Education, healthcare, infrastructure, public services, transportation
USPS
Gee, Winger...could you POSSIBLY be more vague about what Barry's plan is to stimulate the economy? We all know that you progressives LOVE to spend money on all of those things but where is Obama's plan in any of that vagueness to create jobs?
I'll bet you can't even tell me who Barry's Chief Economic Advisers are? You know why you can't? Because he hasn't even ATTEMPTED to do anything about jobs or the economy in so long NOBODY knows who they are!
Do you think the The Congress has much to do about nothing? Calling the twice elected President of the United States "Barry" is the most telling part of your post, your hate for him is irrational.
What's "telling" is that instead of answering my question...you've decided to get upset because someone wasn't respectful enough of Barack Obama! It's a simple question...yet all of you have either run from it or tried to deflect the conversation to something else like my supposed "hate" for Obama! I don't hate him by the way...but neither do I WORSHIP him like so many of you on the left do.
So did you want to tell me what Barry's plan is to stimulate the economy? Did you want to tell me who his Chief Economic Advisers are and what THEIR plan is to stimulate the economy? I'm guessing that will never happen, Catcher because I think it's rather obvious at this point that he doesn't have one and hasn't in many many years!
old style does this help??
Economic policy of Barack Obama
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Main article:
Political positions of Barack Obama
The
economic policy of the Barack Obama administration is a combination of tax increases on the wealthiest Americans and investment in myriad
public services such as
scientific research,
infrastructure,
health care reform, and
education that is meant to boost the American
economy and future prospects. Barack Obama himself is a proponent of using
government regulation to stem
crony capitalism, and
tax revenue to stabilize and promote economic growth. Current economic advisers are
Alan B. Krueger of
Princeton University and
Jeffrey Liebman of
Harvard University.
[1] In 2006, Obama wrote: "We should be asking ourselves what mix of policies will lead to a dynamic
free market and widespread economic security, entrepreneurial innovation and upward mobility [...] we should be guided by what works."
[2] Speaking before the
National Press Club in April 2005, he defended the
New Deal social welfare policies of
Franklin D. Roosevelt, associating
Republicanproposals to establish private accounts for
Social Security with
Social Darwinism.
[3]