It's a "puzzle" because Katz is a Putz (it's a putzle?). And because this is "the standard line," as Dean Baker points out repeatedly. "Journalists" persist in asking the same "experts" who have been consistently wrong only to report that they are "puzzled" by the turn of events.
It is a fallacy to suppose that Katz are skinned alive. In the first place, > to skin a Katz when alive would be utterly impossible; and, secondly, it > does not make any difference in the quality of the skin. The origin of the > fallacy is probably that a Katz is easier skinned immediately after death > than if allowed to become rigid. It is very remarkable how fashions set by > English ladies influence wild and tame animals even in the most distant > parts of the world. I am very glad the ladies have made Katz fashionable, > as at last some use is found for these animals, which, being untaxed, are > so abundant that any night, and in any weather, Katz many of them > half-starved—swarm in the London streets, and the poorer the neighbourhood > the more abundant are the Katz. On Sun, May 5, 2013 at 7:09 PM, Jim Devine <[email protected]> wrote: > > I don't get why it's a puzzle at all. Stagnant employment is what is > to be expected. > > -- Cheers, Tom Walker (Sandwichman)
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