[Text: Removed] Obama has done absolutely nothing to help the economy.
He's too busy looking for photo ops and demeaning himself and the office appearing on talk shows etc.
There is no point in throwing more money after bad money. Any sensible businessperson would realize that. Hell, as a republican capitalist, this would be the "free-market" dictating demand.
The only real variable that remains untested is when Obamacare is fully implemented, how many service companies will cut hours to below the requirement for health insurance and force many employees onto state run healthcare. The hardest hit people will be the ones who work in retail and food/beverage. If Mass Health is any indication of how bad other states will be, I feel bad for people in "red" states then.
From The Globe today...
According to an editorial in The Wall Street Journal last week, health care is expected to account for 41 percent of the state budget in 2013, compared with 23 percent in 2000 and 25 percent in 2006. In real terms Massachusetts’ annual health care budget is 15 percent larger than it was in 2007, according to the Journal, while transportation plunged by 22 percent, public safety by 17 percent, and education by 7 percent.


 
						 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 I still hope for some boutique version of both game and movie/tv hard copies retail, because I am thoroughly repulsed by digital distribution. Or rather, I don't mind it at all, but I want to own my movies and games as physical objects. But I don't mind seeing them as only collector's editions. Part of the reason for the death of this particular industry is not only the advent of digital transfer, but also the fact that regular editions of everything became completely barebone. If one wants ANYthing - as much as a fucking booklet - one needs a collector's edition, full of crap you don't need...
 I still hope for some boutique version of both game and movie/tv hard copies retail, because I am thoroughly repulsed by digital distribution. Or rather, I don't mind it at all, but I want to own my movies and games as physical objects. But I don't mind seeing them as only collector's editions. Part of the reason for the death of this particular industry is not only the advent of digital transfer, but also the fact that regular editions of everything became completely barebone. If one wants ANYthing - as much as a fucking booklet - one needs a collector's edition, full of crap you don't need... 
 
		







 
 
		


 
	 
 
		 
 
		
 
 
		









 
 
		






