Posted on 07/25/2014 9:35:17 AM PDT by Kaslin
Just the other day when I was home in Dunn, a woman standing in the checkout line told me that she felt as though she had less money in her pocket. And, unfortunately, shes right. Did you know that the average clothing cost for children has risen $310 during the presidents term and that food costs have risen an average of $210? Or that an average family of four is missing as much as $1,120 from their monthly budget? I bet women do.
No one understands the true implications of these missing dollars better than women. Women are the ones balancing the household checkbook, worrying about health care and education decisions for their families, and are the ones sitting at the kitchen table at the end of the month crunching numbers to figure out how to cut costs so the dollars dont run out before the month does. I understand this because I have done this and still do. Having worked at the local Burger King during high school, and then paying my way through community college and nursing school, I can relate to the pressures that women feel.
Women talk to me every day about the situations they face at work and home, and how they want a government that works to find solutions. My colleagues and I want to work together for solutions too. Our goal is to empower and engage every woman in this country, regardless of political-leaning or socioeconomic status. We are aware of the facts. The sad fact is that for every job the White House boasts about creating, two new people were added to the food stamp program. Additionally, if we were to factor in the number of people who have given up looking for work, real unemployment would be an astounding 10.2 percent. This is inexcusable. Our job is fighting to create good-paying jobs, grow a healthy economy and help hardworking Americans keep more of their paycheck.
So what are we doing in the House to resolve this? House Republicans are passing legislation with our Democrat colleagues to create jobs and get Americans back to work. There are currently 321 bills that have passed in the House of Representatives, yet still await action in the Senate. Just this past week, the House took up several bills to improve educational access and affordability for young Americansproviding higher-ed opportunities to support families and spur economic growth. To further tackle the issue of unemployment, the House passed legislation called the SKILLS Act which helps workers to acquire the education and skills-training they need for in-demand jobs. This legislation gives women new opportunities by providing them with the hands-on training necessary to transition into a new field of work or move up the ladder. Our party is one of solutions, and we are working for the American people to ensure that we are making their lives easier.
Unfortunately, due to the current Obama economy, I understand the need to stretch every dollar. However, surging gas prices, increasingly-high food and childcare costs do not have to be the norm. Fortunately, women have the opportunity to change the status-quo. We represent nearly 52 percent of the voting electorate, and we are the ones who are going to determine which direction our country heads. The woman who juggles a hectic schedule at work, packs school lunches for her children, finds the time to balance her household checkbook, and makes critical healthcare decisions for her family will be the same woman who will determine elections and policies that will influence our country.
Imagine a time in the future, when all women can turn on the nightly news and hear how something actually got done in Washington. Instead of learning about increasing costs or the new bills she will have to pay, she will hear how decisions made in Washington that day made her life a little easier and a little less chaotic.
This is what my colleagues and I are fighting for every day a bright future for women and all Americans.
Well tell us what you want what you really really want.
“Well tell us what you want what you really really want.”
Nicely done.
I’m sorry, I wasn’t listening.
My wife always says that I never listen to her, at least I think that’s what she says.
“No one understands the true implications of these missing dollars better than women. Women are the ones balancing the household checkbook, worrying about health care and education decisions for their families, and are the ones sitting at the kitchen table at the end of the month crunching numbers to figure out how to cut costs so the dollars dont run out before the month does.”
THEN QUIT VOTING FOR THE DEMOCRAT ‘CAUSE HE’S PRETTY, OR A MINORITY! Mrs. RQSR.
“The woman who juggles a hectic schedule at work, packs school lunches for her children, finds the time to balance her household checkbook, and makes critical healthcare decisions for her family will be the same woman who will determine elections and policies that will influence our country.”
and that approach got us what for the last six and the next two years? Who is this mystical woman? Julia?? I am tired of sex politics. I want to hear what some politician is going to do for all the people by way of what they intend for the country to do within the bounds of our constitution.
Fuel prices have doubled since odinga moved into the White Hut, and the prices of everything else are doubling accordingly, just with a little lag time.
A BIG part of the problem is that “the government” does not seem to recognize the squeeze being experienced in the finances for middle-class families over the past six years or more. And “the government” is not going to create “solutions” to these problems. If “the government” would stop wasting tax money, begin to show some loyalty to the dwindling actual tax-payers, and stop acting as if we all should just want to pay more taxes for their feel-good programs, etc., it would be a tiny step in the right direction.
Try to imagine a title: “What We Men Want”
The need for such titles is a liberal/progressive construct.
Not to mention the cost of gasoline for your car and electricity and heat for your home. All up, up, up since 2009 while Obama dithers about the Keystone pipeline.
Beer.
It’s been all downhill since women started to vote. And NO, I am not ducking and covering. I stand by what I say.
First of all Renee, a substantial number of men do exactly what you strongly imply only the woman does. Things like balancing the checkbook, worrying about their children's education, sleepless nights wondering how they're going to pay for life's necessities, much less life's desires, etc., etc..
Second, I guess you didn't notice that we no longer need ‘something done’ by our government. We need for them to leave us alone. To get off our backs in terms of regulation, taxes, numerous and conflicting laws, and political correctness. In short, to adhere to the Constitution - both the spirit and the letter.
Truer words were never spoken. Women vote for Democrats, and Democrat policies will enhance the possibility that the flood of illegals may give her children communicable diseases and the illegals will take away any possibility of the woman's children having a chance at a decent job at decent wages. But if juggling women vote Democrat, then the ruination of their children's future is what they really want.
Renee Elmers is an amnesty supporter who should have been defeated in the primaries.
So....they thought Obama WAS what they wanted but....now they think he is NOT what they wanted...?
Gosh I’m so surprised.
I was surprised several years ago to see from the results of a poll that women want to be “Cherished”. Not loved or protected or respected or taken care of.......cherished.
Now, “cherished” is an interesting word. Do the Democrats cherish women when they tell them to kill their babies? Do the Democrats cherish women when they tell them that the most they should expect out of life is a lonely government apartment and a measly government check?
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