But it shows that Trump is a liar. Well, we all know this, we can see it time and time and time again.
But again, Trump is a ******* liar and you stick by him.
He can tell an interminable inexactitude from time-to-time. But, he’s a winner and imperative that Hillary not be on Oval Office. Trump loves America and people like Cuomo have no class.
Yes, a winner, the sort of guy who makes sure he's always winning, which means many other people have to be losing, and those people are you and your family and many others.
Trump loves RICH AMERICA. He loves he can pull the wool over your eyes every single ******* time. He loves you're willing to work for a crap deal so he can get a better deal.
Mueller investigation will be another victory for Trump. I’m not tired of winning.
Sure, how can you be tired of winning when the ONLY thing he's "won" is a tax cut for the rich that hasn't meant real wages have risen, hasn't meant much.
Then there's Syria, which Trump claims to have won, regardless of the fact that the US isn't doing much there.
Then there's North Korea which Trump claims to have won something, even though NOTHING has happened.
What winning are you ******* talking about?
US Jobless Claims Fall Unexpectedly to Lowest Since 1969
In the week ending July 14, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 207,000, a decrease of 8,000 from the previous week's revised level. This is the lowest level for initial claims since December 6, 1969 when it was 202,000. The previous week's level was revised up by 1,000 from 214,000 to 215,000.
Published on 2018-07-19
US Services Growth at 4-Month High: ISM
The ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI index for the United States rose to 59.1 in June of 2018 from 58.6 in May, beating market forecasts of 58.3. It is the highest reading since February as business activity and new orders rose faster and price pressures eased. Companies continue to be optimistic about business conditions and the overall economy although there is a continuing concern relating to tariffs, capacity constraints and delivery.
Faster increases were seen in business activity (63.9 from 61.3), new orders (63.2 from 60.5) and new export orders (60.5 from 57.5) and price pressures slowed (60.7 from 64.3). On the other hand, slowdowns were seen in employment (53.6 from 54.1), supplier deliveries (55.5 from 58.5), inventories (53.5 from 57.5) and backlog of orders (56.5 from 60.5).
The 17 non-manufacturing industries reported growth in June — listed in order — are: Mining; Construction; Wholesale Trade; Retail Trade; Public Administration; Educational Services; Real Estate, Rental & Leasing; Management of Companies & Support Services; Transportation & Warehousing; Health Care & Social Assistance; Utilities; Finance & Insurance; Arts, Entertainment & Recreation; Other Services; Professional, Scientific & Technical Services; Information; and Accommodation & Food Services. The only industry reporting a decrease is Agriculture, Forestry, Fishing & Hunting.
US Economy Adds More Jobs than Expected
Non farm payrolls in the United States increased by 213 thousand in June of 2018, following an upwardly revised 244 thousand in May and well above market expectations of 195 thousand. Job gains occurred in professional and business services, manufacturing, and health care, while employment in retail trade declined.
US May Trade Deficit Smallest in 1-1/2 Years
The US trade deficit narrowed sharply to USD 43.1 billion in May 2018 from a revised USD 46.1 billion in the previous month and below market expectations of USD 43.7 billion. It was the smallest trade gap since October 2016.
US June Budget Deficit Smaller than Expected
The US budget deficit narrowed to USD 75.0 billion in June 2018 from USD 90.2 billion in the same month of the previous year, and below market expectations of USD 98.2 billion.
US Industrial Output Rebounds in June
US industrial output rose 0.6 percent month-over-month in June 2018, recovering from an upwardly revised 0.5 percent contraction in May and matching market expectations. The production of motor vehicles and parts rebounded last month after truck assemblies fell sharply in May because of a disruption at a parts supplier.
US Factory Growth Slightly Higher than Expected: Markit
The IHS Markit US Manufacturing PMI edged up to 55.5 in July of 2018 from 55.4 in June and above market expectations of 55.4, flash estimates showed. The reading pointed to a slightly stronger growth of the manufacturing sector amid a robust rise in new orders and a solid upturn in both production volumes and employment.