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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

To bad Monkey, that the rest of America were not interested in exploring and understanding the morals of the man,

they allowed the Supreme Court to declare President and Commander in Chief of the USofA January 22, 2008 9:15 AM
monkey said:
No, you are NOT the only one who remembers how Bush was SOLD to us... and I won't forget how many of us said, "Ummm, look at his business dealings and see how THOSE worked out"... I also won't forget how he was sold as an expert in the OIL business, but look how ARBUSTO worked out...
It has all gone EXACTLY as I knew it would, and we are all completely F*CKED because of it.
Anyone, and I mean ANYONE, who bought into the pile of SH*T that was sold to this nation in both 2000 and 2004 (and yes yes, I know, he lost both elections, yada yada yada), ANYONE who didn't see through that sham of a human being and his piece of garbage VP has some serious soul searching to do (unless they have already).
I am disgusted beyond words, beyond feeling, beyond comprehension.
It has all gone down the drain, just like me and a handful of others have predicted all along... and yet WE are the labeled extremists, unpatriotic, or LIBERAL.
Take a look around folks, this crap didn't happen by accident, it happened by design, by willful deceict, but blatant ignorant ideology that repeats failed history.
You are about to witness a collapse of, dare I say, BIBLICAL proportions.
Screwed, blued, and tattooed.
Adios amigas y amigos.
Kangaroo said::::
Amen
January 22, 2008 7:38 AM
monkey said:
Wall Street expected to plunge at openingU.S. stocks are seen adding to heavy selling throughout the world
NEW YORK - Wall Street was expected to plunge at the opening of trading Tuesday, extending its huge losses from last week and taking more cues from heavy selling that has spread throughout the world. Indicators showed the Dow Jones industrial average was set to fall by about 500 points when trading begins.
Fears of a recession in the United States that could pull down the global economy as well have infected markets around the world, and those declines further unnerved U.S. investors who were unable to trade Monday, when Wall Street was closed for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Dow Jones industrial average futures fell 476, or 3.93 percent, to 11,630. Standard & Poor’s 500 index futures fell 57.30, or 4.32 percent, to 1,628.00. Nasdaq 100 index futures dropped 77.00, or 4.16 percent, to 1,772.50.
In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei stock average closed down 5.65 percent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index lost 8.65 percent a day after showing its biggest losses since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
more...
Hey, let's hear a big round of applause for 7 years of Bush/Republican economic stewardship... come on America, vote for some more of that.
monkey said:
CNN Breaking NewsTreasury Secretary Paulson says Congress, Bush administration need to agree quickly on measures to boost economy, calm markets.
monkey said:
MSNBC BREAKING NEWS: Fed cuts key U.S. interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point
monkey said:
Can you say "Meltdown", boys & girls?
Global Warning
sparrow said:
Monkey,
I'm CRINGING for our 401k's!
I wish the market would just stay CLOSED until they get some COMPETENT people in our government.
So much for the 'business model' being good for businesses.
sparrow said:
Am I the only one who remembers how they sold us on Bush being a CEO President and how he was going to show us how government should be run?
Business-like-but fair--campassionate but conservative.
He was going to bring truth and bi-partisanship to DC.
OMG.
The lies! THE LIES!!!
AUSTRALIA
4th-worst day in ASX history
THE biggest share market rout since October 1987 has caught out millions of shareholders.

Welcome to Georgies Business Aquem, 7 years of GW in the White House.
AUSTRALIA BLACK TUESDAY
4th-worst day in ASX historyTHE biggest share market rout since October 1987 has caught out millions of shareholders.
By Scott MurdochJanuary 23, 2008 02:00am
THE biggest share market rout since the October 1987 crash has caught millions of Australian shareholders offguard and raised fears the China boom might not protect the Australian economy from a looming US recession.
Panic engulfed world financial markets yesterday, with Australian shares plunging by 7.3 per cent to suffer their fourth-worst day in history and wipe $110 billion off the savings of investors.
The carnage - which was worse than the financial market reaction to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 - left traders stunned.
The S&P/ASX200 index lost 393.6 points to close at 5186.8, the lowest point in two years, while the All Ordinaries was smashed by 408.9 points to end at 5222.
By Victoria Laurie and Anthony KlanJanuary 23, 2008 02:00am
WHILE Gen Y investors flooded sharemarket chat sites begging for advice on what to do, 32-year-old broker Ben Polkinghorne spent much of yesterday telling his clients to "hold tight" during the biggest market bloodbath in decades.
It was a different story in cyberspace, where the internet generation was reacting to its first taste of market meltdown. On sites such as HotCopper and Aussie Stock Forum, young bloggers who were losing big money by the minute were panicking.
"For f%%$$K's sake, a bounce must be coming? Maybe it is the end of the world," wrote one blogger on HotCopper, which claims to be Australia's largest stock market internet forum. Fellow HotCopper blogger "Rogues Trade" jokingly offered to hire a bus and drive it off Melbourne's West Gate bridge, offering "25 seats" to fellow distraught young investors.
"Oh what a terrible day, time for a Valium or something stronger," wrote another.
By Terry McCrannJanuary 23, 2008 02:00am
WHAT happened? Fear and loathing took over.
Fear of the unknown. What would happen when Wall St opened last night? Was the mighty US economy spiralling into recession? Would it drag us all and especially China with it?
Loathing of losses suffered. Nearly $400 billion in less than three months. And the billions more that could go, so sell now.
What does it all mean for you? What should you do about it?
That has to be separated into what it does to your superannuation and any shares you own directly, like Telstra and the Commonwealth Bank. And to the economy -- your business, your job, to rates.
First, shares, super, property.
Share values are down 24 per cent from their peak in November, taking them back to where they were in October 2006.

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