Obama's Council of Economic Advisors, a group of three economists who each were handpicked by Obama, released on Friday its assessment of Obama's failure on the economy. The report was released at a point in the news cycle - right at the beginning of a 3-day holiday weekend - so as to fly below the radar. And it worked. You probably didn't hear a thing about it on CNN or MSNBC.
Notable admissions extracted from the report:
- even using the administration's ridiculous claim that the so-called "stimulus" created 2.4 million jobs, each of those supposed jobs cost the U.S. taxpayer $288,000.
- at a cost of $666 billion, the Obama regime has ballooned the national debt from $9.9 trillion to $14.4 trillion in only 30 months in office. And by seeking to eliminate the current spending cap, they evince their intent to go even deeper in debt. As I have demonstrated earlier, it is the Obama regime's hope that the national debt will exceed America's gross domestic product (GDP) - a notion that would have been laughable just 3 years ago.
- if the President and his regime had merely cut a check of $100,000 to each of the supposed 2.4 million job recipients (setting aside the reality that government does not create any jobs), the taxpayers would have saved $427 billion of Obama's $666 billion porkulous spending.
Additionally, unemployment has increased during the Obama regime's tenure from 7.3% to 9.1%. The actual number, which includes those who have stopped looking for work, is much higher. Only in the world of Obama-math could the skyrocketing rate of unemployment be evidence that the "stimulus" has created jobs.
Back here in the real world, Obama has been a demonstrable - and predictable - failure. Jimmy Carter Part II - only with more zeroes and without the distraction of a drunk brother. One must leave to conjecture the question of whether the Obama economic disaster has resulted from incompetence or intentional malfeasance (I believe it is both), but the result is the same: by any objective measure, President Obama is a failure.
A change in administrations is on the horizon, and it cannot occur too soon.
Link.



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