
ahh, kj is now the esteemed psychologist. thank you dr
That was my second professional choice after what I decided to do, so thank you. Maybe I'll actually become one after the market implodes under HRC.NorCalAtlFan wrote:not sure citing kj is your best defense you damn hick!
ahh, kj is now the esteemed psychologist. thank you dr
Hicks get the chicks, dude!NorCalAtlFan wrote:not sure citing kj is your best defense you damn hick!![]()
To borrow a line from Ronald Reagan's '84 debate..... there you go again. Posting FACTS.Edwards Kings wrote:Please do not characterize me as some sort of misanthropic redneck. But typical of a Democrat, when making a stupid allegory about why Republicans and other people are against Secretary Clinton because she is woman, and getting FACTS to the contrary, you change to a different argument rather than even consider evidence that challenges your myopic views.Yah Mule wrote:Wayne, your party's response to the first black President was to nominate a white nationalist bent on instigating violence. If you're not emotionally able to accept that, it's not my problem.
This is Donald Trump's legacy. Feel real proud when you pull the lever for him.
Just again to prove how bent you are, I am not a Republican. I admit I have during most of my political life been a Republican, beginning with the Reagan revolution. However, I began shifting some many years ago to being less inclined to believe the straight party dogma and now fully consider myself an Independent. I fully recommend the change. Thinking for yourself is liberating, slick.
So. I am not a Republican. And can you read? If you check prior posts, you will find I have been equally disdainful of Donald Trump, who is only an American businessman of the worst order, not someone I want as my President.
Also, since I have shot down your shallow gender bias challenge, and your assertion that I somehow support Trump (whom I believe to be totally unprepared for office but not a "white nationalist bent on instigating violence"), let's address calling me a racist. It appears that anyone who calls out President Obama for his horrendous handling of national, economic and international affairs is labeled a "racist" so those who so blindly believed the garbage he has dribbled this last few years will not have to face the facts.
"The problem is, is that the way Bush has done it over the last eight years is to take out a credit card from the Bank of China in the name of our children, driving up our national debt from $5 trillion dollars for the first 42 presidents — number 43 added $4 trillion dollars by his lonesome, so that we now have over $9 trillion dollars of debt that we are going to have to pay back — $30,000 for every man, woman and child. That’s irresponsible. It’s unpatriotic." Senator Barack Obama, July 3, 2008. After eight years of now President Obama, the national debt is $19.7 trillion. So how does that bit of truth hit you, pal?
KJ has already exploded the disaster that is the Affordable Care Act.
The ATF “Fast and Furious” scheme.
IRS targets conservative groups.
Solyndra.
The "Red Line".
Signing a Disastrous Nuclear Deal with the Mullahs of Iran.
Released 5 Taliban Prisoners For Deserter Bergdahl.
Paying ransom to Iran for hostages- and using foreign currency in unmarked plane.
Benghazi.
U6 Labor Under utilization rate still at nearly 10%. Labor Force Participation Rate was 65.8% when President Obama took office and has not been that high since. Now 62.9%
And on and on and on. The second fours years has been hard, I admit, for President Obama because he can no longer blame President Bush (insert "Snowball" reference from "Animal Farm" here).
I am and despite what the network news organizations claim, most of Americans, are not racist. It constantly amazes me that 39% of whites voted for President Obama in 2012 but only 6% of blacks voted for Romney, but me, as a WASP am automatically the racist.
So, I am not a racist but I still think President Obama has been the worst Chief Executive we have known. When it all comes down to it, believe what you want, sport. Do not be confused by the facts.
Respectfully, I disagree with your assessment, unsupported though it is. But I have hopes that people can change their minds. Look at my Grandfather for example. Voted Republican till the day he died. He has voted Democrat ever since.gsjanoff wrote:Why is this even a discussion?
This election isn't about Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump. This election is about facts.
We have 1 political party that royally screwed up the economy and left us with 2008, and another political party that has partially rescued us from that period and has us on the path to a full rescue.
For those of us still living in 2008 and think that was great, this election is easy.
For those of us living in reality, the election is even easier.
As someone that has studied economics and the markets for my entire adult life and a hater of both parties, this is the single most outrageous statement in the entire thread. And that's saying something. Wow, talk about living with your head in the sand and talking out of your a**.gsjanoff wrote:Why is this even a discussion?
We have 1 political party that royally screwed up the economy and left us with 2008, and another political party that has partially rescued us from that period and has us on the path to a full rescue.
When this was gathering steam, the estimated number of uninsured was 45.7 million (number came from a 2007 Census Bureau estimates). How could we, as the most powerful nation on earth, allow all these poor people not to have access to insurance? Or did we?gsjanoff wrote:I also wont argue that Obamacare or the Affordable Care Act is a great piece of legislature as that is an argument that can't be won, but frankly it is a good starting point and provides insurance for many people that previously didn't have it.
