its $85 billion a month of bond purchases, financed by printing money, when it meets again on October 29th and 30th. It could still begin to taper at its December 17-18 meeting, even if the labour market still appears soft, provided officials are relatively confident the outlook, as reflected in other data, is for improvement. But it will be hard to say by December whether that improvement has happened. The government shutdown directly reduced employment for October, and an index compiled by Gallup suggests private job creation also slowed that month. A weekly index developed by the White House Council of Economic Advisers suggest private job creation dropped by 120,000 in the first two weeks of October. Moreover, the shutdown interrupted the Bureau of Labor Statistics' data collection for the report. The household survey, which yields the unemployment and labour force data, started a week later than usual. The shutdown did not affect the collection of the data reported today although it delayed the release by 18 days.

At least one broker today said the data would keep the Fed as "on hold." That's not accurate: as long as QE remains a positive number, the Fed is not on hold: its balance sheet is still expanding and monetary policy is becoming more, not less, stimulative. This distinction may be trivial to the public but it's important to the Fed, where officials agree that the pace of balance sheet expansion has to slow and only disagree on when and how quickly. Charlie Evans, president of the Chicago Fed, indicated only $500 billion more in bond purchases beyond September will be needed, which would imply an end in March at the current pace, or somewhat later if tapering begins soon. Jay Powell, a Fed governor, emphasized recently that "what matters is the overall stance of policy, not the pace of asset purchases." In other words, the date when tapering begins is less important than how large the balance sheet ends up. The later tapering begins the more rapid it will proceed to achieve a given target for the balance sheet.

Ben Bernanke could yet make the taper his last act as chairman in January, but the odds now favor it being Janet Yellen's first act as chairman, in March. She will not do so lightly; she is, if anything, more intent than Mr Bernanke on applying as much monetary stimulus as possible to get employment up faster. But within the Fed there is a growing desire to shift the burden of stimulus to the short-term interest rate and away from quantitative easing. Still, the decision to taper will not be an easy one. Fed officials have often been muddled in explaining the criteria for beginning and ending QE, but one thing is clear: they had hoped the labour market would be gaining, not losing, momentum by now. The exit seems no clearer than when this round of QE started a year ago.

Primemuscle

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 40748
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #63 on: October 24, 2013, 11:03:04 PM »
Spending where I live seems to be up, way up! I assume people must have incomes or they wouldn't be buying homes and cars.

Gregzs

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 17373
  • Getbig!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #64 on: February 15, 2014, 11:38:32 PM »
http://www.sliptalk.com/2014/01/27/employee-quits-job/#.UwBluXmYbaH

This Employee Quit Her Job In The Worst Way Possible. But How Her Boss Responds Is Way Worse.


kawaks

  • Getbig III
  • ***
  • Posts: 914
  • My Two Cents
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #65 on: February 15, 2014, 11:41:13 PM »
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/unhappy-day-reactions-to-march-jobs-report-2013-04-05

• “The modest 88,000 increase in non-farm payrolls in March is further evidence that the U.S. economy is undergoing another spring slowdown, albeit from a pretty rapid pace of growth in the first quarter.” — Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist, Capital Economics.


And can you tell me what the Dow did? It SMASHED through 16,000 closing 150+ points higher after being -70 down on the Dow futures.

Next, is another attempt at 16,500

Be strong, go long.

Mr Nobody

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 40197
  • Falcon gives us new knowledge every single day.
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #66 on: February 15, 2014, 11:41:45 PM »
.

syntaxmachine

  • Getbig IV
  • ****
  • Posts: 2687
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #67 on: February 16, 2014, 10:30:25 AM »
And can you tell me what the Dow did? It SMASHED through 16,000 closing 150+ points higher after being -70 down on the Dow futures.

Next, is another attempt at 16,500

Be strong, go long.


"Steve" is in the habit of confusing his own financial calamities with the status of the US markets/economy, a curious yet decidedly common tendency.

