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U.S. Unemployment Up in February

I am forgetting them, because Obama's numbers aree so bad that the make Bush look like a fiscal conservative.

When the US national debt is doubled in the Obama term like it was under Bush and Reagan, then you can call them fiscal conservatives...
 
Relative to the cluster**** of a mess your guy left the economy... or are you forgetting the 700k losses a month that Bush was responsible for?

Go dig up the numbers.
 
I aint the one quoting some poll companies work before the official unemployment numbers are out later today, and then claiming that unemployment is rising.. that is partisan hackery at its worse.

Only a moron believes the DoL anymore. Do you believe them?
 
Only a moron believes the DoL anymore. Do you believe them?

Gallup's methodology is different from BLS's. I don't see what the big deal is :shrug:

The key is understanding how the data is collected and what conclusions you can draw, and which ones can't be drawn.
 
Latest poll:

U.S. Unemployment Ticks Down in Mid-March

The 0.3-percentage-point decline in mid-March moderates the 0.5-point increase Gallup found in February, but it still leaves the mid-month rate higher than the 8.6% in January. A year ago, Gallup recorded a similar decline in the March unemployment rate of 0.4 points, as it fell to 9.9% in March from 10.3% in February.

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Gallup classifies American workers as underemployed if they are either unemployed or working part time but wanting full-time work. The findings reflect more than 18,000 phone interviews with U.S. adults aged 18 and older in the workforce, collected over a 30-day period. Gallup's results are not seasonally adjusted and are ahead of government reports by approximately two weeks.

Results are based on telephone interviews conducted as part of Gallup Daily tracking from Feb. 16-Mar. 15, 2012, with a random sample of 18,825 adults, aged 18 and older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, selected using random-digit-dial sampling.

For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±1 percentage point.

Interviews are conducted with respondents on landline telephones and cellular phones, with interviews conducted in Spanish for respondents who are primarily Spanish-speaking. Each sample includes a minimum quota of 400 cell phone respondents and 600 landline respondents per 1,000 national adults, with additional minimum quotas among landline respondents by region. Landline telephone numbers are chosen at random among listed telephone numbers. Cell phone numbers are selected using random-digit-dial methods. Landline respondents are chosen at random within each household on the basis of which member had the most recent birthday.

Samples are weighted by gender, age, race, Hispanic ethnicity, education, region, adults in the household, and phone status (cell phone only/landline only/both, cell phone mostly, and having an unlisted landline number). Demographic weighting targets are based on the March 2011 Current Population Survey figures for the aged 18 and older non-institutionalized population living in U.S. telephone households. All reported margins of sampling error include the computed design effects for weighting and sample design.

In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.
 
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