I think this is a bit misleading. Size matters. Our GDP goes up (usually) every year and how the debt tracks to that GDP may be more illuminating. Debt to GDP in 1962 was 49%. 1972 34%. 1980 32% and 1988 49% (yes, Reagan spent with good result...another point to argue I guess). By 2000 (Clinton I) 54% (which is a bit misleading as 54% was actually part of a late term downward trend). 2008 it was up to 67%, a 6% spike over 2007. By 2010, 90%, 2012 99%, 2014 102%. I do not believe we have gotten value for the money spent nor do I believe we can continue. Where would be be without sequestration?gsjanoff wrote:The increase in the debt is the biggest argument against Obama and against the democrats in general, yet if you go back to 1980, which is the last 10 presidencies counting them in 4 year cycles, the least money spent by any president over those 10 cycles is Obama from 2013-2016, and the second least is Obama from 2009-2012. Those most, for those interested is Reagan from 1982-1985, and the second most is Bush from 2005-2008. The debt has increased in large part due to sheer size and interest being paid on that debt, and it will continue to do so until we get more money coming in than going out, which is nothing more than plain old common sense.
Reference?gsjanoff wrote:Most of the rich people (top 1%) have actually come out and stated they are willing to pay more taxes, yet the republicans inexplicably want to lower them. Why?
Reference?gsjanoff wrote:The vast majority of republicans will even tell you so.
This response proves the point that you are a sucker for media fluff. Picking a low point in a business cycle and attributing a cyclical recovery to the fact that someone new stepped into the oval office is literally the world's dumbest political argument pushed at any given moment by whichever party can claim it.gsjanoff wrote:You can talk about having your head in the sand all you want, but the simple fact of the matter is that it is inarguable that we are better off economically today than we were in 2008, Are we perfect? No. Not even remotely close. But we have come a long way back from a big hole created by previous leadership.
Obama didn't win in 2008 because he was going to help minorities or because he was black. He won for 1 reason only and that is that the country was screwed up under then president Cheney and his puppet George Bush. Frankly, the democrats could have run Mickey Mouse in 2008 and he would have won. It really was that bad.
Obama is not a great president, and will never go down in history as having been one, I don't believe, but to look at where we are now compared to 2008, it is better, and he did it with essentially zero help from congress, which by the way has an 11% approval rating while Obama has a 53% approval rating. Both of these figures from the latest polling.
I also wont argue that Obamacare or the Affordable Care Act is a great piece of legislature as that is an argument that can't be won, but frankly it is a good starting point and provides insurance for many people that previously didn't have it. There are serious flaws that need to be fixed within it, and I personally believe with the right leadership, those flaws will get corrected, but starting from scratch isn't a better solution as it undoes what the best part of the program is which was to insure those who had no insurance at all, and that has to be worse.
Human nature is to resist change, and from what I have learned (since I wasn't alive at the time), people hated Medicare when it first was introduced. I can't say whether it's a great program either, as I'm not old enough to take advantage of it, but it has to be better than nothing at all.
The increase in the debt is the biggest argument against Obama and against the democrats in general, yet if you go back to 1980, which is the last 10 presidencies counting them in 4 year cycles, the least money spent by any president over those 10 cycles is Obama from 2013-2016, and the second least is Obama from 2009-2012. Those most, for those interested is Reagan from 1982-1985, and the second most is Bush from 2005-2008. The debt has increased in large part due to sheer size and interest being paid on that debt, and it will continue to do so until we get more money coming in than going out, which is nothing more than plain old common sense.
There are really only 3 ways to accomplish that (listed in no particular order)
1.) raise taxes for some so that more money is coming in (assuming it is spent correctly)
2.) get even more people back to work than we have done since 2008, as more people working means more income tax being paid, and thus more income for the government.
3.) Fix the loopholes in the tax code which ultimately will mean more income
The problem with the latter is that the republicans, though they talk about this, don't really want to do this, as effectively this is viewed as a tax increase. Do you think Donald Trump really wants to start paying taxes? Most of the rich people (top 1%) have actually come out and stated they are willing to pay more taxes, yet the republicans inexplicably want to lower them. Why?
Both political parties have blame as each has gotten too far to the left or too far to the right. You need leadership that is much closer to the center to be successful, and at least Hillary had that reputation during her term in the senate. The vast majority of republicans will even tell you so.
Dem voters respond:COZ wrote:Your "Democratic" National Party. You can add "bird-dogging" or inciting to the Alinsky Radical Liberal playbook of isolate, ridicule, marginalize to those in opposition. Scary stuff. Feel real proud about the division created by your party when you pull the lever for the Demoncrats.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IuJGHu ... e=youtu.be
No, prob. You should appreciate this video on Obama & Clinton's hero too, then. And guess who Shillary wrote her senior thesisNorCalAtlFan wrote:that was a sweet video coz. thanks!
i knew i liked the clinton's, this validates it
i was already there.KJ Duke wrote:https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the ... ring-back/
... and this is the Wash Post, not Fox News. Liberals (and Mikey, whatever you are) please click on link below, not the one above.![]()
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-Lu-0mCNgba0/V ... n-sand.png
I know, I know, I'm just driving NorCal straight into Hilary's all-inclusive arms.