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1. Laborers and Freight, Stock, and Material Movers, Hand: Basically this includes most manual labor outside the construction sector. This sector might include a worker in an Amazon fulfillment center or a someone who feeds materials into factory machines.
Since these jobs are some of the most common in America (there are more than 2 million people employed in such positions in the U.S.) it?s no surprise that they top the list. Unfortunately, these gigs don?t pay well, as the median laborer in this category made just $11.49 per hour in 2012.
2. Accountants and Auditors: Every business needs someone to mind the books, and with more than 1 million of these folks employed in the U.S., accountants make up one of the largest single blocks of above-average paying jobs in the country. The median pay for an accountant? $30.55 per hour.
3. Software Developers, Systems Software: Here is where we see the much-ballyhooed boom in tech jobs show up in the actual numbers. Though in 2012 there were only about 300,000 of these jobs, it?s a fast-growing category and one that pays exceptionally well. According to the Labor Department the median software developer made $47.59 per hour, or just under $100,000 per year.
4. Occupational Therapists: Another job category that is relatively small (there are just over 100,000 occupation therapists employed in the U.S.) but that is fast-growing. As the American population ages, there will be a need for workers to help us all recover from injuries and other ailments. These workers receive an above-average wage of $36.25 per hour.
5. General and Operations Managers: If you are known for your leadership or organizational skills, here?s the job category for you. Nearly every company needs managers to help keep projects on task and employees working to their full potential, and with nearly 2 million positions fitting into this category, plenty of Americans go to work each day doing just that. Management jobs can pay quite well too, as the median operations manager makes $45.88 per hour.
Other notable professions further down the list include Pharmacy Technicians and Registered Nurses, showing the growing importance of healthcare service work in our economy.
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Job Search: These Positions are In-Demand
The will still be jobs but no one needs to see an old man sticking his finger in a robot's fun hole so I guess Paul and his kind are shit out of luck.
Fuck your 'cry me a river' charts. There is going to be less and less work for the unskilled -- that has been the trend for 30 years. WTF? You just get a clue?
Where does this money come from?
Paul doesn't have a job so he pays minimal taxes. Do you pay taxes on your pension income Paul or is that money tax-exempt (or some of it)?
320,000,000 USA people *$12,000 basic income guarantee
cost = $3,840,000,000,000
That is $3.8 Trillion dollars a year 
The total GNP of the USA is $18 Trillion (2015 * world bank)
BTW Paul all pension money would be taxed too. The federal poverty rate for a household of 3 in the USA is $27,724 -- IDK, maybe you would be exempt? Maybe you think you will get some free money at the expense of the people that do have jobs.
There is your fucking chart ... By the fucking numbers ... They do not ad up in the USA and probably no place else in the known world. Let's see how long the Swiss will do this.
A couple of years ago I few back to the USA and the passenger next to me was a Danish girl moving to the USA to attend Grad School. Lucky me for a change

She told me how expensive everyday life was in Denmark and how bad the tax burden was.
There are some countries with universal family allowance stipends but they are small money.
The USA has GA (welfare) and SSI (public disability) but this is not much money and only a small percentage of the population get these government stipends.
These are the economics of children's minds
