Showing posts with label U.S. UNEMPLOYMENT RATE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. UNEMPLOYMENT RATE. Show all posts

June 12, 2020

Investors, No Longer in Denial About Grim Outlook, DOW Drops 1860 pts, Nearly 6%. UPDATES

Investors are finally catching up to the fact the U.S. economy is not recovering anytime soon.


At least for a day, reality triumphed over hope on Wall Street.

After a frenzied, almost unstoppable three-month climb that seemed to defy both gravity and logic, the stock market plunged on Thursday, as investors decided they could no longer go on behaving as if the American economy had already recovered from the pandemic.

The signals leading to this moment were hard to ignore, even for the most bullish of investors. Coronavirus infections are rising in 21 states. Congress is divided on extending more aid. And on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve chair, Jerome H. Powell, warned that the depth of the downturn and pace of the recovery remained “extraordinarily uncertain.”
For investors, who often make buying and selling decisions by looking at the future, it was altogether too much.

Stocks suffered their worst drop in nearly three months as the S&P 500 stock index fell 5.9 percent — just days after it had recouped its losses for the year. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped nearly 1,900 points, or 6.9 percent. Oil prices also cratered, reflecting the sudden unease that swept across financial markets.


Another 1.5 million filed new state unemployment claims last week.

The Labor Department said Thursday that 1.5 million Americans filed new state unemployment claims last week — the lowest number since the coronavirus pandemic shut down much of the economy in March, but far above normal levels.

The weekly report on unemployment claims comes after the government reported that jobs rebounded last month and that the unemployment rate fell unexpectedly to 13.3 percent. Correcting for a classification error, the actual rate was closer to 16.4 percent — still lower than in April, but higher than at any other point since the Great Depression.

A further 700,000 workers who were self-employed or otherwise ineligible for state jobless benefits filed new claims for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a federal aid program.
 
The overall number of workers collecting state benefits fell slightly in the most recent seasonally adjusted tally, to 20.9 million in the week that ended May 30, from a revised 21.3 million the previous week.

President Trump will deliver his convention speech at the VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena in Jacksonville, Fla. Credit...Douglas P. Defelice/Getty Images

New rule for Trump campaign rallies: You can’t sue if you get the virus.

As President Trump moves to resume indoor campaign rallies, his campaign has added a twist to his optimistic push to return to life as it was before the pandemic: Attendees cannot sue the campaign or the venue if they contract the virus at the event.

“By clicking register below, you are acknowledging that an inherent risk of exposure to Covid-19 exists in any public place where people are present,” a statement on Mr. Trump’s campaign website informed those wishing to attend his June 19 rally in Tulsa, Okla. “By attending the rally, you and any guests voluntarily assume all risks related to exposure to Covid-19 and agree not to hold Donald J. Trump for President, Inc.; BOK Center; ASM Global; or any of their affiliates, directors, officers, employees, agents, contractors or volunteers liable for any illness or injury.”

Oklahoma, a state Mr. Trump won four years ago by 36 percentage points, began lifting restrictions on businesses on April 24 and moved into Phase 3 of its reopening on June 1, allowing summer camps to open and workplaces to return with full staffing. The state’s infection numbers are steady but not falling.

Officers in Brooklyn last week. The New York Police Department dismissed criticism about the lack of masks as petty.

An N.Y.P.D. policy says officers should wear masks in public, but many are refusing.

The New York Police Department’s official policy is that officers should wear masks when interacting with the public, but the widespread absence of masks is striking. While officers may forgo face coverings for different reasons, the images have fueled a perception of the police as arrogant and dismissive of protesters’ health.

In a statement on Wednesday, the department dismissed the criticism about the lack of masks as petty. “Perhaps it was the heat,” the department’s press office said in a statement. “Perhaps it was the 15-hour tours, wearing bullet-resistant vests in the sun. Perhaps it was the helmets. With everything New York City has been through in the past two weeks and everything we are working toward together, we can put our energy to a better use.”
 
