yayaa, did you ever see a thick rope that's being sawed through? If you can imagine it (if you haven't seen it), the rope gets much weaker as the saw moves along, disproportionately to the actual sawing. In other words, when the saw starts off, the rope will retain its strength for quite some time, but the more the saw works at weakening the rope, the faster will be it's demise even with moving the saw at a constant rate of speed. That's kind of what happens when millions of people have already lost their jobs. They can no longer spend so that means that more jobs are going to be lost because there are less buyers. The problem is magnified (a vicious cycle so to speak). Get it? On another note, did you see the post of yours I cited yesterday? You can't have it both ways.