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Obama's Labor Day Speech 2010 (TEXT, VIDEO): President Assails GOP, Promotes Job Creation Program

AP/Huffington Post   First Posted: 09/06/10 04:09 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:35 PM ET

A combative President Barack Obama rolled out a long-term jobs program Monday that will exceed $50 billion to rebuild roads, railways and runways, and coupled it with a blunt campaign-season assault on Republicans for causing Americans' hard economic times.

"These are the folks whose policies helped devastate our middle class and drive our economy into a ditch. And now they're asking you for the keys back," Obama said.

Republicans made it clear that Obama can expect no help from them.

Administration officials said the initial $50 billion would be the beginning of a six-year program of transportation improvements, but they did not give an overall figure. The proposal has a longer-range focus than last year's economic stimulus bill, which was more targeted on immediate job creation.

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Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy


President Obama's remarks, as released by the White House:

Hello, Milwaukee! Thank you to the Milwaukee Area Labor Council and to all of my brothers and sisters in the AFL-CIO for inviting me to spend this day with you - a day that belongs to the working men and women of America.

I want to acknowledge your outstanding national president, a man who knows that a strong economy needs a strong labor movement: Rich Trumka; Dave Newby, president of the Wisconsin AFL-CIO; and our host, your Milwaukee Area Labor Council Secretary-Treasurer, Sheila Cochran, who I hear has a birthday tomorrow. I'm proud to be here with our Secretary of Labor, a daughter of union members, Hilda Solis; and our Secretary of Transportation, Ray LaHood. And let's hear it for the folks at the forefront of every fight for Wisconsin's working men and women - Senator Herb Kohl; Congresswoman Gwen Moore; and your outstanding mayor, Tom Barrett. Your other great senator, Russ Feingold, was here with you earlier, standing with you and your families just like he always has, but he had to head to his hometown of Janesville to participate in their Labor Day parade.

So it is good to be back in Milwaukee. Of course, this isn't my first time at Laborfest. I stood right here with you two years ago, when I was still a candidate for this office. During that campaign, we talked about how, for years, the values of hard work and responsibility that built this country had been given short shrift, and how that was slowly hollowing out our middle class. About how some on Wall Street took reckless risks and cut corners to turn huge profits, while working Americans were fighting harder and harder just to stay afloat. And about how the decks were too often stacked in favor of the special interests and against working Americans.

What we knew, even then, was that these years would be some of the most difficult in our history. And then, two weeks later, the bottom fell out of the economy. Middle-class families suddenly found themselves swept up in the worst recession in our lifetimes.

So the problems facing working families are nothing new. But they are more serious than ever. And that makes our cause more urgent than ever. For generations, it was the great American middle class that made our economy the envy of the world. It's got to be that way again.

It was folks like you, after all, who forged that middle class. It was working men and women who made the twentieth century the American century. It was the labor movement that helped secure so much of what we take for granted today - the 40-hour work week, the minimum wage, family leave, health insurance, Social Security, Medicare, retirement plans, those cornerstones of middle class security that all bear the union label.

And it was that greatest of generations that built America into the greatest force for prosperity, opportunity and freedom the world has ever known. Americans like my grandfather, who went off to war just boys, returned home men, and traded one uniform and set of responsibilities for another. Americans like my grandmother, who rolled up their sleeves and worked in factories on the home front. When the war was over, they studied under the GI Bill; bought homes under the FHA; raised families buttressed by good jobs that paid good wages with good benefits.

It was through my grandparents' experience that I was brought up to believe that anything is possible in America. But they also knew the feeling when that opportunity is pulled out from under you. They would tell me about seeing their fathers or uncles losing jobs during the depression; how it wasn't just the loss of a paycheck that stung. It was the blow to their dignity; their sense of self-worth. I'll bet a lot of us have seen people changed after a long bout of unemployment; how it can wear down even the strongest spirits.

So my grandparents taught me early on that a job is about more than a paycheck, as important as that is. A job is about waking up every day with a sense of purpose, and going to bed each night fulfilled. A job is about meeting your responsibilities to yourself, to your family, to your community. I carried that lesson with me all those years ago when I got my start fighting for men and women on the South Side of Chicago after their local steel plant shut down. I carried that lesson with me through my time as a state senator and a U.S. Senator. I carry that lesson with me today.

And I know that there are folks right here in Milwaukee and all across America who are going through these kinds of struggles. Eight million Americans lost their jobs in this recession. And while we've had eight straight months of private sector job growth, the new jobs haven't been coming fast enough. Now, the plain truth is, there's no silver bullet or quick fix to the problem. Even when I was running for this office, we knew it would take time to reverse the damage of a decade's worth of policies that saw a few folks prosper while the middle class kept falling behind - and it will take more time than any of us wants to dig out of the hole created by this economic crisis.

But on this Labor Day, there are two things I want you to know, Milwaukee. Number one: I'm going to keep fighting, every single day, to turn this economy around; to put our people back to work; to renew the American Dream for your families and for future generations.

Number two - and this I believe with every fiber of my being: America cannot have a strong, growing economy without a strong, growing middle class, and the chance for everybody, no matter how humble their beginnings, to join that middle class. A middle class built on the idea that if you work hard and live up to your responsibilities, you can get ahead - and enjoy some basic guarantees in life. A good job that pays a good wage. Health care that'll be there when you get sick. A secure retirement even if you're not rich. An education that'll give our kids a better life than we had. These are simple ideas. American ideas.

I was thinking about this last week. On the day I announced the end to our combat mission in Iraq, I spent some time, as I often do, with our soldiers and veterans. This new generation of troops coming home from Iraq has earned its place alongside that greatest generation. Like them, they have the skills and training and drive to move America's economy forward once more. And from the time I took office, we've been investing in new care, new opportunity, and a new commitment to their service that's worthy of their sacrifice. But they're coming home to an economy hit by recession deeper than any we've seen. And the question is, how do we create the same kind of middle class opportunity my grandparents' generation came home to? How do we build our economy on the same kind of strong, stable foundation for growth?

Well, anyone who thinks we can move this economy forward with a few doing well at the top, hoping it'll trickle down to working folks running faster and faster just to keep up - they just haven't studied our history. We didn't become the most prosperous country in the world by rewarding greed and recklessness. We didn't come this far by letting special interests run wild. We didn't do it by just gambling and chasing paper profits on Wall Street. We did it by producing goods we could sell; we did it with sweat and effort and innovation. We did it by investing in the people who built this country from the ground up - workers, and middle-class families, and small business owners. We did it by out-working, out-educating, and out-competing everyone else.

Milwaukee, that's what we're going to do again. That's what's been at the heart of all our efforts: building our economy on a new foundation so that our middle class doesn't just survive this crisis - but thrives once we emerge. And over the last two years, that's meant taking on some powerful interests who had been dominating the agenda in Washington for too long.

That's why we passed financial reform that provides new accountability and tough oversight of Wall Street; reform that will stop credit card companies from gouging you with hidden fees and unfair rate hikes; reform that ends the era of taxpayer bailouts for Wall Street once and for all.

That's why we eliminated tens of billions of dollars in wasteful taxpayer subsidies to big banks that provide student loans. We're using those savings to put a college education within reach for working families.

That's why we passed health insurance reform that will make coverage affordable; reform that ends the indignity of insurance companies jacking up your premiums at will or denying you coverage just because you get sick; reform that shifts control from them to you.

That's why we're making it easier for workers to save for retirement, with new ways of saving your tax refunds, a simpler system for enrolling in plans like 401(k)s, and fighting to strengthen Social Security for the future. And to those who may still run for office planning to privatize Social Security, let me be clear: as long as I'm President, I'll fight every effort to take the retirement savings of a generation of Americans and hand it over to Wall Street. Not on my watch.

That's why we've given tax cuts to small business owners. Tax cuts to clean energy companies. A tax cut to 95 percent of working Americans, just like I promised you on the campaign. And instead of giving tax breaks to corporations to create jobs overseas, we're cutting taxes for companies that put our people to work here at home.

That's why we're investing in growth industries like clean energy and manufacturing. And you've got leaders here like Tom Barrett and Jim Doyle who have been fighting to bring those jobs to Milwaukee and to Wisconsin. Because we want to see the solar panels and wind turbines and electric cars of tomorrow manufactured here. We don't just want to buy stuff made elsewhere; we want to grow our exports so the world buys products that say "Made in America."

Because there are no better workers than American workers, and I'll place my bet on you any day of the week. When the naysayers said we should just let the American auto industry vanish and take hundreds of thousands of jobs down with it, we said we'd stand by them if they made the tough choices necessary to compete once again - and today, that industry is on the way back.

