At no time should our unemployment in America exceed 3%. We have the "legal authority"-on the books, as I write--to make this a fact 86% of Americans believe that "anybody willing to work should be able to find a job." It is not the lack of political will on the part of the American people that is standing in the way-it is the reality that America is at a crossroads-are we going to continue to be a democracy, or become a plutocracy-that is standing in the way....
At no time should our unemployment in America exceed 3%. We have the "legal authority"-on the books, as I write--to make this a fact 86% of Americans...
Miss Tayke tackles 3 curious murder mysteries in rapid succession. A beautiful young heiress has several attempts made on her life on board a luxury cruise ship. Matters appear to settle down. Then a passenger is murdered followed by another, and yet another. The captain implores Miss Tayke to launch a full scale enquiry. She discovers a common link between the victims; they all had some connection to the heiress. She summons a court of inquiry and exposes an unlikely killer in a nail-biting finale... Inside her conservatory lies the dead body of Aunt Hilda, face down; bludgeoned to death by...
Miss Tayke tackles 3 curious murder mysteries in rapid succession. A beautiful young heiress has several attempts made on her life on board a luxury c...
"3% is the zero-sum threshold above which unemployment starts undermining the Market--and the loss in income to the Market is compounded exponentially with each percentage point of increase in unemployment, above 3%." Further, unemployment is a "social" problem-with oft dire social consequences---we, as the larger society have a responsibility to address-but we run from this responsibility as if it were AIDS....So, why do we stay on this "no win" path? The jobless lose, and the market loses-and the purpose, here, is to drill down on that question. For starters, and in taking stock, a large...
"3% is the zero-sum threshold above which unemployment starts undermining the Market--and the loss in income to the Market is compounded exponentially...