Yesterday:
-march and April's job #s were revised downward by the Labor Dept
-Unemployment ticked up from 8.1% to 8.2%
-Only 69k new jobs created, fewest in a yr.
-Dow dropped 275, and is now negative for the year.
Way to go Obama...


Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.BDKJMU wrote:Thur: 1st qtr growth was revised downward by Commerce Dept from an anemic 2.2% to an even more anemic 1.9% annual...
Yesterday:
-march and April's job #s were revised downward by the Labor Dept
-Unemployment ticked up from 8.1% to 8.2%
-Only 69k new jobs created, fewest in a yr.
-Dow dropped 275, and is now negative for the year.
Way to go Obama...

BlueHen86 wrote:Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.BDKJMU wrote:Thur: 1st qtr growth was revised downward by Commerce Dept from an anemic 2.2% to an even more anemic 1.9% annual...
Yesterday:
-march and April's job #s were revised downward by the Labor Dept
-Unemployment ticked up from 8.1% to 8.2%
-Only 69k new jobs created, fewest in a yr.
-Dow dropped 275, and is now negative for the year.
Way to go Obama...
If only the GOP was calling the shots, they have the answers.![]()
Let's face it, things suck right now and both parties need to shoulder the blame. The idea that it's the "other guys" fault only enables each party to keep blaming the other guy. Obama might lose in November, but I have no faith that Romney can fix things.

Both houses deserve a pox. They don't even try to work together. Screw 'em. Vote them all out!Ivytalk wrote:BlueHen86 wrote:
Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.
If only the GOP was calling the shots, they have the answers.![]()
Let's face it, things suck right now and both parties need to shoulder the blame. The idea that it's the "other guys" fault only enables each party to keep blaming the other guy. Obama might lose in November, but I have no faith that Romney can fix things.
Crap, 86, you're becoming downright boring. Mister pox-on-both-your-houses moderate. A combination of GannonFan
and UNI88 with an oatmeal chaser.

I may be wrong, but believe if Romney is elected, the economy will turn around quickly. My basis for saying this is that many businesses seem to be worried about investing money, especially since Obama has come out with such a staunch "hate business" attitude.BlueHen86 wrote:Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.BDKJMU wrote:Thur: 1st qtr growth was revised downward by Commerce Dept from an anemic 2.2% to an even more anemic 1.9% annual...
Yesterday:
-march and April's job #s were revised downward by the Labor Dept
-Unemployment ticked up from 8.1% to 8.2%
-Only 69k new jobs created, fewest in a yr.
-Dow dropped 275, and is now negative for the year.
Way to go Obama...
If only the GOP was calling the shots, they have the answers.![]()
Let's face it, things suck right now and both parties need to shoulder the blame. The idea that it's the "other guys" fault only enables each party to keep blaming the other guy. Obama might lose in November, but I have no faith that Romney can fix things.

BlueHen86 wrote:Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.BDKJMU wrote:Thur: 1st qtr growth was revised downward by Commerce Dept from an anemic 2.2% to an even more anemic 1.9% annual...
Yesterday:
-march and April's job #s were revised downward by the Labor Dept
-Unemployment ticked up from 8.1% to 8.2%
-Only 69k new jobs created, fewest in a yr.
-Dow dropped 275, and is now negative for the year.
Way to go Obama...
If only the GOP was calling the shots, they have the answers.![]()
Let's face it, things suck right now and both parties need to shoulder the blame. The idea that it's the "other guys" fault only enables each party to keep blaming the other guy. Obama might lose in November, but I have no faith that Romney can fix things.

No, it isn't that he is capable and won't.BlueHen86 wrote:Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.BDKJMU wrote:Thur: 1st qtr growth was revised downward by Commerce Dept from an anemic 2.2% to an even more anemic 1.9% annual...
Yesterday:
-march and April's job #s were revised downward by the Labor Dept
-Unemployment ticked up from 8.1% to 8.2%
-Only 69k new jobs created, fewest in a yr.
-Dow dropped 275, and is now negative for the year.
Way to go Obama...

I hope that you are right. But I doubt it. I think fixing the economy will require more than just a change of President.SeattleGriz wrote:I may be wrong, but believe if Romney is elected, the economy will turn around quickly. My basis for saying this is that many businesses seem to be worried about investing money, especially since Obama has come out with such a staunch "hate business" attitude.BlueHen86 wrote:
Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.
If only the GOP was calling the shots, they have the answers.![]()
Let's face it, things suck right now and both parties need to shoulder the blame. The idea that it's the "other guys" fault only enables each party to keep blaming the other guy. Obama might lose in November, but I have no faith that Romney can fix things.
Businesses don't know what will happen, so they are holding onto their money.
So yes, it is Obama, The Rookie's, fault.

