Reagan did it, not Clinton; how Clinton flimflammed America

Robert W

Don't tread on me. Be kind to our president.
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Clinton was as polished as a Democrat turd can be. Watch the video and see how a Nobel Prize awarded economist shaves his hide off of Clinton. Remember Clinton took credit for a surplus? Pure nonsense. First, I studied his budgets every year he was in office. He never budgeted for a surplus. He got it due to the rush to buy dot.com stocks in firms, by investors trying to get rich, who paid taxes upon selling stocks. He had no way to know about this ahead of time. Enjoy Dr. Friedman skin him alive. This might interest Winco. BTW, Friedman gave credit to Reagan for the economy.

 
Clinton was as polished as a Democrat turd can be. Watch the video and see how a Nobel Prize awarded economist shaves his hide off of Clinton. Remember Clinton took credit for a surplus? Pure nonsense. First, I studied his budgets every year he was in office. He never budgeted for a surplus. He got it due to the rush to buy dot.com stocks in firms, by investors trying to get rich, who paid taxes upon selling stocks. He had no way to know about this ahead of time. Enjoy Dr. Friedman skin him alive. This might interest Winco. BTW, Friedman gave credit to Reagan for the economy.


Milton Friedman?
The ******* loony tune who guided Reagan to triple the debt?

That was REAGAN who flimflammed America.

Bush and the People's Money

1768987208369.webp
Slate
https://slate.com › news-and-politics › 2001/03 › bush-...
Mar 1, 2001 —

George W. Bush has an argument that he thinks clinches the case for his $2.1 trillion tax cut, or as he calls it, his $1.6 trillion tax cut. The argument is the budget surplus is “the people’s money.” The federal government is taking in more than it needs. So it should give the extra cash back to the people who pay the taxes.

So it should give the extra cash back to the people who pay the taxes. “This surplus is not the government's money,” he said in a in a characteristic line yesterday in Council Bluffs, Iowa. “It’s the people’s money. And I believe we ought to listen to the people of America and share that money with the people who pay the bills.” This is only one example of dozens of similar constructs. In his budget message to Congress, Bush said he was merely demanding a “refund” on behalf of taxpayers.
 
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