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In your opinion, Is the recession REALLY over??? I mean . . . . . really?!?

Drue-AFCL 2012/06/09 18:26:17
Related Topics: Recession
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  • JayLynx 2012/06/13 13:38:40
    YES and why ?
    JayLynx
    In my country, thankfully.
  • jon 2012/06/13 01:17:19
    NO
    jon
    +1
    Not hardly, we are producing a lot of welfare types
  • 3003573 2012/06/12 07:02:46
  • Pat 2012/06/12 06:52:33
    NO
    Pat
    No it's not over but if Congress would cooperate, it could be.
  • Jean 2012/06/11 17:47:51
    NO
    Jean
    +1
    Businesses aren't growing - they're surviving. Consumers that still have jobs are hoarding cash, and many people are stocking up on commodities (including gold) and buying farmland, anticipating the next huge crash that some economists expect just about the end of this year. Although the government continues to report an 8.5% unemployment rate, this number fails to include the numbers of people who have given up looking for work and gone on the government dole - welfare, food stamps, section 8 housing, etc. I've lived through two recessions, and THIS isn't what recovery looks like.
  • Philo-ThisSpaceForRent 2012/06/11 16:47:49
  • OPOA912 2012/06/11 14:41:42
    NO
    OPOA912
    +1
    The only one who thinks the recession is over is OZbama's caddy and the White House party planner
  • The One 2012/06/11 07:27:24
    NO
    The One
    +2
    OBAMA IS THE recession!!!!
  • Andrew 2012/06/11 04:23:32
    NO
    Andrew
    +2
    Obama = screwup.
  • RS 2012/06/11 03:04:08
    NO
    RS
    +2
    No. In fact it is seemingly getting worse.
  • Diana 2012/06/10 22:28:29
    NO
    Diana
    +3
    You have to be in dream land to believe that.Everything is still high.
  • Claybern 2012/06/10 22:22:49
    NO
    Claybern
    +2
    Does this vote tell you how people feel about this economy? Mitt Romney will win.
  • lcky9 2012/06/10 20:30:08
    NO
    lcky9
    +2
    we are NOT in a recession we have been in a depression.. take away food stamps .. welfare.. housing allowances .. medicaid .. and what do you have???
  • Reggie☮ 2012/06/10 20:10:39
  • Alvin 2012/06/10 18:47:05
    NO
    Alvin
    +3
    We have millions of unemployed and unemployable, food is becoming outrageously expensive and packages are smaller and more costly, banks are holding on to housing that could be sold at reasonable prices just so they can profit "when things get better", the cost of health care is just beyond comprehension, the cost of an education is sky high without the likelihood of a job at the end of the grind, old people are having to scrabble fof food or decide whether to eat ot buy the medicines they need, more kids are moving in with their parents because they cannot make it on their own..... and on and on.
    We are in a horribly deep hole and the politicians are fighting about the placement of the deck chairs on the sinking ship of state.
  • Prophet 2012/06/10 18:29:31
    NO
    Prophet
    +3
    You have not seen anything yet. Just wait till after the election. Then it will really take off. How fast it goes will be determined by who wins. If Obama wins: well let's just say he has nothing to loose because he can not be re-elected. We will see more immigration from the Middle East. We will also see more billions of dollars going overseas to that part of the world. Just this week 198 billion $ to the Palestinians without congressional approval; to a government which is nonexistent because it is under the control of Israel. So whos pockets does it go into?
  • gocar 2012/06/10 18:07:18
    YES and why ?
    gocar
    Because the private sector is adding jobs and not shedding them. We need to send more money to the states and local governments so they can stop the bleed of public servant jobs.
  • Drue-AFCL gocar 2012/06/10 18:20:29 (edited)
    Drue-AFCL
    +6
    PUBLIC SERVANTS. . . . . . . .WHAT A CROCK! THEY DON'T SERVE THE PUBLIC. . . . . .MOST ONLY SERVE THEMSELVES! OOOPS, I FORGOT SOMETHING. . . . . SEND MONEY??? WHAT MONEY????
  • Reggie☮ Drue-AFCL 2012/06/10 20:04:26
    Reggie☮
    +3
    You go girl :)
  • gaylehelen 2012/06/10 17:12:22
    NO
    gaylehelen
    +3
    No, too much instability. Not many can afford to put the gas in the car to go to the grocery store anymore.
    That ever-widening gap between rich and poor is going to do us in.
  • Incognito 2012/06/10 16:30:17
    NO
    Incognito
    +3
    I am out of work. It is a depression.
  • Risk 2012/06/10 15:23:15
    NO
    Risk
    +3
    Look at our debt and the world debt. As distasteful as it is, there is a severe outlook on everyone's future unless we can get serious about putting things in order. We definitely need a change of leadership, Obama has only made things worse and they will continue if he is reelected !
  • bill 2012/06/10 15:05:50
    NO
    bill
    +4
    Not till Obama is out of office!
  • jackolantyrn356 2012/06/10 14:24:04
    NO
    jackolantyrn356
    +3
    Already we head for a 3rd depression so bad Obama will declare electiojns to be off until he can fix things.
  • mich52 2012/06/10 14:10:55
    YES and why ?
    mich52
    +1
    Because our opinions are irrelevant in this matter.. I know its tough for ignorant people to comprehend but the NBER is the group that determines when recessions start and end and they have been since the late 20's...
  • Franklin 2012/06/10 13:32:35
    YES and why ?
    Franklin
    +2
    ...cause Obama says so that's why ! (LOL)
  • Energene 2012/06/10 13:29:09
    NO
    Energene
    +3
    It is for Obama. He has gone from being broke to being worth 12 million. I am down $200,000. Thanks to the 3.8% sales tax for real estate in the healthcare bill I will lose another $32,000 when I sell my rental real estate. How much will you lose?
  • Shovel Ready Nov 6th 2012/06/10 12:35:52
  • Pale Horse 2012/06/10 12:23:22
  • Grabitz 2012/06/10 11:55:37
    YES and why ?
    Grabitz
    +3
    You all just have to learn to accept a bowl of rice as payment . Slave labor corporations have won the battle . Time to take your place and live as the third worlds do .

    Have a good NWO day .
  • Andrew 2012/06/10 11:48:05
    NO
    Andrew
    +3
    The only way to get out of this recession is to lower spending and taxes! Lowqering taxes will raise revenue to government through increased economic activity. Even JFK knew that! Couple that with spending cuts in the Federal government and we could actually have budget surpluses! We should establish a Constitutional Amendment that requires a balanced budget!
  • sbtbill Andrew 2012/06/11 08:04:56
    sbtbill
    Your ideas would just make things worse Hoover tried that in 29 and we got the great depression. We should do what FDR and Reagan did.
  • Charles... sbtbill 2012/06/11 16:50:36 (edited)
    Charles Braley
    You DO realize that - most economists now believe that it was WWII that really got us out of the Great Depression?
  • sbtbill Charles... 2012/06/12 21:45:06
    sbtbill
    I'm fully aware of that. WWII was the biggest public works stimulus program in history. Reagan did similar with star wars. As long as the government spends to create jobs the economy gets better. It doesn't mater if you build tanks, satellites, and bombers or dig holes and fill them up.
  • Andrew sbtbill 2012/06/12 10:04:17
    Andrew
    Reagan's idea was to cut taxes and spending. Congress went along with lower taxes, but reenigged on their promise to cut spending. We got out of the recession, but continued to rack up huge deficits and with trhe exception of a couple of years during which Republicans held the House and Senate we have continued with high deficits!
  • sbtbill Andrew 2012/06/12 21:42:16 (edited)
    sbtbill
    Better go back and re-read Reagan's 1980 campaign lit. He specifically, said he would increase defense spending. He followed through on that promise. He also said he would cut social spending. He also followed through on that promise. Probably not as much as he would have liked.

    One thing you can say about Reagan is he did his best to do exactly what he promised and he was pretty good at it. Oh yes, he constantly said he'd balance the budget while presiding over tripling the federal deficit even though he was President mostly in good times.

    Back in 79-80 I was working for Dean Witter as a stock broker so I followed economic policy very closely. Had a lot of Republican clients come in and tell me that Reagan was going to balance the budget, never told them they were wrong but it was obvious. Every time Reagan opened his month he said I'm going to balance the budget. I'm going to cut taxes. I'm going to make the US stronger, I'll make the US military big I'll give it what ever it wants. So Reagan advocated cutting revenue and increasing government spending to balance the budget. Well who expects a politician to make sense.
  • sbtbill Andrew 2012/06/12 21:56:42
    sbtbill
    Here is a little help

    Ronald Reagan for President 1980 Campaign Brochure

    ‘The time is now for strong leadership.’



    There is a crisis of leadership in America today that only new, strong leadership can correct. A strong leadership tempered with wisdom, decency and compassion. That's Governor Reagan's vision of leadership. And if he is elected President, here is a glimpse of what Americans can expect.



