So 7.0 mil. New Obama-Biden Jobs Created, & Low-Income Health Benefits For Spending!

mascale

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Feb 22, 2009
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The Business Unfriendly Cruz-Boehner-Cantor-Ryan-Paul-Paul, et. al., brand has been opposed to the Obama-Biden Stimulus from the Start. They took away the "Make Work Pay," refundable income tax credit--with basis in Matthew 20:1-16. There is now on record, 43 entire months, average job growth 162,000 per. That is 7.0 mil. new jobs and then there are health care benefits, coming online. . .maybe soon. . .if not a week from Tuesday. . .or so. . .For the Low-Income market(?)!

Chart Book: The Legacy of the Great Recession ? Center on Budget and Policy Priorities

Anyone has to guess that Silicon Valley and the Ivy League knew exactly who was going to benefit from the health plan--while a few rich people, able to afford food, clothing, shelter, and massive student loan debt, all at the same time(?): Were complaining!

Whine, Oh! America! Whine and complain. Some kid with a runny nose can now get some kleenex, maybe in the nick of time--if anyone is lucky!

That concept alone: Is regarded, business-unfriendly at GOP! Imagine, profits for company making nose-wipe!(?)

A lot of new people with benefits can head for the malls, and even the discount big box locations--now with money! Probably NRA is really displeased at the new lack of responsible gun ownership--like they know it now at LAX(?)!

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Crazy Man shooting at LAX with anti-government papers in possession--Maybe famous speeches of Senator Ted Cruz, or Boehner-Cantor-Ryan, Paul, Paul, et. al.(?)!)
 
Granny says, "Dat's right - gubmint fat cats gettin' rich...

Census: D.C. Suburbs Dominate Wealthiest List; Falls Church, Va.--Where 31% Work for Gov't--Claims Highest Median Income
January 2, 2014 -- The small suburban independent city of Falls Church, Va.—which is treated as the equivalent of a county by the Census Bureau--had a higher median household income in 2012 than any county in the United States, according to data released in December by the Census Bureau.
In the Census Bureau’s ranking of the 30 counties with the highest median household incomes, the City of Falls Church rose from the No. 2 spot in 2011 to the No. 1 spot in 2012, overtaking Loudoun County, Va. While treated as the equivalent of a county by the Census Bureau, the City of Falls Church had a population of only 13,229 in 2012, as estimated by the Census Bureau, and is merely 2.2 square miles in size. It is also a place where, the Census Bureau estimates, 31.3 percent of the civilians who are 16 or older and who are employed work for the government. The median household income in the City of Falls Church in 2012 was $121,250; in Loudoun County it was $118,934. Loudon had an estimated population of 336,898 in 2012.

Falls Church is less than nine miles by road from the District of Columbia line, according to Google Maps, while the Loudoun County line is about 25 miles by road from the D.C. line. The only county among the Top 5 for median household income not located near Washington, D.C., was No. 3 Los Alamos County, N.M.—which is the smallest county in that state, and which is also home to the U.S. Energy Department’s Los Alamos National Laboratory. The median household income in Los Alamos County in 2012, according to the Census Bureau, was $112,115.

In Los Alamos County, the Census Bureau estimates, 28.2 percent of the civilians 16 or older who have a job work for government. After No. 1 Falls Church City, No. 2 Loudoun County, Va., and No. 3 Los Alamos County, Howard County, Md., ranked No. 4 with a median household income of $108,234; and Fairfax County, Va., ranked No. 5 with a median household income of $106,690. Other than Los Alamos, Falls Church City, and the three D.C. suburban counties of Loudoun, Howard and Fairfax, Hunterdon County, N.J. was the only county in the nation with a six-figure median household income in 2012. The median household income there was $103,301.

- See more at: Census: D.C. Suburbs Dominate Wealthiest List; Falls Church, Va.--Where 31% Work for Gov't--Claims Highest Median Income | CNS News

See also:

Poll: Americans have little faith in government
January 2, 2014 - WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans enter 2014 with a profoundly negative view of their government, expressing little hope that elected officials can or will solve the nation's biggest problems, a new poll finds.
Half say America's system of democracy needs either "a lot of changes" or a complete overhaul, according to the poll conducted by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Just 1 in 20 says it works well and needs no changes. Americans, who have a reputation for optimism, have a sharply pessimistic take on their government after years of disappointment in Washington. The percentage of Americans saying the nation is heading in the right direction hasn't topped 50 in about a decade. In the new poll, 70 percent lack confidence in the government's ability "to make progress on the important problems and issues facing the country in 2014."

The poll comes about two months after partisan gridlock prompted the first government shutdown in 17 years. People feel somewhat better about their personal lives. Most have at least some confidence that they'll be able to handle their own problems in the coming year. A narrow majority say they'd do a better job running the country than today's leaders in Washington. Local and state governments inspire more faith than the federal government, according to the poll, with 45 percent at least moderately confident in their state government and 54 percent expressing that much confidence in their local government.

When asked to name up to 10 world or national problems they would "like the government to be working on" in 2014, Americans chiefly cite issues that have dominated — and often flummoxed — the White House and Congress for five years. Health care reform topped the list. It is likely, however, that those naming the issue include both opponents and supporters of President Barack Obama's sweeping health care overhaul.

Jobs and the economy were next, followed by the nation's debt and deficit spending. Some issues that draw ample media and campaign attention rank lower in the public's priorities. No more than 3 percent of Americans listed gay rights, abortion or domestic spying as prime topics for government action. Regardless of the issue, however, Americans express remarkably little confidence that the federal government can make real progress.

- See more at: Poll: Americans have little faith in government | CNS News
 
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Granny says, "Dat's right - gubmint fat cats gettin' rich...

Census: D.C. Suburbs Dominate Wealthiest List; Falls Church, Va.--Where 31% Work for Gov't--Claims Highest Median Income
January 2, 2014 --

- See more at: Census: D.C. Suburbs Dominate Wealthiest List; Falls Church, Va.--Where 31% Work for Gov't--Claims Highest Median Income | CNS News

See also:

Poll: Americans have little faith in government
January 2, 2014 - WASHINGTON (AP) —
- See more at: Poll: Americans have little faith in government | CNS News[/quote][/QUOTE]



Click the link then scroll the map to see what areas of the country are earning a decent living and who's not - couldn't help but notice that whoever coined the term "right to work-----for less" was spot on.
Click here for map ☞ Islands of High Income

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View Data Table
Median household income varies by county across the United States. Predominantly rural counties across parts of the South, Southwest, Midwest, and Appalachia have some of the lower median incomes in the country. Counties with higher median household incomes are generally located in the Boston-to-Washington corridor, in larger metropolitan statistical areas, and along the coasts.

SOURCE: Data are from the 2006-2010 ACS 5-year estimates for median household income in the last 12 months (in 2010 inflation-adjusted dollars). The five year data uniquely give us insights into all parts of the nation, including the more rural and thinly-populated counties.

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What is this "low income health benefits for spending" of which you speak?
 

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