but, mika, you ve heard the same thing that the post is reporting today about tillerson being sidelined at state. for over a week now, i ve been hearing from long time state department types that this is a mess and jobs aren t being filled. he is out of the loop. he s in the wrong place all the time. and he needs more support. especially coming in from running a business. i mean, this is not he needs someone with really a deep interagency experience to lift him up and i hear they are shoving potentially bolton toward him but i m not sure that is the right fit, according to tillerson, from what i ve heard. bob, people even supporting tillerson has are huge tillerson advocates is saying he is playing this like he is still the ceo at exxon. he is not talking to people in the state department he should be talking to. it s still hierarchical. he doesn t understand he is not
growing and has been growing for a while. but where the spoils of that growth are just not flowing to the incomes of people in the middle. yeah, in terms of the flip side, the stats, i guess the opposite of these 25 years you re talking about with the american economy growth. 83% up, corporate profits have doubled. so why has the typical family s income just stayed the same? so my argument is that it s about talent and sort of the allocation of talent in america. that after world war ii, we were really good at helping a lot of people do better things with their skills. we want you to do what you re best at in this economy. and after world war ii, we were great at that. and the last 25 years, not so much. too many people in the middle lost their jobs from automation or outsourcing and got de-valued to doing cheaper labor. too many people at the bottom have a hard time getting the education they need to do those precious few minuscule jobs which increasingly require a degree. and the
tracking and wahlberg s all upset and, you know, yelling at the guy and the guy looks up and says, who are you? wahlberg says, i m the guy doing my job. you must be the other guy. [ cheers and applause ] sometimes i feel like saying to these guys, i m the guy doing my job, you must be the other guy. president obama s number one job, the one he says that he s doing, at the very least politically is to create jobs. that s the thing he s going to be judged on. even if the president can t necessarily take credit for all the jobs created under his administration, a president certainly takes the blame when the jobs aren t being created. a pretty remarkable thing happened right before the july 4th weekend. superb number, really great for the economy, therefore great for the stock market. jobs growth, just perfect. stronger than people expected. exactly what everybody wants. this is a demand-driven hiring because it s so across the board. happy jobs thursday, and happy 4th to everybo
my job. you must be the other guy. sometimes i feel like saying to these guys, i m the guy doing my job, you must be the other guy. president obama s number one job, the one he says that he s doing, at the very least politically is to create jobs. that s the thing he s going to be judged on. even if the president can t necessarily take credit for all the jobs created under his administration, a president certainly takes the blame when the jobs aren t being created. a pretty remarkable thing happened right before the july 4th weekend. superb number, really great for the economy, therefore great for the stock market. jobs growth, just perfect. stronger than people expected. exactly what everybody wants. this is a demand-driven hiring because it s so across the board.
where mark wahlberg, they re on a stakeout and somehow the guy loses the guy that they re tracking and wahlberg s all upset and, you know, yelling at the guy and the guy looks up and says, who are you? wahlberg says, i m the guy doing my job. you must be the other guy. sometimes i feel like saying to these guys, i m the guy doing my job, you must be the other guy. president obama s number one job, the one he says that he s doing, at the very least politically is to create jobs. that s the thing he s going to be judged on. even if the president can t necessarily take credit for all the swrobs created under his administration, a president certainly takes the blame when the jobs aren t being created. a pretty remarkable thing happened right before the july 4th weekend. superb number, really great for the economy, therefore great for the stock market. jobs growth, just perfect. stronger than people expected. exactly what everybody wants. this is a demand-driven