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Personally, I think it rather silly that anyone would claim that supply side initiatives always work or don't work under all circumstances. An economy is a non-linear multivariable time-dependent beast. How can the relationship between policy causes and economic effects always be so simple as to not change from time to time? You are just spewing forth the Democratic party line. You are not at all interested in the truth, only what supports your party. You see nearly all the leading economic indicators rising, a fair 3% GDP growth last year and yet claim the economy is in the toilet. Really, I think you would rather see a bad economy to get a Democrat in office than a good economy for the United States. At worst, the economy is average right now. "In the toilet"? Propaganda. |
Bill Clinton was and could still be a consumate diplomat. The same skills he used on Monica seem to have done wonders for his international relatons also.
Clinton respected to opinions of other world leaders and understood that the major issue to resolve is the Israeli Paleistinian conflict. If that could be resolved th arab world would not have the rancor they feel for the US. The Bushies refuse to recognize the real underlying issue. They would be wise to ask Clinton to mediate in the middle east. Clinton is respected by all parties there and was very close to an agreement. If that agreement happens a major thorn in the side of the arab world would evaporate. |
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(CBS)*The American economy barely budged at the end of 2002, growing at an annual rate of just 0.7 percent in the final three months of the year, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. The performance ? weaker than the 0.9 percent increase analysts were predicting ? gave the fourth quarter the distinction of being the worst quarter for gross domestic product in 2002. It also marked the weakest showing since the economy actually shrank at a 0.3 percent rate in the third quarter of 2001 as the country was mired in its first recession in a decade. There were warning signs that the one saving grace of the economy during the slowdown ? individual consumer spending ? might be weakening. The fall-off in growth was partly due to lower household purchases, which grew at their slowest rate in almost a decade. In another report, the Labor Department said new claims for unemployment benefits increased last week for the second week in a row. The meager rise in gross domestic product in the fourth quarter of 2002 came after the economy grew at a respectable 4 percent rate in the third quarter, the Commerce Department reported Thursday. GDP measures the total value of goods and services produced within the United States and is considered the broadest barometer of the economy's health. Although the economy ended 2002 on a sour note, for all of 2002 the economy grew by a decent 2.4 percent. While that marked a big improvement over the tiny 0.3 percent rise registered in 2001, it was still considered weaker-than-normal growth for the U.S. economy. The economy, knocked down by a recession that began in March 2001, has been struggling to get back on sure footing. Economic growth has been uneven, with a quarter of strength, followed by a quarter of weakness.:thumbsup |
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Apparently it doesn't matter where YOU get your news from because you cannot read it so well. The article states that the US was in a recession in 2001. That was two years ago and that is correct. Specifically, that recession ended 15 months ago. The commonly accepted definition of a recession is two or more consecutive quarters of GDP shrinkage. The United States GDP has grown for five consecutive quarters including a 5% gain in the first quarter of 2002 and a 4% gain in the third quarter of 2002. Therefore we are NOT in a recession. Average annual GDP growth since 1991 has been 3%. You can go calculate that yourself. Should take you five minutes. The majority of the leading economic indicators were up last quarter. Come back and try again after you educate yourself and try reading a little better next time son. |
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Except that bush wasnt elected, he was appointed. Funny how everyone has forgotten that he didnt even get the most votes, then went to court to stop the votes from being counted............... |
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Since you are blinded by your political views you only care to view the economy in terms of "Reagan's", "Bush's", "Clinton's", and "Bush's" economy. It's an average economy, not one that is "in the toilet". |
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Colin you make some good points, however, leading economic indicators don't mean much to the average Joe.
