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  1. #1
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    Thank you Massa Bush.

    Thank you Massa Bush.
    The economy grew and the deficit grew. The biggest deficit we ever had in history of this country.
    Bush cut taxes and the price of everything that sustains life for the American people grew. Health care, food, rent and mortgages and cost of home went up 100%, utilities and gasoline went up, tuition went up, paychecks got smaller, jobs disappeared over seas, illegal immigration grew and corporations grew. Wages declined and the list goes on and on. The middle class became lower class and the poor became poorer and Rep. Pete King say we a living better than we ever have in history. Maybe they are.
    Bush cut services to the elderly, the poor and our service men are being raped and the wages and way of life has been increased for corporations and for our leaders at all levels of the government.
    I got a $30 raise on my social security and my rent went up $10, my food stamps went down $30, my prescription drugs went up, medicare cost went up.Where are we going to spend all the money we got from tax cuts and where are we going to get money to invest in social security, retirement and health care?
    Thank you Massa Bush.

  2. #2
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    FROM THE WANTA FUND

  3. #3
    Senior Member nittygritty's Avatar
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    Hasn't anyone told you yet? He plans to get it from all the taxes he expects to get from the illegals right?
    Build the dam fence post haste!

  4. #4
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    Back From Iraq
    1. by Joshua Brustein
    March, 2006

    Faced with homelessness, about forty veterans call Jason Ortiz each month looking for help. Ortiz is a caseworker at New Era Veterans, a residence for previously homeless veterans in the Soundview section of the Bronx. Most of the residents there left the military decades ago, Ortiz says. But recently about five of the 40 calls he gets every month are from veterans returning from Iraq.

    HOMELESSNESS

    Those seeking evidence that the country is failing to fulfill its obligation to veterans, say advocates, need only to look at the huge number of veterans that end up homeless.
    While they make up about nine percent of the population, veterans constitute 23 percent of the chronically homeless population. Nationwide, there are 200,000 homeless veterans on any given night, and over half a million veterans spend some time homeless over the course of a year. Eighty percent of them live in urban areas, and over three quarters have mental health problems, substance abuse problems, or both.
    According to the Veterans Administration, there are 44,700 homeless veterans in New York State. There are no exact numbers on how many of those live in New York City, but advocates estimate that the total is between 15,000 and 20,000.
    Homelessness, said John Driscoll of the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, is generally the end result of multiple problems spinning out of control. There is a connection between the lack of supportive services and homelessness, he said, but this is not obvious immediately. It was eight years after Vietnam, he said, before Vietnam veterans began turning up for homeless services in significant numbers.
    About two percent of homeless veterans seeking services have served in post 9/11 conflicts, according to the coalition, and Driscoll and other veterans advocates say it is too early to see recent veterans becoming homeless in large numbers. But they worry that the lack of visible evidence of a serious problem will make it hard to address the issues that cause veterans to become homeless today.
    "You have all these veterans being created by this new war," said Ruth Shaffer of New Era Veterans, "and every indication is that they are at least as disturbed – if not more – than those from before."
    http://www.gothamgazette.com/article//20060319/15/1790

  5. #5
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    THE ECONOMIC RAPE OF AMERICA

    What You Can Do About It
    1. By Frederick Mann
    © Copyright 1992 Free America! Institute ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
    Notice: This book contains copyrighted material. This information is free for personal use only. No part of these materials may be reproduced in any form - except for personal use - without permission from the copyright holder. Please contact the webmaster with any questions or comments.

    Contents:
    Preface
    Introduction
    Chapter 1: What Is Money?
    Chapter 2: The Destruction of the U.S. Dollar
    Chapter 3: The Federal Reserve Bankers
    Chapter 4: The Ravages of Inflation
    Chapter 5: The Supreme Law of the Land
    Chapter 6: Stretch Your Imagination
    Chapter 7: The Plundering, Blundering, Murdering IRS
    Chapter 8: History and Theory of Tax and State
    Chapter 9: Government Rape, Anarchy, and Murder
    Chapter 10: The Worst Professional Screwmasters
    Chapter 11: Discover and Develop Your Freedom
    Chapter 12: What You Can Do About It

    http://www.buildfreedom.com/tl/rapecon.shtml

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