View Full Version : Bush is a heartless bastard.


Duke41
11-20-2008, 09:36 AM
This is from CNN Business News.

{The claims numbers, the latest gloomy indicator for the U.S. economy, come as Senate Democrats are seeking to extend unemployment insurance for workers whose benefits have expired.
The House has passed the legislation, and a Senate vote could come as early as Thursday.
The Senate bill would take 60 votes to pass. President Bush has threatened to veto the bill, saying it's fiscally irresponsible. }

Man of the people, rich people.

striperman36
11-20-2008, 09:43 AM
what an A-Hole
Bailout bill for his buds
Nothing for Joe Six-pack

spence
11-20-2008, 09:47 AM
Actually, Bush is now indicating he's going to support this bill.

Must have had a visit from the Ghost of Christmas Future :hihi:

-spence

striperman36
11-20-2008, 10:05 AM
I guess someone told he what it is about

The Dad Fisherman
11-20-2008, 10:26 AM
I think he locked himself in his Play-room....err...I mean the Oval Office for an intense brainstorming session (OK in his case Storming might be pushing it) and walked out singing a Happy Tune.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouZTIqcvb30

......Either that or he finally figured out what the little button on the top of the pen was for.

Nebe
11-20-2008, 10:28 AM
And your surprised? :hs:

Duke41
11-20-2008, 12:22 PM
where did you see he was supporting the bill?

The Dad Fisherman
11-20-2008, 12:34 PM
Perino: Bush would sign jobless benefits extension

WASHINGTON – With weekly jobless claims benefits at a 16-year high, the White House said Thursday that President George W. Bush would quickly sign legislation pending in Congress to provide further unemployment benefits.

The Senate this week is expected to take up a bill, already passed by the House, that would extend unemployment insurance checks for up to 13 additional weeks for jobless people whose benefits have run out. The Senate vote could occur as early as Thursday evening and would require support from 60 senators to pass.

White House press secretary Dana Perino, discussing the worsening economic environment, said Bush is "always concerned" when people lose their jobs and is eager to help.

More than 1.2 million jobs have been lost so far this year and the civilian jobless rate is at a 14-year high of 6.5 percent of the labor force.

The White House earlier had threatened to veto a much broader, $61 billion stimulus bill that included aid to help states maintain Medicaid benefits and new spending for public works projects, in addition to the jobless benefit extension.

Bush's advisers had taken no position on the stand-alone jobless benefits bill costing about $6 billion, other than to say they were firmly opposed to Democratic efforts this week to combine it with a $25 billion bailout of the auto industry that would be drawn from the financial rescue package.

Republicans blocked Senate consideration of the unemployment aid bill in October, but that was before a nearly quarter million additional layoffs that month. The Senate vote occurs at a time when the economy is taking its worst beating in a quarter century.

"The recent financial and credit crisis has slowed the economy, and it's having an impact on job creation," Perino said. "The president is always concerned when anybody loses their job and wants to ensure that anybody who wants to work can find employment."

Perino's statement came after the Labor Department reported that claims for unemployment benefits jumped last week to the highest level since July 1992 when the U.S. economy was emerging from a recession. The report provided more evidence of a rapidly weakening job market that expected to get even worse next year.

The House bill would provide seven additional weeks of payments to those who have exhausted their benefits. Those in states where the unemployment rate is above 6 percent would be entitled to an additional 13 weeks above the 26 weeks of regular benefits. The benefit checks average about $300 a week nationwide.

Without the legislation, the authors say, 1.1 million people will have exhausted their unemployment insurance benefits by the end of the year.

Congress has enacted federally funded extensions seven times in the past 50 years during economic slumps — in 1958, 1961, 1972, 1975, 1982, 1991 and 2002.

The House also voted in June to extend unemployment benefits for three months, but that bill stalled in the face of opposition from Senate Republicans and a White House veto threat.

The Bush administration contends that past extensions occurred only when the unemployment rate was considerably higher and that it was fiscally irresponsible to provide extra benefits in states with low unemployment.

Unemployment insurance is a joint program between states and the federal government that is almost completely funded by employer taxes, either state or federal.

TheSpecialist
11-21-2008, 07:50 PM
This is from CNN Business News.

{The claims numbers, the latest gloomy indicator for the U.S. economy, come as Senate Democrats are seeking to extend unemployment insurance for workers whose benefits have expired.
The House has passed the legislation, and a Senate vote could come as early as Thursday.
The Senate bill would take 60 votes to pass. President Bush has threatened to veto the bill, saying it's fiscally irresponsible. }

Man of the people, rich people.

Once again the Bush bashers are out in force, you guys must me marking the days down on the calendar



The White House earlier had threatened to veto a much broader, $61 billion stimulus bill that included aid to help states maintain Medicaid benefits and new spending for public works projects, in addition to the jobless benefit extension.


Aha, the real reason he threatened to veto it, looks like he had the right position it was loaded with pork at first :sspam:

You owe him an apology. :cheers2:

Raven
11-22-2008, 06:56 AM
yep he's not heartless

he's extended the bennies to run out right in the middle of winter
when there's no jobs.....and that takes heart.

Duke41
11-22-2008, 07:36 AM
Oh geez don't be a Bush basher. He is the best president we ever had. We should add the face of the deciderer's on Rushmore.

Duke41
11-22-2008, 07:40 AM
You owe him an apology. :cheers2:[/QUOTE]

I will right after he apoligizes to the 4,500 families with dead fathers, sons, daughters and moms that his failed policies got killed on Iraq, or the millions of folks that lost their jobs or homes do to his misguided policies. Bush is and will always be the worst president ever and a global embrassment to this great country. Just to note I am a conservative, not stupid or greedy or blind republican.

stripersnipr
11-22-2008, 09:05 AM
You owe him an apology. :cheers2:

I will right after he apoligizes to the 4,500 families with dead fathers, sons, daughters and moms that his failed policies got killed on Iraq, or the millions of folks that lost their jobs or homes do to his misguided policies. Bush is and will always be the worst president ever and a global embrassment to this great country. Just to note I am a conservative, not stupid or greedy or blind republican.[/QUOTE]

People lost their homes because they didn't pay their mortgage. Nothing more, nothing less.

Duke41
11-22-2008, 09:15 AM
People lost their homes because they didn't pay their mortgage. Nothing more, nothing less.[/QUOTE]


It is not that simple at all. As a real estate broker I focus on short sales and the most common reason the folks I help have for losing there greatest possession is lost jobs, medical issues and of course mortgage fraud. I am sickened by the lack of compassion I see for these folks and I am reminded daily that only by the grace of God do I go forward with my life. I also read that Thomas Jefferson said a country's greatness can be measured byhow its treats its poor and downtrodden. That being the case we have fallen greatly over the last decade.

Joe
11-22-2008, 09:38 AM
People will be less likely to paint the poor as lazy dope smokers who don't deserve homes or heathcare after they've joined them.
Its not just uneducated blue-collar manufacturing people that are getting s-canned now. The poverty train is making stops at Citigroup, American Express, JP Morgan - people who have never known what its like to be laid off are going to have a different view once they walk out with a cardboard box filled with their personal effects and no prospects on the horizon.

RIJIMMY
11-22-2008, 10:10 AM
People will be less likely to paint the poor as lazy dope smokers who don't deserve homes or heathcare after they've joined them.
Its not just uneducated blue-collar manufacturing people that are getting s-canned now. The poverty train is making stops at Citigroup, American Express, JP Morgan - people who have never known what its like to be laid off are going to have a different view once they walk out with a cardboard box filled with their personal effects and no prospects on the horizon.

yup

Backbeach Jake
11-22-2008, 07:34 PM
If Texas was OZ and the Tinman and Scarecrow had a son....

Swimmer
11-22-2008, 07:54 PM
Lets see how all the annointed ones feels in July of 2012 about thier choices they made in November 2008.

Obama will take credit for winning the war in Iraq.

Then Obama will widen the war in Afganistan to include Pakistan, and probably one or two other smaller vacation distinations that our troops have been dying to visit.

Obama will then reinstitute the draft, you all remember his statement that everyone should do a year or two of public service.

Just watch its coming.

Joe
11-22-2008, 09:08 PM
I think that's what Marc Rich's appointment is going to be - Selective Service Administration....

spence
11-22-2008, 10:17 PM
Yea, if one thing's for sure, an Obama administraion is sure to bring about endless war.

-spence