Now, another thing we've done is make sound and long-overdue investments in upgrading our outdated and inefficient national infrastructure. We're not just talking new roads, bridges, dams and levees; but also a smart electric grid and the broadband internet and high-speed rail lines required to compete in the 21st century economy. We're talking investments in tomorrow that are creating hundreds of thousands of private sector jobs today.

It was because of these investments, and the tens of thousands of projects they spurred all over the country, that the battered construction sector actually grew last month for the first time in a long time. Still, nearly one in five construction workers are unemployed. And it doesn't do anybody any good when so many American workers have been idled for months, even years, at a time when there is so much of America to rebuild.

That's why, today, I am announcing a new plan for rebuilding and modernizing America's roads, rails and runways for the long-term.

Over the next six years, we are going to rebuild 150,000 miles of our roads - enough to circle the world six times. We're going to lay and maintain 4,000 miles of our railways - enough to stretch coast-to-coast. We're going to restore 150 miles of runways and advance a next generation air-traffic control system to reduce travel time and delays for American travelers - something I think folks across the political spectrum could agree on.

This is a plan that will be fully paid for and will not add to the deficit over time - we're going to work with Congress to see to that. It sets up an Infrastructure Bank to leverage federal dollars and focus on the smartest investments. It will continue our strategy to build a national high-speed rail network that reduces congestion, travel times, and harmful emissions. It will cut waste and bureaucracy by consolidating and collapsing more than 100 different, often duplicative programs. And it will change the way Washington spends your tax dollars; reforming the haphazard and patchwork way we fund and maintain our infrastructure to focus less on wasteful earmarks and outdated formulas, and more on competition and innovation that gives us the best bang for the buck.

All of this will not only create jobs now, but will make our economy run better over the long haul. It's a plan that history tells us can and should attract bipartisan support. It's a plan that says even in the still-smoldering aftermath of the worst recession in our lifetimes, America can act to shape our own destiny, to move this country forward, to leave our children something better - something lasting.

So these are the things we've been working for. These are some of the victories that you helped us achieve. And we're not done. We've got a lot more progress to make. And I believe we will.

But there are some folks in Washington who see things differently. When it comes to just about everything we've done to strengthen the middle class and rebuild our economy, almost every Republican in Congress said no. Even where we usually agree, they say no. They think it's better to score political points before an election than actually solve problems. So they said no to help for small businesses. No to middle-class tax cuts. No to unemployment insurance. No to clean energy jobs. No to making college affordable. No to reforming Wall Street. Even as we speak, these guys are saying no to cutting more taxes for small business owners. I mean, come on! Remember when our campaign slogan was "Yes We Can?" These guys are running on "No, We Can't," and proud of it. Really inspiring, huh?

To steal a line from our old friend, Ted Kennedy: what is it about working men and women that they find so offensive?

When we passed a bill earlier this summer to help states save the jobs of hundreds of thousands of teachers, nurses, police officers and firefighters that were about to be laid off, they said "no" to that, too. In fact, the Republican who's already planning to take over as Speaker of the House dismissed them as "government jobs" that weren't worth saving. Not worth saving? These are the people who teach our kids. Who keep our streets safe. Who put their lives on the line for our own. I don't know about you, but I think those jobs are worth saving.

We made sure that bill wouldn't add to the deficit, either. We paid for it by finally closing a ridiculous tax loophole that actually rewarded corporations for shipping jobs and profits overseas. It let them write off the taxes they pay foreign governments - even when they don't pay taxes here. How do you like that - middle class families footing tax breaks for corporations that create jobs somewhere else! Even a lot of America's biggest corporations agreed the loophole should be closed, that it wasn't fair - but the man with the plan to be Speaker is already aiming to open it up again.

Bottom line is, these guys refuse to give up on the economic philosophy they peddled for most of the last decade. You know that philosophy: you cut taxes for millionaires and billionaires; you cut rules for special interests; you cut working folks like you loose to fend for yourselves. They called it the ownership society. What it really boiled down to was: if you couldn't find a job, or afford college, or got dropped by your insurance company - you're on your own.

Well, that philosophy didn't work out so well for working folks. It didn't work out so well for our country. All it did was rack up record deficits and result in the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.

