Liar
now with 17% more class
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2003
- Posts
- 43,715
Just a question: Was this meant as a reply to me? I didn't even read Pelosi's comment below the part with the numbers and the chart. And I'm not interrested in it.Y'know, I don't have a problem with people who have an agenda to push and identify it as such.
Thanks to the left for banning energy production, we now have an energy crisis. Was there one word about solving it with increased American production?
Health Care, of course, with government workers and union employees having the consumer pay for their lavish plans and now everyone wants it for free, sure, works for me.
I assume you meant, 'failing schools', it is not the real property of school buildings, not even the efficacy of teachers; it is the system of unaccountable public education that has failed.
Infrastructure is the same game, each State has a Department of Transportation and Roads. It is so politicized that repairs are only made as political payback. Put the infrastructure in the hands of private enterprise and you will have safe roads and bridges.
The United States of America took a big hit on September 11, 2001. During world war two all industry became war industries, there were no cars made, no new refrigerators or appliances for public consumption. The entire nation went to war.
We are at war and prosecuting that war at huge costs and you think that does not affect the economy? Katrina took a major toll in business and taxes as off shore oil wells and onshore refineries suffered damage and closed or cut back production.
The severity of this recession is rooted in the mortgages backed by Democrats in Fannie and Freddie, which led to the bank failures and investment firms failures.
None of those issues are being addressed by the new administration.
Go figure.
Amicus...
I just wanted to point out that this current trend is not just an exceptionally deep recession - it's an entirely different beast, not part of the normal business cycle. A business cycle of altering contractions and recessions has a pretty repetitive pattern, although the magnitude of each can vary. This one broke that pattern in the worst of ways. It's a vortex of suck. And therefore it needs something other than business as usual to pull oneself out of.
If what it needs is a one-year halt of any and all taxation, or a massive government spending bonanza, I don't know, since I'm not an economist.
But it's fairly evident that what happens with the economy is different, it is dramatic, it is bad, and it needs urgent and large scale response from those who have the capacity to respond.