10/24/2008 11:48:32 AM
Please refer to the graph at the bottom of the last page.you can tell that clinton's, if higher, was due to it being so high when he received office, and it then fell very very low. when bush came into office it was at this low rate. so while what you may have quoted may be the truth, it is also misleading.
10/24/2008 11:50:53 AM
2008 YTD Average 154,161,778 145,649,778 8,512,000 5.5% 2007 153,167,750 146,093,917 7,073,833 4.6% 2006 151,427,583 144,427,000 7,000,583 4.6% 2005 149,297,833 141,707,250 7,590,583 5.1% 2004 147,401,000 139,252,000 8,149,000 5.5% 2003 146,510,000 137,736,000 8,774,000 6.0% 2002 144,863,000 136,485,000 8,378,000 5.8% 2001 143,734,000 136,933,000 6,801,000 4.7% 2000 142,583,000 136,891,000 5,692,000 4.0% 1999 139,368,000 133,488,000 5,880,000 4.2% 1998 137,673,000 131,463,000 6,210,000 4.5% 1997 136,297,000 129,558,000 6,739,000 4.9% 1996 133,943,000 126,708,000 7,236,000 5.4% 1995 132,304,000 124,900,000 7,404,000 5.6% 1994 131,056,000 123,060,000 7,996,000 6.1% 1993 129,200,000 120,259,000 8,940,000 6.9% 1992 128,105,000 118,492,000 9,613,000 7.5% http://www.nidataplus.com/lfeus1.htmIR, can you think of anything that happened in 2001 that caused alot of people to lose their jobs?[Edited on October 24, 2008 at 11:54 AM. Reason : .]
10/24/2008 11:53:31 AM
10/24/2008 11:53:57 AM
10/24/2008 11:57:50 AM
all true...doesnt seem like there was much difference at all between the revered one (clinton) and the hated one (bush) which goes to prove my argument against libs who just spout off at the mouths at whatever talking point they can grasp:
10/24/2008 3:20:11 PM
I'm not exactly sure how that proves your point. It was your initial indication that unemployment was higher under clinton than it was under bush, which isn't entirely truthful nor forthcoming and doesn't certify you proving a point.
10/24/2008 4:46:00 PM
I just dont really consider any of those percentages statistically significant enough to be a campaign issue. polices certainly arent changing that...more like market conditions and the normal ebb and flow.especially when the comment that caused this debate was
10/24/2008 4:49:55 PM
I'm not seeing a lot wrong with that comment since the sharp change in overall unemployment following bush 1 is evident from the graph on page 2. I'll give Bush 9/11 and let some of the unemployment and other such negative metrics be written off as such, and I'll also give him a free pass on this most recent turn of events, but there still are no signs that he has done a good job in reducing unemployment and definitely not to the levels of clinton. I don't think any of this "proves" your point as much as it does highlight the unwillingness of some to disregard some failures during bush's term as a matter of consequence. it in no way removes him of economic error.
10/24/2008 4:59:54 PM
10/24/2008 5:05:18 PM
10/24/2008 5:43:16 PM
[quotewhat are you, hormonal right now?[/quote]Ad hominem attack...for the win?
10/24/2008 5:44:16 PM
ftw!!!
10/24/2008 5:47:47 PM
10/24/2008 6:34:38 PM
wow. so, a less than .7% change in a variable, despite massive differences in what contributed to that variable, is considered not "different"? I'd say it's pretty much the same damned thing, troll
10/24/2008 6:46:47 PM
On the one side, we have a president lowering unemployment (creating jobs) by .44% per yer. On the other side we have a president raising unemployment by .19% per year. The difference is so stark that both of your sanitys (or maybe the just the kool aid you've been drinking) should be questioned.Btw, do you actually work, or do you just like to argue with the liberals for the fun of it? You don't actually strike me as someone with very much real world experience at all based on what you post.
10/24/2008 6:58:00 PM
tell me, do you have a brain? because you don't exactly strike me as a person who actually has a brain based on what you post.and no, I don't see anything drastically different there for Bush. He starts out at 4, gets nailed with 9/11, gets shit back to close to 4, then gets nailed with housing crash. Clinton starts out w/ 7.5, gets the boon of the .com bubble, and manages to push things down to 4. so no, there really isn't a huge noticeable difference. But yes, if you ignore everything else, then one could say there is a difference. But that person would have to be an idiot to do so. Which, btw, is what you are doing.
10/24/2008 7:07:36 PM
10/24/2008 9:30:25 PM
10/24/2008 10:22:01 PM
10/24/2008 10:48:09 PM
10/24/2008 11:04:29 PM
Sooooo, you really are the slow one around here? What part of decreasing unemployment and increasing unemployment don't you get? You do know what positive and negative concepts of numbers are, right?
10/24/2008 11:20:10 PM
going back to the point I've already trashed, I see. that .44 is still close to -.16, especially when taking into account the vastly different experiences that occurred during the terms of the presidents.
10/24/2008 11:31:27 PM
The only thing trashed is your credibility. Only a brain dead moron would think there isn't much difference between taking 240k jobs per year out of the economy versus adding 660k (using todays employment numbers).Really?...Really?Are you angry because no matter how hard you try to gotcha the liberals it always ends up in one heaping pile of fail cake?
10/25/2008 9:15:45 AM
10/25/2008 9:46:14 AM
10/25/2008 12:11:26 PM
10/25/2008 12:47:42 PM
There is a lot of damage to the economy that can be attributed to Bush. My problem is that most democrats are not "the Southern New Democrat from Arkansas" that Bill Clinton was. It has been said that Bill Clinton was the best Republican president in history. I disagree, but there is no doubt that he is definitely the best Republican president in recent history. He kept his wars affordable, his tax increases small, pushed for deregulation, eroded union power, liberalized trade, and reformed welfare. He did these small-government tasks while talking endlessly about "the new economy." Why don't we get new economy speeches anymore? Why doesn't the president spend every other press conference staking next to the founders of the latest high-tech startup? Big 'R' Republicans hated Bill Clinton because they knew he was a better little 'r' republican than they were, and they couldn't stand it.
10/26/2008 12:21:08 AM
I keep hearing people say the GOP has moved way too far to the right. I think McCains campaign is evidence of such. He is known to be a moderate republican but has spent most of his campaign trying to "energize his base", he should have been going after the middle because that is the segment he lost to Obama.That huge miscalculation will cost him any chance of ever being President of the United States.
10/26/2008 12:44:59 AM
10/26/2008 1:04:47 AM
I would say gas prices are a driving factor behind this recession too. The housing crash did not drive up the cost of pretty much every consumer purchase.
10/26/2008 1:20:56 AM
10/26/2008 11:33:32 AM
10/26/2008 5:51:05 PM
10/26/2008 5:54:11 PM
10/26/2008 6:22:43 PM
nice backpeddle/subject change.
10/26/2008 9:53:02 PM
10/26/2008 10:40:42 PM