What need to be done is find a new source of employment other than manufacturing military hardware.

Kokonut, you're missing one thing....lot of students return back to school....it's normal for unemployment to rise a bit before it goes down once new people replace them. It usually happens every year on average.
Sally speaks the truth really...
Everything is being outsourced to China or India. Now, Canadians have been lucky we have a resource-economy to fall back on, but the United States?
However at this point, isolationism, as preached by kokonut, would be a really asinine idea to pull. What need to be done is find a new source of employment other than manufacturing military hardware.
Hey, we need that stuff. We gotta be ready for the coming of the Palin administration.![]()

Sally speaks the truth really...
Everything is being outsourced to China or India. Now, Canadians have been lucky we have a resource-economy to fall back on, but the United States?
However at this point, isolationism, as preached by kokonut, would be a really asinine idea to pull. What need to be done is find a new source of employment other than manufacturing military hardware.
Regarding oil, the price of oil is rising and we need to reduce our dependence on oil all together. See:
End of Cheap Oil @ National Geographic Magazine
Even the oil companies are trying to get into the new technologies like biodiesel. The oil execs know what's coming.
The Chinese are poisoning their children. Every week there's a new story about a town where all the children have lead poisoning. Very tragic. Companies would never get away with that in the US (for which I'm grateful).
Regarding oil, the price of oil is rising and we need to reduce our dependence on oil all together. See:
End of Cheap Oil @ National Geographic Magazine
Even the oil companies are trying to get into the new technologies like biodiesel. The oil execs know what's coming.
The Chinese are poisoning their children. Every week there's a new story about a town where all the children have lead poisoning. Very tragic. Companies would never get away with that in the US (for which I'm grateful).
It's a little more complicated than that. The Import Export Bank has preliminarily approved is a loan to Petrobras Oil to finance purchasing American goods. The idea is to give credit to entities that will buy American goods and services. See Ex-Im Bank :: Facts About the Proposed Ex-Im Bank Loans for Petrobras' Brazilian Offshore Oil Exploration and Development
The latest word is that this Brazilian company will be nationalized to a greater precentage. See Petrobras Expects Brazil Government to Increase Stake (Update2) - Bloomberg.com
Nationalization is common in Latin America.
Is that what you meant?
The U.S. is going to lend billions of dollars to Brazil’s state-owned oil company, Petrobras, to finance exploration of the huge offshore discovery in Brazil’s Tupi oil field in the Santos Basin near Rio de Janeiro. Brazil’s planning minister confirmed that White House National Security Adviser James Jones met this month with Brazilian officials to talk about the loan.
The U.S. Export-Import Bank tells us it has issued a “preliminary commitment” letter to Petrobras in the amount of $2 billion and has discussed with Brazil the possibility of increasing that amount. Ex-Im Bank says it has not decided whether the money will come in the form of a direct loan or loan guarantees. Either way, this corporate foreign aid may strike some readers as odd, given that the U.S. Treasury seems desperate for cash and Petrobras is one of the largest corporations in the Americas. …
But it still doesn’t allow the U.S. to explore in Alaska or along the East and West Coasts, which could be our equivalent of the Tupi oil fields, which are set to make Brazil a leading oil exporter. Americans are right to wonder why Mr. Obama is underwriting in Brazil what he won’t allow at home.
George Soros Cut Petrobras Stake in Second Quarter (Update2) - Bloomberg.comHis New York-based hedge-fund firm, Soros Fund Management LLC, sold 22 million U.S.-listed common shares of Petrobras, as the Brazilian oil company is known, according to a filing today with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Soros bought 5.8 million of the company’s U.S.-traded preferred shares.
Soros is taking advantage of the spread between the two types of U.S.-listed Petrobras shares, said Luis Maizel, president of LM Capital Group LLC, which manages about $4 billion. The common shares were 21 percent more expensive than preferred today, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. …
Petrobras preferred shares have also a 10 percent additional dividend, said William Landers, a senior portfolio manager for Latin America at Blackrock Inc.
“Given that there will most likely never be a change in control in the company, I see no reason to pay a higher price for the common shares.” Brazil’s government controls Petrobras and has a majority stake of voting shares.
Kokonut, you're missing one thing....lot of students return back to school....it's normal for unemployment to rise a bit before it goes down once new people replace them. It usually happens every year on average.

Oil is not the answer. Oil is a depleting resource. Technology is the answer. Producing products of value is the answer. Growing and raising real food is the answer (not the crappy industrial food and processed food that we have now). I'm old enough to remember when the US wasn't like this. We had manufacturing operations. Not everything was made of plastic or in China. I'm not saying that we should go back to the old way but we need something to move forward. The thinking needs to be long term and sustainable, not short quarterly profits.