Remember how Obamacare was going to destroy the economy? Early indications are that’s just another hysterical scare tactic that’s being proved dead wrong:
Bloomberg — Companies boosted payrolls in November by the most in a year, a sign that U.S. employers were optimistic about demand after the end of a government shutdown a month earlier, a private report based on payrolls showed today.
The 215,000 increase in employment exceeded the most optimistic forecast in a Bloomberg survey and followed a revised 184,000 gain in October that was larger than initially estimated, according to the ADP Research Institute in Roseland, New Jersey. The median forecast of economists called for a 170,000 advance.
Stronger job growth helps provide working Americans with the income gains needed to boost consumer spending at the same time retailers seek to spur holiday sales with discounted merchandise. Federal Reserve policy makers are watching labor-market progress as they debate when to scale back record monetary stimulus.
And these weren’t all low paying retail and part time jobs either, there were some actual living wages included in that number.
Alverant says
Lies about ACA don’t die, they just keep getting repeated by successively crazier people.
Raging Bee says
Remember how Obamacare was going to destroy the economy?
It destroyed the economy retroactively, using the same time machine Obama used to plant that fake birth certificate in a vault in Hawaii, amirite? (Or amitrite?)
Raging Bee says
Sorry, wrong tense formation. It willdid destroy the economy retroactively, using the same time machine Obama willdid use to plant that fake birth certificate in a vault in Hawaii, willdidiberite?
Drew says
@ Raging Bee
I believe you’ll find that the proper tense is:
It willan on-destroy forewhen presooning retroeconomy, using the same time machine Obama willdid usenon plantar that fake birth certificate in a vault in Hawaii, willdidiberite?
It’s a pretty easy mistake to make: You used the “future perfect” when it was anything but.
Drew says
I know, I know,
Hail Grammar Vogon