Dad2three
Gold Member
LOL! That's the best you've got? Seriously? You havent thought this through very well, have you, Sparky?There are 4 why people should not vote for Republican.The Democrats have three reasons to vote for HIllary:Ah, so you know she is not the best candidate, it is just that you hate Republicans and she is the only Democrat. It took a while, but you finally make sense.Hillary is clearly the best choice for president - especially considering the alternatives.
1) She isnt a Republican
2) Her name is Clinton
3) She has a vagina.
Seriously, that's it.
1. Clowns
2. Zero agenda
3. Koch puppets
4. All of the above.
Here's a short list of why no one should vote for Democrats:
1) Failed programs producing poverty and dependence
2) Over reach by government into private and working lives of citizens
3) Programs and policies that have increased income inequality
4)Failed foreign policy that has destabilized nations all over the world
5) Failed foreign policy that has strengthened dictatorial regimes from Venezuela and Cuba to Iran and North Korea
6) Failed domestic policies that have reduced business start ups and entrepreneurial actiivity
7) High tax rates that have made US companies uncompetitive
8) Failed immigration policies that have encouraged millions of illegal immigrants.
And that's the short list.
Corporate Profits Hit A New Record High Last Year
Mar 27, 2014 - After-tax profits for American corporations hit another record high last year, rising to $1.68 trillion
![us-after-tax-corporate-profits-are-still-on-the-rise-total-corporate-profit-domestic-profit-world-profit_chartbuilder-638x359.png](/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fd35brb9zkkbdsd.cloudfront.net%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2014%2F03%2Fus-after-tax-corporate-profits-are-still-on-the-rise-total-corporate-profit-domestic-profit-world-profit_chartbuilder-638x359.png&hash=2647c11d33737d167eb4b61d64be56f7)
Corporate profits have also hit a record as a share of the country’s total income:
![us-after-tax-corporate-profits-are-still-on-the-rise-total-corporate-profits-domestic-corporate-profits-world-corporate-profits_chartbuilder-1-638x359.png](/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fd35brb9zkkbdsd.cloudfront.net%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2F2014%2F03%2Fus-after-tax-corporate-profits-are-still-on-the-rise-total-corporate-profits-domestic-corporate-profits-world-corporate-profits_chartbuilder-1-638x359.png&hash=8417c5c45060d83b27acafe19ca8b932)
But this wealth hasn’t trickled much further down. Despite the fact that workers have been increasing their productivity — helping to drive those corporate profits — they haven’t seen much of a reward. Wages are growing at the slowest rate since the 1960s, only just barely outpacing inflation. They have actually declined since 2007, and the trend extends back even further: American workers have experienced a “lost decade” of wage growth, as their pay stayed flat or declined between 2000 and 2012, despite a 25 percent bump in productivity. On the whole, corporate profits have grown 20 times faster than workers’ incomes since 2008.