Dead wrong. Read mine and Blue Hen's posts, dork.CID1990 wrote:No, it isn't that he is capable and won't.BlueHen86 wrote:
Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.
It is that he is incapable and can't.
Hiring a guy with Obama's experience was along the lines of
hiring a bus driver to land a 747. His lack of experience was brought up before his election, but of course nobody wanted to hear that. Remember "Jesus was also a community organizer"?
It would be sweet to say "we told you so", but this is our country and should take more importance and its governance should carry more gravity than the petty divisiveness of the last several years.
Romney might not be the guy to guide the economy back onto the tracks, but his resume makes him eminently more qualified to take a shot at it than the guy currently on the job.
Also Sodomy

I didn't vote for Obama, and don't plan on voting for him this time, so saying "we told you so" would be preaching to the choir. You can blame Obama if you want, but I suspect that the measures taken to fix the economy won't happen becuase the two parties won't work together to make the tough decisions necessary. They are too busy trying to get reelected to make the hard choices. Both parties share the blame for the current situation.CID1990 wrote:No, it isn't that he is capable and won't.BlueHen86 wrote:
Yeah, because it's all Obama's fault. He has the power to fix it, but chooses not to.
It is that he is incapable and can't.
Hiring a guy with Obama's experience was along the lines of
hiring a bus driver to land a 747. His lack of experience was brought up before his election, but of course nobody wanted to hear that. Remember "Jesus was also a community organizer"?
It would be sweet to say "we told you so", but this is our country and should take more importance and its governance should carry more gravity than the petty divisiveness of the last several years.
Romney might not be the guy to guide the economy back onto the tracks, but his resume makes him eminently more qualified to take a shot at it than the guy currently on the job.
Also Sodomy

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/0 ... austerity/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Let’s look at the comparison between government purchases in the Reagan “Morning in America” recovery and the current recovery:
At this point in the Reagan recovery government spending had risen 11.6 percent; this time around it’s actually down by 2.6 percent. So if we had followed the Reagan track, spending would be almost 15 percent higher.
Since government spending on goods and services is about $3 trillion a year, spending on the Reagan track would have meant more than $340 billion more in direct government demand, or more than 2 percent of GDP. Include the multiplier effect, and we would have expected real GDP to be something like 3 percent higher — and given Okun’s Law, the unemployment rate to be 1.5 percentage points lower, or something like 7 percent.
How does this compare with the Reagan recovery at a corresponding stage?
So what my calculation suggests is that if it weren’t for austerity, American style — the result of the failure to provide sufficient aid to state and local governments — we might well have an unemployment rate right now that was lower than unemployment at the comparable stage of “Morning in America”.

Bulls**t. Spending is down 2.6% under Obama?kalm wrote:The problem is we haven't followed the Reagan plan:
http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/0 ... austerity/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Let’s look at the comparison between government purchases in the Reagan “Morning in America” recovery and the current recovery:
At this point in the Reagan recovery government spending had risen 11.6 percent; this time around it’s actually down by 2.6 percent. So if we had followed the Reagan track, spending would be almost 15 percent higher.
Since government spending on goods and services is about $3 trillion a year, spending on the Reagan track would have meant more than $340 billion more in direct government demand, or more than 2 percent of GDP. Include the multiplier effect, and we would have expected real GDP to be something like 3 percent higher — and given Okun’s Law, the unemployment rate to be 1.5 percentage points lower, or something like 7 percent.
How does this compare with the Reagan recovery at a corresponding stage?
So what my calculation suggests is that if it weren’t for austerity, American style — the result of the failure to provide sufficient aid to state and local governments — we might well have an unemployment rate right now that was lower than unemployment at the comparable stage of “Morning in America”.


Uh oh...touched a nerve.BDKJMU wrote:-2.6% my a**. This is what Krugman wrote in his blog: "...Since government spending on goods and services is about $3 trillion a year...." Try about 3.8 trillion. Krugman is an idiot.
Since FY 2008' when the recession started, to FY 2012, fed spending has increased from about 3 trillion to about 3.8 trillion. That's an increase of about 27%. in 4 years:


Goddammit, kalmie.kalm wrote:Uh oh...touched a nerve.BDKJMU wrote:-2.6% my a**. This is what Krugman wrote in his blog: "...Since government spending on goods and services is about $3 trillion a year...." Try about 3.8 trillion. Krugman is an idiot.
Since FY 2008' when the recession started, to FY 2012, fed spending has increased from about 3 trillion to about 3.8 trillion. That's an increase of about 27%. in 4 years:

When the Obama campaign asked in 2008 if the American people wanted to continue the failed Bush policies, that when he spoke of change, he just wanted to add his name and make it the failed Obama-Bush policies.BDKJMU wrote:-2.6% my a**. This is what Krugman wrote in his blog: "...Since government spending on goods and services is about $3 trillion a year...." Try about 3.8 trillion. Krugman is an idiot.
Since FY 2008' when the recession started, to FY 2012, fed spending has increased from about 3 trillion to about 3.8 trillion. That's an increase of about 27%. in 4 years:


Gil Dobie wrote:When the Obama campaign asked in 2008 if the American people wanted to continue the failed Bush policies, that when he spoke of change, he just wanted to add his name and make it the failed Obama-Bush policies.BDKJMU wrote:-2.6% my a**. This is what Krugman wrote in his blog: "...Since government spending on goods and services is about $3 trillion a year...." Try about 3.8 trillion. Krugman is an idiot.
Since FY 2008' when the recession started, to FY 2012, fed spending has increased from about 3 trillion to about 3.8 trillion. That's an increase of about 27%. in 4 years: