Meh, no.So are you going to educate us on how skyrocketing soybean sales pumped up the manufacturing hiring data?
Meh, no.So are you going to educate us on how skyrocketing soybean sales pumped up the manufacturing hiring data?
Meh, no.
I will say that in the 2nd quarter element electronics and caselabs was probably still hiring, until the tsriffs.Hey Hobbes. This just in! From the New York Times no less!
Emphasis mine:
Element electronics was "expected to eventually have" 500 employees. Caselab didn't even have 25. Jeesh...I will say that in the 2nd quarter element electronics and caselabs was probably still hiring, until the tsriffs.
Well, they are going to zero now aren't they?Element electronics was "expected to eventually have" 500 employees. Caselab didn't even have 25. Jeesh...
ok ok...Do you know why?
Soy beans aren't manufactured, they're farmed. Try again.
Because soybean ore deposits are so deeply buried that it's cheaper just to grow new ones.Do you know why?
They prolly didn't do that with anything else.
Well that still has no bearing (that I can tell) on US manufacturing jobs increasing by 37,000 like the NYT article I posted stated.They prolly didn't do that with anything else.
GTG
Enter your email address to join: