http://news.yahoo.com/this-is-how-barac ... 16799.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;If history looks only at the broad trends during Obama’s presidency, then, barring a novel economic calamity, the economic recovery is likely to secure Obama’s legacy. But it has taken six years for the economy to start recovering. That’s a long time.
And as the 2016 Republican primary heats up, the likely candidates are beginning to make the case that Obama’s presidency should be remembered for the slowness of the recovery more than the recovery itself.
“It’s true enough that we’ve seen some recent and welcome good news on the economy. But it’s very little, and it’s come very late,” former Florida governor Jeb Bush said at the Detroit Economic Club on Wednesday. “Six years after the recession ended, median incomes are down, households are, on average, poorer, and millions of people have given up looking for a job altogether.”
“The recovery has been everywhere but in the family paychecks. The American Dream has become a mirage for far too many,” Bush said.
Doug Stafford, a senior adviser to Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said the recovery “hasn’t worked for most Americans.”
“And the debt incurred to paper over bad policies will last through their lifetimes if we don't change direction,” Stafford told Yahoo News.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is the leading voice on the left whose critique of the Obama presidency is very similar to that of the Republicans.
The “widely cited statistics” on economic growth, unemployment, inflation and the stock market are “an important snapshot of the health of the overall economy,” Warren said in a speech to the AFL-CIO in January.
“But the overall picture doesn’t tell much about what’s happening at the ground level to tens of millions of Americans. Despite these cheery numbers, America’s middle class is in deep trouble,” Warren said.
Republicans are now moving quickly to try to align their message and their policies to address wage stagnation, underemployment and a languishing labor force participation rate. Warren and the progressive wing are already there.
The Recovery...
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kalm
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The Recovery...
And the race to secure Obama's legacy and middle class voters in 2016. I agree that in the long run, history will white wash the administration's record, much the same as it did Reagan's.
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Ivytalk
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Re: The Recovery...
The 2016 election is light years away, in political terms. Let's see what the economy looks like in a year, when primaries and caucuses start.
“I’m tired and done.” — 89Hen 3/27/22.
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CAA Flagship
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Re: The Recovery...
kalm wrote:And the race to secure Obama's legacy and middle class voters in 2016. I agree that in the long run, history will white wash the administration's record, much the same as it did Reagan's.![]()
http://news.yahoo.com/this-is-how-barac ... 16799.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;If history looks only at the broad trends during Obama’s presidency, then, barring a novel economic calamity, the economic recovery is likely to secure Obama’s legacy. But it has taken six years for the economy to start recovering. That’s a long time.
And as the 2016 Republican primary heats up, the likely candidates are beginning to make the case that Obama’s presidency should be remembered for the slowness of the recovery more than the recovery itself.
“It’s true enough that we’ve seen some recent and welcome good news on the economy. But it’s very little, and it’s come very late,” former Florida governor Jeb Bush said at the Detroit Economic Club on Wednesday. “Six years after the recession ended, median incomes are down, households are, on average, poorer, and millions of people have given up looking for a job altogether.”
“The recovery has been everywhere but in the family paychecks. The American Dream has become a mirage for far too many,” Bush said.
Doug Stafford, a senior adviser to Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said the recovery “hasn’t worked for most Americans.”
“And the debt incurred to paper over bad policies will last through their lifetimes if we don't change direction,” Stafford told Yahoo News.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is the leading voice on the left whose critique of the Obama presidency is very similar to that of the Republicans.
The “widely cited statistics” on economic growth, unemployment, inflation and the stock market are “an important snapshot of the health of the overall economy,” Warren said in a speech to the AFL-CIO in January.
“But the overall picture doesn’t tell much about what’s happening at the ground level to tens of millions of Americans. Despite these cheery numbers, America’s middle class is in deep trouble,” Warren said.
Republicans are now moving quickly to try to align their message and their policies to address wage stagnation, underemployment and a languishing labor force participation rate. Warren and the progressive wing are already there.
- Skjellyfetti
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Re: The Recovery...
Uhm. It didn't just start recovering...CAA Flagship wrote:But it has taken six years for the economy to start recovering. That’s a long time.
It's been recovering for 5 years.

"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
Re: The Recovery...
Appears to have been declining Obama's tenure...Skjellyfetti wrote:Uhm. It didn't just start recovering...CAA Flagship wrote:
![]()
It's been recovering for 5 years.
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Re: The Recovery...
It's a peripheral matter but I don't think Democrats have ever typically gotten the majority of the "middle class" vote in recent history if "middle class" is reasonably defined in terms of income. What has happened with Democratic Presidential candidates including Obama in terms of "class" is that they have gotten an overwhelming majority of votes among those in the "lower" class and that has sometimes been enough to make them overcome losing by a modest majority among the "middle class" and a solid majority among the "upper class."And the race to secure Obama's legacy and middle class voters in 2016.
Same will probably happen in 2016. The Republican candidate will probably win among the "middle class" if "middle class" is reasonably defined by a relatively narrow margin and will win among the "upper class" by a substantial margin. But the Democrat will win by an OVERWHELMING margin among the lower class. Relatively minor variations in the extent to which each side wins among each class will determine the outcome.
Well, I believe that I must tell the truth
And say things as they really are
But if I told the truth and nothing but the truth
Could I ever be a star?
Deep Purple: No One Came

And say things as they really are
But if I told the truth and nothing but the truth
Could I ever be a star?
Deep Purple: No One Came

Re: The Recovery...
Since when is a gradual decrease a "recovery?"Skjellyfetti wrote:Uhm. It didn't just start recovering...CAA Flagship wrote:
![]()
It's been recovering for 5 years.
Turns out I might be a little gay. 89Hen 11/7/17
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kalm
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Re: The Recovery...
Paraphrasing Teddy Roosevelt, those willing to work should be rewarded with wages that enable a mortgage, education for their kids, healthcare, and to retire with dignity.JohnStOnge wrote:It's a peripheral matter but I don't think Democrats have ever typically gotten the majority of the "middle class" vote in recent history if "middle class" is reasonably defined in terms of income. What has happened with Democratic Presidential candidates including Obama in terms of "class" is that they have gotten an overwhelming majority of votes among those in the "lower" class and that has sometimes been enough to make them overcome losing by a modest majority among the "middle class" and a solid majority among the "upper class."And the race to secure Obama's legacy and middle class voters in 2016.
Same will probably happen in 2016. The Republican candidate will probably win among the "middle class" if "middle class" is reasonably defined by a relatively narrow margin and will win among the "upper class" by a substantial margin. But the Democrat will win by an OVERWHELMING margin among the lower class. Relatively minor variations in the extent to which each side wins among each class will determine the outcome.
That would be the middle class.
- CID1990
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Re: The Recovery...
Yep that was a graphic failclenz wrote:Appears to have been declining Obama's tenure...Skjellyfetti wrote:
Uhm. It didn't just start recovering...![]()
It's been recovering for 5 years.
I think the 2008 uptick was market optimism that the newest Nobel Laureate really was THUH ONE
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houndawg
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Re: The Recovery...
Wow. What an astonishing revelation.JohnStOnge wrote:It's a peripheral matter but I don't think Democrats have ever typically gotten the majority of the "middle class" vote in recent history if "middle class" is reasonably defined in terms of income. What has happened with Democratic Presidential candidates including Obama in terms of "class" is that they have gotten an overwhelming majority of votes among those in the "lower" class and that has sometimes been enough to make them overcome losing by a modest majority among the "middle class" and a solid majority among the "upper class."And the race to secure Obama's legacy and middle class voters in 2016.
Same will probably happen in 2016. The Republican candidate will probably win among the "middle class" if "middle class" is reasonably defined by a relatively narrow margin and will win among the "upper class" by a substantial margin. But the Democrat will win by an OVERWHELMING margin among the lower class. Relatively minor variations in the extent to which each side wins among each class will determine the outcome.
Your buddies over at Stormfront clue you in?
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
- Skjellyfetti
- Anal

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Re: The Recovery...
Huh? The uptick in unemployment in 2008 was due to optimism that Obama was the One?CID1990 wrote:Yep that was a graphic failclenz wrote: Appears to have been declining Obama's tenure...
I think the 2008 uptick was market optimism that the newest Nobel Laureate really was THUH ONE
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
Re: The Recovery...
Who said anything about unemployment?Skjellyfetti wrote:Huh? The uptick in unemployment in 2008 was due to optimism that Obama was the One?CID1990 wrote:
Yep that was a graphic fail
I think the 2008 uptick was market optimism that the newest Nobel Laureate really was THUH ONE
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kalm
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Re: The Recovery...
I'm guessing there's some confusion regarding the graph Skelly posted.Baldy wrote:Who said anything about unemployment?Skjellyfetti wrote:
Huh? The uptick in unemployment in 2008 was due to optimism that Obama was the One?
Re: The Recovery...
There's no words describing what it is.kalm wrote:I'm guessing there's some confusion regarding the graph Skelly posted.Baldy wrote: Who said anything about unemployment?
He mentioned the economy under Obama and then posted a graph with a downward trend
Re: The Recovery...
There's no words describing what it is.kalm wrote:I'm guessing there's some confusion regarding the graph Skelly posted.Baldy wrote: Who said anything about unemployment?
He mentioned the economy under Obama and then posted a graph with a downward trend
- GannonFan
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Re: The Recovery...
Ah, the beauty, and importance, of lables on a graph.clenz wrote:There's no words describing what it is.kalm wrote:
I'm guessing there's some confusion regarding the graph Skelly posted.
He mentioned the economy under Obama and then posted a graph with a downward trend
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- DSUrocks07
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Re: The Recovery...
Lables(sic) and Tables and Graphs, oh my!GannonFan wrote:Ah, the beauty, and importance, of lables on a graph.clenz wrote: There's no words describing what it is.
He mentioned the economy under Obama and then posted a graph with a downward trend
- AZGrizFan
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Re: The Recovery...
Which is why it's in the Donks' best interest to create (and maintain) as large of a "lower class" as possible.JohnStOnge wrote:It's a peripheral matter but I don't think Democrats have ever typically gotten the majority of the "middle class" vote in recent history if "middle class" is reasonably defined in terms of income. What has happened with Democratic Presidential candidates including Obama in terms of "class" is that they have gotten an overwhelming majority of votes among those in the "lower" class and that has sometimes been enough to make them overcome losing by a modest majority among the "middle class" and a solid majority among the "upper class."And the race to secure Obama's legacy and middle class voters in 2016.
Same will probably happen in 2016. The Republican candidate will probably win among the "middle class" if "middle class" is reasonably defined by a relatively narrow margin and will win among the "upper class" by a substantial margin. But the Democrat will win by an OVERWHELMING margin among the lower class. Relatively minor variations in the extent to which each side wins among each class will determine the outcome.
"Ah fuck. You are right." KYJelly, 11/6/12
"The future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam." Barack Obama, 9/25/12

"The future must not belong to those who slander the prophet of Islam." Barack Obama, 9/25/12

- GannonFan
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Re: The Recovery...
Agreed. Spell check, where are you???DSUrocks07 wrote:Lables(sic) and Tables and Graphs, oh my!GannonFan wrote:
Ah, the beauty, and importance, of lables on a graph.
Proud Member of the Blue Hen Nation
- Skjellyfetti
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Re: The Recovery...
When have we had a recovery that WASN'T a gradual decrease in unemployemnt?Ibanez wrote: Since when is a gradual decrease a "recovery?"
It's usually a sharp increase in unemployment followed by a gradual decrease.
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
Re: The Recovery...
Is that what that graph is showing? You post a graph with no labels. I assumed it was the economy tanking. Or it could've been the decrease in people you still says, " Where's the Beef?"Skjellyfetti wrote:When have we had a recovery that WASN'T a gradual decrease in unemployemnt?Ibanez wrote: Since when is a gradual decrease a "recovery?"
It's usually a sharp increase in unemployment followed by a gradual decrease.
Turns out I might be a little gay. 89Hen 11/7/17
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houndawg
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Re: The Recovery...
..but if it weren't I wouldn't be babbling about it.JohnStOnge wrote:It's a peripheral matter but I don't think Democrats have ever typically gotten the majority of the "middle class" vote in recent history if "middle class" is reasonably defined in terms of income. What has happened with Democratic Presidential candidates including Obama in terms of "class" is that they have gotten an overwhelming majority of votes among those in the "lower" class and that has sometimes been enough to make them overcome losing by a modest majority among the "middle class" and a solid majority among the "upper class."And the race to secure Obama's legacy and middle class voters in 2016.
Same will probably happen in 2016. The Republican candidate will probably win among the "middle class" if "middle class" is reasonably defined by a relatively narrow margin and will win among the "upper class" by a substantial margin. But the Democrat will win by an OVERWHELMING margin among the lower class. Relatively minor variations in the extent to which each side wins among each class will determine the outcome.
You matter. Unless you multiply yourself by c squared. Then you energy.
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
"I really love America. I just don't know how to get there anymore."John Prine
- Skjellyfetti
- Anal

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Re: The Recovery...
the fact that you think it's a graph that shows the economy tanking over the last 5 or 6 years says everything.Ibanez wrote:Is that what that graph is showing? You post a graph with no labels. I assumed it was the economy tanking. Or it could've been the decrease in people you still says, " Where's the Beef?"Skjellyfetti wrote:
When have we had a recovery that WASN'T a gradual decrease in unemployemnt?
It's usually a sharp increase in unemployment followed by a gradual decrease.
not labeling graphs is very enlightening to see how people interpret it.
"The unmasking thing was all created by Devin Nunes"
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
- Richard Burr, (R-NC)
Re: The Recovery...
You're a fucking moron if you post a graph with no labels and expect people to understand it.Skjellyfetti wrote:the fact that you think it's a graph that shows the economy tanking over the last 5 or 6 years says everything.Ibanez wrote:
Is that what that graph is showing? You post a graph with no labels. I assumed it was the economy tanking. Or it could've been the decrease in people you still says, " Where's the Beef?"![]()
not labeling graphs is very enlightening to see how people interpret it.
Turns out I might be a little gay. 89Hen 11/7/17





