It was the spirit of good-natured sportsmanship in the looming shadow of global economic collapse that brought 40 out-of-work New Yorkers with nothing fucking better to do to the East Village’s Tompkins Square Park on a recent weekday afternoon to compete in the 2009 Unemployment Olympics. “Athletes” competed in four “sports” — “Pin the Blame on the Boss,” the “You’re Fired” sprint, some piñata-bashing (producing Pay Day candy bars) and the fax machine toss (nixed by tight-ass park rangers) “Office Phone Skee-Ball” — with the winners taking home prizes from area businesses and the losers . . . getting satisfaction of a job well done? “It’s not a bad time to be unemployed,” said the Olympics founder, an unemployed computer programmer from the Midwest. “There is no stigma associated with it now.” Unlike, say, the Special Olympics.