On Thursday, Mayor Bill de Blasio said that while there were legitimate reasons for officers to remove their masks, such as to take a drink of water, the city remained “in the middle of a pandemic.”
The city is still reporting hundreds of new cases each week. As of May 29, 901 uniformed members — about 2.5 percent — were out sick, down from 19.8 percent in April. As of that same date, 5,627 members of the Police Department had returned to work after testing positive.

A photo of Chief Monahan in the Bronx on June 4th, who appears to be ordering the arrest of an organizer who is later taken to the group by cops in riot gear at the protest.

"The Streets Were Out Of Control": NYPD Chief Defends Violent Police Tactics During George Floyd Protests

The NYPD’s initial strategy of violently dispersing protesters who took to the streets after the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis has drawn widespread condemnation and prompted an investigation by the state Attorney General. While the police department has since allowed large groups of New Yorkers to march through the streets without beating and arresting them, the NYPD’s presence at the daily demonstrations is still heavy, and police helicopters continue to circle the city’s neighborhoods.

One of the main architects of the police response to the protests is Chief of Department Terence Monahan, the NYPD’s highest ranking uniformed officer, who also led the NYPD's mass arrest tactics during the 2004 GOP convention. Early on in the demonstrations, Monahan took a knee with protesters at Washington Square Park in a sign of respect and deference, a gesture that garnered positive press and effusive praise from Mayor Bill de Blasio.

Days after he made that gesture, Chief Monahan appeared to order the violent arrest of an organizer of a peaceful demonstration in the Bronx, and presided over the police on the scene as they beat New Yorkers with clubs and arrested legal observers.
 
We spoke with Chief Monahan about the NYPD’s handling of the protests, aggressive police tactics, and why so many people were detained for violating Mayor Bill de Blasio’s six-night curfew.

More than half of the detainments in 11 days were for curfew violations. How does this square with the NYPD’s stated goal, which was to crack down on violence and property damage and theft and not peaceful protesters?

If you look at protests and what occurred, starting at the Barclays Center on May 29th, there were numerous instances of violence early on from that day. It was a protest that started around three o'clock in the afternoon. By approximately 6, 6:30, the cops that were standing in front of the Barclays Center, myself included, started getting hit with all sorts of objects being thrown from the very large crowd that had gathered there. There were numerous bottles, rocks, paintballs, bottles of water, bottles of unknown liquids being thrown at the cops. So that was just the start of what we were experiencing over what would be the next four days.

The violence continued obviously through that night. Vans burnt. Molotov cocktails thrown at police officers while they were seated in their cars. The next day, large crowds gathered around, around officers that were in their cars, trying to pull them out. As a matter of fact, the commanding officer in one of the commands, his radio transmission as he was being pulled out was, ‘This may be my last transmission.’

So the violence escalated between that Friday and Saturday. Once Sunday came, that's when we started seeing looting, and lots of it, throughout the city. That Monday, when the looting really continued extremely bad in Manhattan, the curfew was put into effect. And in that night, the majority of our curfew violations were made, ending one of the toughest nights I think I've ever worked in the police department.

We made numerous burglary arrests that night, in addition to all of the curfew violation arrests. By having that curfew in place at 11, it helped us tamp down some of what was going on with the very large crowds that were running around. Once the violence stopped, that's when we really didn't need to enforce the curfew as much anymore. So that curfew helped us get this city back under control. For those four days, it was a very dangerous place to be in New York City.

Given the coronavirus pandemic, why were so many people physically detained for lower-level offenses, including curfew violations, and in some cases for more than 24 hours? Why didn't the police department use discretion to issue summonses in lieu of physical detention?

Listen, the streets were out of control. We needed to get control back on the streets. There wasn't a worry about social distancing when crowds of hundreds, if not thousands, were running together in the streets, looting the stores. Those that we were able to catch right away, were charged with the burglary. Those that would spill out after the curfew running around through those streets were the ones that were charged with the curfew violations. This was a way of getting control back in this city for incidences that were really problematic for quite a few days.

This isn't your normal two guys on a street corner, let's give them a summons. This was crowds of people violating. We needed to be able to bring them in.

