As I have seen since I went off to college, finding employment seems awfully hard, especially in a city that is one of the poorest in the country, Mr.Bush seems to think that his tax refund program will stimulate the economy, he is supposedly a Republican, and yet he spends more money than any other president in the history of the United States, which I find odd, he doesn't even follow his own party's views on spending, I hate to say it but I think Reagan was a better president, he limited spending and made the government smaller, less "in society", also Reagan seemed to refuse to mess with the economy, and if he did it was on a small scale. Mr.Bush offered money to the people buying out Bear Stearns. Jefferson and Madison, two previous Presidents, said that a National Bank would be a detriment to American Society and government.
Back to employment, I find it hard to believe that in a city with so many open jobs, and other positions that it has taken me this long to even get a few interviews, I find that a city that seems to want to exploit workers to the fullest backward if they can't seem to make jobs possible for me, not that it isn't mostly my fault, but really, a very poor city with a large African American population, and a large percentage of the population here living at or near the poverty line, making jobs available for the population should not be hard. Instead of having tax refunds and minimum wage jobs, the city, state and country should try to make, say the minimum wage a living wage, and make the country more prosperous, or do a reverse tax refund, the poorest tax filers get the richest tax filers refunds, it would stimulate the economy and also make people more willing to contribute to society. Just an idea, instead of giving people a minimal tax refund, give them a reverse refund, a very socialist idea, but due to the Patriot Act we seem to have a dictator so why not make it a socialist dictatorship. While I was in Russia, it seemed more free than the United States, more welcoming, I felt scared and imposed upon as soon as I arrived in the United States from Ireland, yes security is important, but at what cost? Forcing American citizens to relinquish their civil rights, and making them into mindless puppets, that have to listen to the government that has seemingly limitless power, and a president that can veto certain parts of bills. Oh wait I remember a country like that, the Soviet Union under Stalin, given that Mr.Bush has not killed 50 million people, I will say he is better than Stalin, but removing civil rights for "security" seems really anti-american, if you want to look at a terrorist, someone that has put fear into American citizens and made us feel as if we are not free, take a look at the President.
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