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Economy stalls again

FUZO

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[h=1]Dismal Jobs Report as Minorities, Private Sector Take Hits[/h]African Americans were particularly hard hit by the difficult economy with 184,000 more jobless black Americans in June and an overall unemployment rate at a staggering 14.4 percent.



Barry will not get re-elected


 
[h=1]Dismal Jobs Report as Minorities, Private Sector Take Hits[/h]African Americans were particularly hard hit by the difficult economy with 184,000 more jobless black Americans in June and an overall unemployment rate at a staggering 14.4 percent.



Barry will not get re-elected


I get the joke.

Most brothas don't vote (I think?) and in general they focus little on education.

Barry may or may not get re-elected.

I think he stinks, as well as his opponents.

In the economic times the lazy, dense, and unmotivated will have higher numbers of unemployment. The labor market is much less forgiving now, compared to when the U3 unemployment rate was 4.5%​
 
I wonder what the stats are for presidents who have high enemployment rates and their chance of re-election...can't be good.

Just remember, when in doubt, blame bush.
 
I would vote for mickey mouse before I would vote for hussein, but I don't think he can lose, just my opinion.
 
Just remember, when in doubt, blame bush.

You forgot the other token phrase: "It could have been much worse"

I saw an analyst throw this out today with no reference to how it will affect Obama's chances in November. It's like they just mechanically spout it out when bad economic news comes out(brainwashing). It reminds of idioms like 'Lord help us'.

'Mary done runned off with Gilbert. Lord help us.'

'Employment numbers stalled last month but it could have been much worse.'
 
no one to vote for period.

per South Park "a douche bag and a turd sandwich".....the end result of what happens when democracy is purchased by capital
 
If Obama wins we will all be in a world of shit
 
You forgot the other token phrase: "It could have been much worse"

I saw an analyst throw this out today with no reference to how it will affect Obama's chances in November. It's like they just mechanically spout it out when bad economic news comes out(brainwashing). It reminds of idioms like 'Lord help us'.

'Mary done runned off with Gilbert. Lord help us.'

'Employment numbers stalled last month but it could have been much worse.'


:lol:
 
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IronMag Labs Prohormones
If Obama wins we will all be in a world of shit

Obama or Romney we'll be in a world of shit.

Both are fuckheads.
 
I wonder what the stats are for presidents who have high enemployment rates and their chance of re-election...can't be good.

Just remember, when in doubt, blame bush.

or you can look at figures 1 & 2 and draw a logical conclusion as to the long term effects of the housing market collapse and the associated loss of wealth and reduced level of consumption. the negative effects of the last recession will last decades...

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco: Gauging the Impact of the Great Recession
FRBSF Economic Letter: Gauging the Impact of the Great Recession (2011-21, 7/11/2011)
 
Did the economy stall? By definition, it stalled (or dived in 2007). Shiller calls it a "lost decade." I agree with him. If there is any good news, we are half way through (although I am skeptical of that and think it will be much longer).

(Reuters) - The worst U.S. housing crisis since the Great Depression has been declared over. But is it?
July 18, 2012

What some of Wall Street's forecasts for a recovery may be underestimating are tectonic shifts in the U.S. economy that make the housing market a different place from a decade ago.

Record levels of student debt, 15 years of flat incomes and the fact that nearly half of homeowners are effectively stranded in their houses look likely to weigh on prices into the indefinite future.

Several housing experts have said the market is in danger of drifting for years. In a bleaker scenario, the fragile U.S. economic recovery could slip back into recession if Europe's crisis deepens or the political impasse in Washington triggers a new budget crisis, putting the housing market at risk again.

"We've gone through half of a lost decade since the crisis started in 2007," said Robert Shiller, co-founder of the Case-Shiller U.S. housing price index and an economics professor at Yale University.

The so-called Lost Decade in Japan occurred after the speculative bubble in the 1980s, when abnormally low interest rates fueled soaring property values. The ensuing crash has continued to afflict the Japanese economy ever since.

Entire: Analysis: In the U.S. housing market, recovery or Lost Decade? | Reuters
 
We could elect Jesus H. Christ and it wouldn't have any effect on the economy, and he's a jew...
 
It is nearing that beyond repair stage, too many are bought and sold and too much wealth has transfered to those in power and they continue to be protected by both sides.
 
It is nearing that beyond repair stage, too many are bought and sold and too much wealth has transfered to those in power and they continue to be protected by both sides.

inequality and low/stagnant wages are the problem right now. top down grants will only make the problem worst. debt has been fueling consumption for decades and the modest increase in the personal savings rate crippled the recovery when gov stimulus was contracted.
 
We could elect Jesus H. Christ and it wouldn't have any effect on the economy, and he's a jew...