The only economic indicator most people care about is the unemployment rate (i.e. whether or not they have a job) That number has not fared well under the current administration. It may or may not be the president's fault, but when you're the leader you get the credit for the good and the blame for the bad. Also, the average Joe's are also unhappy that they put money into their 401k's every week and have less money in them now than they did 2 years ago. Again, that may or may not be Dubya's fault, but the same principle applies. |
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dude are you serious? the economy wasn't even real back then, damn dot com's going bust with their $300 per share which now if there still in business would be at .50, all the damn coporate scandels now were done during the clinton admin with the cooked up books. it was a virtual economy, that shit wasn't real and people like me are paying for it,, Thank god i ain't like some of my co-workers nearing retirement and loosing all their monies Plus you can't blame Bush for Sept 11, don't tell me that didn't have a MAJOR impact on the economy,, still does |
Bush doesnt seem to think there is anything wrong with the economy even though more than 2 million people have lost their job in the past two years:
"Look around you, You've all got jobs. I've got a job. Dick Cheney has a job. I don't see what all the fuss is about." GW - November 23, 2002 "Economies are about money, and I feel . . . I believe that money . . . I like money. And I like this country. Money is good and this country still has a lot of money." GW - November 23, 2002 "Concerns about the economy are nothing more than partisan politics," Fleischer announced. "To turn our attention away at this time from the threat posed by Iraq to focus on the U.S. economy would be un-American." |
Clinton bombed Iraq's military and weapons producing infrastructure for failing to comply with the UN during his administration. He would have done the same again, but without the ground war.
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that's exactly what i was wondering why Bush didn't do the same,, |
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surely... ? |
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Or Sadam's offer of $25,000 in cash to the family of Palestinian suicide bombers wasn't real? Bottom line is this guy unequivocally supports terrorists and has weapons of mass destruction, not a very good combo. But remember my earlier point, 9/11 changed everything. It was only after that incident that our policy became "We will make no distinction between terrorists and those who harbor them" |
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Let's discuss economics and not politics. I didn't say the economy wasn't good under Clinton. In fact, I think it was great under Clinton. You're assuming I have a political view and am trying to convince you that the economy is as good now as it was 4 years ago in order to prove something about political parties. It's not. That's your goal and it is obvious you have an axe to grind with the Republican party. We had average (within 1 SD) GDP growth in the past year compared to the past 20 years. I could care less which political party controls congress or has the president in the White House. You are comparing the GDP under presidential leadership which doesn't make any sense in evaluating the economy NOW. If the economy was poor two years ago - or below average for the term of the current president - it has no bearing whatsoever on a conversation regarding the state of the economy now. Monetary policy and the Fed have a huge influence on the month-to-month and year-to-year state of the economy and it's decisions are and were designed to be separate from the executive and legislative branches of government. The attempt to slow the stock market, for example, was an intentional consequence of the policies of Alan Greenspan who wanted to slowly let the air out of a stock market who's prices were excessively high compared to earnings on an historical basis. |
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Good points. The inevitable result of a very strong market and economy is that it will return to normal. Bubbles burst. Anyone that thought the market was going to stay evaluated so excessively ignored the lessons of history. Remember the "New Economy" talk? People really thought we could remain in a bubble forever. Wise investors were heading the warnings of Warren Buffet. Regression towards the mean. The leading economic indicators were designed specifically to measure the breadth of the economy. How is it performing across a wide range of it's features? Tha answer is "average" and improving. |
Yeah. I wonder how those steel tariffs a few months ago or maybe a year ago affected US economy.
