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No risk = no reward. With an attitude like yours, it is unlikely that you were bound to be successful with your new venture anyways, so pardon my bluntness, but are we supposed to give a s***? You go on and on about how much sweat and tears have been poured into this business plan, and you're willing to sacrifice it all over the personal vendetta you have against the President? Cry us a river.
This thread is nothing more than the rantings of a "good ole boy" who is lamenting the loss of corporate welfare and overt cronyism which are the mainstays of the typical Obama-bashing flapjaws. Nothing more. The only reason that a business person would "hold out" on their fantabulously spectacular big time money making idea would be if it 1) it really is that great to begin with or 2) they are not receiving the "kick backs" and back room deals that they normally would under an (R) administration or 3) they aren't able to do business with regualtions in place to protect the general public and need "lose" regulations to be able to cut costs by polluting the environment, being lax on safety with workers, etc, etc.
More and more people are beginning to understand that the tidal wave of new regulations are not just republican talking points. They see it in their workplaces, their friends are talking about it, and it does help explain the weakest economic recovery on record. The load of crap dumped on the hometown bank next door has nothing to do with corporate welfare or protecting the public.
Like I say, people are catching on. Obama just hit a new record low in approval per Gallup (38%), and a record gap between approval and disapproval (16%).
When have you EVER seen things like they are now???
I did not always agree with Bush however, I put a lot of money in the system back then.
That is not my point. My point is not that things were THIS bad then. Actually, now that I think about it, our country has seen many bad economical times. My point was that people don't think about the big picture with the economy. The economy starting going down before the President got into office. So how can we act like the President was supposed to fix everything? I don't even like the Administrations decisions and I can say that.
No risk = no reward. With an attitude like yours, it is unlikely that you were bound to be successful with your new venture anyways, so pardon my bluntness, but are we supposed to give a s***? You go on and on about how much sweat and tears have been poured into this business plan, and you're willing to sacrifice it all over the personal vendetta you have against the President? Cry us a river.
That was kinda the point I was trying to make, lol.
This thread is nothing more than the rantings of a "good ole boy" who is lamenting the loss of corporate welfare and overt cronyism which are the mainstays of the typical Obama-bashing flapjaws. Nothing more. The only reason that a business person would "hold out" on their fantabulously spectacular big time money making idea would be if it 1) it really is that great to begin with or 2) they are not receiving the "kick backs" and back room deals that they normally would under an (R) administration or 3) they aren't able to do business with regualtions in place to protect the general public and need "lose" regulations to be able to cut costs by polluting the environment, being lax on safety with workers, etc, etc.
It is fun....
Obama made to clear he was for redistributing the wealth.
It took my wealth of the system.
Oh, we are drilling every weekday. I am drilling now.
And I keep track of things.
I will be done at this pace in October for the year.
No risk = no reward. With an attitude like yours, it is unlikely that you were bound to be successful with your new venture anyways, so pardon my bluntness, but are we supposed to give a s***? You go on and on about how much sweat and tears have been poured into this business plan, and you're willing to sacrifice it all over the personal vendetta you have against the President? Cry us a river.
While I can't speak to the OP's particular business interests. But the whole "There is too much government regulation argument" rings rather hollow in light of ongoing efforts of the Obama administrations to cut governmnet regulation.
The White House this week unveiled plans from 30 government agencies to cut the cost and paperwork needed to comply with federal regulations.
The plans are in response to President Barack Obama’s January directive to agencies to weed out outdated regulations and ensure that those on the books promote economic growth and job creation while protecting public health and welfare (C&EN, Jan. 24, page 10).
Cass R. Sunstein, Obama’s regulatory gatekeeper, says this first round of reforms will save hundreds of millions of dollars in annual compliance costs and tens of millions of hours in reporting burdens. The changes could ring up billions of dollars in savings for U.S. businesses in coming years, he adds.
Major themes in the plans are scaling back or eliminating government paperwork that businesses must fill out and switching from paper to electronic reporting.
President Barack Obama told almost two dozen current and former corporate leaders he’ll work with businesses to reduce hurdles to job creation, including regulations, while asking their help lobbying Congress on measures to boost the recovery.
Obama met for more than an hour with his Council on Jobs and Competitiveness in Durham, North Carolina, hearing a selection of proposals from panel members, including General Electric Co. (GE) Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Immelt and American Express Co. (AXP) Chairman and CEO Kenneth Chenault, to create 1 million new jobs over the next two years.
“Sometimes we are going to need legislation and where we do, having a group like this that can reach a bipartisan consensus and then push Congress to act, I think, can make an extraordinary difference,†Obama said at the meeting, held at the headquarters of Cree Inc. (CREE), the Durham-based maker of energy- efficient light-emitting diode products, which are becoming increasingly common in homes, businesses and municipal applications such as streetlights.
On the same day that President Barack Obama chided regulatory agencies like the Food and Drug Administration for developing regulations that interfere "with the pursuit of progress and the growth of our economy," PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC) published a report that found emerging markets led by China, India, and Brazil are chipping away at America's lead in medical technology innovation, in part, because the FDA's 510 (k) medical device approval program is cumbersome and costly.
In an article he penned for Tuesday's Wall Street Journal, President Obama said the FDA will outline new efforts to improve the process for approving medical devices. The president also signed an executive order on Tuesday requiring federal agencies to ensure that regulations protect safety, health, and the environment while advancing economic growth.
Anand Iyer, president and chief operating officer of WellDoc, a telehealth company that recently received FDA 510 (k) clearance for its WellDoc DiabetesManager system, said the time has come for the FDA to develop a medical device approval program that demonstrates the balance of innovation and safety that the president seeks.
Based on the OP's consistent aniti-Obama postings I have to really wonder how credible his assertions really are.
But the whole "There is too much government regulation argument" rings rather hollow in light of ongoing efforts of the Obama administrations to cut governmnet regulation.
Lets see, Obama hasn't lied about anything else has he
Maybe this time, ya this time I should believe his lipservice bullchit
Obama isn't going to cut a damn thing that is meaningful for business, and he knows it...but most importantly I know it!
More and more people are beginning to understand that the tidal wave of new regulations are not just republican talking points. They see it in their workplaces, their friends are talking about it, and it does help explain the weakest economic recovery on record. The load of crap dumped on the hometown bank next door has nothing to do with corporate welfare or protecting the public.
Like I say, people are catching on. Obama just hit a new record low in approval per Gallup (38%), and a record gap between approval and disapproval (16%).
4) Inflation. The weak economy is putting downward pressures on prices while inflation begins to soar. Profit margins are too thin. It's business suicide.
Um...question...
If the weak economy is putting so much downward pressures on prices, then how can we have soaring inflation? In other words, how can prices be simultaneously depressed downward and also be soaring upward? Can you pls explain this to me?
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