Obama has got to be the dumbest fucker on the planet. Spending bills don’t do shit for an economy other than burying it further into recession.
Tax cuts for businesses and individuals does two things.
1. It gives businesses the incentive to invest in new ideas and create jobs.
2. Individuals are more apt to spend their money if they know it isn’t going to come out of their pay checks in huge swaths because of moronic spending policies.
Too fucking easy. Democrats are morons.
Now, The One, is getting all uppity about it. Tough shit asshole. The change most Americans were clamoring for was not socialism. They didn’t want Bush’s ass, or Bush III, in there anymore.
This “stimulus” needs to be renamed. The only stimulating that is happening is the Democrats stroking The One.
There is only 37% of the American population, the stupid ones, that agree with this bill.
KILL THE BILL!!!!
By Joseph Curl
President Obama, fresh off his first Washington apology tour, grew combative Wednesday, asserting that America voted for him, not the other guy, and demanding that lawmakers “put aside politics” — well, Republican lawmakers, anyway.
A day before he headed to a luxury resort to meet behind closed doors with Democrats, the Harvard graduate lectured the less economically astute, ridiculing the Reaganomics Doctrine held dear by Republicans, who prefer tax cuts to new spending to bounce America out of its financial mess.
“Now, in the past few days I’ve heard criticisms of this plan that echo the very same failed theories that helped lead us into this crisis — the notion that tax cuts alone will solve all our problems,” the president said at the White House. “I reject that theory, and so did the American people when they went to the polls in November and voted resoundingly for change.”
And some links for more Obama gaffs.
By their actions ye shall know them. By now we are seeing an ominous pattern of actions by the O administration. We know that President Obama is a very slick liar indeed, but then so was Bill Clinton. But Clinton had a smaller majority in Congress, and was forced to compromise after the Gingrich Congress was elected in 1994. It is still possible that Obama may turn toward the mainstream. But the early omens look dark.
Inside Obama’s sausage factory
In the end, Tom Daschle had to go, not because of his tax problems, but because he had allowed a glimpse inside the Obama sausage factory. And what folks saw could have made even a certain peanut plant look pristine by comparison.
It can be argued that Daschle’s tax avoidance was less egregious than Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s, even though the amount was substantially more: $140k compared to ‘just’ $34,000. Geithner’s taxes were owed on regular compensation which his then-employer, the International Monetary Fund, had not withheld — even though the IMF had offered repeated instructions on paying these taxes owed.
Last week America blew a raspberry at the House “stimulus” bill. The Wall Street Journal edit page reckoned it out at about 12 percent stimulus. What about the other 88 percent? It was mostly the usual liberal special-interest spending, 40 years of pent-up pet projects. Things looked so bad that the Journal’s other edit page, the liberal news side, decided to put out a calming analysis piece. Obama aides “say this is a baseball game in its early innings, or a football game at halftime,” Gerald F. Seib assured us.
You’d think the Democrats would do a better job of camouflaging their real agenda, given the effort they have put, starting with the 2006 mid-term elections, into wooing the middle class. According to pollster Alex Lundry, “middle class” is the number one positive thing that people associate with Democrats. But the stimulus bill proves that it’s not about the middle class. It’s about the Democratic patronage state. Always was, always will be.
Barry, honey, can we talk about money?
“Mr. President” seems way too stiff and stilted for you, our most populist-appealing president ever. So, I certainly hope you won’t mind if I chat with you here just as though we were in a humble diner down South. Just try to think of me, dear Sir, as another Joe in the neighborhood, with an awful lot on my mind.
Now, Barry Honey, can we talk about money?
Times are tough, I’m sure you’ve heard. Certainly, you recall your oft-repeated, campaign ditty: “We are in the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.” You said that line so often people were putting it to music as they stood around waiting for your election and the inevitable return of those happy, happy, happy days.