I think I saw somewhere that the price of steel was going sky high. Maybe Bush doesn't listen to his economists too much, but only people specialized in some other fields of .. hmm... control |
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It's disingenuous and misleading the public.. It doesn't change the fact that Al quaida and saddam aren't buddies, the CIA laughed at the idea originally and until they started doing everything they can to start the war there had been absolutely no intelligence of anti-western terrorism linked to Saddam. Looking to history and the faked triggers to things like vietnam you just can't put it past the government not to lie or bend the truth vociferously when it really really wants to get something happening. Unlike Saddam's "alleged" WMD, The terrorism link isn't something that has any support fromt he experts. It's spin, and it's working. They should stick the WMD reason, at least it's highly likely. Saddam needs and wants to be seen as the great defender of the palestinian people against Israel.. palestinian bombers are a very seperate beast to al-quaida. it's a local response to a very specific situation. Besides I don't think it's such a bad thing now the family homes are being destroyed in retaliation... kind of equalises it back down. |
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* When President Bush was sworn in on Jan. 20, 2001, U.S. stocks were valued at $14.7 trillion, according to Wilshire Associates. Last week?s value: $9.9 trillion. Total decline: $4.8 trillion. The only fair way to compare the Bush Market with other presidents? markets is to use percentages rather than dollars. Here, too, he leads the pack. According to a study conducted for NEWSWEEK by Aronson+Johnson+Ortiz, a Philadelphia money-management firm, the Standard & Poor?s 500 Index has fallen more in Bush?s first two years than under any president since the modern stock market emerged. (AJO?s data go back only as far as Hoover, enough for our purposes.) During Hoover?s first two years, which included the Black Thursday crash in October 1929, the S&P fell 29 percent. Not as bad as Bush?s 33 percent. (Through last week, the decline was 36 percent.) *You can?t blame this all on Bush, of course. The market he inherited in 2001 had been inflated by the tech and telecom bubble that started popping in the spring of 2000. It was bound to fall. But he?s been in office long enough to bear at least some responsibility?you can bet he?d be taking the credit if the market were rising. He can?t blame the problem on 9-11. AJO says the S&P 500 declined at a 28 percent annual rate from Bush?s Inauguration through Sept. 10, 2001, but at less than half that rate since 9-11. However you count, the market isn?t buying his program. And in the long run, the market?s pretty savvy. I also think giving a huge tax break to the rich and a $300 bribe to every one else is probably not the best idea heading into a war and will do nothing except make the gap between the rich and poor bigger, and increase the deficit. |
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* When President Bush was sworn in on Jan. 20, 2001, U.S. stocks were valued at $14.7 trillion, according to Wilshire Associates. Last week?s value: $9.9 trillion. Total decline: $4.8 trillion. The only fair way to compare the Bush Market with other presidents? markets is to use percentages rather than dollars. Here, too, he leads the pack. According to a study conducted for NEWSWEEK by Aronson+Johnson+Ortiz, a Philadelphia money-management firm, the Standard & Poor?s 500 Index has fallen more in Bush?s first two years than under any president since the modern stock market emerged. (AJO?s data go back only as far as Hoover, enough for our purposes.) During Hoover?s first two years, which included the Black Thursday crash in October 1929, the S&P fell 29 percent. Not as bad as Bush?s 33 percent. (Through last week, the decline was 36 percent.) *You can?t blame this all on Bush, of course. The market he inherited in 2001 had been inflated by the tech and telecom bubble that started popping in the spring of 2000. It was bound to fall. But he?s been in office long enough to bear at least some responsibility?you can bet he?d be taking the credit if the market were rising. He can?t blame the problem on 9-11. AJO says the S&P 500 declined at a 28 percent annual rate from Bush?s Inauguration through Sept. 10, 2001, but at less than half that rate since 9-11. However you count, the market isn?t buying his program. And in the long run, the market?s pretty savvy. I also think giving a huge tax break to the rich and a $300 bribe to every one else is probably not the best idea heading into a war and will do nothing except make the gap between the rich and poor bigger, and increase the deficit. |
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how can an economy can grow with unparalled success in the history of the planet and have more "have nots" in the end? why is a tax credit/cut a "bribe"? (DISCLAIMER: my post is not in any way intended to be an insult to Chairman Mao, Marx, Lenin, or their failed economic models, ideas or philosophies regarding the attainable Workers Utopia, wealth redistribution, or any other similarly disproven faith, belief or teachings regarding general fairness and anti-imperialism) |
Yeah jackass, that's what I said we should all be communist. Why don't you try and read if you want to know what the gap is. Unfortunatly unlike oil the world will never run out of ignorant republicans.
