I'm better off personally. I make about $20K more a year, and have over $250K in stock that I didn't have then.
This country and most families are worse off now than when obama took office. That's clear.
That's just history. The real question now is, where to go from here and who is best suited to take us there?
In every way, it's Romney.
Going from top to bottom I am sure you are just trolling.
Who was president 4 years ago? Oh yeah...it was Bush....and we were in the beginning of the 2nd greatest economic downturn in our country's history. Between Jan and Aug 2008, we lost 605,000 jobs. So far this year, we have gained 1,017,000 jobs.
Fuck yeah it's better.
Instead of blaming Bush(43), you just might want to check to see what the Congress (controled by Democrtas) was doing.
You live in a fucking fantasy world. Deny it all you want, but Republicans caused this clusterfuck, and every Republican in office has made it their number one priority to boot BO instead of actually trying to turn the economy around.
You and your kind are the cause of this - you have failed this nation.
Stock market returns (T. D. Ameritrade's "Enlightened Investor" magazine (fall 2008 edition), page 3):
Average Annual Returns:
- Democrat: 9.0%
- Republican: 5.8%
Cumulative Return on $10,000:
- Democrat: $315,449
- Republican: $73,536
Average Annual Returns (individual administrations):
- FDR 7.5%
- Truman 8.3%
- Eisenhower 10.9%
- Kennedy 6.5%
- LBJ 7.7%
- Nixon -3.9%
- Ford 10.8%
- Carter 6.9%
- Reagan 10.2%
- H. W. Bush 11.0%
- Clinton 15.2%
- George W Bush -0.8% (through 8/25/08)
(in reconciling average annual returns with the cumulative gain on $10,000 statistic above, I'm guessing that Republican administrations have represented giant boom and bust cycles where lots of money was made, lots of money was lost, but the net overall effect was simply transfer of wealth, rather than gains that hold significantly over time?)
Average Annual Cumulative Return:
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http://www.bluevirginia.us/diary/73...our-wallet-dems-outperform-republicans-by-far
** Obviously you won't have 40 years of continuous Democratic (or Republican) rule, so the sequential compounding above is only hypothetical and most likely very grossly exaggerates the actual pot of money you would end up with in reality ** (second chart, which looks like lump sum investing, and third chart, which is dollar cost averaging and probably what most people with 401k would relate to, then extrapolating cumulative return over time by using average annual return over 40 years of Republican rule (5.8% average annual return) vs. 40 years of Democratic rule (9.6% average annual return)
But it does seem to reinforce my impression above that 1) Republican cycles end up being massive boom and bust cycles where Wall Street (very savvy and active traders, employing judicious amounts of leverage and a healthy respect for risk (i. e. permanent loss of capital, not short term volatility in price), can get incredibly rich, while Main Street gets put in the poor house and pundits on tv say that buy and hold investing in a low cost, total market index fund (VTSMX) no longer works, even though that strategy requires a time horizon of decades, not a few years or even a decade) and that 2) significant negative returns at some point can seriously damage your accumulation of long-term wealth (i. e. the actual pot of money you are left with, not average annual returns or relative performance metrics):
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Ryan is partially right he just forgot to include the Democratic ilk along with a777pilot's ilk.
a777, "partisan hack"? Geez, pot meet kettle! good luck with your "fixed income" in the coming years...
If the GOP congress we the American people elected in 2010 has made things even worse, why should we American voters believe the same warmed over GOP lies in 11/2012?
I
Time to take the trash out.
..then in 2016, you'll be saying the same thing.
It has boiled down to picking which is the best-tasting pile of dog crap.
This is the heart of the issue. Do we all take a haircut and get our fiscal house in order or do we declare it just too difficult and spend, spend, spend and let the next guy worry about it? It's a simple proposition. Do we act like adults or act like children?
Unfortunately, austerity suits neither party.
