Posted on 06/06/2011 3:41:50 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
And you know who that helps? Er, nobody, really, but it certainly hurts Barack Obama. The Daily Caller provides a four-minute video from today’s Don Imus Show, in which Democratic political strategist James Carville warns that extended unemployment will have a destabilizing effect on American politics, which is hardly the kind of Hope and Change Obama was selling in 2008:
CLICK ABOVE LINK FOR THE VIDEO
It is going to be very difficult, Carville said. But the country, if that is what we are doing, this is gruesome on people. This unemployment rate for this long is humanitarian crisis of the first magnitude. This financial crisis, people have studied this by the way, they know that the things take this long to work their way through. The aftermath of these things kind of an academic book that is dry entitled This Time is Different. What it concluded it is not different this time. They studied it, the aftermath of the financial crisis. What we are going through is imminently predictable. But this is a terrible thing that has happened to peoples lives. I think the president at one level understands that, you know. But he is limited in what he can do. So well just have to see. But its going to be hard. If 54,000 jobs is the new norm this is going to be very, very tough. Some people say it just might be one more thing. We dont know.
But Carville said the consequences arent limited to politics alone. He warned of heighten risk of civil unrest with the bleak economic picture.
You know, look this is a humanitarian you know, youre smart enough to see this, Carville said. People, you know, if it continues, were going to start to see civil unrest in this country. I hate to that, but I think its [eminently] possible.
Will there be riots in the streets? Doubtful, not unless we see a total collapse of the economy. Right now it’s a toss-up whether we’ll drop into a mild recession, so the civil unrest is hardly imminent, the word the DC mistakenly used to transcribe Carville’s warning. But without a doubt, high and chronic unemployment has caused civil dissatisfaction with Obama and the Democrats; we saw that in the midterm elections, while the GDP numbers were still inching up.
Now that the Keynesian bubble has deflated, Obama is left with no progress at all, and handed his opponents a good argument that far from helping, Obamanomics got in the way of a normal recovery. At the very least, Republicans can ask whether a Democratic warning of impending civil unrest is a sign of success or failure, and ask voters to reach the obvious conclusion.
Amen to that. (St. John the Baptist School, Brunswick, ME; Class of 1968)
We’re watching our country be destroyed before our eyes.
The collection of quotes on your profile page says it all.
They gave us warnings, wisdom, guidance, examples of courage and a roadmap.
Those great men were right.
A chicago update basically taken from the “Second City Blog” it seems the beaches will be closed today no reason given, the top cop types are out pleading with the “reverends” for peace and the media blackout on the mobs of “honor students” is beginning to crack. Chicago a nice Democratic enclave.
You are correct. Dept. of Indoctrination, indeed.
In my Boomer grade school classes, it was not unusual for the sister to have over 30 students in a class. Somehow, they did it. And they did it without huge amounts of money spent on resources.
Authority and discipline are cheap to enforce, when allowed, as they were then. Rulers must have been cheap, too.
Rulers? Were you a naughty boy? I was a well-behaved little girl whose mother would have given her what-for if I had misbehaved in school. You and I can remember the days when children were expected to be respectful of authority figures and adults in general. Today, coming across a child with good manners is such a rare treat.
I had my moments. However, my Dad was a Grand Night in the KOC, and was in tight with the priests. He knew all the details before he arrived home from work, every time; much to my chagrin. Guilty as charged!
Uh-huh! You knew you would get it at school and at home. And you’d better not bad-mouth the sisters or the teachers, right? That’s how it was in my home. My mother would say, “I don’t want to hear it”. Exact quote. She told me after I had reached adulthood that she did not always agree with what the sisters had punished us for, but that there was no way she would say anything against them in our presence.
Sadly, today, even in many Catholic schools, the parents are up in arms if their precious children are scolded for anything or if their lazy kids don’t get good grades that they have not earned.
If the nuns claimed it was true, there was no defense!
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