
What Grade would you give President Obama for his time in Office ?
True~Male
2012/07/12 01:38:33
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1 vote
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3% | |||
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2 votes
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7% | |||
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2 votes
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7% | |||
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5 votes
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17% | |||
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19 votes
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66% | |||
By grading President Obama A, B, C, D or F we can get a good sampling of how American or at least Sodaheads feel.
Top Opinion
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Dandydon 2012/07/12 01:40:31




















1) The democrats would like to expand government and take personal responsibility from the public and individuals (Democrat ideology). It seems to me that having a larger government that is more responsible for the people would open them up for criticism. How does having a smaller more efficient government and shifting the responsibility to the public and the individual (Republican ideology) make the government look bad?
2) Did you know that according to Gallup, Liberals only make up 20% of the US population? Which means YOU think that nearly 8 out of every 10 people that walk around in the US is not only a scumbag or a scumbag want-to-be, but a terrorist scumbag. Your statement almost sounds like something straight out of the crazy right wing playbook. Why would you say this?
2) really? Makes no sense, but please send poll to me. Curious to understand.
Is the tea party not economic terrorists by sending the country to the edge of bankruptcy to prove a point? Pure terror.
The number of federal employees grew by 123,000, or 6.2%, under President Obama, according to the White House's Office of Management and Budget.
Much of the hiring increases came in the departments of homeland security, justice, veterans and defense.
The federal payroll has been expanding since President Bush took office, after declining during the Clinton administration. But it's still a tad smaller than it was in 1992, said Craig Jennings, a federal budget expert at the progressive think tank OMB Watch.
The federal government has been one of the few areas that's grown during the economic downturn. The private sector remains down 1.1 million jobs from the start of 2009, while state and local governments have shed 635,000 positions.