I'm not bringing this up to re-litigate the past; I'm bringing it up because I don't want to re-live the past. It would be one thing if Republicans in Washington had new ideas or policies to offer; if they said, you know, we've learned from our mistakes. We'll do things differently this time. But that's not what they're doing. When the leader of their campaign committee was asked on national television what Republicans would do if they took over Congress, he actually said they'd follow "the exact same agenda" as they did before I took office. The exact same agenda.

So basically, they're betting that between now and November, you'll come down with a case of amnesia. They think you'll forget what their agenda did to this country. They think you'll just believe that they've changed. These are the folks whose policies helped devastate our middle class and drive our economy into a ditch. And now they're asking you for the keys back.

Do you want to give them the keys back? Me neither. And do you know why? Because they don't know how to drive! At a time when we're just getting out of the ditch, they'd pop it in reverse, let the special interests ride shotgun, and hit the gas, careening right back into that ditch.

Well, I refuse to go backwards, Milwaukee. And that's the choice America faces this fall. Do we go back to the policies of the past? Or do we move forward? I say we move forward. America always moves forward. And we are going to keep moving forward today.

Let me just close by saying this. I know these are difficult times. I know folks are worried, and there's still a lot of hurt out here. I hear about it when I spend time in towns like this; I read about it in your letters at night. And when times are tough, it can be easy to give in to cynicism and fear; doubt and division - to set our sights lower and settle for something less.

But that is not who we are. That is not the country I know. We do not give up. We do not quit. We are a people that faced down war and depression; great challenges and great threats; and lit the way for the rest of the world. Whenever times have seemed at their worst, Americans have been at their best. Because it is in those times when we roll up our sleeves and remember that we will rise or fall together - as one nation, and one people. That's the spirit that started the labor movement. The idea that alone, we are weak. Divided, we fall. But united, we are strong. That's why we call them unions. That's why we call this the United States of America.

Milwaukee, that's the case I am going to make across the country this fall - yours. And I am asking for your help. If you are willing to join me, and Tom Barrett, and Gwen Moore, and Russ Feingold, we can strengthen our middle class and make our economy work for working Americans again. We can restore the American Dream and deliver it safely to our children. That's how we built the last American century. That's how we'll build the next. We don't believe in the words "No, we can't." We are Americans, and in times of great challenge, we push forward with an unyielding faith that we can. Yes, we can. Thank you, God Bless You and the work you do, and God Bless the United States of America.

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A combative President Barack Obama rolled out a long-term jobs program Monday that will exceed $50 billion to rebuild roads, railways and runways, and coupled it with a blunt campaign-season assault o...
A combative President Barack Obama rolled out a long-term jobs program Monday that will exceed $50 billion to rebuild roads, railways and runways, and coupled it with a blunt campaign-season assault o...
 
 
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07:47 PM on 09/10/2010
Highly confused by the blame that the President is passing on to the GOP. Is the Democratic Party not in control of congress? So if congress is not passing his bills, does his own party not own most of the blame?
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NilesPDX
02:15 PM on 09/08/2010
TEN POOREST U.S. CITIES

City, State, % of People Below the Poverty Level

1. Detroit , MI 32.5%
2. Buffalo , NY 29.9%
3. Cincinnati , OH 27.8%
4. Cleveland , OH 27.0%
5. Miami , FL 26.9%
6. St. Louis , MO 26.8%
7. El Paso , TX 26.4%
8. Milwaukee , WI 26.2%
9. Philadelphia , PA 25.1%
10. Newark , NJ 24.2%

U.S. Census Bureau, 2006 American Community Survey, August 2007

What do the top ten cities (over 250,000) with the highest poverty rate all have in common?

