Looks like we just as well start planning for NEXT weekend to see where “Ike” is going.
Here’s what they’re saying this evening…

{Clickit to biggit}
Lots of things can happen in a week, but this is getting tedious…
During the last week as Hurricane Gustav approached, I fretted over its effects on one of my charges, an offshore compressor station on a platform out in the Gulf. While I was at Houma yesterday taking care of the onshore office for that facility, I inquired as to how the platform fared.
It did great. The crew left one of the generators running when they evacuated ahead of Gustav, and when they finally got a helicopter back out there, the generator was still running, the lights and air conditioning was still on, and if those two items survived, then the rest of the platform is in good shape.
That’s a big change from Hurricane Lili’s effects where we had to run for the first few days on the emergency backup generator while we dried out the main generators, and wind and rain and salt spray had gotten into control cabinets and such.
The new unemployment numbers are out from the government and they are {{GASP!!!}} up from 5.7% to 6.1%.
As with many subjects, I have an opinion.
Do you think, for instance, that it just MIGHT be a little bit due to the government deciding that if you have a business, you need to pay your entry level, no job skills workers a minimum wage that is 12% higher than it was at the beginning of July? Tell me, did little Kayleigh behind the counter at your local McDonalds sucessfully translate her superlative skillz at selecting nail polish into a 12% productivity increase? Did Leondre’ suddenly start showing up and doing his job picking up the parking lot 12% better? NO?
Perhaps it might be because every government in the country looks at a business in terms of how can we squeeze some tax dollars out of it to provide money we can give away to keep our phoney-baloney jobs? “But Cajun,” you say, “Our government just gave several million dollars in incentives to get a new mall/factory/facility here in Podunk South.”
Government business incentive (Def.): Don’t tax the new guy, tax the crap out of somebody else.
To which I say, “You poor, poor creature…. The government giveth, and the government taketh away. The millions of dollars in “incentives” for the new business are being squeezed out of a) existing businesses and b) the pocketbooks of you poor citizens. The new business and the old businesses will have to pay higher wages so you can scrape together enough ducats to provide your family with food and shelter, and that makes it more expensive to do business overall.
The average BIG business carefully observes the bottom line, and when it becomes more expensive to produce here than it costs to produce in China or Malaysia or Mexico and have it delivered here, guess what happens. You guessed correctly, didn’t you?
Smaller businesses are less susceptible to such pressures because they cannot react, but eventually big businesses swallow them up.
Thus endeth my ‘macro’ view.
Now here’s my ‘micro’ view: I just spent the day worming my way through a hurricane disaster area. For the next year or so the place will be crying for craftsmen: carpenters, roofers, electricians, plumbers, HVAC techs, etc. Know what? There ain’t enough of them, so like happened to us after Karina and Rita, we’re gonna see a lot of crews where English is NOT the first language.
Why? Because little Harley is TOO damn good to go out and work with TOOLS. Mommeigh and daddeigh want their little crotchfruit to have a job where he can wear slacks and a nice shirt and THINK for a living, even though said job will pay half of what a good craftsman can make.
Sow when it comes time to slap rafters together and tug wire, little Harley is going to be deciding how to stock the shelves at Starbucks at eight bucks an hour while Bubba at thirty bucks an hour leads a crew consisting of Pablo, Rafael and Juan and a few others.
6%? Feh! Louisiana. If you’re not working in THIS state, you don’t have the skills or you don’t WANT to work, or both.
Out in the plants where I work, they have a job called “hole watch.” What’s a “hole watch”? Let’s say you have work to be done inside a big ol’ tank. That is, by OSHA definition, a “confined space”, in that it was not set up for human habitation. It has to be tested for a breathable atmosphere and several other precautions have to be taken, then as workers go in the thing to work, the hole watch signs each one in, monitors for hazards or accidents, and then signs each worker out of the space. To become a qualified ‘hole watch’ you have to be able to pass a drug screen and sit through a training session and pass a written test on the training. Rocket science it isn’t. And hole watches make more than department managers at retail stores. Of course, you’ll be sitting outdoors on a bucket in the heat and dust of an industrial facility instead of the air-conditioned halls of JC Penney’s.
We have a bunch of jobs just as intellectually demanding. And I see contractors having trouble filling those as well as the hard skills like electrical, millwright, machinist, ironworker, pipefitter, boilermaker, etc. And those guys make good money. A bit of brain, a bit of ‘want to’ , a bit of experience and a pair of safety-toed boots makes a six-figure income for thousands of people in this area and other industrial areas around the country.
And that’s my take on ‘unemployment’.
1522 – The Victoria, one of the surviving ships of Ferdinand Magellan’s expedition, returns to Sanlúcar de Barrameda in Spain, becoming the first ship to circumnavigate the world. They left in 1519 with five ships and 270 men. They return with one ship, and only 38 of the original bunch make it back home. Magellan isn’t one of them.
1776 – Hurricane hits Guadeloupe, killing more than 6000. FEMA slow to respond. Bush widely blamed.
1776 – 1st (failed) submarine attack (David Bushnell’s “Turtle” attacks British sailboat “Eagle” in Bay of NY). We’ve improved…
1847 – Henry David Thoreau leaves Walden Pond and moves in with Ralph Waldo Emerson and his family in Concord, Massachusetts. His book popularizes dreamy leeching as a lifestyle.
1901 – Anarchist Leon Czolgosz shoots and fatally wounds US President William McKinley at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York. Since McKinley was a Republican, this guy achieves sainthood among moonbats… Today he’d also have a logon at MoveON.org.
1976 – Cold War: Soviet air force pilot Lt. Viktor Belenko lands a MiG-25 jet fighter at Hakodate on the island of Hokkaid? in Japan and requests political asylum in the United States. In Soviet military circles, several bricks are shat.
1991 – The name Saint Petersburg is restored to Russia’s second largest city, which had been renamed Leningrad in 1924. Soon to become Putinopolis, no doubt.