    Strong leadership in foreign affairs means a strong peace.



    Only a strong America can enjoy the fruits of a strong peace. And only a strong peace can instill in Americans a sense of security and the feeling of confidence they seek.

    Says Reagan: "We know only too well that war comes not when the forces of freedom are strong, but when they are weak. It is then that tyrants are tempted."



    Under a Reagan Administration, America would move swiftly to:



    Provide the leadership and policy direction necessary to promote a healthy, growing economy, enabling the U.S. to show the world it is a nation in control of its destiny again.

    Restore America's military strength, because an America that enjoys a margin of safety in its military preparedness is an America with the greatest chance to keep the peace -- the strong peace that would always be at the heart of Ronald Reagan's foreign policy.

    Speak out mo...



































































































    Here is a little help

    Ronald Reagan for President 1980 Campaign Brochure

    ‘The time is now for strong leadership.’



    There is a crisis of leadership in America today that only new, strong leadership can correct. A strong leadership tempered with wisdom, decency and compassion. That's Governor Reagan's vision of leadership. And if he is elected President, here is a glimpse of what Americans can expect.



    Strong leadership in foreign affairs means a strong peace.



    Only a strong America can enjoy the fruits of a strong peace. And only a strong peace can instill in Americans a sense of security and the feeling of confidence they seek.

    Says Reagan: "We know only too well that war comes not when the forces of freedom are strong, but when they are weak. It is then that tyrants are tempted."



    Under a Reagan Administration, America would move swiftly to:



    Provide the leadership and policy direction necessary to promote a healthy, growing economy, enabling the U.S. to show the world it is a nation in control of its destiny again.

    Restore America's military strength, because an America that enjoys a margin of safety in its military preparedness is an America with the greatest chance to keep the peace -- the strong peace that would always be at the heart of Ronald Reagan's foreign policy.

    Speak out more often and more eloquently -- in the U.N., through the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe, and in every other proper forum -- on behalf of peace, freedom, human rights...the principles for which America stands.

    Seek greater consultation and cooperation with our European allies -- fully expecting each one of them to bear a fair share of the common defense effort -- in order to maintain a strong NATO as a counterweight to the Soviet Union's continuing arms build-up.

    Re-establish an efficient intelligence operation, for the ability to detect and act upon a brewing problem early and peaceably is essential in conducting an effective foreign policy.

    Make it clearly understood that detente is a two-way street and that the Soviet Union cannot expect U.S. silence in the face of aggression, such as the invasion of Afghanistan -- or refusal to honor the Helsinki Agreements guaranteeing a free interchange of information and the right to emigrate.

    All of these points represent but a sampling of the foreign policy direction that a Reagan Administration would take. Such a foreign policy would not stand alone. It would be linked to a domestic policy that reinforced its strength and credibility in the eyes of the world.



    Strong leadership in economic policy means lower taxes, more jobs, and less inflation.



    Governor Reagan has an economic program for America that will work because it's a comprehensive program. A program that recognizes the interrelationships and complexity of our economy...one that combines the wisdom of leading American economists with common sense.



    Here is the basis of the Economic Plan that can be expected from a Reagan Administration:



    The growth of federal spending will be controlled. A freeze on federal hiring will be instituted immediately. And Ronald Reagan will do as President what he did as Governor of California: create a task force composed of the finest minds from industry and labor, to isolate wasteful and fraudulent operations in government, estimated by the Justice Department to amount to as much as $25 billion. No longer will unemployment be used to fight inflation.

    An immediate 10% reduction in personal tax rates, along with acceleration of depreciation schedules, will be initiated in order to help generate industrial expansion and the creation of new jobs. Changes will be made in the tax structure, especially aimed at removing those requirements which serve as disincentives in industry. It will be recommended that the tax on savings account interest be further reduced. Upon reducing the tax rates, tax indexing will be proposed to protect taxpayers from automatic tax increases resulting from cost-of-living wage increases.

    Action will be taken to review those government regulations which clearly hamper, instead of encourage, economic growth -- and to then change them in as orderly a fashion as possible. This action will not affect regulations in such sensitive areas as health and job safety which do serve a useful purpose.

    A sound monetary policy will be restored -- one designed to instill confidence in the American dollar abroad, as well as bring down the rate of inflation at home.

    The nation's economic policy, once established, will be adhered to. Abrupt changes in economic policy have, in recent years, aggravated existing problems and created new ones; they have played havoc with the confidence of those in both industry and labor. The right economic policy, held steadily and consistently on course, will do much to establish greater stability in America's economic system.

