111th Congress Added More Debt Than First 100 Congresses Combined

Quote from Range Rover:

Its the President who proposes the federal budget to Congress.Guess what 2 Presidents were the biggest deficit spenders and added the most to the national debt ?:)
.......and you are still trying to pick the winner of the two shit horses in the very back of the pack......LOL!!!!!!!!!


You have been CONNED again by the false left/right two party paradigm!!! :eek: You keep getting stuck in the pile of shit left behind by all your compromised heroes (minion scum OWNED by Globalist "handlers"). For once in your life think for yourself, and quit the back handed bitch slapping psy ops abuse you keep falling for (BTW, THEY love your type.......you lay down so EASY for them!!!). :eek:
 
Quote from Range Rover:
Bush 2 and Reagan did most of the damage to this country's finances.
This statement is completely false. The last Congress Reagan presided over is the 100th Congress. Refer to the title of the thread.
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Quote from Range Rover:
It's the President who proposes the federal budget to Congress.
The big word there is proposes. Congress writes the bill and all the President does is either sign it or veto it.
 
Quote from nutmeg:

I have more debt than my father and his father and his fathers father.
The current generation is the most irresponsible generation. I have NO debt. I owe no one.
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Quote from Petsamo:

The current generation is the most irresponsible generation. I have NO debt. I owe no one.

Yeah, but you're not in business, you have no enterprise.
 
Quote from Ricter:

Yeah, but you're not in business, you have no enterprise.
Business is responsible. It can handle its debt, unlike California, Illinois, the PIIGS, and Democrats. If the US can pay off its debt, we wouldn't have a problem with Obama & Congress, would we?
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Quote from Petsamo:

For those concerned about inflation, there hasn't been much since the beginning of the 101st Congress.


LOL, think about that graph for a minute.
 
Quote from Ricter:

LOL, think about that graph for a minute.
Yea? It rose above 5% very briefly after 1989, and it stayed well below 5% thereafter. <a href="http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys.php" title="Smiley"><img src="http://www.freesmileys.org/smileys/smiley-taunt002.gif" alt="Smiley" border="0" /></a>
 
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