
| Msg # 162 of 668 on ZZNY4439, Thursday 9-28-22, 11:07 |
| From: SCOTT |
| To: ALL |
| Subj: Bush Agenda |
From: Scotty1958@nyc.rr.com Unemployment When President Bush took office, unemployment had reached a 40-year low of 3.9%. America can do better. Under George W. Bush's Unemployment Plan, more than 9 million Americans are actively looking for work but unable to find it € more than the combined total population of 10 states. The President has produced the worst job creation record of any administration in the last 58 years. Poverty Under President Bush, millions of Americans slipped below the official poverty line, marking the first increase in poverty since 1993. George W. Bush plans to do even more for poverty in the future. Bankruptcies In two years, the U.S. had the highest rate of bankruptcy cases in history, increasing 23% since 2000. That's good, but there's still more work to do. President Bush's Corporate Scandal Plan should make the rate go even higher. Homeland Insecurity President Bush is doing more to make our country less secure. In August 2002, George W. Bush vetoed a bipartisan homeland security package for port security, cockpit doors, border patrol, customs information systems, local first responder equipment, chemical weapons safety and other security shortfalls. President Bush has his priorities straight -- just four months before he was to propose another tax giveaway for the rich, Bush rejected the Homeland Security funds on the grounds that the nation could not afford it. Hatred of America When there were high levels of worldwide sympathy after the 9/11 attack, President Bush didn't sit back and do nothing -- he worked harder to make America more hated. U.S. prestige has plummeted to new lows in Europe, the Middle East and Asia due to perceived arrogance and belligerence. Budget Deficit George W. Bush inherited a horrible budget surplus of $236 billion in 2000, yet the President thankfully found a way to make it evaporate into a more than $150 billion deficit for 2002. There's more to be done, and President Bush is taking action. Private sector budget forecasters now predict the Bush 2004 deficit to be in the $300 to $350 billion range, meaning a half-trillion-dollar negative change in the government's fiscal picture since George W. Bush took office. Education Cuts Weeks after the President's promise to "write a healthy check" for education when signing the "No Child Left Behind Act", he submitted a 2003 budget that actually cut education the programs within the No Child Left Behind Act by $90 million. The White House 2004 budget proposal for Title I (the main program targeting aid to disadvantaged children) is expected to fall more than $6 billion short of what is promised in the new education law. Tax Breaks for the Rich Almost 40% of Bush's first tax cut went to the richest 1% of the country € those making more than $373,000 per year and the ones who need it the most. The average tax cut for that sliver of the population was $53,123. Similarly, with Bush's second tax cut proposal, the same sliver of the population would receive an average tax cut of $30,127, while the average working family would receive about $289. More Americans Without Health Insurance The number of Americans without health insurance rose by 1.4 million in 2001, after dropping in 1999 and 2000, all thanks to the leadership of George W. Bush. More Serious Crime Serious crime is up 2.1% for 2001 - the first increase in 10 years, reversing the downward trend started in 1991; between 2000 and 2001, robberies up 3.7%, murders up 2.5%. More crime means more guns, and we all love our guns, right? Copyright € 2004 MINITRUE --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05 * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2) |
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