Washington is stopping job creation

As Ronald Reagan said, government isn’t the solution, it’s the problem. This little clip starts with Jim Cramer and ends with Alan Greespan both agreeing. Washington’s crazy socialist agenda of spend and control has business frozen in its tracks with no intention of hiring until absolutely necessary. Watch and learn you lefties.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HpRr-Zb6vBk

Greenspan went on the predict lower unemployment by mid next year … but not by much.

Posted in

Jim Vicevich

Jim is a veteran broadcaster and conservative/libertarian blogger with more than 25 years experience in TV and radio. Jim's was the long-term host of The Jim Vicevich Show on WTIC 1080 in Hartford from 2004 through 2019. Prior to radio, Jim worked as a business and financial reporter for NBC30 - the NBC owned TV station in Hartford - and as business editor at WFSB-TV in Hartford for 14 years while earning six Emmy nominations and three Telly Awards.

3 Comments

  1. sammy22 on December 13, 2009 at 12:41 pm

    What the country could REALLY use is some contructive solutions and approaches. Neither side of the isle is willing to put special interests aside and find common ground to solve real problems. We are heading "south" and all I see is finger pointing. Neither side has revealed truth, but both sides act as if they have it.



  2. Dimsdale on December 14, 2009 at 7:07 am

    sammy has a good point: let the parties be left behind after the elections, and let us all be Americans in between.

     

    Politics is doing nothing unless it performs the ultimate good of tying Congress into knots and keeping them from legislating the destruction of the country.



  3. Dimsdale on December 15, 2009 at 4:04 am

    The only certainty in the current administration is the scheming and the certainty that they will find a way to screw it all up.  They got us into this, and won't admit it, and now they think they can "save" us, and won't admit they haven't got clue #1 about how to do it.



The website's content and articles were migrated to a new framework in October 2023. You may see [shortcodes in brackets] that do not make any sense. Please ignore that stuff. We may fix it at some point, but we do not have the time now.

You'll also note comments migrated over may have misplaced question marks and missing spaces. All comments were migrated, but trackbacks may not show.

The site is not broken.