Detroit, MI (1st on the poverty rate list) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1961.
Buffalo, NY (2nd) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1954.
Cincinnati , OH (3rd) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1984.
Cleveland , OH (4th) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1989.
Miami, FL (5th) has never had a Republican mayor.
St. Louis , MO (6th) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1949.
El Paso , TX (7th) has never had a Republican mayor.
Milwaukee , WI (8th) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1908.
Philadelphia , PA (9th) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1952.
Newark , NJ (10th) hasn't elected a Republican mayor since 1907.
09:22 PM on 09/07/2010
At times Miss Dashwood is thoroughly flummoxed by the quirky moderation on HP. I have seen many borderline-vile comments replete with name calling, yet my response on this thread defending Pres. Obama's jobs program and criticizing Republican obstruction in blocking loans and tax cuts to small businesses just went ..... poof. Perhaps it was my admonition to the responder to "try again" to come up with an appropriate argument that raised their wrath? Darn, I'm just too potty-mouthed, I guess.
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Chris tibbs
08:09 PM on 09/07/2010
dude, i will tell you the sky is not blue.....
sky n. , pl. , skies . The expanse of air over any given point on the earth; the upper atmosphere as seen from the earth's surface.... yes it does say seen, but sky is a noun, hence its the 'expanse of air'... the blue would be the refracted light....
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Nancy66
06:50 PM on 09/07/2010
Hopefully, more companies will think twice before moving overseas. Read an article last week where some are actually coming back to the states, as they're finding that the costs of doing business overseas is becoming more expensive.
03:25 PM on 09/07/2010
what a boring speech.. I hope they don't take any excerpts from this one for his monument
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rel77
I used to be disgusted, now I try to be amused
02:26 PM on 09/07/2010
The disappearance of the middle class has been going on for almost thirty years. And while I applaud the sentiments in Obama's speech, sentiments aren't enough. We need a paradigm shift away from our current business model, and that would take the will of senators and congressmen to stand up to the corporations that fund their campaigns. I don't see that happening.
All of the efforts this administration has made to improve the job outlook have helped, but we need to make a MUCH bigger commitment to manufacturing, and we need several types of new products, including many more consumer products (anybody know why we're incapable of making a television or a computer?} We need to build things again and people need to be committed to supporting those domestically based industries when they go shopping.
There's a place in Maine we go to every year, it's been there since the turn of the last century. A lot of the appliances are still the same ones they used in the 50's and 60's. I looked at them one day and saw that all of those toasters and electric blankets and coffee makers had been made in the USA. Each appliance represented a plant, in a different state, supporting an entire town full of people.. Until that happens again, all this talk about making the middle class strong again is just that, talk.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Longtimeliberal
06:29 PM on 09/07/2010
People may not realize the stimulus funds in part were paired with private equity funds to start many many new manufacturing jobs-$90 billion and biggest green stimulus to start factories and jobs ever. Also, big increase in funding for R&D.
01:10 PM on 09/07/2010
Mr. President I am sorry but you have been in office for almost 2 years now. You should have been worried about this in May, 2009 and made it your number 1 priority. You didn't and your popularity has suffered. You have no one to blame but yourself for this.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Longtimeliberal
06:31 PM on 09/07/2010
The stimulus has been working and these same things are in it. Maybe the President didn't communicate everything due to working thru the multiple crisis out there and running the country. We hopefully hold a higher standard to ourselves to find out what is going on.
06:59 PM on 09/07/2010
The President has failed by his own standards. He claimed that he could fix the economy to get elected and he did not. He claimed the stimulus would keep unemployment below 8% and it didn't. If he would have said something like: no President can influence the economy more than a little bit, I would be willing to let him off the hook, but he didn't.
10:17 AM on 09/08/2010
I only agree with the part of your comment that says you are sorry.
10:48 AM on 09/08/2010
I was apologizing for pointing out his poor performance.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nevada Scribbler
Angry middle-aged man with a heart of gold.
12:34 PM on 09/07/2010
We can start by bringing American jobs back home to the US. It is Republican CEOs that moved these millions of jobs overseas -- and were given a huge tax incentive to do so by GW Bush and the GOP. It is these same Republican CEOs who blame President Obama and the Democrats for this rotten economy they created.
We suffer historic hardships so these (insert favorite curse word here) can anger the ignorant for votes.
12:42 PM on 09/07/2010
NAFTA was pushed by??????????
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MaryMay
May your tears come from laughing
04:49 PM on 09/07/2010
Clinton.

NAFTA was first negotiated by Bush, Sr., but Clinton signed it into law in 1993.
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Lemmy
There Are Americans, then there are Liberals . .
12:43 PM on 09/07/2010
How would you motivate companies to bring these jobs back? If it's cheaper to produce goods overseas, you would have to provide a pretty nice tax cut for companies to repatriate thes jobs.
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parlimentMike
Terrorists keep you in fear
01:42 PM on 09/07/2010
Reciprocal tariffs would be a good start. It's time to stop giving America away.
02:11 PM on 09/07/2010
not to mention the US consumer would not stand for the HUGE price increases that come along with the factory start up costs, not to mention the wages and benefits that come along with domestic made products.

