ANOTHER MASSIVE CHICAGO SHOOT OUT!

MAKAVELI

Well-Known Member
Yep. White people are always the go-to for blame now. Last week NPR, CNN and MSNBC were all obsessed with making the argument that black candidates were pushed out of the latest debate because white people don't want to vote for a black person for President.

Hey guys, I and a buttload of moderates voted for Obama twice. And he became President twice. It's not a racial thing at all. But it's the easiest way for TDSers to pass the buck when it comes to minority problems.
*American problems. Ttku, son....
 

vantexan

Well-Known Member
You still haven’t addressed the question.
Your claim is that the Republicans are the party of personal responsibility and yet can’t point to anything that the leader of the party takes personal responsibility for.
What do you think he should take responsibility for?
 

vantexan

Well-Known Member
Trump is the least personally responsible person perhaps ever. He blames anything bad on everyone else, but accepts all credit for anything good. A complete whining crybaby who cries "UNFAIR" when anyone questions him.

#1. Talking point/won't happen
#2. Talking point/won't happen
#3. Untrue
#4 Untrue, but politicians of both parties have been vacating convictions for low level drug offenders.

Perhaps you should talk to Matt Bevins about being tough on crime and drugs...great Republican. Or Matt Shea, who wanted to create a private Christian Army and worked together with the Bundy's to assist their takeover of a federal facility in Oregon.

Republicans only care about one thing: MONEY
If that's true why are you trying to entrepreneur yourself into millions, and I'm not? By the way, more Democrat millionaires in Congress than Republican millionaires. Party of Wall Street these days.
 

Old Man Jingles

Rat out of a cage
You still haven’t addressed the question.
Your claim is that the Republicans are the party of personal responsibility and yet can’t point to anything that the leader of the party takes personal responsibility for.
Everytime I see him on TV, he is taking credit for something.

Here is just a few:

The Trump Economic Record
*According to the U.S. Department of the Treasury: www.treasury.gov
  • Thanks in large part to TCJA, unemployment is at its lowest rate in nearly a half century.[1]
    • Since November 2016, 24 states have achieved or matched their lowest-ever unemployment rates. [2]
    • Unemployment rates for African Americans, Asian Americans and Hispanic Americans have hit all-time lows. [3]
  • You are earning more and keeping more of your hard-earned money.
    • We are in the midst of a 16-month streak of 3% year-over-year wage growth. [4]
    • The typical family earning $75,000 also received a tax cut of over $2,000. [5]
  • More people are participating in the labor market than ever before – and are more productive as a result of the Trump administration’s economic policies.
    • Labor force participation in November was just below the 6-year high of 63.3%. [6]
    • More adults are at work – with individuals between the ages of 25 and 54 participating in the labor force at the highest rate since 2009. [7]
  • Americans are being afforded the financial freedom and flexibility to pursue their version of the American dream.
    • New single-family home sales are up 31.6% in October 2019 compared to just one year ago. [8]
    • The poverty rate fell to a 17-year low of 11.8% under the Trump administration as a result of a jobs-rich environment. [9]
      • Poverty rates for African-Americans and Hispanic-Americans have reached their lowest levels since the U.S. began collecting such data. [10]
    • Over 6 million Americans have left the food stamp program since February of 2017.
    • The Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey’s income inequality measure declined in 2018. [11]
  • American consumers continue to drive economic growth. Real consumer spending grew at a strong 2.9% annual rate in Q3 of 2019, up from the 2.6% pace set during the preceding four quarters. [12]
    • Real disposable personal income grew at a 2.9% annual rate in Q3 of 2019, a total increase of nearly $110 billion. [13]
    • The average pace of annual growth in real disposable personal income per household under the Trump Administration ($2,577) has nearly doubled the pace from President Obama’s expansion period ($1,606). [14]
  • The stock market is reaching unprecedented heights, allowing the average American to put away more money for their retirement.
    • Both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average have seen record highs this fall. [15]
    • Since the fall of 2016, the S&P 500 has increased a whopping 50.3% which means the average American saving for retirement by holding the S&P 500 index saw a more than 50% increase in the value of their retirement plan. [16]
    • According to the 2017 Survey of Consumer Finance, the median retirement account had assets of approximately $60,000 in 2016. [17] If that account were invested in the stock market for the last three years, that $60,000 has increased to approximately $90,000–without including any additional contributions.
    • Through TCJA and other administration actions, our economy is creating jobs at an exceptional pace.
  • Since November 2016, the economy has added more than 7 million jobs.[18]
      • For reference, this is more than the combined 2018 populations of Wyoming, Vermont, Alaska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Delaware, Rhode Island, and Montana.
      • There are 5.1 million more jobs than the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) had projected in its August 2016 report. [19]
  • Over the past twelve months, employment growth has averaged a whopping 183,700 jobs a month. [20]
  • According to the most recent data available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are nearly 1.3 million more job openings than unemployed persons. [21]
  • September 2019 marks the 19th month in a row where there were more jobs available than people to fill them. This is a first since the data series began in the year 2000. [22]
  • Manufacturing has seen a boost – contributing to a #BlueCollarBoom.
    • Since November 2016, the manufacturing sector has added an impressive 524,000 jobs. [23] The National Association of Manufacturers’ survey of the industry hit record levels of confidence under the Trump administration. [24]
    • In November 2019 alone, 54,000 new manufacturing jobs were created.
  • United States’ growth in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) shows that while other countries have begun to slow down, our economy remains vibrant.
    • U.S. GDP is $320 billion higher than the CBO had projected it would be in 2016. [25]
    • In 2019 so far, the U.S. economy grew 2.4% at an average annual rate, while the rest of the G7 has grown at 1.0%. [26]
  • U.S. companies are bringing money back home from overseas.
    • As a result of TCJA, U.S. companies have brought back close to a trillion dollars from overseas.
      • As reported by Bloomberg as recently as June, corporations have brought back $876.8 billion dollars since TCJA was enacted. [28]
    • The TCJA stemmed the tide of corporate tax inversions by substantially reducing incentives for companies to go overseas.
 

vantexan

Well-Known Member
You still haven’t addressed the question.
Your claim is that the Republicans are the party of personal responsibility and yet can’t point to anything that the leader of the party takes personal responsibility for.
It's really simple...If Trump says something negative is his fault he'll get impeached for it. And before they're through the Democrats will make it sound like something Hitler devised.
 

