joobz
Tergiversator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2006
- Messages
- 17,998
I agree. But how does this change the fact that he was correct about the severity of the recession?A direction the stimulus was sold as stopping.
I agree. But how does this change the fact that he was correct about the severity of the recession?A direction the stimulus was sold as stopping.
if you say so. Unfortunately the timeline doesn't quite agree with you. The time it took for the stimulus to actually get underway, and the time he requested the stimulus we saw continual 500,000/month job losses.He ended up being correct because the situation got worse under his glorious guiding hand. At the time he was making the claim, we weren't there yet.
In addition to Unemployment benefits running out for many, many people, the housing market has taken a hit as the tax rebate program ended.
In other words: Your anti-stimulus stance has furthered the economic contraction that had appeared to, at least in some part, level off/stabilize prior to the latest hits.
Here's what I don't get - how the tax cuts are supposed to create jobs. And, yes, I know the rhetoric/boilerplate response of: "businesses use the saved money to create jobs" except that if I'm a business owner, and I have no market because relatively little money is flowing, why would I bother hiring more people? I'm more likely to cut people as the economy continues to contract. You'd have to be a very foolish businessman to hire new workers when the market for your products is shrinking.
Nice attempt at changing topics. The reason BAC dislikes me is that I tend to hold people accountable to facts and what they say.According to the graph, the highest unemployment rate was almost year after the stimulus passed.
The recession was in motion when he stated it was. It was severe like he said it was and later data confirmed his statement. It can't possibly be considered "Self-fulfilling" if he wasn't the one to have created the situation to make it. The job loss trends showed to be constant (and severe) for the year he entered office to the year afterwards. This constant rate of job loss suggests forces causing the recession to be well in play prior to his entering the state.If you say something that you know isn't true at the time you are saying it, that is called lie. If the situation changes, and it becomes true, that's called a self-fulfilling prophecy.
According to the graph, the highest unemployment rate was almost year after the stimulus passed.
The time it took for the stimulus to actually get underway, and the time he requested the stimulus we saw continual 500,000/month job losses. … snip ...
Obama made the claim (this recession is worse than 81/82) in January. Look at the increasing rate and you can see he was speaking truth.
The reason BAC dislikes me is that I tend to hold people accountable to facts and what they say.
So it stopped going up once the stimulus kicked in. That proves our point and refutes yours...
ETA:
how about actually looking at the graph
http://www.google.com/publicdata?ds...ate&tdim=true&dl=en&hl=en&q=unemployment+rate
Obama made the claim (this recession is worse than 81/82) in January. Look at the increasing rate and you can see he was speaking truth.
It is extremely silly to claim that the stimulus is responsible for the recession when it was clearly well in motion before it was even postulated.
But the unemployment rate also stops going up even when there is no stimulus.
You mean propping up a failing housing market with tax credits didn't work? I'm schocked, shocked I tells ya! Perhaps if the government paid all underwater mortgages for a year housing would rebound.
I stand by my arguments.I suspect that Chris L will discover the real reason we don't get along soon enough. In fact, I suspect he's learning that as you misrepresent the facts over and over in this thread.![]()
I wonder why you keep avoiding the fact that your characterization of Obama's statement was wrong?It actually kept going up, long after the stimulus was passed.
Actually, it was propping up the housing market. That's the point I made. The expiration of the tax credit caused the housing market to begin falling again... Thus, the tax credit was responsible for propping up what had remained of the housing market.
IOW: The Stimulus package (which included that tax rebate) was, at least in some part, successful. Unemployment had leveled off - perhaps higher than was touted, but the goal of leveling off unemployment was achieved.
As was the goal of propping up the housing market. Now that further stimulus has been blocked, unemployment has begun to rise again and the housing market has started falling off again. Funny coincidences, those.
How does lack of stimulus translate to businesses not hiring people? It's not like corporations are broke. What are they sitting on? Almost two trillion in reserves?