Political Meme - Cartoon Thread...

Re: Political Meme - Cartoon Thread


Gotta love the look at 0:08 to make sure the cameras are watching.
 
Re: Political Meme - Cartoon Thread

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Re: Political Meme - Cartoon Thread

And thanks to Obama there are more jobs available now. [emoji3] (unemployment rate about 8% then, 5% now)

https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/LNS14000000
Weird how that works out. Unemployment down, yet welfare more than doubled by over 20,000,000........seriously....it's almost like the number of people unemployed are no longer counted as unemployed because they are no longer "in the job force" also known as looking for a job. Cause that's why the unemployment rate looks so awesome right now.

http://edition.cnn.com/2017/01/18/politics/obama-presidency-statistics/index.html

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VERSUS

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Re: Political Meme - Cartoon Thread



Fair enough.....now they just need to cowboy up and go to war for what they believe in.

Pretty sure it won't happen, but heck, keep burning up cars and breaking windows. I'm sure that will somehow translate into constitutional amendments, international agreements, etc.
 
Re: Political Meme - Cartoon Thread


Interesting.
So the people in DC last week were protesting against taxes on limos and windows?
Why label this only "white people?" Were their no black people involved in the Boston Tea Party? And if it were shown that there were black participants, would that make the BTP more legitimate or less? And who is race-baiting?
These people were from Massachusetts. They started a fight. Virginians ended it.
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Re: Political Meme - Cartoon Thread

Is Tidewater obtuse? A good read on the linked site for the non-obtuse!

http://www.factcheck.org/2015/03/declining-labor-participation-rates/

Consider a report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics issued in November 2006, more than two years before Obama took office and before the start of the Great Recession. It pegged the start of the decline in participation rates at around 2000, and projected the decline would continue for the next four decades.
Bureau of Labor Statistics, November 2006: Every year after 2000, the rate declined gradually, from 66.8 percent in 2001 to 66.0 percent in 2004 and 2005. According to the BLS projections, the overall participation rate will continue its gradual decrease each decade and reach 60.4 percent in 2050.


Almost all of the decline (80 percent) in the participation rate since the first quarter of 2012 is accounted for by the increase in nonparticipation due to retirement. This implies that the decline in the unemployment rate since 2012 is not due to more discouraged workers dropping out of the labor force.”

Please enjoy my alternative facts.

 
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