US companies that have moved off shore did it for a reason - global competition. if the US manufacturing operations of companies did not move offshore they would have been hammered price wise from Asian companies setting up shop here and selling their good.
12:17 PM on 09/07/2010
Obama has not created jobs - overall we have lost jobs - he has increased and maintained gov jobs (60% union)
His idea for the economy is - take $$$ from producers and give it to non producers -
If you keep making gov bigger and have fewer tax payors, who will fund gov?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Billyguitar
Disgusted by politics since John Anderson lost. In
12:21 PM on 09/07/2010
statistically you are incorrect.
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Lemmy
There Are Americans, then there are Liberals . .
12:46 PM on 09/07/2010
The Dems idea is to tax our way to prosperity.
12:59 PM on 09/07/2010
Not this dem...I got a tax credit this year. And I paid a smaller % in fed taxes last year.

Lemmy....you need a new accountant.... and a different source for your political information wouldn't hurt either.
11:47 PM on 09/07/2010
Proof please. Stop reading the Fox talking points and do your own research.
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FGW
Republicans, You Don't Speak For Me, So Stop Lying
12:09 PM on 09/07/2010
I love archives!!!

The Republicans are following a playbook that has evolved over more than four decades, to regain power by sabotaging Democratic presidents.

In this analysis, the Republicans believe they can reclaim the lucrative levers of national authority by making the country as ungovernable as possible while a Democrat is in the White House, essentially holding governance hostage until they are restored to power. Then, the Democrats are expected to behave as a docile opposition “for the good of the country” (and usually do). Democrates prove them wrong this time.

The “destroy Obama” game plan tracks most closely with Newt Gingrich’s strategy for undermining Bill Clinton 16 years ago. But today’s strategy also traces back to Richard Nixon’s sabotage of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Vietnam peace talks in 1968 and Ronald Reagan’s October Surprise gambit against President Jimmy Carter’s Iran hostage negotiations in 1980.

http://www.consortiumnews.com/2010/033110.html
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NJProgressiveIndie
Never Surrender...
04:04 PM on 09/07/2010
You are so fanned and faved!
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Billyguitar
Disgusted by politics since John Anderson lost. In
12:08 PM on 09/07/2010
"They talk about me, like a dog"

President Obama quoted Jimi Hendrix in Stone Free!
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parlimentMike
Terrorists keep you in fear
01:48 PM on 09/07/2010
I'm quite sure they were wrong about Jimi.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
11:47 AM on 09/07/2010
$50 billion in government money will be a tempting pot for the Republicans to skim from with more no bid contractors in the future
11:57 AM on 09/07/2010
William Jefferson, that Congressman from LA caught, tried on 16 charges, and found guilty of 11 of those charges was a Republican? Someone write the Washington Post, they mis-spelled "Republican" as "Democrat", unless of course he was a true Democrat: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/05/AR2009080503195.html
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Longtimeliberal
06:37 PM on 09/07/2010
John Ensign under investigation by FBI
12:13 PM on 09/07/2010
This $$$ is for Barry's union buddies - it's a get out the vote Dem slush fund.
Where were the shovel ready jobs we were promised a yer ago with the last batch of $$$
Follow the $$$ it went to unions and Dem supporting districts.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Billyguitar
Disgusted by politics since John Anderson lost. In
12:22 PM on 09/07/2010
what a load!!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Jamie Schler
Writer at Life's a Feast & Huff Post blogger.
11:37 AM on 09/07/2010
People keep complaining, keep saying "too little too late" or "it's too much" or "it's not enough" but what would have happened if he never presented the stimulus? Or presented all of this all at once? It's like Healthcare Reform: he can't just make a decision and sign everything into law or create programs alone. Everything must pass through Congress and they are never happy! He had to get Healthcare Reform rolling by presenting only a first step or it never would have passed. Same with getting the country's economy back on track. Little by little and he is able to push it through Congress with enough people on both sides of the aisle happy enough to say yes. Things have to be set up a piece at a time and this is what is happening. I think he is doing a great job, knows what needs to be done and understands how to get Congress and Americans used to his ideas and plans a little at a time. But in my opinion, he has done a lot in the short time he's been in office.
12:10 PM on 09/07/2010
Totally agreed, fanned and faved!
11:34 AM on 09/07/2010
When they call you a Dog, then, show them your teeth and scare them off with a pretend Bite.
You are as cute as BO though.