Abe Lincolon's thoughts on your idea about Christ Jesus;:clapping:

[TABLE="width: 85%, align: center"]
[TR]
[TD]"We have forgotten God. We have forgotten the gracious hand which preserved us in peace and multiplied and enriched and strengthened us, and we have vainly imagined, in the deceitfulness of our hearts, that all these blessings were produced by some superior wisdom and virtue of our own. Intoxicated with unbroken success, we have become too self-sufficient to feel the necessity of redeeming and preserving grace, too proud to pray to the God that made us."
Abraham Lincoln's 1863 Thanksgiving Proclamation

[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]
 
Federal Regulations are stalling the economy??

They're federal regulators and they're putting new regulations on everything, from business products to the financial industry to items in your home.
Critics like Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, say America is so over-regulated now that it threatens to kill almost 11.5 million jobs in the private sector.
One example: vehicle manufacturers report regulations requiring new mileage and emissions standards will cost them almost $11 billion every year.
"And they're passing that cost down to their consumers, which will add up to about $1,000 more per car, if not more," said Audrey Jones, assistant director of broadcast services at the Heritage Foundation.
Jones' group, which advocates for a freer free market, said the annual cost of government regulations to businesses and consumers is staggering.
"Regulations cost us $1.75 trillion every year. So this is a huge detriment to the economy that's weak at the moment," she explained.
That is estimated to cost every American household around $15,000. And with all the new regulations coming out this year, the cost countrywide will be more like $2.8 trillion.
That adds up to American employees working 77 days a year -- two-and-a-half months -- just to pay the cost of regulation. And there's much more to come.
"We have 2,700 regulations in the pipes coming down," Jones told CBN News.
This year alone, 50,000 pages of new regulations have been added to the Federal Register.
Almost 5,000 of those pages are aimed at new regulations on banks and other financial institutions.
One frustrated banker said it takes 20 percent more employees to deal with all the paperwork to comply with regulations than it does to work on loans.
In fact, the financial industry will have to spend almost 318,000 hours of staffers' time to comply with just three new regulations in the Dodd-Frank Financial Reform bill.
And it seems nothing escapes the regulators touch. The Labor Department has even issued new regulations for the tiny industry of goat herding.
They've set rules for such things as goat herders sleeping quarters, lighting, bathing, and food storage.
"Did you know every goat herder has to have a cell phone? Did you see that? And three square meals a day," Jones said.
Jones explained some regulations just make life ridiculous.
"Miniature horses are now service animals. So restaurants and airplanes have to allow mini-horses on," she said.
And while most of the U.S. economy suffers, there's one booming sector -- the regulatory agencies. Their budgets have gone up 16 percent in the last three years.
There are so many regulators now, if they were all combined into one private company, they'd be the third largest in the U.S. -- as big as Ford, Boeing, Disney, and McDonald's combined.
From the Heritage Foundation, here is a look at just a few of the thousands of federal regulations that are strangling America in red tape:
-- The Dodd-Frank bill financial regulation will ultimately encompass some 243 new formal rule-makings by 11 different federal agencies.
-- Most every sector of finance will be hit by rules that will inhibit product innovation and availability of credit.
-- Most folks would reasonably think that a railroad engineer or conductor would be able to distinguish the front of a train from the back of it. To ensure against any possible confusion, the Federal Railroad Administration requires the letter "F" to be displayed on the sides of each locomotive to identify the front of the train. This regulation may be rescinded.
More BIG GOVERNMENT extending that looonng arm of theirs...
 
The thing that scares me is that Obabymama cannot be re-elected if he serves another term, and therefore he can do whatever he wants with no fear of reprocussion. If he is a plant or has an agenda, it will come out in his second term.
 
"Miniature horses are now service animals. So restaurants and airplanes have to allow mini-horses on," she said.

That's old news. I remember reading an article in the USA Today in the late 90's where a guy was picking up his miniature service horse and airlining home with it. The idea is they live 30 years vs a dog that only lives 10.
 
That's old news. I remember reading an article in the USA Today in the late 90's where a guy was picking up his miniature service horse and airlining home with it. The idea is they live 30 years vs a dog that only lives 10.

what an terrific way to spend tax dollars:)


The Labor Department has even issued new regulations for the tiny industry of goat herding.
They've set rules for such things as goat herders sleeping quarters, lighting, bathing, and food storage.
"Did you know every goat herder has to have a cell phone? Did you see that? And three square meals a day," Jones said.


I love that one^^^
 
Federal Regulations are stalling the economy??

