Society's Child
The second straight weekly decline in claims reported by the Labor Department on Thursday also pointed to strong job growth momentum, which could further drive the unemployment rate lower.
"The extremely low level of claims is a sign of tightness in the labor market and suggests that February is shaping up to be another solid month for job creation," said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics in New York.
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits decreased 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted 221,000 for the week ended Feb. 3, the Labor Department said. Claims fell to 216,000 in mid-January, which was the lowest level since January 1973.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast claims rising to 232,000 in the latest week. Last week marked the 153rd straight week that claims remained below the 300,000 threshold, which is associated with a strong labor market. That is the longest such stretch since 1970, when the labor market was much smaller.

Obdulia Sanchez veered onto the hard shoulder then over-corrected.
Obdulia Sanchez continued to film on Instagram as her 14-year-old sister Jacqueline lay dying after being thrown from the car in Los Banos, California.
The 19-year-old was sentenced yesterday after being convicted of gross vehicular manslaughter, DUI and child endangerment stemming from the July crash.
The car driven by Sanchez veered onto the shoulder of a road in Los Banos, about 100 miles south of San Francisco.
Authorities say she overcorrected, causing the vehicle to swerve and overturn, ejecting and killing her 14-year-old sister.
"Please help me. My mom had no idea she was pregnant. She is unable and unfit to take care of me. Please get me to the authorities so they can find a good home," the note said.
"Please, I'm sorry," the note concludes. "I just want what is best for him and it is not me."
Authorities are seeking the woman who is thought to have given birth at around 9pm on January 14, in the Concourse B restroom at Tucson International Airport in Arizona.

Egyptian security forces stand by their Armoured Personnel Carriers ahead of a military operation in the northern Sinai Peninsula
The Egyptian Air Force has carried out strikes on militant's hideouts in the northern and central parts of the Sinai Peninsula, the army spokesperson said Friday.
"The Egyptian Air Force has carried out strikes on shelters and munition storage, which are used by terrorists to mount attacks on law enforcement bodies and civil facilities in the northern and central Sinai Peninsula," the spokesperson's statement reads, adding that Egypt's navy, border security forces, and police had stepped up measures to protect Egypt's land and maritime borders in order to prevent the flow of terrorists to the country's territory.
Ex-Chief of Israeli and US-trained elite forces unit in Mexico arrested over 'forced disappearances'

Members of the Fuerza Civil (Civil Force) police patrol during a media presentation in Monterrey, Mexico. Dec. 17, 2014.
A former high level police officer from the eastern Mexican state of Veracruz was arrested Wednesday over charges of "forced disappearances" during his tenure as the head of an elite unit called Civil Force, which has received training from U.S. and Israeli agencies.
Federal and state agents captured Roberto González Meza, former director of the Civil Force of Veracruz, an elite unit that included 2,000 highly trained agents during the administration of Governor Javier Duarte de Ochoa between 2010 and 2016. Duarte himself is in prison and faces charges related to organized crime and money laundering.
The latest marijuana figures showed a whopping 16 percent increase over 2016, which registered just $9.7 million in sales, according to The Aspen Times, quoting the city's finance department.
By comparison, Aspen's total haul from the Food & Drug industry amounted to $56.1 million in 2017, just a 1 percent change from 2016; the restaurant and bar sector, meanwhile, pulled in $129.7 million, a 3 percent change.
Colorado voted for legalizing recreational marijuana in 2012, with sales starting in 2014.
Comment: More on marijuana: San Francisco to expunge thousands of marijuana convictions which will "right so many wrongs"
UK lawmakers from the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee traveled to Washington in an attempt to extract information from leading tech firms including YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Google. Committee members held hearings with the company's executives, during which they were told there was little or no evidence of fake news being circulated on their platforms.
"The patience of policy makers is running out," Chairman of the Committee Damian Collins told a press conference, following the hearings.
Angered, Collins insisted the committee from Britain be heard and ordered Google and others to have a "sense of compulsory obligation" and accept their investment in dealing with "bad content" was "still very small."
Despite numerous investigations, one of which revealed that less than $1 (£0.72) was spent on Facebook ads in the Brexit referendum from accounts linked to Russia, the UK government is seemingly not giving up their battle with fake news.
Comment:
- Oxford researchers point out obvious - Russia did not influence Brexit referendum
- "No evidence" of Russian interference in Brexit referendum YouTube exec tells parliamentary committee (VIDEO)
- Russian Embassy slams 'unfounded accusations' they interfered in Brexit, next day PM Theresa May rewords statement

Feras Fayyad’s Oscar-nominated film has come under attack as ‘western propaganda’.
Comment: Is it really a "smear" campaign if he really is a terrorist sympathiser?
Director Feras Fayyad spent a year working with local journalists to follow a handful of volunteer rescue workers in the besieged Syrian city as they rushed towards bombed buildings to try and find people in the rubble. The resulting documentary has earned widespread critical praise and won awards including the Sundance grand jury prize.
However, the international recognition has been accompanied by an organized attempt to tarnish the film-maker's reputation, following a playbook of Russia-backed disinformation and manipulation.
"It is like Russia wants to hack the Oscars like they hacked the US election," he told the Guardian.
Comment: That darn pesky Russian playbook. If only it would stop telling the truth already!

Russian Prime Minister Dmitriy Medvedev in Moscow, Russia on 6 October 2017
The draft agreement to be signed between the parties included the opening of Lebanese ports in front of Russian military vessels and fleets, in addition to making Lebanese airports a transit station for Russian aircrafts and fighters, and the dispatch of Russian military experts to train and strengthen the capabilities of members of the Lebanese army, according to the Russian agency Sputnik.
Some 800 activists, some bearing South Korean and US flags, gathered for the rally near the Olympic stadium in Pyeongchang, according to Reuters estimate. One banner was apparently addressed to US leader Donald Trump, reading: "Mr President. North Korea bombing, please." Many activists were seen holding posters, referring to Kim by the Trump-devised nickname of "mad little rocket man".
Protesters also carried banners, saying "Moon Regime is leading Korea to destruction," referring to South Korean President Moon Jae-in. On Friday, Moon met with the North's ceremonial head of state, Kim Yong-nam.
Comment: Just goes to show: every nation has its suicidal lunatic fringe.










Comment: See also: Egyptian Air Force bombs 40 ISIS-affiliated terrorists in Northern Sinai