Topspin
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Intrade has the line at 60% Obama gets re-elected
http://www.intrade.com/v4/home/
http://www.intrade.com/v4/home/
Uhhh...boy you social science junior college boys have a hard time with math don't you? Obama won the popular vote by 6%.
Dumbasses are unemployed
GDP we will see if it's getting weaker, if it comes in under 2.5% this year he better worry
I have supreme confidence in the American Economy (not Obama's ablility to manage it) but the thousands of companies that make our economy great.
He's at 60% approval now, and while the bin laden bubble will indeed burst.
What are we left with A Nobel Prize winning non Muslim, actually born in the US, actually a solid foriegn policy guy with the largest feather possible in his cap.
Now it's early and we just lost the Rag head as the con front runner, Soon we will lose the cousin marriers favorite the Pizza King who couldn't win a measly senate race.
It's early, but when is it too late for a real republican to get into the heat of the race?
I think that's pretty much true though there is a certain segment of the population that would never, ever vote for Obama because he is black. That is certainly an advantage for Repelicans for securing a base, though one would have to question if they would want them as part of their base?
OBL is going to be bigger in the campaign than people think. It basically takes "Dems soft on terror" out of the GOP playbook.
They're essentially in a position where they just have to hope the economy isn't doing better by then, as has been stated.
share the drugs freak
if the economy stays as it is with him having great marks he crushes a good republican which can't even be found right now.
It appears that Damo's comment about Obama being the most vulnerable incumbant President in a long time was a very erroneous comment. If his approval ratings remain as they are it will be a very long uphill battle for Republicans to defeat him, if they can at all. Though Obama certainly has vulnerabilities, his re-election odds right now look pretty solid to me.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110511/ap_on_re_us/us_ap_poll_obama_boost
So far I'm deeply impressed with Obama's competency despite what his detractors, partisan hacks and the "Bush is God" worshipers say.
So far Obama has;
Inherited a staggering mess and a deep hole from his predecessor who is widely regarded by professionals as one of the most inept US Presidents ever. Those included a banking/financial crises that threatened the entire US economy and being over extended in two foreign wars.
He made the tough decisions required to keep the US financial system from utterly collapsing and causing another great depression.
He made the tough decision to provide stimulus spending to help mitigate the great recession he inherited from Bush.
He made the tough decision to bail out GM & Chrysler. US auto production had slipped from a record highs of over 10 million units to 5.5 million. Since the bailout US production reached nearly 8 million last year and is projected to reach 9 million this year. Most of the bail out money has all ready been paid back. That's millions of jobs saved!
He has wound down our involvement in the immoral Iraq war.
He is beginning to wind down the war in Afghanistan.
He implemented meaningful and ground breaking health care reform that will finally begin the process of modernizing our health care system and allow us to catch up with the rest of the industrialized world. Something his predecessor Clinton failed to do.
He pulled the trigger on a mission that finally killed Osama bin Ladin. Something his predecessor Bush failed to do.
Obama has certainly had his flaws and misteps and fair share of mistakes but compared to his immeadiate predecessor it's damned reassuring we have such a competent Chief Executive.
The biggest problem there, of course, is that the GOP doesn't have anyone in the current field who is nearly as good or capable as "generic candidate"....
The biggest problem there, of course, is that the GOP doesn't have anyone in the current field who is nearly as good or capable as "generic candidate"....
They don't need to have one at this point---and sadly, the economy stupid, is still in decline...buh-bye Oblama-buh bye~
Topdope has no brain-unless straw is considered actual brain matter~
The Case For Slower Than Expected Growth
As noted above, the WSJ and BCEI surveys both suggest that the economy will grow by slightly more than 3% this year. But there were plenty of respondents to both surveys that believe the economy will grow by less than 3% this year. What follows is a brief summation of the concerns held by these less optimistic survey respondents, in no particular order.
President Obama’s $800+ billion stimulus spending will largely come to an end in 2011. Many argue that it accomplished little in the way of real growth in the economy. There appears to be little or no talk about further stimulus coming from the Obama Administration, so other than the temporary payroll tax holiday passed in December, fiscal policy will be mostly neutral in 2011. Likewise, the Fed’s $600 billion QE2 will come to an end by mid-year, and as noted above, most economists expect interest rates to rise this year.
State and local governments are drowning in red ink. This will be a drag on the national economy as states cut budgets and lay off workers. In addition, it will also result in higher taxes and fees as states struggle to balance their budgets.
Economists foretell of U.S. decline, China's ascension
By Mark Felsenthal
DENVER | Sun Jan 9, 2011 12:24pm EST
Jan 9 (Reuters) - To hear a number of prominent economists tell it, it doesn't look good for the U.S. economy, not this year, not in 10 years.
Leading thinkers in the dismal science speaking at an annual convention offered varying visions of U.S. economic decline, in the short, medium and long term. This year, the recovery may bog down as government stimulus measures dry up.
In the long run, the United States must face up to inevitably being overtaken by China as the world's largest economy. And it may have missed a chance to rein in its largest financial institutions, many of whom remain too big to fail and are getting bigger.
On the one hand, Harvard's Martin Feldstein said he believes the outlook for U.S. economic growth in 2011 is less sanguine than many believe.
First, the boost to growth from government spending will be drying up this year, he said. Renewal of expiring tax cuts is no more than a decision not to raise taxes, and the impact of one-year payroll tax cut is likely modest, he said.