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http://story.news.yahoo.com/fc?cid=3...cat=US_Economy plenty more stats there indicating overwhelmingly that the economy is completely in the shitter. |
and Bush is a moron who stole the presidency
maybe if they keep us in a high state of terrorist alert nobody will notice :glugglug |
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Bush proved that he would do ANYTHING to win the presidency, and now he'll do ANYTHING to get his oil buddies hooked up again in the Middle East. |
and if you want to bitch about anything you better do it now, because pretty soon being anti-Bush is going to mean you're pro-terrorist:
(WASHINGTON, Feb. 7, 2003) -- The Bush Administration is preparing a bold, comprehensive sequel to the USA Patriot Act passed in the wake of September 11, 2001, which will give the government broad, sweeping new powers to increase domestic intelligence-gathering, surveillance and law enforcement prerogatives, and simultaneously decrease judicial review and public access to information. Dr. David Cole, Georgetown University Law professor and author of Terrorism and the Constitution, reviewed the draft legislation at the request of the Center, and said that the legislation ?raises a lot of serious concerns. It?s troubling that they have gotten this far along and they?ve been telling people there is nothing in the works.? This proposed law, he added, ?would radically expand law enforcement and intelligence gathering authorities, reduce or eliminate judicial oversight over surveillance, authorize secret arrests, create a DNA database based on unchecked executive ?suspicion,? create new death penalties, and even seek to take American citizenship away from persons who belong to or support disfavored political groups.? http://www.public-i.org/dtaweb/repor...L3=0&L4=0&L5=0 Orwell was right, he was just 20 years too late. Wonder if all the 'Libertarians' will keep voting Republican. |
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For the period, the average GDP growth rate has been 3.02. The standard deviation is 1.5. This means the range of 1.57 to 4.52 defines the width of one standard deviation. The GDP growth rate in 2002 was 2.76 - WELL within that range and entire 1 percent higher than the bottom of that range. You still do not understand me. You said I attempting to say something about "Bush's economy". I am not. You're still grinding your axe sharpening it for party politics. I'm sorry but you are oversimplifying everything to the point of absurdity in a lame attempt to bash the Republican in office and it is very obvious. Can you step back and see things for how they are? It's simple. Really. Yes, the market is lower. Much lower. It's a horrible market. Market prices were overvalued by more than a factor of three compared to earnings. This would mean the market would have to lose 1/3 of it's value to reach an historically normal price to earnings ratio for a basket of stocks. We just witnessed one of the one of the larger stock market bubbles in market history. The S&P 500 index hit 60 in early 2002. This is more than three times it's historical average. Think about that. That means the stock market was more overvalued relative to historical price to earnings ratios than it was in 1929. Not even interest rate cuts could force the market higher. 2001-2002 was only the second time in history the market did not rise after two consecutive rate cuts. The other was 1929. Supposed lack of investor confidence in Bush has nothing to do with the fact that the market was overvalued by a factor of three. All bubbles burst. Famous examples are 15th century tulip prices in Holland during the tulip mania, The 1920s US stock market, South Florida real estate in the 1920s, gold in 1978, and Japanese real estate in the early 1980s. There are many more. Comrade Dig -- you're the MOST politically biased person I have ever met in your life and your opinion on such matters can only be the most slanted drivel and a direct result of wearing your specially manufactured democratic glasses - forged with a hammer and cut with a sickle, of course ;-) |
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It's no ones fault. You can't blame an individual for the actions of the millions of people that continued to buy stocks even as they rose through dizzying heights. You can't blame Bush for all the people that bought billions of dollars of stock that were based on nothing more than castles in the air. hen after you admit the reasons for the fall and the market's severe overvaluation, you turn around in the end and say "but it's at least part Bush's fault". You want to bring party politics into it and that doesn't make any sense. |
nope. I hate Joe Leibermann and Tipper Gore as much as I hate any republican.
what I hate are hypocrites who want to parade their moral virtue in my face while they're busy stealing with both hands and sucking off the religious right. every possible point of determination you can use points to the fact that Bush is a moron who is not only making us look like provincial fools to the rest of the world, he's leading us into WWIII. I, for one, don't intend to give up my civil liberties or my life just because the majority of the American populace is easily propagandized. Aren't you one of those people that call themselves Libertarians, while you vote every single personal right that our forefathers fought for out of existence? SHAME!! |
I don't have to beat you in a debate. The Republicans will do it for me when they get the Patriot Bill passed and toss you in jail, along with every other pornographer, pot smoker and 'subversive' in existence.
I'll be in France or Antigua. Smoking dope and laughing. |
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