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  1. Like
    got a reaction from thongd4me in Is it everything you thought it'd be?   
    It sucks.
  2. Like
    reacted to Hilarious Clinton in If this keeps up, no one's going to trust any scientists   
    All GW threads should be moved to the 'religious' forum.
  3. Like
    got a reaction from Amby in Is it everything you thought it'd be?   
    It sucks.
  4. Like
    reacted to Danno in Comparing the cleanliness of the post-Beck rally to the Barackalyptic Inauguration Weekend   
    DING DING DING
    and we have a winner.
    The first lefty to see a race angle!
    Give that VJer a cigar!
  5. Like
    got a reaction from mawilson in Is it everything you thought it'd be?   
    It sucks.
  6. Like
    got a reaction from JeanneVictoria in Comparing the cleanliness of the post-Beck rally to the Barackalyptic Inauguration Weekend   
    And when the 1-termer leaves office +60 million Americans will celebrate.
  7. Like
    got a reaction from TBoneTX in Comparing the cleanliness of the post-Beck rally to the Barackalyptic Inauguration Weekend   
    And when the 1-termer leaves office +60 million Americans will celebrate.
  8. Like
    reacted to HappyKnappy in Anyone currently own an iPhone 4?   
    Great phone, have almost 2 months with it, and it rocks.
  9. Like
    reacted to alienlovechild in The Most Fiscally Irresponsible Government in U.S. History   
    There is an instinctive conclusion among the American public that President Obama's stimulus package has failed to create a sustained recovery. Unemployment has increased, not declined; consumers have retrenched; housing starts have crashed along with mortgage applications; and there is a fear that a double-dip recession may very well be in the pipeline. The public perception, reflected in Pew Research/National Journal polls, is that the measures to combat the Great Recession have mostly helped large banks and financial institutions, and that's a view common to Republicans (75 percent) and Democrats (73 percent). Only one third of either political leaning thinks government policies have done a great deal or a fair amount for the poor.
    There is another instinctive conclusion among the American people. It is that the national deficit, and the debts we have accumulated, are of critical political importance. On the national debt, the money the government has spent without the tax revenues to pay for it has produced mind-numbing numbers so large as to be disconnected from reality. Zeros from here to infinity. The sums are hard to describe; it is hard to describe an elephant, but you know one when you see one. The public knows that, shuffle the numbers as you may, the level of debt is unsustainable.
    In a usnews.com post on July 26, Jodie Allen of the Pew Research Center reported that in recent weeks more academic and market economists have been urging the government to defer budget cuts and tax increases and instead provide additional stimulus to a still-fragile economy, some by continuing the Bush tax cuts. But among the public there has been a suggestive shift of opinion the other way, reflecting worries about debt. "Deficit and government spending" has jumped from 10th or 11th place as a priority for the federal government to one that is second only to job creation and economic growth. The drift of opinion is manifest in other recent polls. For instance, a CBS poll conducted July 9-12 assessed the most important problem facing the country as the economy and jobs (38 percent), with concern about the budget deficit and national debt way down at 5 percent. Yet CNN (July 16-21) has 47 percent preoccupied first with the economy, and 13 percent with the federal deficit. In a recent Time magazine poll, two thirds of the respondents say they oppose a second government stimulus program and more than half say the country would have been better off without the first one.
    The Fed has lowered rates dramatically to keep the economy ticking and maybe continue the painfully slow recovery, but at the receiving end there is no feeling of relief at all. People know that the stimulus is about to stop stimulating. They know that money is petering out. They know that states are preparing to cut $200 billion to balance their budgets. They realize that the Great Recession has wiped out huge amounts of wealth and that, unlike other recessions, this will not be followed by the kind of economic boom when people who had sat on their money during the lean years unleash pent-up demand for all sorts of goods and services.
    There is no sign of that happening this time around. Households and businesses have kept their hands in their pockets. And so while many think that the only way to revive the economy and to inject more money into it is through governmental spending, the general feeling is that we can't afford that right now. The government will be writing more IOUs on top of those we already can't afford. Why plan a second stimulus if the first stimulus couldn't prevent high unemployment?
    There are two warning signs of a budget crisis: rising debt and the loss of confidence that the government will deal with it. This administration is on the verge of fulfilling both conditions. In fairness, there is no majority coalition in Congress for deficit reduction today. It is also true that the growth of public debt has been driven by a dramatic diminution of tax receipts due to the recession, the extra spending to avoid sinking into a self-perpetuating depression, and all those billions we invested to save the financial sectors from their sins. Voters see the politicians most vociferous about reining in the federal budget as those who are out of power and want to use it against the majority party. Too many politicians claim they are all for balanced budgets—but only by reducing the other party's priorities. Republicans want to reduce social spending. Democrats want to reduce military spending. It is Washington as usual.
    Amid the clamor and counterpromises, the historic record is worth keeping in mind. We paid for World War II through growth. The national debt, as a percentage of gross domestic product, fell sharply through the postwar presidencies of Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Johnson (despite the Vietnam War) and continued edging down through most of Nixon's, rising a little with Ford's. We marked time in the stagflation of the Carter years, and then the debt percentage increased dramatically during the Reagan-Bush presidencies. It shot up again to the present dangerous levels under George W. Bush and Obama. The only good years were Clinton's.
    Then there are the retirees. Their numbers and their health costs will keep on rising. There were 35 million Americans over 65 in 2000 and the number of retirees is expected to double by 2030. The impending retirement of millions of baby boomers, with their claims on federal retirement programs, comes at a time when both parties seem to be willing to worsen tomorrow's problems to win more of today's votes. The result is that the federal budget is drifting into a future of huge deficits or unprecedented tax increases, or both.