Chief of Department of the New York City Police, Terence Monahan, hugs an activist after he took a knee, on June 1st, 2020.
Chief of Department of the New York City Police, Terence Monahan, hugs an activist after he took a knee, on June 1st, 2020. CRAIG RUTTLE/AP/SHUTTERSTOCK
You were present for the June 4th protests in the Bronx, where more than 250 people were arrested. We also know at least 11 legal observers were detained. The department had to walk back some claims around a gun and gasoline that were recovered. Do you feel like that evening was an appropriate use of police force?

Yes, I do.

I don't know where the walkback was. The night before we recovered gasoline and making of a Molotov cocktail from some information that we received coming into the 4-0 Precinct. That day, on scene, we had information of a person going to get a gun to bring back to the protest, where we were able to follow and apprehend before they got back there with the firearm. We also arrested people going to the protests from a car with lighter fluid, all sorts of other equipment including hammers, fireworks.

In the course of discussion with the people arrested, they said they were going to utilize that, at that demonstration to set off fires and to hit the police officers with those weapons. So this was something right off the bat, we knew was not your typical protest. Even the advertisements for the protest were saying that they were going to cause destruction.

Their advertisement showed a burning van, police van. And this is the “FTP” [Fuck The Police] group, the same group who vandalized subways throughout the city just a few months prior.
Prior to even the arrests I went through the Patterson Houses where the people there were quite upset seeing them marching through their neighborhoods and talking about taking care of business for themselves if anything in the neighborhood got damaged.

The Bronx took a beating the night before. The last thing we needed was for the Bronx to take another beating on this night. If you drove around the Bronx, and you looked through the hub, every store had signs on it begging, that nothing would happen, saying ‘We’re minority owned, we support this movement,’ pleading that nothing would happen to their businesses.


Jake Offenhartz@jangelooff
 
Just before 8 this group of heavily armored bike cops intercepted the group. Yelled “move” and knocked people back with bikes all at once. Now we’re kettled on this hill
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Jake Offenhartz@jangelooff
 
Cops charged from the back with batons out. Multiple people hit. Someone bleeding from the head. I jumped over a car and am out because of a press base. This wasn’t even a confrontation it was a trap
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2,322 people are talking about this 
 
The more violent examples you gave didn’t add up to the more than 250 people arrested. Why were so many others arrested and thrown to the ground, thrown against cars, beaten with batons, kettled?

They were the people who we were given information were looking to cause mayhem in the streets of the Bronx. They were warned repeatedly that they could face arrest for being in the streets and for the violation of the curfew.

I saw a lot of the arrests being made—quite a few of them were struggling and fighting with the cops as they were attempting to place them in custody. So they weren't a peaceful group who put their hands up and said, ‘Okay, take me in.’ No, there were quite a few people struggling, pushing, shoving the cops. Someone actually threw a wheelbarrow, climbed over a fence and tried to throw a wheelbarrow over on the cops.

All the legal observers, I observed them and we got them all cut loose right away.
This wasn't cops going in there and trying to just physically beat people and take them under arrest. This was controlling the group that we had information with intent on violence within a neighborhood that had already been devastated by violence.

You’ve said before that some of the people causing the most trouble at protests are from out of state, like California. You personally oversaw the arrest of two of the organizers, both who are black women from the Bronx. Do you think it hurts the NYPD’s credibility when police leaders make these claims that don't always have evidence to back them up about where protesters are from?
The evidence that we have is that there are organizations, not from this area that are infiltrating and encouraging people to do acts of violence. And that's what we saw in the first four days.
There are active investigations currently ongoing about who may be the ones behind these organizations and exactly where they're from. So I can't go into detail on it. But we have solid information that there were outside agitators who were pushing off an agenda, especially within those first four days of protest.

Morena Basteiro
@morenabasteiro
 
 
An emotional ⁦@NYPDChiefofDept⁩ tells ⁦@JoshEiniger7⁩ that it’s time to get the agitators “out of here” - “from California, from all over this country, who are being paid to take this movement, which is a good movement, and turn it into violence.” ⁦@ABC7NY
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1,491 people are talking about this
 Some of the videos we’ve seen about the police response to people who are peacefully in the street—the use of batons, pepper spray. Do you defend some of that use of force the department has used over the course of the past several days?

