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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: zax who wrote (825731)12/25/2014 8:34:09 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
FJB

  Respond to of 1577835
 
Yes , gayboy Obama is very popular in Libya, Egypt, Syria, Russia, Poland, Britain, Israel, Taiwan,



To: zax who wrote (825731)12/25/2014 8:36:52 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
FJB

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1577835
 
A Christmas Card From Obama Claus And His Illegal Amigos



To: zax who wrote (825731)12/25/2014 8:38:04 PM
From: i-node  Respond to of 1577835
 
What country do you think could conceivably detain Bush or Cheney? Name one.



To: zax who wrote (825731)12/26/2014 5:54:27 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 1577835
 
The Kenyan Chimp has CRUSHED the dreams of Black America.

From the NY Times:

William Zonicle did what all the job experts advise. He majored in a growing field like health care. He studied hard and took time to develop relationships with his professors. Most important, he obtained a great internship in the human resources department at Florida Hospital in Tampa the summer before his senior year.

But more than seven months after receiving his diploma from Oakwood University, a historically black religious school in Huntsville, Ala., Mr. Zonicle is still without a job in his field. Instead, he is working part-time for $7.60 an hour at a Barnes & Noble bookstore in the center of town.

“It was tougher than I expected,” said Mr. Zonicle, 23, who applied for jobs at hospitals and nursing homes from Ohio to Florida after graduating in May. “Because of the work I had put in as an undergraduate, and making connections, I thought it would be easier to find a decent position.”

College graduates have survived both the recession and ho-hum recovery far better than those without a degree, but blacks who finished four years of college are suffering from unemployment rates that are painfully high compared with their white counterparts.

Among recent graduates ages 22 to 27, the jobless rate for blacks last year was 12.4 percent versus 4.9 percent for whites, said John Schmitt, a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.

While there has always been a gap between black and white college grads, this 7.5 percentage point difference was far greater than before the recession burned through the economy. In 2007, for example, there was only a 1.4 percentage point difference, with 4.6 percent of recent black graduates out of work compared with 3.2 percent of similarly educated whites.

“This is very different from the past,” said Mr. Schmitt, a co-author of a study of employment among recent graduates published by the center. “You’d have to go back to the early 1980s recession to see that pattern.”

Historically, the periods during and immediately after downturns have been harder on blacks than on whites. But in this current cycle, the trend has been even more extreme.



To: zax who wrote (825731)12/26/2014 7:25:12 AM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 1577835
 
The Kenyan Chimp secured his legacy of UTTER FAILURE in 2014.
=============================================================
For Barack Obama, 2014 could hardly have been worse
By Donald Lambro - - Thursday, December 25, 2014

<span style="font-size:1.3em;">There is no way to sugarcoat the past year. It has been, with rare exceptions, one of our nation's worst in many years.

In the areas of greatest concern, things have grown a lot worse for those among the bottom half of the income scale in a still-uneven, job-challenged economy across most of the nation.

A Gallup poll reported this week that only 23 percent of Americans surveyed each month "were satisfied with the way things are going in the U.S."


That number has fallen precipitously to "the lower end of what Gallup has measured since 1979," the polling firm said. That was when America was scraping bottom under Jimmy Carter, surely one of our worst presidents, at least until Barack Obama came along to redefine what "worst" really feels like.
</span>
In December 2008, polling by CNN-Opinion Research Corp. found that more than 75 percent of the people they surveyed said President Obama "can manage the government effectively." Fast-forward to earlier this year when only 43 percent would say that.

For the past six years, the No. 1 issue in the country has been the economy and jobs, and that's unlikely to change in Mr. Obama's final two years. That's even though his Commerce Department reported this week that the economy grew by 5 percent in the third quarter, up from the government's earlier estimate of 3.9 percent.

It's an unexpected revision in the gross domestic product, the broadest measurement of the economic health of the country. The Federal Reserve has predicted that the economy will grow by little more than a tepid 2 percent to 3 percent, which may be closer to the truth once the fourth-quarter numbers are in.

The government throws many numbers into the GDP basket — things like federal, state and local government spending, exports and various investment expenditures.

The sharply higher GDP number was largely the result of faster consumption — 3.2 percent versus 2.2 percent — despite flat or falling incomes.

That's why Paul Dales of Capital Economics warns that even though the GDP number looks rosy, it suggests that households have had to dip into their savings to boost spending. That can last only so long.

But other numbers tell a bleaker story about the Obama economy. For example, existing home sales plunged last month to their lowest levels in half a year, a worrying sign of economic weakness. Housing sales are a major chunk of the economy, and it appears that a lot of Americans are not in a financial position to enter the market.

"This is not good news," said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors. "The November decline was a sizable one."

Gallup regularly conducts tracking surveys on the jobs front, finding that the underemployment number is a great deal worse than the government's other monthly figures.

Its poll finds the nation's underemployment rate — for people who need full-time jobs but are forced to accept lower-paying, part-time or temporary work — is a withering 15 percent.

Moreover, a Depression-era 40 percent of Americans polled by Gallup describe themselves as "struggling," and another 10 percent say they are either "suffering" or under a great deal of "stress" in their attempts to make ends meet.

This is why, no matter how much Mr. Obama continues to insist his economy is doing better, that every poll during the Obama years still ranks the economy and jobs as the most important problems facing the country, Gallup says.

After a six-year string of record deficits and a historic $6 trillion in added debt, plus one administration scandal after another, dissatisfaction with the government is "consistently ranked among the most important problems facing the country," Gallup said this week.

Mr. Obama was swept into office promising an era of smart government. Instead, his administration has turned into a breeding ground of badly mismanaged bureaucracies and dysfunctional programs run by political hacks and worse.

In 2013, they included the Internal Revenue Service's political targeting of conservative tea party groups, the botched rollout of Obamacare and Edward Snowden's National Security Agency surveillance leaks that gave aid and comfort to our worst adversaries around the globe.

That's for starters. This year, former Soviet KGB agent Vladimir Putin, whom Mr. Obama trusted enough for a "reset" of relations with Russia, seized the Crimean Peninsula and sent forces and arms into eastern Ukraine, getting off scot-free with little more than a sanctions slap on the wrist. He's still there.

Then the scandal of scandals unraveled at the Department of Veterans Affairs, where aged veterans were kept waiting for months for lifesaving treatment, as officials doctored their records to show a much shorter waiting time. Many died waiting.

Throughout this period, Mr. Obama was caught asleep at the switch in the war on terrorism and has been playing catch-up ever since — drawing blistering criticism for his indecision, ineptitude and timidity from a tell-all book by former Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta.

In 2012, he campaigned on a myth that al Qaeda had been "decimated" and was "on the run." In fact, they were metastasizing into larger and better-funded armies of the Islamic State that went on a blood-soaked rampage in the Middle East — seizing large swaths of territory in Iraq and Syria and beheading American hostages with impunity.

Mr. Obama's policy was rapid withdrawal from the war on terrorism and little else, leaving behind a huge vacuum into which the Islamic State sent tens of thousands of terrorists to slaughter untold numbers of noncombatants in an all-out blitzkrieg to destabilize the Middle East.

But rest assured, gentle reader, Mr. Obama is said to be on top of it all as he hits the golf courses, beaches and luaus of Hawaii, hoping that 2015 will be a better year.

Don't bet on it.