The Shining City Upon a Hill
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
State Minimum Wage Rates
State 2020 Minimum Wage 2021 Minimum Wage
Mississippi $7.25 (Federal, no state minimum) $7.25 (Federal, no state minimum)
Says it ALL RepublicansComment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
If I ever hire anyone for my business I'd pay them more than the minimum wage. I suppose you exploit people by paying them the minimum wage for your business, right?Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
US Census Dept. says that major democratic states have lost hundreds of thousands of citizens due to covid restrictions.
Idaho had the largest gain in population with 2.9%.
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
Weekly jobless claims total 198,000, less than expected and around 52-year low
- Weekly jobless claims totaled 198,000 for the week ended Dec. 25.
- That was below the 205,000 forecast and near the lowest level since 1969.
- Continuing claims also fell, dropping to 1.72 million for their lowest total since March 7, 2020.
Initial filings for unemployment insurance dipped last week and remained close to their lowest level in more than 50 years, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
Jobless claims for the week ended Dec. 25 totaled 198,000, less than the 205,000 Dow Jones forecast and a dip of 8,000 from the previous period.
The numbers reflect an increasingly tight labor market and come with the Federal Reserve pulling back on some of the historically accommodative policy it put in place during the crisis. The national unemployment rate has dropped to 4.2%, a far cry from the 14.8% peak in April 2020.
Despite the downward trend in initial claims, the total of those receiving benefits under all programs rose by nearly 40,000 to 2.18 million, according to data through Dec. 11.
Some of the decline in claims has come from the ending of benefits through programs created during the pandemic that provided enhanced and extended payments. Still, the total getting benefits is a far cry from where it was a year ago when 20.5 million were on the various programs.
The jobs market also has seen a record pace of people quitting their jobs, many for better opportunities elsewhere as average hourly earnings climb in an inflationary environment the U.S. has not seen in decades.
The Fed has responded to inflation by speeding up the pace at which it is reducing its monthly bond purchases. That program is expected to be completed in a few months, and markets expect the central bank to start raising interest rates in March 2022.
... apparently the sky is not falling as the US economy roars ahead.Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
Joe Rogan
Joe Rogan has been a problem for some time. He insists that he's "just asking questions" and that he's "not a respected source of information" while platforming the likes of Alex Jones and Gavin McInnes and building a business model on people — overwhelmingly young men — listening to him as a respected source of information. But this year, he managed to turn himself from a vague danger into an immediate, obvious danger.
A recap of the year in Rogan:
- In April, he strongly suggested that healthy young people don't need the COVID-19 vaccine. (He later walked that statement back, reminding people that while he's "not a doctor," he is "a fucking moron." His words, not mine.)
- In August, he suggested that vaccine passports were the first step in turning the United States into a dictatorship.
- In September, while on tour in Florida — a state experiencing a massive spike in cases at the time — he somewhat predictably contracted COVID. He described his treatment plan as "I threw the kitchen sink at it." The sink included prednisone and monoclonal antibodies, both of which have a solid track record of aiding COVID recovery, and Ivermectin, which does not.
- CNN implied he was taking horse medicine, at which point he forcefully clarified that he took Ivermectin for humans.
- Rogan's kitchen sink-aided recovery turned him into something of a resource for celebrities who are not full-blown "Plandemic" types, but not quite not that either. NFL quarterback Aaron Rodgers talked to Rogan when creating his health protocol, which apparently did not include vaccination. Rogan's sometimes-boss and UFC president Dana White thanked "Dr. Joe Rogan" for recommending the kitchen sink approach when he caught the virus, and claiming that at least 40 other people have tried it, too.
- In October, Rogan suggested that people should get vaccinated, then actively try to get a breakthrough infection for "extra protection."
Look, I can't prove this, but it's overwhelmingly likely that Rogan's Ivermectin endorsement contributed to a rash of human use of veterinary Ivermectin, because if people will spend $200 USD on a Darth Vader-shaped kettlebell on your say-so, they will definitely eat a couple tablespoons of sheep dip. And this is the thing. Joe preaches "keeping an open mind," but many, many young dudes are out here taking everything he says as gospel. He's not just some wacky comedian with a podcast — he is someone that his audience turns to for guidance. That's why MeUndies and Onnit supplements and those mushroom coffee people pay big bucks to sponsor his show. And he is not being responsible with that power. He never has been. He's a gateway drug to some really dangerous conspiratorial thinking, his open-mindedness is pointedly one-sided, and MeUndies are both overrated and overpriced. But now he's encouraging young men to eat horse medicine (even though, again, he says he himself did not), fear public health measures, and actively chase COVID. That's a new level of danger.Comment
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Re: The Shining City Upon a Hill
Young Conservatives - ? Watch: Biden Nominees Struggles To Defend Angry Tweets From His PastComment
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