    Beyond these broad economic steps aimed at expanding the economy as a whole, a Reagan Administration would recognize that special problems exist which require special solutions.

    A few examples:



    For workers who have lost their jobs because they lack certain skills or are victims of a changing

    technology, Reagan would act to implement job retraining and job placement programs.

    For disadvantaged youths and others unemployed because of the flight of industry from the cities, enterprise zones would be established in depressed urban areas in order to stimulate new businesses and new jobs.

    For industries in trouble because of exceptionally aggressive foreign competition -- such as the auto industry -- he would initiate steps to permit American industry to be more competitive in the world market. These would include the elimination of unnecessary and costly regulations...and adopting a firmer, common sense view of future trade agreements with other nations, always with jobs for American workers uppermost in mind.



    Strong leadership in meeting human needs means common sense, as well as compassion.



    Ronald Reagan believes in the need to devise lasting solutions to problems, and in the need to combine a sense of caring with a sense of the cost involved.



    As President, he will:



    Strengthen the Social Security system in order to insure that older Americans need never worry about the survival of the system. And he will strive to improve quality health care for the aged and poor through medicare and medicaid.

    Act to change the tax structure to make treatment of working spouses more equitable, and remove the present tax provision that penalizes married two-worker families.

    Work at both the federal level and with state governments to end welfare fraud by removing ineligibles from the rolls, strengthen "work incentive" programs to help recipients become self-supporting, and at the same time, resolve to never fail to assist those who are truly needy.

    Propose a health policy with built-in protections against financial disaster brought on by huge medical expenses.

    Sponsor the removal of many of the bureaucratic and costly federal regulations on small businesses, thereby assisting them to be profitable.

    Demand vigorous enforcement of civil rights laws intended to assure equal treatment in job recruitment, hiring, promotions, pay, credit, mortgage access and housing.

    Support equal rights and opportunities for women in such key areas as employment, but oppose taking away the traditional rights women have enjoyed, such as exemption from the military draft.

    Support every effort to guarantee quality education for every American...back tax credits for parents bearing the cost of educating their children in non-public schools...and oppose forced busing of children that is often disruptive and does nothing to improve educational quality.

    Ronald Reagan believes -- and is ready to prove -- that strong leadership can make a difference in meeting the human needs of Americans in a way that combines a sense of caring with a sense of what the cost will be to every American taxpayer.



    Strong leadership means strong people working as a team to get the job done.



    When Ronald Reagan was Governor of California, he was widely acclaimed by friend and foe alike for selecting the most qualified and capable men and women to serve in state government. He would, as President, put together the finest team to assist in the formulation and implementation of both domestic and foreign policies. Here is just a sampling of the talent he has called on during the campaign:



    Gerald R. Ford, former President; Milton Friedman, Nobel Prize-winning economist; Donald H. Rumsfeld, former Secretary of Defense; James Lynn, former head of the Office of Management and Budget; George S. Shultz, former Secretary of Labor and Secretary of the Treasury; Rita Hauser, former U.S. Representative to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights; Dr. Fred Ikle, former Director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency; Arthur Burns, former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, Frank Shakespeare, former Director of the U.S. Information Agency; Alexander M Haig, former Supreme Commander of NATO; Carla A. Hills, former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development; William P. Rogers, former Attorney General, Donald E. Santarelli former Associate Deputy Attorney General and Caspar Weinberger, former Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare.

    What all of these people have in common is experience and expertise in specific areas of government policy. Together, they would bring to a Reagan Administration a reputation for knowledge, sound judgment, and a keen awareness of the type of strong leadership that America needs.

    They would also bring the urgent realization that the time for such strong leadership is now.



    The time is now, for Reagan.

    Reagan. For President.
    (more)
  • sbtbill 2012/06/10 11:33:57
    NO
    sbtbill
    +1
    Things are getting better but we still have a long way to go.
  • 2sly 2012/06/10 09:29:59
    NO
    2sly
    +3
    My pockets say no as well as my bank account.
  • Rand 2012/06/10 09:17:11
    NO
    Rand
    +3
    Only somebody that is trying to fool you would make you think the recession is over. The international markets, US markets and current problems in the debt structure from around the world has led us back into a serious recession. The policies of this administration are going to put more coal miners, oil workers, construction, nuculear out of work then you could possibly understand.. The S&P; and Dow are in the process of major down turns that will be effected by the policies of Mr Obama. We can only pray that The November to remember come sooner to put a stop to this upside down economy.

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