MAKAVELI

Well-Known Member
Everytime I see him on TV, he is taking credit for something.

Here is just a few:

The Trump Economic Record
*According to the U.S. Department of the Treasury: www.treasury.gov
  • Thanks in large part to TCJA, unemployment is at its lowest rate in nearly a half century.[1]
    • Since November 2016, 24 states have achieved or matched their lowest-ever unemployment rates. [2]
    • Unemployment rates for African Americans, Asian Americans and Hispanic Americans have hit all-time lows. [3]
  • You are earning more and keeping more of your hard-earned money.
    • We are in the midst of a 16-month streak of 3% year-over-year wage growth. [4]
    • The typical family earning $75,000 also received a tax cut of over $2,000. [5]
  • More people are participating in the labor market than ever before – and are more productive as a result of the Trump administration’s economic policies.
    • Labor force participation in November was just below the 6-year high of 63.3%. [6]
    • More adults are at work – with individuals between the ages of 25 and 54 participating in the labor force at the highest rate since 2009. [7]
  • Americans are being afforded the financial freedom and flexibility to pursue their version of the American dream.
    • New single-family home sales are up 31.6% in October 2019 compared to just one year ago. [8]
    • The poverty rate fell to a 17-year low of 11.8% under the Trump administration as a result of a jobs-rich environment. [9]
      • Poverty rates for African-Americans and Hispanic-Americans have reached their lowest levels since the U.S. began collecting such data. [10]
    • Over 6 million Americans have left the food stamp program since February of 2017.
    • The Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey’s income inequality measure declined in 2018. [11]
  • American consumers continue to drive economic growth. Real consumer spending grew at a strong 2.9% annual rate in Q3 of 2019, up from the 2.6% pace set during the preceding four quarters. [12]
    • Real disposable personal income grew at a 2.9% annual rate in Q3 of 2019, a total increase of nearly $110 billion. [13]
    • The average pace of annual growth in real disposable personal income per household under the Trump Administration ($2,577) has nearly doubled the pace from President Obama’s expansion period ($1,606). [14]
  • The stock market is reaching unprecedented heights, allowing the average American to put away more money for their retirement.
    • Both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average have seen record highs this fall. [15]
    • Since the fall of 2016, the S&P 500 has increased a whopping 50.3% which means the average American saving for retirement by holding the S&P 500 index saw a more than 50% increase in the value of their retirement plan. [16]
    • According to the 2017 Survey of Consumer Finance, the median retirement account had assets of approximately $60,000 in 2016. [17] If that account were invested in the stock market for the last three years, that $60,000 has increased to approximately $90,000–without including any additional contributions.
    • Through TCJA and other administration actions, our economy is creating jobs at an exceptional pace.
  • Since November 2016, the economy has added more than 7 million jobs.[18]
      • For reference, this is more than the combined 2018 populations of Wyoming, Vermont, Alaska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Delaware, Rhode Island, and Montana.
      • There are 5.1 million more jobs than the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) had projected in its August 2016 report. [19]
  • Over the past twelve months, employment growth has averaged a whopping 183,700 jobs a month. [20]
  • According to the most recent data available from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are nearly 1.3 million more job openings than unemployed persons. [21]
  • September 2019 marks the 19th month in a row where there were more jobs available than people to fill them. This is a first since the data series began in the year 2000. [22]
  • Manufacturing has seen a boost – contributing to a #BlueCollarBoom.
    • Since November 2016, the manufacturing sector has added an impressive 524,000 jobs. [23] The National Association of Manufacturers’ survey of the industry hit record levels of confidence under the Trump administration. [24]
    • In November 2019 alone, 54,000 new manufacturing jobs were created.
  • United States’ growth in Gross Domestic Product (GDP) shows that while other countries have begun to slow down, our economy remains vibrant.
    • U.S. GDP is $320 billion higher than the CBO had projected it would be in 2016. [25]
    • In 2019 so far, the U.S. economy grew 2.4% at an average annual rate, while the rest of the G7 has grown at 1.0%. [26]
  • U.S. companies are bringing money back home from overseas.
    • As a result of TCJA, U.S. companies have brought back close to a trillion dollars from overseas.
      • As reported by Bloomberg as recently as June, corporations have brought back $876.8 billion dollars since TCJA was enacted. [28]
    • The TCJA stemmed the tide of corporate tax inversions by substantially reducing incentives for companies to go overseas.
Thanks Obama!
 

DriveInDriveOut

Inordinately Right
Thanks Obama!
LMFAO
1569463095782.gif
 

cachmeifucan

Well-Known Member
Trump was going to "fix" Chicago. In fact, he's been there several times to tell everyone and act tough. It used to be one of his campaign talking points about how it was all Obama's fault.

You're up to bat, Donnie. It looks like you're hitting .000.

It's Trump's fault now. He owns it, and because the "Blacks Love Him", he has no excuses.
I mean 500 is 500 to many but the good economy seems to be the reason the murders are down. And we can blame trump for the great economy
 
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