Gregzs

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 17373
  • Getbig!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #68 on: February 17, 2014, 11:25:45 PM »
http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/man-sent-feces-to-companies-that-failed-to-hire-him/article_df9db8a2-99bc-5910-ad16-5c53a15adb85.html

St. Louis jobseeker mailed feces to companies that failed to hire him

ST. LOUIS • Rather than simply grumble to himself or complain to others, a St. Louis man aggrieved by a company's failure to hire him took another approach.

Jevons Brown packaged up cat feces and sent it through the mail.

Brown, 58, was sentenced Friday to two years of probation after pleading guilty in August to a misdemeanor charge of mailing injurious articles.

The plea says Brown, a veteran, became frustrated with his lack of employment opportunities and lashed out at employees of companies that failed to hire him.

U.S. Postal Inspection Service spokesman Dan Taylor said that investigators tracked 20 similar packages to Brown.

“This is not a victimless crime,” Assistant U.S. Attorney John Bodenhausen said in court Friday, later explaining that he meant postal workers and the people whose mail was adjacent to Brown's packages, in addition to the employees that received it.

Both Bodenhausen and Sean Vicente, Brown's public defender, agreed that probation was an appropriate sentence, saying Brown had recently found a job and had almost no criminal history.

Federal sentencing guidelines recommended probation or up to six months in prison.

Brown apologized in court, vowing, “I'm sorry. This will never happen again.”

He has been getting counseling, and said that prayer and church had also been helping.

Roger Bacon

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 20957
  • Roger Bacon tries to be witty and fails
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #69 on: February 17, 2014, 11:26:35 PM »
http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/man-sent-feces-to-companies-that-failed-to-hire-him/article_df9db8a2-99bc-5910-ad16-5c53a15adb85.html

St. Louis jobseeker mailed feces to companies that failed to hire him

ST. LOUIS • Rather than simply grumble to himself or complain to others, a St. Louis man aggrieved by a company's failure to hire him took another approach.

Jevons Brown packaged up cat feces and sent it through the mail.

Brown, 58, was sentenced Friday to two years of probation after pleading guilty in August to a misdemeanor charge of mailing injurious articles.

The plea says Brown, a veteran, became frustrated with his lack of employment opportunities and lashed out at employees of companies that failed to hire him.

U.S. Postal Inspection Service spokesman Dan Taylor said that investigators tracked 20 similar packages to Brown.

“This is not a victimless crime,” Assistant U.S. Attorney John Bodenhausen said in court Friday, later explaining that he meant postal workers and the people whose mail was adjacent to Brown's packages, in addition to the employees that received it.

Both Bodenhausen and Sean Vicente, Brown's public defender, agreed that probation was an appropriate sentence, saying Brown had recently found a job and had almost no criminal history.

Federal sentencing guidelines recommended probation or up to six months in prison.

Brown apologized in court, vowing, “I'm sorry. This will never happen again.”

He has been getting counseling, and said that prayer and church had also been helping.

rofl

this guy is a go-getter... should have hired him

Gym-Rat

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 6824
  • BRUTAL IF TRUE!!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #70 on: August 07, 2022, 11:31:25 AM »
...

Gym-Rat

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 6824
  • BRUTAL IF TRUE!!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #71 on: August 07, 2022, 11:32:32 AM »
...

oldschoolfan

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 5778
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #72 on: August 07, 2022, 11:43:14 AM »
Help wanted signs everywhere here

Gym-Rat

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 6824
  • BRUTAL IF TRUE!!
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #73 on: August 07, 2022, 12:07:25 PM »
...

IroNat

  • Getbig V
  • *****
  • Posts: 33315
  • The only constant in life is change. – Heraclitus
Re: The US Economy - No jobs and another slowdown
« Reply #74 on: August 07, 2022, 12:09:56 PM »
Thanks to Biden everything is wonderful.