They're federal regulators and they're putting new regulations on everything, from business products to the financial industry to items in your home.
Critics like Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison, R-Texas, say America is so over-regulated now that it threatens to kill almost 11.5 million jobs in the private sector.
One example: vehicle manufacturers report regulations requiring new mileage and emissions standards will cost them almost $11 billion every year.
"And they're passing that cost down to their consumers, which will add up to about $1,000 more per car, if not more," said Audrey Jones, assistant director of broadcast services at the Heritage Foundation.
Jones' group, which advocates for a freer free market, said the annual cost of government regulations to businesses and consumers is staggering.
"Regulations cost us $1.75 trillion every year. So this is a huge detriment to the economy that's weak at the moment," she explained.
That is estimated to cost every American household around $15,000. And with all the new regulations coming out this year, the cost countrywide will be more like $2.8 trillion.
That adds up to American employees working 77 days a year -- two-and-a-half months -- just to pay the cost of regulation. And there's much more to come.
"We have 2,700 regulations in the pipes coming down," Jones told CBN News.
This year alone, 50,000 pages of new regulations have been added to the Federal Register.
Almost 5,000 of those pages are aimed at new regulations on banks and other financial institutions.
One frustrated banker said it takes 20 percent more employees to deal with all the paperwork to comply with regulations than it does to work on loans.
In fact, the financial industry will have to spend almost 318,000 hours of staffers' time to comply with just three new regulations in the Dodd-Frank Financial Reform bill.
And it seems nothing escapes the regulators touch. The Labor Department has even issued new regulations for the tiny industry of goat herding.
They've set rules for such things as goat herders sleeping quarters, lighting, bathing, and food storage.
"Did you know every goat herder has to have a cell phone? Did you see that? And three square meals a day," Jones said.
Jones explained some regulations just make life ridiculous.
"Miniature horses are now service animals. So restaurants and airplanes have to allow mini-horses on," she said.
And while most of the U.S. economy suffers, there's one booming sector -- the regulatory agencies. Their budgets have gone up 16 percent in the last three years.
There are so many regulators now, if they were all combined into one private company, they'd be the third largest in the U.S. -- as big as Ford, Boeing, Disney, and McDonald's combined.
From the Heritage Foundation, here is a look at just a few of the thousands of federal regulations that are strangling America in red tape:
-- The Dodd-Frank bill financial regulation will ultimately encompass some 243 new formal rule-makings by 11 different federal agencies.
-- Most every sector of finance will be hit by rules that will inhibit product innovation and availability of credit.
-- Most folks would reasonably think that a railroad engineer or conductor would be able to distinguish the front of a train from the back of it. To ensure against any possible confusion, the Federal Railroad Administration requires the letter "F" to be displayed on the sides of each locomotive to identify the front of the train. This regulation may be rescinded.
More BIG GOVERNMENT extending that looonng arm of theirs...

and there's a reason why we have all these regulations. places like the Love Canal , Centralia Pennsylvania, Pacific Gas and Electric and the Cuyahoga River fire in Ohio are just a handful of examples.

and then there is stuff like pink slime in meats, asbestos, BPA's, etc..the regulations where put in place because they were needed. if you haven't noticed business owners and especially US large firms with limited liability only do what is required by law not what is good for the environment, society, etc.

if you think doing away with regulations will boos the economy I feel sorry for you. self-regulation has been tried time and time again and it always comes at the expense of the working class. look at the wonderful effects that self-regulation on wallstreet resulted in, the 2nd worst recession in US history...outstanding

and outside of the US the Frank-Dodd Act has been called the greatest piece of financial reform in history. the only people in the world that want to deregulate finance are those that want to tank the US economy as recessions cause permanent wealth transfers.

and by the way it was Nixon that established the EPA along with FEMA
 
and there's a reason why we have all these regulations. places like the Love Canal , Centralia Pennsylvania, Pacific Gas and Electric and the Cuyahoga River fire in Ohio are just a handful of examples.

and then there is stuff like pink slime in meats, asbestos, BPA's, etc..the regulations where put in place because they were needed. if you haven't noticed business owners and especially US large firms with limited liability only do what is required by law not what is good for the environment, society, etc.

if you think doing away with regulations will boos the economy I feel sorry for you. self-regulation has been tried time and time again and it always comes at the expense of the working class. look at the wonderful effects that self-regulation on wallstreet resulted in, the 2nd worst recession in US history...outstanding

and outside of the US the Frank-Dodd Act has been called the greatest piece of financial reform in history. the only people in the world that want to deregulate finance are those that want to tank the US economy as recessions cause permanent wealth transfers.

and by the way it was Nixon that established the EPA along with FEMA

Not all regulation is sensible; financial and reasonable environmental regs I agree with. The idea that any regulation is good is ridiculous; many were put in place not because they are good but because they financially benefit a constituent of the author aka elected official. You of all people know that LAM.
 
Regardless of who his opponent is, the state of the economy and the utter failure of Obama to meet any of the standards he set himself should deem his re-election impossible. The fact that it's even close, much less than the fact that he'll probably win, is pretty astounding.
 
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