Loresinger wrote:and it's not the only thing that the government creates revisionist history about.
Let's take employment. Employment numbers do NOT take into account people who have fallen off unemployment, those who were fired, those who are disabled and those who have yet to even find a job.
Can you imagine how that would change the figures?
Actually, those numbers are available, I hear them discussed once in a while on business reports (such as on NPR), so they are not a secret. They don't get the press that the "unemployment rate" gets, but they are out there.
Here is the July 5 report from the Labor Department - a couple of seconds of google. It is very long, but I'll quote part of it as an example:
In June, the number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks or more) was essentially unchanged at 4.3 million. These individuals accounted for 36.7 percent of the unemployed. Over the past 12 months, the number of long-term unemployed has declined by 1.0 million. (See table A-12.)
I don't think I would call it "revisionist history". That to me implies someone is going back and rewriting the history books. The info is publicly available.
I actually think the government has little to do with the situation I described in my post; it is more a lack of government action to change the situation, rather than the government causing it (though there are some government actions making it worse, such as various tax laws and anti-union laws, particuarly at the state level).