Listen, obviously we are not perfect. I am not perfect. There are issues that have happened during the course of this, but everything has to be looked at in the context of what was going on during that time. You know, you look at a video of a cop doing A, but let's go and look at the whole video of the rocks and bottles and things being shot out them, the fireworks being shot at him, the struggles that he had with people pushing and fighting, the dearresting tactics that were used largely by many people.

Did some of them act too aggressively? Yes. But take it in the context of thousands of police officers out on the streets, trying to prevent the mayhem that occurred during the course of those days.

We’ve seen instances of groups of protesters and elected officials negotiating with police, in which protesters have an understanding they are permitted to continue peacefully protesting. But then smaller groups later on are aggressively arrested. I saw this happen at Grand Army Plaza, where a larger group dispersed, and later in the evening, a smaller group that had continued marching was aggressively arrested on Nostrand Avenue. Is that timeline—negotiations with officers at the scene during a standoff, smaller groups separating from larger groups after a partial dispersal, then police following them and making arrests—a tactic by police?

I don't have the exact information for that incident itself. But we look, and discretion is given to all commanders on the scene. Decisions are not made from 1 Police Plaza. They're made from the commanders on the scene based on what they're seeing. The direction was, for the most part, if there was no, as we moved forward, if there was no disorder, no garbage being thrown in the street, no bottles being thrown, we tried to give as much time as we could. At some point, it was up to the discretion of the commander on scene whether or not they were going to take enforcement action.

Is there anything you regret about the handling of the protests?

Well, specifically those first four days, those were the problematic days for us. I wish we had better information. I wish we knew exactly how violent it was going to turn out on those first four days. We expected this to be demonstrations like we're seeing right now—tens of thousands of people peacefully marching through the streets, talking about what needs to be talked about, changes that need to be made. We fully support that.

We’ve seen this dramatic shift in police tactics this week though protests have continued, like you noted. Why didn’t those police tactics change sooner for managing large crowds?

It's not us. It's the crowds that we're managing. We can manage crowds like this every single day, with a very, very light touch. The crowds that we were seeing in the beginning, as we walked away, they followed us and they yelled at us and they threw bottles at us. These crowds are not doing that. If you take a look at the videos, and early on from the Barclays Center, our cops were just standing there, like they've been doing the last week.

I don't know if the agitators have moved, and now our peaceful protesters have finally gotten rid of them. That was my statement to the crowd of Washington Square. Throw the agitators out, throw those who are throwing bottles at cops, because that's not what this is about. This is about change. This is about us coming together. It's not attacks on police. It's about getting your voice out so change can be made.

October 3, 2014

Jobless Rate in U.S. Falls Below 6% as Hiring Picks Up . Also Another Beheading and Ebola in Dallas.

Students attend a career fair at the University of Illinois in Springfield, Ill. Credit Seth Perlman/Associated Press        

Read it at Bloomberg News

The U.S. economy added 248,000 jobs in September, bringing the unemployment rate down to 5.9 percent. Job growth was higher than projected and it brought the unemployment rate down to its lowest level since July 2008. Growth was seen mostly at grocery stores, factories, and restaurants. It was a significant gain over the 180,000 jobs added in August.

N.Y. TIMES

But the surprisingly rosy jobs report released by the government on Friday appeared to be too little, too late to bolster the prospects of Democratic candidates facing voters in struggling campaigns for next month’s midterm elections in the face of rising disenchantment with President Obama’s performance.
And the signs of improvement were tempered by evidence that wage gains remained meager and that millions of Americans were still so discouraged by their job prospects that they had lost contact with the regular employment system.

