were expecting. this is unusual. every month when we get the jobs number, we also get revisions for the two prior months, and both of those prior months were gang busters. in december of 2018, the number has been revised upward by 5,000, so we created 227,000 jobs in december of 2018. january s number was revised up by 7,000. this is a very big number. 31 # 1,000. keep this in mind. december 227, january 31 # 1. february 20,000. that s a bit of a problem. here is what stephanie was talking about, though. average hourly wages are up. they re up compared to last year by 3.4%. when you calculate that amount you have to think about what inflation is doing. inflation is relatively low right nows, that s actually a real wage increase. for a lot of people it s not where they think things should be. when you look at a 3.8% unemployment rate, one would assume wages would be going up at a pace that is higher than 3.4% year over year. that s where we are.
can i find my wifi password? himself big time on capitol just ask. [ ding ] hill this week. take a look. show me my wifi password. not only is donald trump hey now! [ ding ] not a racist, he believes you can even troubleshoot, learn new voice commands and much more. that all people are part of clean my daughter s room. [ ding ] one race, the human race. oh, it won t do that. i know what mr. trump is. welp, someone should. just say teach me more into your voice remote he is a racist. and see how you can have an even better x1 experience. he is a con man. simple. easy. awesome. and he is a cheat. griff: the question now is will democrats continue to push michael cohen as a credible source? and, if so, how? joining us to react is media reporter for the hill and new radio talk show host on griff: the battle for border security reaching a fevered wor joe concha. good morning. rachel: good morning, joe. switch drugs flowing into hey griff, hey rach. america unchecked. take a quick
of mind adventures theatre company. not long ago, to even talk politics, let alone stage a play deemed controversial, could be dangerous. anthony: the play that you ve been doing, it came from a book, the boy who. tracy: speaks in numbers , by mike masilamani. yeah, it was first performed in november 2009. so it s anthony: no way. controversial, would you say? tracy: a little. the play is about internally displaced people. after the end of the war, we had over 300,000 people in camps. the largest one of them was built to house 100,000 people, but ended up housing 227,000 people. tents that were designed for maybe five people to be in, had 10-15 people in them. there were no toilets in the camp, there were just these big pits. living conditions for these people was intolerable. there are some communities in this country that have been displaced for 25 years; that
north america sales grew dramatically. sales internationally went down. it was about the u.s. general motors, and the usa. incredible story. general motors was the proxy for america and today it is as well. bill: what about the reports on friday? 227,000, street was looking for 189,000. jobs where you want them. i talk about dirty fingernail jobs and good producerings. 4,000 in mining which is beyond mind-boggling. 1700 construction. 17,000 manufacturing. a great number going into friday. we ll see. the last number from the government was really what they call noisy. when you get hurricane disruptions like we had, people were displaced, it is hard to get a good read on it. maybe we ll get a better one friday. bill: what is the street looking for on friday? you also have to take it within the context of an election that happens four days later.
dangerous. anthony: the play that you ve been doing, it came from a book, the boy who. tracy: speaks in numbers , by mike masilamani. yeah, it was first performed in november 2009. so it s anthony: no way. controversial, would you say? tracy: a little. the play is about internally displaced people. after the end of the war, we had over 300,000 people in camps. the largest one of them was built to house 100,000 people, but ended up-housing 227,000 people. tents that were designed for maybe five people to be in, had 10-15 people in them. there were no toilets in the camp, there were just these big pits. living conditions for these people was intolerable. there are some communities in this country that have been displaced for 25 years; that means since the 80s, they haven t had a home. woman 1: hurry up! don t waste my time. what s in the bag?