Black and Bruised

President Bush keeps saying the recession is over, but in counties across America, families struggle to find work. JOBS will be a driving force in the 2004 election.

«
Black and Bruised
« The Real Numbers
« JOBS: A Savvy Strategy
« Turning Out the Vote

« The Values Debate

« Contents


 






Not counted  Official unemployment numbers do not reflect those long-term unemployed workers who have given up finding work or who are forced to work part-time.

It’s over?

The recession is over ... officially in March 2002.

The Iraq war is over ... in May 2003 when President Bush stands below a sign that reads “Mission Accomplished.”

The presidential  election is over ... in January 2004 after the President of the United States gives his State of the Union address.

In precincts where where the filthy rich live along the East River in New York and Lake Michigan in Chicago, in the gated communities of Dallas, Los Angeles and Miami, next to the golf courses in Columbus, Atlanta and Phoenix – the traumas of the past four years have hardly registered.

Where advertising executives gather for $250 lunches, where newspaper and television editors meet to sip $20 shots of single malt scotch, where corporate executives honor themselves at $2,000 a plate charity dinners, the pain and suffering of American families have become insipid insider jokes.

And in the hotel ballrooms where the president and vice president sing that old Haliburton tune – We’re coming over. And we won’t be back ‘til it’s over, over there – in order to rake in a million or two for their campaign coffers, the dirty little secret is: it’s not over.
Not over, over there.
Not over, over here.
Not over, anywhere ... until the last vote is counted.
 
It’s Not Over
The 2004 presidential election has only just begun. All the headlines, all the polls, all the mini-debates, all the predictions, all the posturing, all the position papers, all the press releases are but the warmup acts to the main event.
The media elites want you to believe that once the parties’ nominees are known, that signals the start of the main event, an event in which the GOP nominee has an overwhelming advantage.
 
They’re wrong.

The main event is the clash of haves and have nots. It occurs on November 2, 2004 but it has been building in intensity for four years. On Election Day, over one hundred million Americans will go vote.

The issue that will determine how the vast majority will vote is graphically portrayed on the cover pages of this IAM Journal. That map shows a black, bruised and bleeding America.
 
Black covers counties where the unemployment rate is over 10 percent.
Purplish blue – the color of a bruise – stains counties where the unemployment rate is between seven and 9.9 percent.

Brown and red show the counties where the unemployment rate is between five and 6.9 percent. Those are the official numbers!

The map was created by the U. S. Department of Labor, and was found on the Bureau of Labor Statistics web page. It shows the county-level unemployment rate as of October 2003.

Cover Story: Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5