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Friday, August 6, 2010

Where would you be when the lights go out?



How do we see news today? From up and  down and fro0m the side and we also get a top view. The only thing we don’t see is news as it is, looking it straight in the eye…. Here are two versions of the same news in two US famous publications, and you will realize how we can read life.

It teaches us many lessons, actually. It tell us how we can be and walk through life, desperate, as if all is falling away behind you, or we can walk through life, hopeful, realizing that even though everything is falling away behind you, there remains a lot more intact for you to experience and enjoy.

You are where you wish to be. You will be where you wish to be. And you came from wherever you never really should have been.

Take care…

HERE ARE THE NEWS ITEMS

Breaking News Alert
The New York Times
Fri, August 06, 2010 -- 8:37 AM ET
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U.S. Shed 131,000 Jobs in July, but Private Payrolls Grew; Jobless Rate Steady at 9.5%
With the American economic recovery hanging in the balance,
private employers added 71,000 jobs in July, down from 83,000
in June and below the consensus forecast of 90,000. The
unemployment rate remained steady at 9.5 percent.
Over all, the nation lost 131,000 jobs in July, more than
expected, as federal Census Bureau workers left their
temporary posts, and as state and local governments cut back
their work forces. The unemployment rate, which economists
predicted would rise to 9.6 percent, is driven in part by the
number of workers who re-enter the labor force to look for
work, a number that has bobbed around for several months as
job seekers alternately despair and renew their efforts to
find positions.

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News Alert: Employers add 71,000 jobs in July; unemployment rate unchanged 9.5 percent
08:21 AM EDT Friday, August 6, 2010
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Private employers added new workers at a weak pace for the third straight month, making it more likely economic growth will slow in the coming months.
The Labor Department says companies added a net total of 71,000 jobs in July, far below the roughly 200,000 needed each month to reduce the unemployment rate. The jobless rate was unchanged at 9.5 percent.
Overall, the economy lost a net total of 131,000 jobs last month, as 143,000 temporary census jobs ended.


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