    Federal spending is moving toward a higher plateau—from roughly 18 percent of the GDP to almost 25 percent by 2030. We don't know how we are going to pay for this. We don't know how the economy would fare with much higher taxes. We have seen the clouds gathering for years but haven't invested in an umbrella by adjusting federal retirement programs or taking other steps to reduce entitlements. One response would have been to begin gradually phasing in eligibility ages and tying benefits more to income. No doubt we have to think about raising the eligibility age for Social Security and Medicare, perhaps by one month for each two-month increase in average life expectancy. We will have to think of ways to reduce the cost-of-living increases on Social Security benefits for wealthy seniors by slowly increasing their Medicare premiums and leaving everybody else's untouched. We may have to allow the Bush tax cuts to expire, certainly for households earning more than $250,000 (and more for the super-rich) given the concentration of wealth in the top 1 percent of the population. It is entirely appropriate that they begin to make a greater contribution to our longer-term fiscal health.
    The United States simply seems to lack a system that can fund the government that the people say they want. We are good at crises, but we do not seem to be good at tackling chronic problems. If we wait until a crisis happens, it will be too late. It is simply not possible to close the gap entirely with the tax increases on the rich that Democratic liberals so desperately believe in. Nor can we close the gap with spending cuts, as the Republicans would like. The liberals will have to concede that benefits and spending ought to be reduced. Conservatives will have to concede the need for higher taxes.
    http://politics.usnews.com/opinion/mzuckerman/articles/2010/08/26/the-most-fiscally-irresponsible-government-in-us-history.html?PageNr=1
  10. Like
    reacted to Pooky in Former McCain Adviser Says Boehner Wrong On Stimulus, Geithner, And Summers   
    Did you know that 82% of all statistics are made up on the spot by bored statisticians playing a practical joke?
  11. Like
    reacted to mawilson in Former McCain Adviser Says Boehner Wrong On Stimulus, Geithner, And Summers   
    But it's better than a 62% unemployment rate which we would have without Obama's stimulus.
    Yes, I pulled the number out of my аss, just like Obama did with his "created or saved" routine.
  12. Like
    reacted to Pooky in Former McCain Adviser Says Boehner Wrong On Stimulus, Geithner, And Summers   
    What we have, if the politicians, economists and statisticians were being honest, is a 16.5% unemployment rate.
  13. Like
    reacted to mawilson in The Profoundly Screwed-Up Beliefs That Compose Mitt Romney's Economic Ideology   
    Assuming they had a load to take off to begin with. If the store is empty 16 hours a day,
    they wouldn't be hiring more people to do nothing.
    For the record, I am a small business owner and will be starting a new business within 2-3 months.
  14. Like
    reacted to Sofiyya in Construction Workers Vow Not to Build NYC Mosque   
    I could commit acts of violence in your name, that wouldn't. make you culpable nor fanatical. If people use a faith to cover their bad acts, that doesn't grant them ownership, it doesn't change the faith or the way other adherents practice. It also doesn't redefine the faith. Islam is what it is, and remains what it is, No matter what some Muslims do.
  15. Like
    reacted to I AM NOT THAT GUY in It's Official: Welcome to the Obama Depression   
    Economy Caught in Depression, Not Recession: Rosenberg
    Positive gross domestic product readings and other mildly hopeful signs are masking an ugly truth: The US economy is in a 1930s-style Depression, Gluskin Sheff economist David Rosenberg said Tuesday.
    http://www.cnbc.com/id/38831550
  16. Like
    reacted to Hilarious Clinton in Gamer Sues Gaming Publisher For Being Addicated To MMO   
    Hey ladies, he's single!!
  17. Like
    got a reaction from Pinocchio Liberal in Does Barack Obama want to be re-elected in 2012?   
    According to Steven: "as we approach the November elections, the Republicans in Congress are actually faring worse than Obama or the congressional Democrats."

  18. Like
    reacted to Gary and Alla in What do you believe about Muslims and Islam?   
    I never give Islam or any other religion a thought.
  19. Like
    got a reaction from ^_^ in Captain Ewok - an idea to help with moderation   
    The site investorshub.com is so large that they actually have a jailhouse thread for suspended members.
    I think it's pretty funny. Even though they are suspended, they are free to complain and nag about their suspension in the jail thread:
    http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=38
  20. Like
    got a reaction from I AM NOT THAT GUY in Captain Ewok - an idea to help with moderation   
    The site investorshub.com is so large that they actually have a jailhouse thread for suspended members.
    I think it's pretty funny. Even though they are suspended, they are free to complain and nag about their suspension in the jail thread:
    http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=38
  21. Like
    got a reaction from LaL in Captain Ewok - an idea to help with moderation   
    The site investorshub.com is so large that they actually have a jailhouse thread for suspended members.
    I think it's pretty funny. Even though they are suspended, they are free to complain and nag about their suspension in the jail thread:
    http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=38
  22. Like
    reacted to BobandXiaomei in Death of the 'McMansion': Era of Huge Homes Is Over   
    I got mine, repo, 4600sqft.
  23. Like
    got a reaction from ^_^ in Is it everything you thought it'd be?   
    It sucks.
  24. Like
    got a reaction from Heracles in Best Countries in the World   
    It's all lies and propaganda. America is number 1 in everything.
  25. Like
    got a reaction from JeanneVictoria in Best Countries in the World   
    It's all lies and propaganda. America is number 1 in everything.
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