**** this thread, lets do some fishing!
**** this thread, lets do some fishing!
In the wake of President Obama's reelection, one CEO is doubling down on his criticisms of Obamacare.
Papa John’s CEO John Schnatter said he plans on passing the costs of health care reform to his business onto his workers. Schnatter said he will likely reduce workers’ hours, as a result of President Obama's reelection, the Naples News reports. Schnatter made headlines over the summer when he told shareholders that the cost of a Papa John’s pizza will increase by between 11 and 14 cents due to Obamacare.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/1...st-cards-image
You can gauge the validity of your question by his reluctance to address it. Maybe because the site he copy's and pastes his posts from doesn't have any responses for a question like that.
If you did get a response it would be an attack on your character and not on your question. Most republicans operate this way.
If Romney won, Obamacare AND Dodd/Frank would have been repealed, and corporate taxes would have been lowered and lured manufacturing back. Remember, we have the highest corporate taxes in the world. So yes, jobs would have been saved AND millions more created in a very big way, in the private sector. Now, government will grow exponentially, in turn raising the costs to taxpayers, or what's going to be left of them...
Last edited by HawgZWylde; 11-11-2012 at 09:53 AM.
Obama won 7.6 million fewer votes than he did in 2008, and Romney won 1.3 million fewer than McCain in 2008.
The Center for the Study of the American Electorate, put 2012 voter turnout at 57.5% of all eligible voters, compared to 62.3% who voted in 2008 and 60.4% who cast ballots in 2004. In 2000, the turnout rate was 54.2%.
The group estimated 126 million people voted in the election, where President Barack Obama defeated GOP nominee Mitt Romney. That means 93 million eligible citizens did not cast ballots.
Not exactly a mandate for the pResident or Romney or for either political party if a VIABLE 3rd party were to form now.