bannedagain said:
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If the company values you, you can. I know many people that have juggled two part-time jobs in order to get 40+ hours a week.
The Democrats gave you unions, overtime, SS, medicare, weekends, medicade, insurance and the list goes on and on. Repubicans are like the grinch.
So what where you saying. Plus the gov. is run by republiCONS right now. They held the debt limit captive which would have made the depression look like a easy sunday morning. You have no clue.
And its many of those same reasons that jobs are leaving America. Unions gave us inflated worker costs which destroyed the American auto industry. Social Security gave us a horrible pension plan that allows government to take tax monies and spend it on government debt. Medicare pegs health care to specific monetary values, ensuring companies bilk the system for money as well as increased costs to do business with the government (same with Medicaid).
Republicans aren't like the grinch. Republicans are usually the ones that run the business that know how hard it is to run a business while external forces (the government) continue to hamper, hinder, and reduce your margins which force you to do business overseas just to scrape by. Certainly, they are far from perfect, but to champion Democrats as the thing as all that is right with America shows a true lack of understanding of the economy.
Run a business for a few years, and see how over-zealous regulations and restrictions hurts your company. As I've said before, there is a reason that groups like the NFIB rarely score Democrats high in terms of pro-growth initiatives.
The Democrat mantra is that you have to take money from Peter and invest it in Paul in hopes that you grow the economy. That rarely works, because a few dozen beaurucrats in Washington distributing money to special interest factions rarely will see the same kind of growth and development as ensuring a market where capital is not taken from businesses in the first place, and instead is utilized by 300 million Americans through trade and commerce.
Back from the dead, I'm afraid.