==========================================

Alan Henning
 
 
Read it at BBC News
 
ISIS released a new video Friday showing the beheading of British aid worker Alan Henning. The jihadists warned that American Peter Kassig, a medic and ex-U.S. Army Ranger who was working in central Syria as of last October, will be killed next.
Henning, 47, was an aid convoy volunteer who was captured by ISIS in Syria nine months ago and is thought to have been held with 20 other Western hostages. Members of the convoy Henning was helping when he was captured have described armed men surrounding a warehouse where the convoy was delivering medical equipment. Gunmen claimed they were suspicious of Henning because he was not Muslim and separated him from the group. In the video showing his beheading, Henning's executioner, in a London accent, says, "If you, Cameron, persist in fighting the Islamic State, then you, like your master Obama, will have the blood of your people on your hands."
The other ISIS hostage is Peter Kassig, a 25-year-old native of Indiana. Kassig founded an emergency aid group for Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Syria called Special Emergency Response and Assistance (SERA). The organization provided medical assistance, medical supplies, clothing, food, and cooking stoves, and fuel to refugees.

N.Y. TIMES

Health officials’ handling of the first Ebola patient diagnosed in the United States continued to raise questions Friday, after the hospital that is treating the patient and that mistakenly sent him home when he first came to its emergency room acknowledged that both the nurses and the doctors in that initial visit had access to the fact that he had arrived from Liberia.
For reasons that remain unclear, nurses and doctors failed to act on that information, and released the patient under the erroneous belief that he had a low-grade fever from a viral infection, allowing him to put others at risk of contracting Ebola. Those exposed included several schoolchildren, and the exposure has the potential to spread a disease in Dallas that has already killed more than 3,000 people in Africa.
 
Health officials narrowed down to 10 the number of people considered most at risk of contracting Ebola after coming into contact with Mr. Duncan. They also moved the four people who had shared an apartment with him from their potentially contaminated quarters, as local and federal officials tried to assure the public that the disease was contained despite initial missteps here.
The four people, a girlfriend of Mr. Duncan and three of her relatives, had been under orders not to leave their home, and Texas officials apologized to them for not moving faster to have the apartment cleaned of potentially infectious materials.
The cleanup began Friday afternoon — more than a week after Mr. Duncan first went to the hospital — as television-news helicopters swirled in the skies above and workers in yellow protective suits scoured the apartment, whose entryway and balcony were covered with a tarp.
 
Around the country, anxiety spread Friday as two hospitals in the Washington area each reported a possible case of Ebola, and a television journalist working in Liberia prepared to return to the United States after being told that he had the virus. Besides the 10 people considered most at risk in Dallas, another 40 people are being monitored in the city but are considered at relatively low risk, officials said. No one has developed any symptoms. The first signs of the illness often appear within eight to 10 days, but can take as long as 21 days.
 
Images from Monrovia, Liberia and Dallas in the last few days have raised new questions about the adequacy of the American effort on both continents.
In Liberia, the help Mr. Obama promised several weeks ago has been slow to arrive, and logistical glitches have prevented the United States military from being able to quickly set up the hospitals and treatment centers needed to halt the virus. Gen. David M. Rodriguez, commander of the Africa Command, told reporters in Washington that the military was working quickly, but that it could take “several weeks” to get the hospitals built and the medical personnel trained.
And in Dallas, the misstep at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital, where Mr. Duncan is in serious condition, came after the acknowledgment Thursday by other health officials that the apartment where he had stayed had not been sanitized, with the sheets and towels that he had used while sick still there.
Dr. Ashish Jha, a professor at Harvard University’s School of Public Health, said there appeared to be “literally multiple failures” that led to Mr. Duncan’s release on Sept. 25, only to be hospitalized three days later when his symptoms worsened. Among them, he said, are that the nurse who learned Mr. Duncan had just come from Liberia failed to tell a doctor directly.
“In a well-functioning emergency department, doctors and nurses talk to each other,” Dr. Jha said. “Also, why didn’t the physician think to ask the question separately? Anyone who comes in with a febrile illness, a travel history, that’s a fundamental part of understanding what might be going on.”
He added, “For me, the most disappointing thing isn’t that the system didn’t work, but in the aftermath, instead of helping every other hospital in the country understand where their system failed and learn from it, they have thrown out a whole lot of distractions.”
 
“The United States is prepared to deal with this crisis, both at home and in the region,” Ms. Monaco said. “Every Ebola outbreak over the past 40 years has been stopped. We know how to do this, and we will do it again.”