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To: jamese777
By comparison, the Republican Party — which resisted Obama's recently passed stimulus plan and has criticized the spending in his budget — finds its favorability at an all-time low. It also receives most of the blame for the current partisanship in Washington and trails the Democrats by nearly 30 percentage points on the question of which party could best lead the nation out of recession.

IMO, the GOP should at this point voice opposition, hold together, and allow the Dems to give the country a big honkin dose of liberalism. It's gonna happen anyway at this rate, and by 2010 the inflation will kick in like a big dawg and remind folks why Jimmah Carter was a one-termer.

4 posted on 04/29/2009 11:28:35 AM PDT by dirtboy
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To: dirtboy
"It's gonna happen anyway at this rate, and by 2010 the inflation will kick in like a big dawg and remind folks why Jimmah Carter was a one-termer.

I don't see how inflation doesn't eventually set in. But, the question becomes, when does it set in. If inflation doesn't start to effect the American consumer before the summer of 2010, it could be a very ugly year (again) for the GOP - especially with the negatives of the Republican party.

7 posted on 04/29/2009 11:34:24 AM PDT by Big_Monkey
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To: dirtboy

...and allow the Dems to give the country a big honkin dose of liberalism.

Good point. Obama and his lib minions may yet be the GOP's salvation.

23 posted on 04/29/2009 12:11:38 PM PDT by luvbach1 (Worse than we could have imagined.)
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